Monday, October 30, 2006

liar, lunatic, or Lord

A man who was merely a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would not be a great moral teacher. He would either be a lunatic - on the level of a man who says he is a poached egg - or else He would be the devil of hell. You must make your choice. Either this manw as, and is, the Son of God: Or else He is a madman...or something worse. You can shut Him up for a fool; you can spit at Him and kill Him as a demon; or you can fall at His feet and call Him Lord and God. But let us not come with any patronizing nonsense about His being a great human teacher. He has not left that open to us.

-C.S. Lewis

Sunday, October 29, 2006

gfa - first missionary support away!

Today, we collected for EM's very first "$1-a-day-for-30-days" Gospel for Asia native missionary support donation, and I thank and praise God we were able to begin our monthly support of SIX Native Missionaries at $30 per missionary per month!

God is good and faithful!

Let's continue to save $1 day for the next 30 days as we pray for these six missionaries who serve God day and night bringing message of hope of Jesus Christ to many remote villages where the name of Jesus has never even once been heard!

It is a wonderful privilege to join in with these brothers and sisters in Christ in obeying Jesus' Great Commission!

Praise God!

kings & prophets I: Heart of Saul

We started a series on Kings of the Old Testaments beginning with King Saul.

The people of Israel, after centuries of backsliding, of each doing what was right in his own eyes, demand the last judge and prophet Samuel to give them a king like all other nations that surrounded them.

God sees this demand as Israel's rejection of God as their King. It wasn't that God didn't want to give them a king; years before, God already had planned to give them a king as we can see God warning ahead through His laws about kingship in Deut 17:16-17. What displeased God were the reasons for their want of a king:

But the people refused to listen to Samuel. "No!" they said. "We want a king over us. Then we will be like all the other nations, with a king to lead us and to go out before us and fight our battles."

The Israelites blatantly refused to acknowledge God who was their King, their leader over their armies to fight the battles.

It depicts a major transition from Theocracy (God-rule) to Monarchy (king-rule).

So God gives them what they want:

1 Sam 10:1-9 records the anointing of Saul as the first king of Israel which is confirmed by three evidences of God's providential work in Saul's life.

The man Saul was an impressive young man, tall and likeable, unassuming and generous.

God gives Saul three evidences to show His hand on Saul's anointing:

1. Instruction: regarding the lost donkeys which caused Saul to seek out Samuel;
2. Provision: Saul would be met by three going to worship God with provision which they would share with Saul; and
3. Inspiration: Saul would be met by a procession of prophets, at which time the Holy Spirit would cause Saul to prophesy along with them.

Samuel tells Saul in 1 Sam 10:6 that Saul "will be changed into a different person" once the three signs are fulfilled, but in v.9, it states, "as Saul turned to leave Samuel, God changed Saul's heart..."

Saul's change of heart however never fully took root as we can see from his tragic downfall.

No amount of the supernatural or miraculous we experience will change our hearts. Having a heart after God, a pure and tranformed heart, does not come into being over night.

Saul disobeys God in increasingly grave situations until it finally culminates into God's rejection of him as king of Israel.

The metamorphosis of a believer's a heart into one after God's own heart - a heart moldable and touchable by God - does not consist in the degree or frequency or intensity of "spiritual" experiences, but in living out the truth of God in our lives in the mundane, the routine, the daily.

Is your spiritual walk with Christ built upon one hyped up experience after another, or is it founded upon His Word, worked out in your life in the midst of the ordinary by the indwelling Spirit?

--from Nakwon EM Oct. 29th 11:00am Sunday Worship Service

Monday, October 23, 2006

the seen & the unseen

The City of Jericho, one of the most well-fortified cities during that time, was the first city the Israelites conquered in their campaign to possess the promised land of Canaan. Accordingly, God commanded that the spoils of conquest be devoted to God (Joshua 6:17-19) unlike all other conquests that would follow.

But one man's disobedience (7:1) caused humiliating defeat before their next city of conquest - Ai. The three thousand armed Israelites were routed before the seemingly insignificant army of the peopel of Ai and even resulted in 36 blind-siding fatalities of war.

