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New Addition (to my sidebar)

I added my shared items from Google Reader to my sidebar. I thoroughly enjoy seeing what others are reading, so I why shouldn’t I share mine too?

(And yes, I feel like such a copycat.)

If you, my reader, use google reader and have a shared items feed, I’d love to see it. :) Just comment me or email me with it.

(It just gets complicated when X shares an item they read from Y’s shared item feed. And thus Z, who is subscribed to both X and Y’s shared feeds and the original source, opens up his gReader one morning to find 3 RSS items of the same original post.)

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Rest

“Our hearts are restless until they find their rest in Thee.” -Saint Augustine

Upon hearing, I stand rebuked.

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Psalm 18

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Teeth and Toothpaste

I thought ya’ll would need to know this:

The rubberbands on my braces match my blog. Yup. That’s right–see that darker teal border around my header up there? Mhmm. That’s what my braces look like.

So, I got to thinking. If I thought that color made my blog look like toothpaste, does that mean my teeth look like toothpaste? And does that mean I don’t need to use toothpaste anymore? (eww..gross, I know.)

I don’t have to worry about people removing me from their blogroll: I’m not there to remove. :D

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http://firstimportance.org/

http://firstimportance.org/

I love this blog. I found it a few months ago, and since I added it to my feedreader, it’s definitely one of the highlights of opening up my google reader in the morning. I admit, the JE (Jonathan Edwards) week was a little heavy for early morning, but being reminded of the Gospel is so encouraging!

I am reminded that the Gospel isn’t just an event that affected me once and no longer has an impact on my life. Everyday, all the day, I need the Gospel. And I never outgrow that need. It affects and relates to so much of life…

Anyway, it’s added to my blogroll now. And I am tired, very tired, and am going to bed. I think. Don’t ask my why I blogged twice in a night, when normally it’s twice in a month.

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Alistair Begg and Nice girls and Ugly guys

Enjoyed these broadcasts this weekend as I insanely worked on a project. Quite refreshing and convicting on the subject of an important matter. I listened to all three. :-) Alistair Begg is so fun to listen to!

On another (less serious) note, you mind also enjoy a bit of Ellen and Katie:

Katie: I feel sorry for all the poor guys who have to put up with flocks of girls, just because they look halfway decent.

Ellen: That’s why all the nice girls marry ugly guys.

*grins* I found that amusing. I’m not sure about Ellen’s logic or conclusion though. :D

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Christ and the Gospel

“It is well to be acquainted with all the doctrines and principles of Christianity. It is better to be acquainted with Christ Himself. It is well to be familiar with faith and grace and justification and sanctification. They are all matters “pertaining to the King.” But it is far better to be familiar with Jesus Himself, to see the King’s own face, and to behold His beauty. This is one secret of eminent holiness. He that would be conformed to Christ’s image, and become a Christ–like man, must be constantly studying Christ Himself.Now the Gospels were written to make us acquainted with Christ. The Holy Spirit has told us the story of His life and death, His sayings and His doings, four times over. Four different inspired hands have drawn the picture of the Savior His ways, His manners, His feelings, His wisdom, His grace, His patience, His love, His power are graciously unfolded to us by four different witnesses. Ought not the sheep to be familiar with the Shepherd? Ought not the patient to be familiar with the Physician? Ought not the bride to be familiar with the Bridegroom? Ought not the sinner to be familiar with the Savior? Beyond doubt it ought to be so. The Gospels were written to make men familiar with Christ, and therefore I wish men to study the Gospels.

As ever you would grow in grace, and have joy and peace in believing, beware of falling into this error. Cease to regard the Gospel as a mere collection of dry doctrines. Look at it rather as the revelation of a mighty living Being in whose sight you are daily to live. Cease to regard it as a mere set of abstract propositions and abstruse principles and rules. Look at it as the introduction to a glorious personal Friend. This is the kind of Gospel that the apostles preached. They did not go about the world telling men of love and mercy and pardon in the abstract. The leading subject of all their sermons was the loving heart of an actual living Christ. This is the kind of Gospel which is most calculated to promote sanctification and fitness for glory. Nothing, surely, is so likely to prepare us for that heaven where Christ’s personal presence will be all, and that glory where we shall meet Christ face to face, as to realize communion with Christ, as an actual living Person here on earth. There is all the difference in the world between an idea and a person.”

- JC Ryle, Holiness (Webster, NY: Evangelical Press, 2004), 191.

HT: Of First Importance

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Won’t Lift a Finger

“I’m worried that we’re so afraid of legalism in the church today that we won’t lift a finger to pursue holiness in the fear of God.”

- random quote from a random blogger (that I don’t know) on a random blog (Okay, not random, Justin Taylor’s)

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Lilias Trotter on Focus

I met a new friend tonight: Lilias Trotter. She spoke words I didn’t really want to hear, but words to think on, none the less.

It is easy to find out whether our lives are focused, and if so, where the focus lies. Where do our thoughts settle when consciousness comes back in the morning? Where do they swing back when the pressure is off during the day? Does this test not give the clue? Then dare to have it out with God–and after all, that is the shortest way. Dare to lay bare your whole life and being before Him, and ask Him to show you whether or not all is focused on Christ and His glory. Dare to face the fact that unfocused, good and useful as it may seem, it will prove to have failed of its purpose. -Lilias Trotter

Lilias Trotter is one of those friends…well, the friends Alex Harris called, “dead friends.” She was born in 1853, excelled in painting and art, and spent much of her life in Algeria spreading the Gospel. Thank you, Mrs. Piper, for introducing her to me. I’ll be posting more about Lilias and more from the article that the above excerpt came from, time permitting.

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