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December 9 – Comforter

Posted by Cor Unum Abbey on December 9, 2018
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

 

Van_Gogh_-_Trauernder_alter_Mann

 

 

 

Comfort, comfort my people, says your God. 

Speak tenderly to Jerusalem, and cry to her that her warfare is ended, that her iniquity is pardoned, that she has received from the LORD’s hand double for all her sins.

He will feed his flock like a shepherd, he will gather the lambs in his arms, he will carry them in his bosom, and gently lead those that are with young. (Isaiah 40:1, 2 and 11)

The Scripture reveals that there is a war where there is life, flesh and against Spirit, Spirit against flesh, the terms of peace cannot be implemented.  The flesh sets itself against the Spirit, and the Spirit can never submit to the selfish and unbelieving nature of the flesh.  The Spirit knows that God is Sovereign and good and for us!

Paul said it for us all, “Oh wretched man that I am!  Who will set me free the body of this death??”  (Romans 7:24). Even when our misery comes through the aegis of others, it is our unbelief and enmity with God that will not consent to be loved by Him when others fail us.

The Comforter has accomplished what counsel and intelligence and strength could not: Jesus was made to be sin for us, that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him Who is without sin.  The most mysterious and bewildering exchange in all of human history is simple and essential in Christ: when we believe the truth concerning our fallen nature, our tendency toward sin and unbelief and self-exaltation, we may have the remedy, which is Christ Himself.  Having Him, there is no more unbelief, there is nothing stiff-necked in taking the Father at His Word and taking His Son to be our life, with a new heart by His Spirit, freely given.

This is not, “a cookie when we get home” comfort.  It isn’t, “You’ll feel better in the morning.”  This is life from death, light from darkness, the Presence of God rather than the ravages of Abaddon.  This is Comfort that is life, to us; once we were dead, and now we are alive to God in Christ.  Every Word He speaks, even His rebukes, comfort our souls, for He is Near and will not depart, and in Him is life and Love that never fails or comes to an end.

 

 

Father God, delightful, loving, generous God, how determined you are that we should know the depths of Your love, and how determined we are to find our comfort and our joy in you, all other joys in abundance!  Others may disappoint us, and our flesh will always shut You out, but You have made our warfare not to be with flesh and blood, not even our own!  Now we fight a good fight!  Difficulties arise, but they never revoke anything that You Are.  Oh, comfort us today!  In keeping with Your nature, Comfort us beyond all despair and loss and fear and failure, our own and others’, comfort us in Your bosom today and every day, Shepherd of Israel!

 

 

Van Gogh – Trauender Alter Mann, 1890

Wiki Commons, by permission

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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December 8 – Light of the World

Posted by Cor Unum Abbey on December 8, 2018
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

738475main_8601843216_1dc787a335_o-full_full.jpg

 

Again Jesus spoke to them, saying, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.”  (John 8:12, ESV)

 

The sounding joy of Advent is light! … the Light that is coming into the world. It is, for seasoned Advent celebrants, an amazing juxtaposition of glory in Him Who Was and Is and Is to Come.

 

 

I love light. I love it! Sunrises that paint the world from first light, fireworks that cause grown-ups to ooh and ahh, thousands of “fairy lights” illuminating the shop windows and the town square and the village Christmas trees in European cities, a single candle in a window, and glow sticks and fluorescent necklaces on children at amusement parks.

 

 

Rainbows, prisms, a well-lit portrait in oils, and a diamond when it catches the light and sends it back in radiance into the world … I love light. My favorite part of darkness is the way it showcases light.

 

 

The very word … Bethlehem . . . is an illustration to us, and the scene in the stable that night has been illumined by artists for thousands of years. “He is come! He is come! Emmanuel, God with us! The Light of God is come to us!” The cave is always dark, but the Child in the manger … always bright.

 

Oh, we do lament the darkness in the world around us!  It’s so intense these days. In truth, darkness has always been dark, but our Father tells us to believe in the One He sent. When we do, there is no light, no laser light, not the Aurora Borealis, there is no star or sun that can hold a candle to the Light that comes to us. The Living Word is our lamp, and He radiates from our souls until we shine like torches lighting a boulevard to Bethlehem for those around us. We travel on, no matter the darkness, like millions of luminaries marking the road to the New Jerusalem.

 

 

He shines, dear ones, and He shines in us!  Shine this Advent season. His Name is Light, but He is seen, He is revealed, He illumines the world, when we are merry and bright … when all within is calm and bright with peace and hope and secure in love … then darkness must flee. The Light of the World shines, shines in us, and the piercing glow of humility, compassion, faith in God, and unfeigned love are as a thousand suns in us.

