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Update:

Monday, I had much more than just a blood test for Potassium level, but it was all
good. We had a wonderful talk with our house doctor. She explained more about
the medicine I take and said that I would take 6 months of the expensive (the
insurance company having to pay about 200 Euro for each box of 100 pills) blood
thinner one just to be sure. She is very thorough and even keeps herself informed
about stents. She said that the stent will most likely do well in me. But I was
surprised that she said that the heart attack could have been caused by the
prolonged congestion cold that I had. I only had 10 days of antibiotics. Dolo
had three 10-day prescriptions of antibiotics. The doctor was glad that I was not
experiencing any dizziness or heart area pains. She decided to have 4 tubes of my
blood for 4 tests. I also had a good EKG and my blood pressure was normal. But I
didn’t get to start eating my breakfast until about 10:30 AM. The doctor was so
happy about my recovery. She advised that we get down to only one dinner a
week with beef. She eats more fish and chicken. She said tofu is fine but she
doesn’t like the taste. She gave us some food charts for good nutrition. I should
do exercising later on after the tests show that I am completely healed. The doctor
had a prescription for a home blood pressure instrument so that we can get a good
one from the health insurance for testing me and Dolo.

Recently I found and have been ministering via responding to popular blogs at
http://www.revelife.com/ . Also I update the following almost daily:
"0 ~ interesting recent uploaded articles"
https://ntpastor.diinoweb.com/files/0%20%20%7E%20interesting%20recent
%20uploaded%20articles/

Good Bible study teaching and discussions are downloadable from


http://www.hannoveribc.com/templates/System/details.asp?
id=25727&PID=570587 and http://www.forestlakechurch.org/CatDetail.asp?
CatID=246 Dolo and I now go to the first group meetings on Wednesday nights
and watch the second group on Friday nights.

I am currently doing two Bible study tools using the logical indenting formatting.
One is about trust and the other is about worship. Dolo finally realized that she has
very little faith and trust in God. The Holy Spirit gave me these 2 anagrams many
years ago:
F -- fear not
A -- assurance from God's Word
I -- in God's love
T -- trust in God and the Bible
H -- holiness with Holy Spirit and Bible help

T -- truthfulness
R -- respect
U -- understanding
S -- steadfastness (especially in promise/vow-keeping)
T -- tolerance (of the other's preferences)

Hope that you enjoy these as I did recently:


I Know Who Holds Tomorrow
By: Ira Stanphill

I don't know about tomorrow,


I just live from day to day;
I don't borrow from its sunshine,
For its sky may turn to gray;
I don't worry o'er the future
For I know what Jesus said,
And today I'll walk beside Him,
For He knows what is ahead.

Many things about tomorrow


I don't seem to understand;
But I know who holds tomorrow,
And I know who holds my hand.

Every step is getting brighter


As the golden stairs I climb;
Every burden's getting lighter,
Every cloud is silver lined.
There the sun is always shining,
There no tear will dim the eye;
At the ending of the rainbow,
Where the mountains touch the sky.

Many things about tomorrow


I don't seem to understand;
But I know who holds tomorrow,
And I know who holds my hand.

I don't know about tomorrow,


It may bring me poverty;
But the one who feeds the sparrow
Is the one who stands by me;
And the path that be my portion,
May be thru the flame or flood,
But His presence goes before me,
And I'm covered with His blood.
Many things about tomorrow
I don't seem to understand;
But I know who holds tomorrow,
And I know who holds my hand.

What If God …….?

What if God couldn't take the time to bless us today


because we couldn't take the time to thank Him yesterday?

What if God decided to stop leading us tomorrow


because we did not follow Him today?

What if we never saw another flower bloom


because we grumbled when God sent the rain?

What if God didn't walk with us today


because we failed to recognize it as His day?

What if God took away the Bible tomorrow


because we would not read it today?

What if God took away His message


because we failed to listen to His messenger?