God reproaches the despairing leader Joshua and tells them why God was not with them in their next battle at Ai in Joshua 7:10-12:

The LORD said to Joshua, "Stand up! What are you doing down on your face? Israel has sinned; they have violated my covenant, which I commanded them to keep. They have taken some of the devoted things; they have stolen, they have lied, they have put them with their own possessions. That is why the Israelites cannot stand against their enemies; they turn their backs and run because they have been made liable to destruction. I will not be with you anymore unless you destroy whatever among you is devoted to destruction.

Finally, the next morning, through lot, Achan of the tribe of Judah is singled out as the culprit, and he and his family along with all his possession in destroyed.

REASON FOR SIN:

Achan's sin began with what he "saw":

Achan replied, "It is true! I have sinned against the LORD, the God of Israel. This is what I have done: When I saw in the plunder a beautiful robe from Babylonia, two hundred shekels of silver and a wedge of gold weighing fifty shekels, I coveted them and took them. They are hidden in the ground inside my tent, with the silver underneath." (7:20-21)

Someone said the eyes are the portals through which Satan works; whereas the ears are the portals through which God works.

The woman fell prey to Satan's temptations because she "saw that the fruit of the tree was good for food and pleasing to the eye..." (Gen 3:6) King David "saw a woman bathing. The woman was very beautiful..." (2 Sam 11:2)

Many of our sins begin with what we see with our eyes. Apostle John warns of the "lust of his eyes" as one of three things that mark the fallen world or sin nature in man.

The word "saw" in Achan's confession before Joshua and the Israelites is a significant word that goes beyond mere physical visual act: the root meaning denotes weighing of something's worth, to consider carefully, to observe with growing attention - in other words, worship. Achan "worshiped" what he saw, hence taking it was only a matter of time, all too easy when his greed and desire weighed heavily against God's command.

RESULT OF SIN:

Achan not only brought destruction on himself, but on all his family, who presumably from the narrative, were partakers of his sin since he hid the stolen plunder in his tent, a housing shared with all his family members. And even more far-reaching repercussion of his hidden sin was that the people of Israel were not liable to fear and dread from their surrounding enemies in the promised land who would no doubt know of their humiliating defeat. His one sin, seemigly harmless to any other soul affected the entire community.

God told Joshua that the Israelites could not stand against the enemy.

Sin does that.

Especially hidden, "un-dealt with" sins.

RELEASE FROM SIN:

God gave us a way to overcome the temptations of this world which relentlessly bombards us with audio-visual messages of pleasure and success and means to satisfy our every fleshly need and desire: it is so simple, we often miss it.

Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is seated at the right hand of God. 2Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things. (Colossians 3:1-2)

The key to overcoming such temptation, to not falling prey to deceiving pleasures of this fallen world with all its devices to draw us further away from God, and to remaining faithful to our calling in Christ is in our determination and obedience to His Word - a disciplined mind that fixes its faith-eyes heavenward, not fooled with lies espoused by everything around us telling us this world is all there is and all there will be.

None of us were made for this world, to live apart from God. We were made to spend eternity with our Creator and Father in heaven where there are no tears, no sin, no pains, no heartaches, no disappointments, no weariness, no rejection, no loneliness, no frustrations, and no evil.

Let's fix our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith!

--from Nakwon EM October 22nd 11:00am Sunday Worship Service

Monday, October 16, 2006

the first resurrection

Jesus is coming back soon.

Sooner than we think.

The events recorded in Matt 24:4-14 leading up to what is called "Rapture" (being taken up into heaven in a transformed body; 1 Thess 4:16-17 & 1 Cor 15:50-55) are unfolding before our very own eyes today in the world around us as we witness wars, "rumors of wars," natural disasters, brutal ethnic cleansing wars, etc. Both Apostle Paul (2 Tim 3:1-7)and Peter (2 Pe 3:3-7) warned that in the Last Days, hearts will grow colder and farther away from God and things of God.

Following the Rapture, we will all stand before the Judgment Seat of Christ to receive according to what we had done.

The moment following the Rapture marks the beginning of seven-year Tribulation period, during which those who were left behind will have to endure seven years of Antichrist's reign.

At the end of seven years, Christ returns ("Second Coming") to earth to reign with his saints (both raptured & tribulation saints) for 1,000 years, known as the "Millennium" during which Satan is bound in chains in the Abyss to be let loose at the end of 1,000 years for the Final Battle of Gog & Magog.