 

Lord God, we shine in You, we shine for You,  …  because You shine through us.  Oh, grant us grace and faith to shine because it is dark and You are Light, not because we sparkle.  Let us light the darkness which we would otherwise fear.  We trust that in Your Son, we are marking a path from death to life, and we thank You for the privilege of maintaining hope and showing Your love in the world around us.

 

 

Manhattan as seen from space

photo courtesy of

NASA – public domain, government photo

 

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December 7 – Faithful and True

Posted by Cor Unum Abbey on December 7, 2018
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

561px-andrea_del_sarto_-_annunciation_detail_-_wga0413

I will make an everlasting covenant with them that I will not turn away from them, to do them good; and I will put the fear of Me in their hearts so that they will not turn away from Me.  I will rejoice over them to do them good and will faithfully plant them in this land with all My heart and with all My soul.

(Jeremiah 32:40, 41)

  

Honestly, and from my experience, I don’t think a lot of us really believe all of this.  Why an epistle on our children during Advent?  Because we will or will not celebrate Christmas in keeping with how certain we are that the Lord can and will keep them!

 

It’s still early in our Advent Adventure for 2018 … supposing we irradiate our hopes regarding our children and go on to even more deep and true and glorious things concerning the Lord and His faithfulness? Let us suppose that what God has given, He is able to sustain.

 

Look at Jesus’ words as He prepared to enter into His suffering and death.

 

I am no longer in the world; and yet they themselves are in the world, and I come to You. Holy Father, keep them in Your name, the name which You have given Me, that they may be one even as We are. While I was with them, I was keeping them in Your name which You have given Me; and I guarded them and not one of them perished but the son of perdition, so that the Scripture would be fulfilled.   (John 17:11, 12 NASB)

 

Truly, “all our children shall be taught of the Lord, and great will be their peace,” (Isaiah 54:13.)  Should they stumble (as did King David,) should they doubt (as did Thomas,) should they renounce truth (as did Peter,) they have someone trusting the Father on their behalf more thanthey are distrustful, confused, wounded, or frightened concerning Him. They have us, and we have the Spirit of the Lord in the glory of Christ Jesus, Savior and King.

 

Merry Christmas, everyone! Blessed are they that have believed all that the Lord has spoken to them.

 

detail of the Anunciation

Andres Sarto

1528, public domain

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December 6 – God of Our Fathers

Posted by Cor Unum Abbey on December 6, 2018
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

HumanNewborn 

They shall be My people, and I will be their God; and I will give them one heart and one way, that they may fear Me always, for their own good and for the good of their children after them. (Jeremiah 32:38 and 39)

 

         For our good, and THE GOOD OF OUR CHILDREN AFTER US! Is it possible that too many of us have either prided ourselves on our parenting (as long as it seemed to be working!) or threw ourselves into deepest despair when it seemed to have failed?  The Christmas season is an awful time to be overwrought as a parent, to be unbelieving and fearful.

 

The God of our Fathers was God of our fathers, and will be to our children, always!  Let’s neither take too much nor too little upon ourselves. When God makes promises regarding our children, let’s seize upon them, hold them fast, never let them go, and battle accordingly! We know we cannot “save” our children … oh, the deep despair we can feel when they are troubled or unbelieving!! … but do we know that what has been given to us by the Lord is guarded by Him with more jealousy, with far greater strength, than by us?

  

We kept our children while they were with us, as Jesus kept His disciples (John 17:12.). We kept them in the Name of the Lord and guarded them. We gave them the Word of the Lord. And if we didn’t know to do that when they were with us, if we came late to faith, today is the day of salvation and we give them to God now, for they really are ours to give in a parental reality. They are our children. Possessive pronoun.

 

There’s more . . . tomorrow …

Your Name is Lord, Father God, and Jesus is Your saving, keeping Son.  What do we have more precious to give than our children, and what would we ask You to guard above their hearts and souls?  Nothing matters more, and yet You give all good things to us to enjoy.  We ask for the peace and the assurance we crave regarding our children, according to Your Word, and we will have it, for that grace is with You, Loving FATHER.  Amen.