What if the door of the church was closed


because we did not open the door of our heart?

What if God stopped loving and caring for us


because we failed to love and care for others?

What if God would not hear us today


because we would not listen to Him yesterday?

What if God answered our prayers the way we answer His call for service?
What if God met our needs the way we give Him our lives???

Author Unknown

If I were the devil ...


Posted: August 16, 1999
By Paul Harvey
© 2009 WorldNetDaily.com

I would gain control of the most powerful nation in the world;

I would delude their minds into thinking that they had come from man's effort, instead of God's blessings;
I would promote an attitude of loving things and using people, instead of the other way around;

I would dupe entire states into relying on gambling for their state revenue;

I would convince people that character is not an issue when it comes to leadership;

I would make it legal to take the life of unborn babies;

I would make it socially acceptable to take one's own life, and invent machines to make it convenient;

I would cheapen human life as much as possible so that the life of animals are valued more than human
beings;

I would take God out of the schools, where even the mention of His name was grounds for a lawsuit;

I would come up with drugs that sedate the mind and target the young, and I would get sports heroes to
advertise them;

I would get control of the media, so that every night I could pollute the mind of every family member for
my agenda;

I would attack the family, the backbone of any nation.

I would make divorce acceptable and easy, even fashionable. If the family crumbles, so does the nation;

I would compel people to express their most depraved fantasies on canvas and movie screens, and I
would call it art;

I would convince the world that people are born homosexuals, and that their lifestyles should be accepted
and marveled;

I would convince the people that right and wrong are determined by a few who call themselves authorities
and refer to their agenda as politically correct;

I would persuade people that the church is irrelevant and out of date, and the Bible is for the naive;

I would dull the minds of Christians, and make them believe that prayer is not important, and that
faithfulness and obedience are optional;

I guess I would leave things pretty much the way they are.

Paul Harvey is the dean of U.S. radio commentators.

What Is the Recession For?


Some of God's Purposes
By John Piper February 1, 2009

2 Corinthians 1:1-11

Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God, and Timothy our brother, To the church of God that is
at Corinth, with all the saints who are in the whole of Achaia: 2 Grace to you and peace from God our
Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. 3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of
mercies and God of all comfort, 4 who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort
those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God. 5 For as
we share abundantly in Christ’s sufferings, so through Christ we share abundantly in comfort too. 6 If we
are afflicted, it is for your comfort and salvation; and if we are comforted, it is for your comfort, which
you experience when you patiently endure the same sufferings that we suffer. 7 Our hope for you is
unshaken, for we know that as you share in our sufferings, you will also share in our comfort. 8 For we do
not want you to be ignorant, brothers, of the affliction we experienced in Asia. For we were so utterly
burdened beyond our strength that we despaired of life itself. 9 Indeed, we felt that we had received the
sentence of death. But that was to make us rely not on ourselves but on God who raises the dead. 10 He
delivered us from such a deadly peril, and he will deliver us. On him we have set our hope that he will
deliver us again. 11 You also must help us by prayer, so that many will give thanks on our behalf for the
blessing granted us through the prayers of many.

This is a message about God’s purposes in the recession. By recession I don’t have any sophisticated
definition in mind. I just mean various financial setbacks like business slowdown, decreasing profits,
massive layoffs and joblessness, the bursting of the housing bubble, thousands of foreclosures, personal
and business bankruptcies, bank failures, investment company collapses, the loss of retirement funds, and
the social ills and unrest that go with the downturn.

God is sovereign over these things, he foresees them all, he causes or permits them all, and when he
causes or permits something, he does so with purpose and design.
• The lot is cast into the lap, but its every decision is from the Lord. (Proverbs 16:33)
• Many are the plans in the mind of a man, but it is the purpose of the Lord that will stand.
(Proverbs 19:21)
• The Lord brings the counsel of the nations to nothing; he frustrates the plans of the peoples.”
(Psalms 33:10)
• [The Lord] declares the end from the beginning . . . saying, “My counsel shall stand, and I will
accomplish all my purpose.” (Isaiah 46:10)

So none of the recessionary events has surprised the Lord. His purposes and designs are being fulfilled
according to plan. And what I want to do is draw your attention to some of those purposes.

