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A Prayer by Dr.Frank Laubach
Lord. end this wishy-washy, lukewarm, mumbling religion and set us on fire.
Put the divine fire in us before the demonic fires destroy us and our world.
Take away our small thoughts and our small loves.
Make us big as the world in vision.
Take away our weaknesses.
Fill us with the strength of Jesus Christ.
Help the sleeping might of the nation in which I live be to awakened into glorious action by the Holy Spirit.
We are sick of our disgusting indifference and we know that You are sick of us.
Do not spew us out of Your mouth, but set us on fire.
God of courage, sweep aside our pitiful timidity.
Make us divinely unafraid.
Help Christendom to rise, not in fine sounding words but in deeds,in fire and in truth;
change our defeat, in this battle for freedom and for Christ, into glorious victory.
Give us a Pentecost at any cost.
Send a Pentecost right now and begin it in me.
Keep Your promise, Lord Jesus Christ, and baptise us with the Holy Spirit and with fire.
The altar is ready, the offering is laid. Now, Lord, send the firer




"We frail humans are at one time capable of the greatest good and, at the same time, capable of the greatest evil.
Change will only come about when each of us takes up the daily struggle ourselves to be more forgiving,
compassionate, loving, and above all joyful in the knowledge that, by some miracle of grace,
we can change as those around us can change too: Maíread Maguire
LOVE

"I know men and I tell you that Jesus Christ is no mere man. Between him and every other person
in the world there is no possible term of comparison.
Alexander, Caesar, Charlemagne and I founded empires. But on what did we rest the creations of our genius?
Upon force.
Jesus Christ founded His empire upon love; and at this hour millions of people would die for Him".
Napoleon Bonaparte, French emperor 1769-1821



Suffering, Mercy, and Heavenly Regret
By John Piper April 30, 2003


Suffering, Mercy, and Heavenly Regret
When I think of the atrocities in the world, like the genocides of the 20th century, it makes me want to live my short life on earth with as few regrets as possible. Germans killing Jews during World War II (6 million); Turks killing Armenians, 1914-1915 (1.5 million); the Khmer Rouge killing Cambodians, 1975-1979 (2 million); Saddam Hussein's troops killing Iraqi Kurds, 1987-1988 (100,000); Serbs killing Bosnian Muslims, 1992-1995 (200,000); Hutus killing Tutsis, 1994 (800,000); Americans killing unborn children, 1973-present (40 million). Not to mention the 60 million people killed by the Communist regime mainly under Stalin.
There were others.
Add to this the suffering owing to natural disasters like the tropical storm in November, 1970 that killed about 400,000 people in Bangladesh, or the earthquake of Gujarat, India in January, 2001 that killed 15,000, or the AIDS epidemic in Africa that has taken the lives of 2.5 million people. Then add the sadness and pain and eventual death of your own family. When I think on these things, it makes me tremble at the prospect of living a trivial, self-serving, comfortable, middle-class, ordinary, untroubled American life. I can't keep eternity out of my mind. Life is short and eternity is long. Very long. It is a long time to regret a wasted life.
Which raises the question: Is there regret in heaven? Can regret be part of the ever-increasing, unspeakable joy of the age to come, purchased by Jesus Christ (Romans 8:32)? My answer is yes. I am aware of promises like Revelation 21:4, "He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning nor crying nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away." But I don't think this rules out "tears of joy," and it may not rule out "regretful joy".
Why do I think this? I do not see how we will be able to worship Christ and sing the song of the Lamb without clear memory of the glorious, saving work of Jesus Christ and all that it involved. According to Revelation 5:9, the saints will sing "a new song, saying, 'Worthy are you to take the scroll and to open its seals, for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for God from every tribe and language and people and nation.'" Ransomed from what? Will we have forgotten? This song and this memory will make no sense without the memory of sin. And the memory of sin will be hypocritical without the confession that it was our sin that Jesus died for.
It is inconceivable to me that we will remember our sin for what it really was, and the suffering of Christ for what it really was, and not feel "regretful joy." The intensity of our joy in grace will be fed by the remembrance of our unworthiness. He who is forgiven much, loves much (Luke 7:47). But this does not mean we should sin so that grace may abound (Romans 6:1). The holiest will be the happiest. But it does mean that regret will not ruin heaven. There will be kinds of joys, and complexities of happiness, and combinations of emotions in heaven of which we have never dreamed.
But all this leaves me trembling that I not throw away the one short life that I will look back on for all eternity. Just think of it. You have one life. One very short life. Then an eternity to remember. Does not the suffering in this world seem inexplicable to you? Is not this great global (and intensely personal) suffering a call to magnify the mercy of Christ by how we respond? Is not suffering a seamless fabric stretching into eternity for unbelievers? And therefore, are not Christians the only people who can respond with relief to the totality of misery? > Shall we not then live our lives - and prepare for heaven - by strategizing in all our vocations and with all our talents and all our money to relieve suffering (now and forever) for the glory of Jesus?
©

By John Piper. © Email: mail@desiringGod.org. Toll Free: 1.888.346.4700.