 

Ernest F., by permission, Wikipedia

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December 5 – “Savior”

Posted by Cor Unum Abbey on December 5, 2018
Posted in: Uncategorized. 1 Comment

But the Scripture has shut up everyone under sin, so that the promise by faith in Jesus Christ might be given to those who believe. Galatians 3:22

Bethlehem_1898 

 

So much can be known of the Lord when we start from the correct vantage point: God is good, and He does good. (Psalm 119:68). We call to mind that David, shepherd king of Israel, knew this to be true long before His descendent, Jesus of Nazareth, was born. Israel, and David, personally, had been privileged to travel with God, with His Presence, to see His miracles, to experience His victories in war and even His discipline when necessary. Other nations might deny Him; Israel could not, not for long. When they grew idolatrous, He came and got them and turned them again.

 

Jehovah had determined to have a people for Himself. Israel would benefit, sometimes despite herself, and one of the greatest blessings of all was that the Hebrew people did not have to waste generations and strength trying to be good enough to please God. They didn’t have to pretend they were without sin. It was for them to stay very close to the truth of their iniquity and the reality of atonement as provided in the system of sacrifice and the faithfulness of God’s covenant. They knew, thousands of years before Christ, that the “life is in the blood.”

 

God dealt severely with His people Israel at times, and purity of body and soul were never left to chance or interpretation. Their national faith knew Him to be the good God, the only wise God, the God of their salvation.  This alone was enough to set them apart … far and away apart from their neighbors.

 

The man and his wife who traveled to Bethlehem to register for the census decreed by Caesar Augustus were products of this nation, this chosen people, of stubborn and stiff-necked ancestors and equally stubborn men and women of no compromise when it came to righteousness.

 

During this Advent season, let us determine that we will celebrate as those alive from the dead, as those who know themselves to have been enemies of God, now redeemed from our own destructions and especially our own unbelief. Would you, would I, have said, “Be it unto me according to Your word” as Mary did?  I don’t want to think otherwise … ! While we were not raised among a people chosen as the Jews were chosen, we are the Lord’s own, called to grace and chosen to believe. We haven’t seen, but we believe (John20:29,) and now we rejoice!  

 

To each one who believes what he hears, comes the greatest blessing of all, the power to become a son of God (John 1:12.) We will not come up short in the fullness of the restoration of all things. As shut up as ever we were in sin, how much more are we fortified, walled in, protected, covered, shielded and SAVED by the faith in which we stand, the very faith of the Lord our Savior.  (Romans 3:22, Galatians 2:16, 3:22)

 

Lord God, this season is nothing to us if we fail to celebrate the Savior, born to us.  Unto us, born that day, a SAVIOR, who is Christ the Lord.  We will set ourselves to see salvation to the uttermost for ourselves and those for whom we pray, and we will rejoice to take part in this greatest exercise of human will known to man.  Amen.

 

 

 

View of Bethlehem

Wikipedia, public domain

December 5 – “Savior”

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We Are Worshiping …

Posted by Cor Unum Abbey on February 16, 2018
Posted in: Lent, 2018, Lenten Fast, 2018, personal devotion, Prayer for families, Prayer for the Nation, Uncategorized. Leave a comment

 

Playground_at_Fuji-Hakone-Izu_National_Park.jpg

 

 

“Ephraim will be like a mighty man,
And their heart will be glad as if from wine;
Indeed, their children will see it and be glad,
Their heart will rejoice in the Lord.
“I will whistle for them to gather them together,
For I have redeemed them;
And they will be as numerous as they were before.
“When I scatter them among the peoples,
They will remember Me in far countries,
And they with their children will live and come back.

Zechariah 10:7-9

 

 

 

Your children and mine … and the children of this nation, brought up with metal detectors and armed officers ushering them into their schools, ever looking across the aisle and seeing the classmate whom they know … could be the one.

 

Your children and mine … and those brought up in foster care, most of them loved and cared for, but so often wounded in their souls, as their foster parents know only too well.

 

Your children and mine … and those whose lives look splendid on the outside, but whose hearts have darkened, sometimes nobody knows how.

 

We are worshiping, worshiping the God who fashioned their souls, and for Himself. Call them back, whistle them up, oh Lord, cause Your glorious Voice to be heard!

 

I say with praise and thanksgiving, You know how to save, whether by many or by few. I say with a shout, their wounds are not deeper than your love, and they cannot flee faster than You can overtake them!

 

We are worshiping You, Lord …

 

 

 

A sheltered playground in Japan

Stephen Oung, Wikipedia, by permission

SaveSave

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If Not Now, When?

Posted by Cor Unum Abbey on February 15, 2018
Posted in: Lent, 2018, Lenten Fast, 2018, personal devotion, Prayer for families, Prayer for the Nation, spiritual warfare, Uncategorized. Leave a comment

 

 

Feuerbach_Mirjam_2

 

 

 

 

If we will not worship the Lord our God now, when will we?