Why This Message?

Three things have inclined me to preach a message on God’s purposes in the recession at on this
particular weekend.

1. Writing Leave Beginning

One is that I will be away for the next eight Sundays on a writing leave. That fact inclined me not to start
the third chapter of John’s Gospel (where we are in our series), only to pick it up in eight weeks, but to
start chapter three when I return. It also inclined me to want to say something to you about being faithful
to the church in my absence. The recession has a great deal to do with what it means to be the church--
and to be faithful to each other in the church. More on that in a moment.

2. Economic Turmoil

The second thing that inclines me to preach on this just now is that few things have had a more pervasive
effect on our lives nationally and globally in recent years than the financial turmoil around the world. We
need to hear at least some of God’s perspective on this.

And that is all we ever have-- some of his perspective. He is God and we are not. He has told of some of
what he is doing in this recession. But most of what he is doing-- billions and billions of God-designed
effects-- he does not tell us. But what he does tell us is crucial for living amid the providence of what he
does not tell us.
3. “Finishing the Million”

Third, I want to put the present financial sprint to finish the North Campus-- the sprint we are calling
Finish the Million by March-- in a larger biblical and contemporary context, to guard us from a kind of
ecclesiastical myopia.

So those are the reasons for this message.

(Some of) God’s Purposes in This Recession

Now what are some of God’s purposes in this recession? I will mention five:
• He intends for this recession to expose hidden sin and so bring us to repentance and cleansing.
• He intends to wake us up to the constant and desperate condition of the developing world where
there is always and only recession of the worst kind.
• He intends to relocate the roots of our joy in his grace rather than in our goods, in his mercy
rather than our money, in his worth rather than our wealth.
• He intends to advance his saving mission in the world-- the spread of the gospel and the growth
of his church-- precisely at a time when human resources are least able to support it. This is how he
guards his glory.
• He intends for the church to care for its hurting members and to grow in the gift of love.

1. To Expose Sin and Bring Repentance

The book of Job in the Old Testament begins, “There was a man in the land of Uz whose name was Job,
and that man was blameless and upright, one who feared God and turned away from evil” (Job 1:1). But
in the last chapter of the book, Job says, “I despise myself, and repent in dust and ashes” (Job 42:6). He
was “blameless,” but later he repented. What does that mean?

It means that the most godly people in the world are like a clear glass of water with a sediment of sin
hidden at the bottom of the glass. And when the glass is struck-- with Job’s suffering, or with our
recession-- the sediment of sin is stirred up and exposed, and the water becomes cloudy. That’s one of the
things that recessions are for.

And it works both individually and socially.

Individually Paul said in 2 Corinthians 1:8-9, “We were so utterly burdened beyond our strength that we
despaired of life itself. Indeed, we felt that we had received the sentence of death. But that was to make us
rely not on ourselves but on God who raises the dead.”

God brought his own faithful servant Paul to the brink of death so that he might learn more deeply to rely
not on himself but on God. If that happened to Paul, we may be sure that God is doing that for us as well
in this recession. That we may rely on him and not ourselves.

At the bottom of every Christian heart-- no matter how advanced in faith and godliness-- there is the
sediment of self-reliance. Then God shakes our lives, sometimes to the foundations, to show us our self-
reliance and clean it out with a new, deeper reliance on him.