Apostle John tells us that those who reigned with Christ during the Millennium were all partakers of the "First Resurrection." They were blessed because "second death" had no power over them.

Once devil and his angels are thrown into the lake of fire, the White Throne Judgment will take place, where those who had not stood before the Judgment Seat of Christ will now stand before God. Those whose names were not written on the Lamb's Book of Life were cast into the "Lake of Fire," which is called the Second Death, where the lost souls, those who never made Christ Lord of their lives and heart, along with the devil and his fallen angels would suffer for all eternity.

Then, finally, we will be with our Lord and Savior and dwell in perfect Heaven (a new heaven and a new earth) forever, never again knowing heartache, pain, sadness, loneliness, discontent, disillusionment...

You get the idea.

So the question remains:

Are you ready?

Will you have a part in the First Resurrection? Are you sure second death will have no power over you?

Is your life completely devoted to God, your will and your desires aligned with His perfect will and desire?

Jesus is coming back soon.

For He says, "In the time of my favor I heard you, and in the day of salvation I helped you." I tell you, now is the time of God's favor, now is the day of salvation. (2 Cor. 6:2, emphasis added)


Not tomorrow, not this coming Sunday, not when your life is settled and after you've attained to fullness of your dreams and desires, but NOW is the time of salvation.

What do you live for?

What is your greatest hope and purpose in life?

If your asnwer is not a certain and confident "Christ, and Christ alone," you will be surprised when the Day comes.

--from Nakwon EM October 15th 10:00am Sunday Worship Service

service & meeting time changes

Hopefully this will be more or less permanent meetings times for our EM:

Our Sunday Worship Service will now take place at 11:00AM. Yes! We have our own room now! (And our own beautiful LCD Projector! Hee)

The Saturday Bible Study meetings will be at 4:30PM. (Not at church, but at my apartment.)

And finally, we are beginning Tuesday 6:30PM Praise & Prayer meetings this week.

Please come and be blessed!

One more reminder: We will be holding monthly "Lock-In's."

Our first one is scheduled for this Friday, 10/20, at 9PM. We will be studying about the Last Days, in more detail of what we learned during yesterday's worship service.

We will study in depth what the Bible tells us about the End Times and how we are called to live our lives as people of God awaiting the second coming of Christ.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

"The Law" Part One: Genesis & Exodus

Do the Math: "Prophecy in a Name"

Methuselah = “(his) death” + “shall bring”

Gen 5:25-31 & 7:11, can you determine when the Flood came in relation to Methuselah’s age in the light of the meaning of his name?

Methuselah - 187 years old (Lamech is born)
Lamech - 182 years old (Noah is born)
So, 369 years have passed…
Noah - 600 years old when Flood comes
Thus, 369 + 600 = 969 years!

The Flood came when Methuselah died – just as his name prophesied.

Pentateuch: Five Books of Moses

Part One : Genesis – Book of Beginnings
Exodus – Birth of the Nation

Part Two: Leviticus – Laws of the Nation
Numbers – Wilderness Wandering
Deuteronomy – Laws Reviewed

GENESIS:

Chapters 1-11
1 – 3 Creation - Chicken or the egg?
4 First Murder
5 Genealogy
6 – 9 Flood of Noah Ark:
· Matt 24:36-39 as foreshadow of coming in Christ
· 2 Pe 2:5 Noah as preacher of righteousness)
10 Nations
· 70 nations from Noah (only 70 entered Egypt)
11 Tower of Babel: “Bab—El” – “Tower to Heaven”

Chapters 12 – 50
12 – 20 Abraham
· Unconditional Covenant – 15:17 (God does it alone; Abram is asleep)
21 – 26 Isaac – Jacob gets blessing (25) – All is to blame…
· (25:23) Isaac attempted to thwart God’s plan
· (25:29-34) Esau breaks oath he had made to Jacob
· (27:13) Rebekah tries to achieve God’s blessing by deception
· (27:11-12) Jacob’s only fear is getting caught
27 – 36 Jacob – the deceiver is deceived
· Laban (Rachel & Leah)
· His own sons when Joseph is sold as slave (37)
37 – 50 Joseph
· (45:4-7) Joseph has realized God’s sovereignty
· (50:25) Prophecy – “come to your aid”

EXODUS :

Chapters:
1 – 18 The Exodus: the Plagues, the Passover, the Crossing of Red Sea
· Acts 7 = the best “commentary” of OT. (7:17) – “another king” – hetero – not Egyptian – that’s why did not know about Joseph (Ex 1:8)
· 3:2 – Fire = judgment: judged, not consumed; i.e. mercy/grace
· Ten plagues of Egypt – deliberate attack on the gods of Egypt

19 – 24 The Law: The Mosaic Covenant
25 – 40 The Tabernacle: The Priesthood

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

"let My people go!" or "let go!"