 

It would be as if we had been brought up out of Egypt, out of slavery, delivered with all the power and might of the Almighty God, set free that we might worship Him in the desert, and found the desert not to our liking.

 

As long as turmoil and wickedness and injustice remain in the earth, we will worship. The One we serve is our only hope.

 

We will worship on behalf of those who cannot, and if for a brief moment, I cannot, or you cannot, others will worship for us, praising our God, our Great High Priest, Who has had to see and experience all the ills, all the pain, all hardness, all the evil that could have been so good, and ever turning every stream toward a faithful, glorious end, if only we would lend our consent to His so good will.

 

It is the will of the Son of God that we should worship and serve the Father, the Father who gave and sent Him. That much we know, and that we can accomplish.

 

His banner over us is love.

 

 

 

Anselm Feuerbach, Mirjam

public domain, artist’s life plus 100 years,

Wikipedia, by permission

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A Message, from the (Former) President

Posted by Cor Unum Abbey on February 14, 2018
Posted in: devotional life, Lenten Fast, 2018, personal devotion, Prayer for families, Prayer for the Nation, Uncategorized. Leave a comment

 

 

Reagan_and_Gorbachev_signing

 

We are, you know. We are the salt of the earth. It isn’t a colloquialism with us. We are poor in spirit, hearts going out to others more than moaning over our own ills or dissatisfactions, always hungering and panting for righteousness, mourning over things others celebrate, and celebrating every opportunity to suffer – with grace and good heart, taking no coin of glory under the table – for Jesus’ sake.

 

We are peacemakers, not finger pointers, and when the genuine meekness of Christ illumines our souls, that strong, rich, even aromatic meekness that routs enemies of darkness and covers the sins of others with mercy and the hope of the Gospel, we are blessed beyond expression. Rich or straightened in circumstances, we are all alike, poor in spirit, and that blessedness suits us and salts us. We are the very flavor of life, and millions have come to know it over the centuries. Light and flavor, both, are we.

 

Not weak, meek. Such a vast difference. Not impoverished, but poor as to hubris and carnal successes and the crippling venom of self-reference. Because, not in spite of these, we shine where we have been established, and we have been established, a city on a hill. A lamp upon a stand.

 

We don’t live in Hobbiton, much as we may have fashioned our homes after theirs. We aren’t the cabana on the beach. We’ve been placed on high, for good reason, and our lamp does not go out. Our lives are peppered with opportunities to salt the earth with kindness, showing courage, rejoicing in hope, strong in battle, fervent in love. It is not for nothing that we dwell on high. It may be that seldom a day goes by when we are without opportunity to show patience, perseverance, joy, and good neighborliness. We don’t say, “Why, oh why??” …   We say, “Oh Lord our God, we love the place where your glory dwells.”

 

Do you think I have forgotten that today is the first day of Lent? Oh no! Not at all! We step with all this blessedness into the fasting and fighting and the favor of this season. More impoverished, through our fasting, and the Word dwelling more richly in us. Making ourselves more weak, and thus renewing strength. Purifying our hearts all the more, and seeing God at break of day.

 

Something special for you today. Excerpts from President Ronald Reagan’s Inaugural and Farewell speeches. Let us covenant to remember and carry on as he challenged us to be and to remain …

 

from President Ronald Reagan’s Inaugural Address:

 

“Standing on the tiny deck of the Arabella in 1630 off the Massachusetts coast, John Winthrop said, ‘We will be as a city upon a hill. The eyes of all people are upon us, so that if we deal falsely with our God in this work we have undertaken and so cause Him to withdraw His present help from us, we shall be made a story and a byword throughout the world.’ Well, we have not dealt falsely with our God, even if He is temporarily suspended from the classroom.”

 

“Somehow America has bred a kindliness into our people unmatched anywhere, as has been pointed out in that best-selling record by a Canadian journalist. We are not a sick society. A sick society could not produce the men that set foot on the moon, or who are now circling the earth above us in the Skylab. A sick society bereft of morality and courage did not produce the men who went through those year[s] of torture and captivity in Vietnam. Where did we find such men? They are typical of this land as the Founding Fathers were typical. We found them in our streets, in the offices, the shops and the working places of our country and on the farms. 