Socially, the recession reveals a host of sins that hurt people. The recent Ponzi schemes are one of the
clearest examples. Promise people huge returns on their investment when there is nothing to invest in,
then pay those returns with some of the next investments in nothing. And keep doing it for years, while
you skim millions for yourself. Until a recession makes people want their investments back-- and they
don’t exist. Recessions have a wonderful power to expose that kind of deceit. What will it expose about
you?
And, of course, the recession is especially good at exposing the sin of wasting other people’s money (or
our own), and the sin of selfishness and greed in the mortgage business, and the sin of fear when
everything starts coming down, and the sin of grumbling and impatience. And on and on. What a gift the
recession is in the exposure of sin. May the Lord give us all the grace to repent and receive the
forgiveness that God offers in Jesus Christ.

2. To Awaken Us to World Poverty

It’s astonishing how blind prosperity makes us to the miseries of the world. God has some remedies for
that kind of indifference. For example, it says in Hebrews 13:3, “Remember those who are in prison, as
though in prison with them, and those who are mistreated, since you also are in the body.”

How does that work? He says that there are people that we should care about who are imprison and
mistreated. We tend to forget them. So he says, “Remember!” And he says: “As though with them” and
“since you have a body.” So how does it work? It works like this: You have a body and sometimes it
hurts. When it hurts, remember that there are people right now who are being mistreated-- who are
hurting much more than you. Imagine yourself in their shoes, and treat them the way you would want to
be treated.

Recession hurts us. It imprisons us. What is God’s aim? That we would wake up. Does this recession
bother us? If it bothers us, we should be bothered by the fact that millions always live in recession. Only
live in recession.

One billion people do not have safe water to drink. Sixteen thousand children die every day from hunger
related illnesses. Almost eighteen million children are orphaned in sub-Saharan Africa.

Our family prays through the Global Prayer Digest each morning. For January 29, 2009, we prayed for
the Afar people of Ethiopia:

It’s 3:00 a.m., and the Afar father is still awake. The desert night is cold. He snuggles up to his wife and
newborn baby to keep them warm. Their stomachs rumble with hunger. Should he slaughter his scrawny
goat to feed his wife, hoping she will produce enough milk for their baby? Or should he beseech the clan
elders to move again, in search of weeds for the goat, or maybe even some fresh water?

They are fortunate; both his wife and their baby survived the birth. The Afar people have the highest
maternal fatality rate in the world. Women give birth without benefit of sterile conditions, or even clean
water. Of the babies born alive one-third die before age five. Afar people roam throughout one of the
most desolate places on earth: the Ethiopian desert.

Drought and malnutrition make them vulnerable to diseases such as tuberculosis, malaria, conjunctivitis,
and other water-borne illnesses. Of 13 million Afar people, three million are infected with HIV/AIDS.

It is good to know these things. And to pray about these things. And to cultivate a radical culture at
Bethlehem in which hundreds of people dream of ways that their lives can count creatively and long-term
for the relief of suffering. Recession has a way of making us wake up to the endless recession of millions.
It has a way of changing our priorities and releasing effort and money for others.

Part of our overall vision at Bethlehem called Treasuring Christ Together (TCT) is the Global Diaconate.
The giving to TCT is over and above the $9.2 million budget for church and missions this year. Ten
percent of everything you give to the vision of TCT goes to our efforts to help the poorest of the poor.
Since 2005 when TCT started, you have given over $700,000 to this fund, and $593,000 of it has been
disbursed. God’s purpose for this recession is to say: That’s good work; and now more than ever, don’t let
up.

3. To Relocate the Roots of Our Joy in His Grace, Rather Than in Our Goods
God sends recessions to his people to pull up the roots of our joy from the pleasures of the world and sink
those roots into the pleasures of the glory of his grace. Here’s he clearest recessionary text about this in
the Bible-- 2 Corinthians 8:1-2. It describes the roots of the joy of the Macedonian believers in their
“recession.”

We want you to know, brothers, about the grace of God that has been given among the churches of
Macedonia, for in a severe test of affliction, their abundance of joy and their extreme poverty have
overflowed in a wealth of generosity on their part.

