VictoryinJesus
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- Jan 26, 2017
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I would love to seek the things of God, and not the things of men. I still crave acceptance from people.The seeking is what we are always to do first. When do we stop seeking these things? Perhaps when we are really just like Him...
I still wonder if seeing through the glass darkly is being yet blind towards Christ in another. Where a veil remains between two fighting who can’t see that which is unseen in each another. But when the veil is removed —taken out of the way—two brothers see face to face in Christ. For example when Saul couldn’t see Christ in Stephen but when the veil was removed, Stephen was one of Paul’s brothers whom he consented to his death. That had to be eyeopening, “I killed a brother.”How is our vision of Him? Have we moved beyond "through a glass darkly" toward "face to face?
Love the above. And also Philippians 4:12 I know both how to be abased, and I know how to abound: every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need.At each moment in our walk do we not want to be content as Paul was inspired to write here?
Php 4:11 Not that I speak in respect of want: for I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content.
To be both abased and abounding Reminds me of:John 3:30 He must increase(abound), but I must decrease(be abased).
I get everyone sees it differently but that is the only way I know to be both abased and abounding.
I want brotherly kindness.Are we asking for only what God knows that we need? Do we know now what we need or are we still including carnal wants in our requests or what we are seeking?
I don’t want to fake it.
It easy to lack brotherly kindness. I can fake it. You can’t fake the kind of brotherly kindness displayed in the word where one who possesses all things, yet becomes poor that another be made rich. Or where one becomes weak, for another to made strong.Are we still blind in part or do we see as clearly as God sees? What are we lacking? What are we asking for? What are we seeking?
No kidding. Self…seeking. I can relate. Selfishness is in me. I don’t doubt that.One difference between Jesus and other men was that Jesus was not selfish. Other men, all of us, have been and
perhaps continue to be selfish.