We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

Behold the beauty of God’s design for man, woman, and marriage. Two dignified people, both molded in the image of their Maker. Two diverse people uniquely designed to complement each other. A male and a female fashioned by God to form one flesh, a physical bond between two bodies where the deepest point of union is found at the greatest point of difference. A matrimony marked by unity and diversity, equality with variety, and personal sanctification through shared consummation.
David Platt

[We] must understand that Christianity is not served by mindlessness, but by the knowledge of God through the Word of God. Such knowledge engages our minds, stirs our hearts, and transforms our lives. This knowledge is personal. How is it fostered? By listening to what He says (the priority of preaching), by engaging Him in conversation (the emphasis on prayer), by spending time in His company (the need for a devotional life), and by being with others who know Him too (the need for gathered worship). This knowledge is progressive and dynamic, not static. At the end of our journey, we should still be exclaiming with Paul: “I want to know Christ” (1 Corinthians 2:2).
Alistair Begg

Miracles

Miracles

MIRACLES

CATHOLIC JOURNALS From LEAVES, July/August 1979. “WHEN FAITH DEFEATS DEATH. Man must die – not even Christ, the Perfect Man, was spared that.

“Christ’s followers, the saints, are singular proof that death is not a transition: the miracles they worked on earth are merely multiplied from heaven. And – to the perplexity of skeptics and science itself – the bodies they left behind often remain incorrupt for centuries.

“Take, for example, St. Guthlac, an Anglo-Saxon monk who died in 714. A miracle heralded his birth, and a strange light attended his death. The records show that when his coffin was opened – before a vast assemblage of ecclesiastics – his body was completely intact, even the joints of his limbs pliant and flexible.

“St. Catherine Laboure died on December 31, 1876. When her tomb was opened on March 23, 1933, observers found the coffin of wood has disintegrated but the body of the saint was perfectly intact.

“Take St. Rita. The intact body of `the Saint of Impossible and Desperate Cases’ is still on display in Cascia, Italy. St. Rita died in 1457. As Joan Carroll Cruz tells us in a well-documented book, THE INCORRUPTIBLES, `Her body has shifted positions several times, plus the eyes have opened and closed unaided.’

“A Lebanese monk, St. Charbel Maklouf, died in 1898, and his incorrupt body continues to ooze sweat and sometimes blood; at his tomb miracles are unending.”