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Difference between revisions of "He alone can rescue me'"

(Created page with "---- '''Back to Man's religion & God's religion 6''' ---- <p>"My eyes are always looking to the Lord for<br /> help, for <strong>He alone can rescue me</strong> f...")
 
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   help, for <strong>He alone can rescue me</strong> from the<br />
 
   help, for <strong>He alone can rescue me</strong> from the<br />
 
   traps of my enemies.&quot; Psalm 25:15<br><br>
 
   traps of my enemies.&quot; Psalm 25:15<br><br>
<p>&quot;Oh, please help us against our enemies,<br />
+
&quot;Oh, please help us against our enemies,<br />
 
   for all human help is useless.&quot; Psalm 60:11<br />
 
   for all human help is useless.&quot; Psalm 60:11<br />
 
   <br />
 
   <br />

Revision as of 21:06, 6 January 2013


Back to Man's religion & God's religion 6


"My eyes are always looking to the Lord for
help, for He alone can rescue me from the
traps of my enemies." Psalm 25:15

"Oh, please help us against our enemies,
for all human help is useless." Psalm 60:11

What a mighty God we have to deal with! 

And what would suit our case but a mighty God? 

Have we not mighty sins

Have we not mighty trials

Have we not mighty temptations?

Have we not mighty foes and mighty fears

And who is to deliver us from all this mighty army,
except the mighty God? It is not a 'little God' (if I may 
use the expression) that will do for God's people. They 
need a 'mighty God', because they are in circumstances 
where none but a mighty God can intervene in their behalf. 

And it is well worth our notice that the Lord puts His 
people purposely into circumstances where they may 
avail themselves, so to speak, of His omnipotent power, 
and thus know from living personal experience, that He 
is a mighty God, not in mere doctrine and theory, but 
a mighty God in their special and particular behalf. 

Why, if you did not feelingly and experimentally know . . .
your mighty sins, 
your mighty trials,
your mighty temptations,
your mighty fears,
you would not need a mighty God. 

O how this brings together the strength of God and 
the weakness of man! How it unites poor helpless 
creatures with the Majesty of heaven! How it conveys
to feeble, worthless worms the very might of the
Omnipotent Jehovah!

This sense of . . .
our weakness and His power, 
our misery and His mercy, 
our ruin and His recovery, 
the abounding of our sin and 
the super-abounding of His grace;
a feeling sense of these opposite yet harmonious 
things, brings us to have personal, experimental 
dealings with God. And it is in these personal 
dealings with God that the life of all religion consists.

<p>"The Lord hears His people when they call to Him for help.
He rescues them from all their troubles." Psalm 34:17


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