Eleven times in the book of Exodus, God says "Let My people go!" to the Pharaoh who stubbornly and repeatedly refused to give up the children of Israel. After ten devastating plagues, which were each a direct attack on the various deities of Egyptian pantheon, the Egyptians finally let Israel go.

The book of Exodus recounts the story of a God who sets out to call unto Himself a nation. It is a type and shadow of the salvation we receive through Jesus Christ. Just like the Israelites, we are called forth and delivered from our oppressor, Satan, and from his deadly grip on our souls and lives. Just as the Passover lamb was sacrificed prior to the exodus of the Israelites, Jesus, our Passover Lamb, has been sacrificed for our salvation.

God's deliverance is two-fold: In Exodus 6:6-7, God promises to bring out and free His people, but also makes a covenant with them to make them His own and bring them to a land they will possess.

That is the "Let My people go!" part. Salvation is the work of God, not of man. It is a gift, not to be worked for, but received. It is God who saves.

But Paul tells us in Philippians 2:12 to "work out [our] salvation with fear and trembling."

Being saved is not the end; it is the beginning.

Once we are saved, we must live in accordance with the faith we professed, and that is the "working out" part; that is, the "letting go" part.

God tells our enemy, Satan, "Let My people!" but He tells us to "Let go!"

As a teaching pastor said, "It took 40 hours to get Israel out of Egypt, but it took 40 years to get Egypt out of Israel."

We see in the life of the Israelites in the desert that their progression toward apostasy caused the first generation to altogether be forbidden to enter the Land of Promise, to die in the desert in their wanderings for 40 years.

It is a progression from Unbelief, to Forgetfulness and finally to Blatant Disobedience and Deception.

God drives the children of Israel to the Red Sea with the Pharaoh's angry army in pursuit in Exodus 14. Israelites begin to cry out to God and panic:

As Pharaoh approached, the Israelites looked up, and there were the Egyptians, marching after them. They were terrified and cried out to the LORD. They said to Moses, "Was it because there were no graves in Egypt that you brought us to the desert to die? What have you done to us by bringing us out of Egypt? Didn't we say to you in Egypt, 'Leave us alone; let us serve the Egyptians'? It would have been better for us to serve the Egyptians than to die in the desert!" (Exodus 14:10-12)

Despite amazing miracles (plagues) the Israelites witnessed as God struck their enslavers, the Israelites did not believe or trust in God who had delivered them thus far.

Unbelief marks the first progression toward apostasy in any believer; failing to trust God's faithfulness and might, the same God who had already demonstrated his power and love in delivering us from sin and death.

Second step in progression toward apostasy is Forgetfulness. In Exodus 14, God does deliver them by parting the Red Sea allowing the Israelites to walk across the sea in dry seabed and drowning the Egyptian army who came in pursuit.

Chapter 15 records the song Moses taught the Israelites in glorifying the God who delivered them. But only three days later, in Exodus 15:22-25, when the Israelites come face to face with a trial - lack of drinking water at Marah, they grumble against Moses and God. They have already forgotten God's might and power.

Forgetful heart is never thankful. And it is a sure way to draw farther away from the heart of the Father and closer to apostasy.

Finally, the last step toward apostasy is Blatant Disobedience. In Exodus 32, while Moses is up on the mountain receiving God's laws during 40 days of fasting, the children of Israel commit a heinous crime of idol worship.

When the people saw that Moses was so long in coming down from the mountain, they gathered around Aaron and said, "Come, make us gods who will go before us. As for this fellow Moses who brought us up out of Egypt, we don't know what has happened to him."