This is my dream for Bethlehem. Verse 2 ends with a “wealth of generosity.” We want to be a generous
people. Generous in every way. Where does it come from? From prosperity? No. Extreme poverty. “Their
extreme poverty overflowed in a wealth of liberality.” This is why I call this a recessionary text. Here are
people overflowing in generosity when the economic times are very bad.

Where then did the generosity come from if not from prosperity? From a supportive and sympathetic
culture surrounding them? No. Verse 2 says they were in a “severe test of affliction.” That means they
were being harassed. You can see what that looks like in Acts 17:5-9.

Where then did this wealth of generosity come form? Paul says it came from joy, abundance of joy. Verse
2: “Their abundance of joy and their extreme poverty have overflowed in a wealth of generosity.”

Their joy was not rooted in prosperity or popularity. But it was very great. Paul calls it “abundance of
joy” in the middle of verse 2. Where did that joy come from?

It came from the grace of God. Verse 1: “We want you to know, brothers, about the grace of God that has
been given among the churches of Macedonia.” What makes people grumble and be stingy is a sense of
entitlement. But if we have tasted the measure of our sin and the magnitude of God’s grace, we will have
abundance of joy in recessionary hardships. God’s grace overflowing in Jesus for sinners like us is the
most glorious thing in the universe.

This is where our joy is rooted. This is why the Fighter Verse for this past week says that Christians can
be thankful in all circumstances (1 Thessalonians 5:18). Our joy is not rooted in circumstances. God has
relocated our joy in his grace, not our goods-- in his mercy, not our money, in his worth, not our wealth.

If the recession can assist that relocation, it will have done the most important thing possible. Because
God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in him.

4. To Guard His Glory by Advancing His Saving Mission in the World Precisely When Human
Resources Are Low

We see this all over the Bible. God does his great advancing work again and again when it looks least
possible for us.
• He promises the heir when Abraham and Sarah are too old to have children.
• He splits the Red Sea when Israel is hopelessly trapped by Pharaoh’s army.
• He gives manna when there is no food in the wilderness.
• He stops the Jordan River when it’s time to take the land.
• When a city stands in the way, he makes the walls fall down.
• When the Midianites were as many as the sand of the sea, God whittled Gideon’s army down to
300 so God would get the glory for the victory.
• When Goliath defies the armies of the Lord, God sends a boy with a sling and five stones.
• When the Son of God is to come into the world, God calls a virgin to conceive.
• And when the mighty devil himself is to be defeated, a Lamb goes to the slaughter.
• And here in 2 Corinthians 8:1-2, when God wants to raise money for the poor in Jerusalem, he
uses afflicted, poverty-stricken Macedonians and fills them with joy because of his grace.
So that’s the context for Finish the Million by March. In only four weeks, in the hardest financial times in
decades, on top of a 9.2 million-dollar church budget, with thousands of givers who never attend the
North Campus, all of Bethlehem (on every campus) will give $235,000 to meet the million-dollar goal to
pull the trigger on finishing the North Campus.

But vastly more important than that is where your treasure is-- where your heart is. Are you like the
Macedonians whose joy-- in times of “recession”-- was invincible because it was rooted in the grace of
God? May God open our eyes to glory of his grace. When he does, the last purpose for the recession that I
will mention will come true.

5. To Bring His Church to Care for Her Hurting Members and Grow in Love

Buildings exist for people, not the other way around. May no effort to build ever keep us from caring for
Christ’s followers. Acts 4:34 describes the early church: “There was not a needy person among them.”
This is what the church does. Every member will have his needs met. God will test us to see if we are a
church or a club.

May the Lord grant us “Macedonian grace” to “finish the million” and care for each other.

© Desiring God

Permissions: You are permitted and encouraged to reproduce and distribute this material in any format
provided that you do not alter the wording in any way and do not charge a fee beyond the cost of
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above must be approved by Desiring God.

Please include the following statement on any distributed copy: By John Piper. © Desiring God. Website:
desiringGod.org

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