Aaron answered them, "Take off the gold earrings that your wives, your sons and your daughters are wearing, and bring them to me." So all the people took off their earrings and brought them to Aaron. He took what they handed him and made it into an idol cast in the shape of a calf, fashioning it with a tool. Then they said, "These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out of Egypt."

When Aaron saw this, he built an altar in front of the calf and announced, "Tomorrow there will be a festival to the LORD." So the next day the people rose early and sacrificed burnt offerings and presented fellowship offerings. Afterward they sat down to eat and drink and got up to indulge in revelry. (Exodus 32:1-6)

What is most astonishing from the above passage is that the Israelites were indulging in sinful outright rebellious revelry in the name of the Lord!

How is it possible?

They were calling this a "festival to the Lord." It shows the absolute depravity and deception among these children of Israel.

But Paul reminds us in 1 Corinthians 10:6-11:

Now these things occurred as examples to keep us from setting our hearts on evil things as they did. Do not be idolaters, as some of them were; as it is written: "The people sat down to eat and drink and got up to indulge in pagan revelry." We should not commit sexual immorality, as some of them did—and in one day twenty-three thousand of them died. We should not test the Lord, as some of them did—and were killed by snakes. And do not grumble, as some of them did—and were killed by the destroying angel. These things happened to them as examples and were written down as warnings for us, on whom the fulfillment of the ages has come.(emphasis mine)

In other words, to put it bluntly, the Israelites weren't some mad people we can cluck our tongues at. Our own spiritual walk is typified by the Israelites. When we are honest with ourselves, we are not so different from the Israelites, and just like them, we can also be denied entrance to our Promised Land if we continue down the road toward apostasy, blinded by our unbelief, living a life of ingratitude and forgetfulness of the faithfulness of God, and attempting to live for God while loving the world.

We are not all that different from the children of Israel from thousands of years ago.

The only major difference is that now we have the Holy Spirit who is our Personal Guide and Helper. We do not look forward to hearing from a mediator like Moses or some priesthood. We have the Spirit of the Living God who sits upon the throne of our hearts, directing our paths, teaching our hearts and minds to live a life worthy of His Kingdom.

The Law of God is no longer written on stone tablets, but in our hearts by His Spirit that resides in us as God promised through prophets of old.

God still speaks to us today: "Let go!" Let go of your ambitions, your pride, your own hopes for future, your dreams, your love for the temporary things of this world.

And He promises to give us something far more precious, something that transcends any and all pleasure or satisfaction this fallen world could ever offer - He gives us Himself.

Will you let go?

--from Sunday October 8 10:00AM EM Worship Service

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Overview of the Bible

I. Books of the Bible

Old Testament (OT):

Pentateuch/Five Books of Moses (5):
Genesis - book of beginnings (Ge 1:1)
Exodus - birth of a nation (Ex 19:4-6)
Leviticus - laws of a nation (Lev 18:3-5; 22:32-33)
Numbers - Wilderness Wandering (Nu 14:26-35, Record of journey - Nu 33)
Deuteronomy - Laws Reviewed (Dt 1:1-4)

History/Narrative (12):
Joshua - conquest of Canaan (Jos 1:1-9)
Judges - value of relativism demonstrated (Jdg 2:8-23, 17:6, 18:1, 19:1, 21:25)
Ruth - Story of Kinsman Redeemer (Ru 2:11-12)
1 & 2 Samuel - Birth of Monarchy in Israel; rejection of God as their King (1 Sam 8:6-7)
1 & 2 Kings - Divided Kingdom (1 Ki 9:2-9)
1 & 2 Chronicles - Historical record (beginning with Saul's suicide) (1 Chr 9:1)
Ezra - Return of the Exiles (Ezra 1:1-4)
Nehemiah - Rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem (Neh 1:3)
Esther - Deliverance for Israel by the "Invisible Hand" of God (Es 8:1-4, 9:24-25)

Poetry/Wisdom Writings (5):
Job - providence of God & spiritual reality (Job 38:1-2, 40:1-5)
Psalms - worshiping God - through thick and thin (Ps 5:1-3)
Proverbs - wisdom (Prov 1:7, 4:7)
Ecclesiastes - Despair of men (Ecc 1:1-2, 12:13-14)
Song of Songs - Love of the Bridegroom (SS 8:6-7)

Prophets: warning of judgment, call for the apostate to repentance (2 Chr 36:15-16)
Major (5): Isaiah to Daniel
Minor (12): Hosea to Malachi

New Testament (NT):

Gospels (4):
Matthew to John - God in flesh (Jn 1:1-14, 20:30-31)

Narrative (1):
Acts - the promised Holy Spirit at work (Acts 1:8)

Epistles: Christian Disciplines & Doctrines (2 Tim 4:2, Heb 4:12-13)
Pauline Epistles (13): Romans to Philemon
General Epistles (8): Hebrews to Jude

Apocalyptic Writing:
Revelation - revelation of Jesus Christ (Rev 1:1-3, 22:20)

II. Concealment and Revelation
New Testament is in the Old Testament concealed;
Old Testament is in the New Testament revealed.

What is in a Name? [Genesis 5]
Adam = "man"
Seth = "appointed"
Enosh = "mortal"
Kenan = "sorrow"
Mahalalel = "Blessed God"
Jared = "shall come down"
Enoch = "teaching"
Methuselah = "his death shall bring"
Lamech = "despairing"
Noah = "comfort"

The very first Prophecy in the Bible:
"Man is appointed mortal sorrow, but the blessed God shall come down teaching that His death shall bring the despairing comfort."

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

abraham: father of faith, friend of God

Abraham's faith is acknowledged three times in Hebrews 11.

In verses 8-10, the Hebrew writer speaks of faith of Abraham in obeying God's call; in verses 11-12, the writer reminds us that the fulfilling "mechanism" of God's promises was Abraham's faith that He who made the promise was faithful; and, most amazing of all demonstrations of faith in this patriarch is recorded in verses 17-19, in which Abraham offered his son as God commanded with faith that he would receive his beloved son Isaac back from the dead.

Resurrection was unheard of in Abraham's time. We have no account of any such thing until the time of Kings in Israel. Yet, this man believed God would do the impossible - the unthinkable - to fulfill the promise He made to his servant.

Now, that is faith.

Hebrews 11:1 defines faith as "being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see."

I cannot imagine what must have gone through Abraham's mind when God commanded him to sacrifice his hope and dream - a culmination of everything he believed in God now to be relinquished in utter contradiction to logic and common sense.

But he obeyed.

And through his obedience, countless are blessed who call on God who is faithful.

More than anything else, Abraham's faith was real: it was never conceptual or ideal. It was real-ized.

His obedience was immediate. He went early next morning. Not after a week of fighting against doubt and confusion, asking his wife or friends about whether he'd heard God right.

Genesis 22:4 tells us that Moriah (where Abraham was to sacrifice his son) was a three-day journey from where he was. Three days is a long time to reconsider the sanity or insanity of his actions.

Abraham does not hesitate to obey God. His knife is on a downward plunge when the angel of the Lord stops him. And he receives as a result the greatest blessing a man could ever possess - to be "source" of blessing to other - a type and shadow of Christ's own ministry.

Interestingly, Moriah where Abraham was about to sacrifice his son is the same spot where King David built an altar and sacrificed in repentance (after having taken a census of his fighting men in Israel against God's command) when the angel of the Lord stopped at the threshing floor of Araunah the Jebusite after killing 70,000 Israelites.

And the threshing floor of Araunah the Jebusite is the exact place where David's son King Solomon built the Temple for God in 2 Chronicles 3:1.

And hundreds of years later, on that same spot, another Father offered his own Son as an atoning sacrifice for all humanity - in a place then called Golgotha.

A pastor once shared a story about a new member of his church who approached him after service upset after the service.

"Pastor," the man began his face grim, "I am very offended at this story you shared with us today about Abraham's sacrifice. How could a loving God demand such cruel sacrifice? What kind of God demands such a thing of any father?"

The pastor replied, "My brother, I am glad you are offended. Because that is what God did for us. No one stayed God's hand from allowing his own Son to be crucified. You should be offended."

It is small wonder God called Abraham His friend.

Are you a friend of God?

Can God "confide" in you as He did with Abraham in regard to Sodom and Gomorrah? Have you come to such a place as to know the very heartbeat of the Father that you would take no offense no matter what He demands of you?

--from Sunday October 1, 2006 10:00am Worship Service