 

“We cannot escape our destiny, nor should we try to do so. The leadership of the free world was thrust upon us two centuries ago in that little hall of Philadelphia. In the days following World War II, when the economic strength and power of America was all that stood between the world and the return to the dark ages, Pope Pius XII said, ‘The American people have a great genius for splendid and unselfish actions. Into the hands of America God has placed the destinies of an afflicted mankind.’

“We are indeed, and we are today, the last best hope of man on earth.”

Ronald Reagan 

Inaugural Address

January 25, 1974

 

 from the Farewell Address:

 

“And that’s about all I have to say tonight. Except for one thing. The past few days when I’ve been at that window upstairs, I’ve thought a bit of the ‘shining city upon a hill.’ The phrase comes from John Winthrop, who wrote it to describe the America he imagined. What he imagined was important because he was an early Pilgrim, an early freedom man. He journeyed here on what today we’d call a little wooden boat; and like the other Pilgrims, he was looking for a home that would be free.

 

“I’ve spoken of the shining city all my political life, but I don’t know if I ever quite communicated what I saw when I said it. But in my mind it was a tall proud city built on rocks stronger than oceans, wind-swept, God-blessed, and teeming with people of all kinds living in harmony and peace, a city with free ports that hummed with commerce and creativity, and if there had to be city walls, the walls had doors and the doors were open to anyone with the will and the heart to get here. That’s how I saw it and see it still.

  

“And how stands the city on this winter night? More prosperous, more secure, and happier than it was eight years ago. But more than that; after 200 years, two centuries, she still stands strong and true on the granite ridge, and her glow has held steady no matter what storm. And she’s still a beacon, still a magnet for all who must have freedom, for all the pilgrims from all the lost places who are hurtling through the darkness, toward home.”

  

President Ronald Reagan 

Farewell Address

January 11, 1989

 

 photo, National Archives and Records Administration

Public domain, Wikipedia

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It Starts Tonight!

Posted by Cor Unum Abbey on February 13, 2018
Posted in: devotional life, Lenten Fast, 2018, personal devotion, Prayer for families, Prayer for the Nation, spiritual warfare, Spiritual Warfare 101, Uncategorized. Leave a comment

 

 

PILLAR-OF-FIRE-2.png

 

 

 

“Even the captives of the mighty man will be taken away, And the prey of the tyrant will be rescued; For I will contend with the one who contends with you, And I will save your sons. (Isaiah 49:25, NASB)

 

Have you ever pondered how awful it might be in heaven to see, not what you have done, and you know what those things are, but to see what you could have done?

 

We have forgiveness for the things we have done wrong, things of which we have repented, things cast into the Sea of the Lord’s Forgetfulness (Micah 7:19, Isaiah 43:25), but I do not want to see the replay of all I might have done, if I hadn’t been … watching television. Reading. Talking on the phone. Shopping for fun …

 

And furthermore … we won’t be judged or held accountable for anything we could not do, even if everyone we know does more than we. Only those things we might have done, those things we knew we ought to endeavor and could manage, through faith, even if by the smallest increments of faithfulness.

 

It’s those TINY steps of forward motion are the most difficult to keep up, certainly. Are you like me? I could plant fifty or even a hundred seedlings in the space of a day or two, but if I only had time to plant them a two or three at once, day by day, would they EVER get done before I gave it up? Even when hard work is not in short supply, persistence often is.

 

As I see it, for this season, the battle will be to worship as unceasingly as grace will provide, to win skirmishes and conflicts with praise and gratitude and truth, shouted beyond the sun and moon, beyond the stars, back to the throne room where they came from. We will sing our praises, and if we do not sing, we will lift our voices and shout and proclaim, and if that is still a little more than we are prepared to do, we will speak the truth, we will voice the truth: Our God will contend with those that contend with us, and He will save our sons!” … and He will save the sons of those who cannot sing or shout or speak, those whose faith has failed or never yet ignited, those for whom we pray as we worship.

 

I used to tell my sons, when they were sitting in front of a video game, as intense as if it were a life and death battle, always remember there is a life and death battle to be fought and won, and someday you’re going to need to apply that passion to real life. We need to apply our passions to real life!

 

This is true of the shout of praise, of the songs of Zion … of the lifting of our hands, even in the privacy of our homes.   When first we try, we realize, something has been able actually to hold us back, to weigh down our arms, to stifle the roar of love that resounds in our souls, but silenced in our voices.

 

That very rousing, pulsating number from The Greatest Showman is ringing in my heart –

 

“From now on, what’s waited ‘till tomorrow starts tonight! It starts tonight!”

 

 

 

The Ark of the Covenant

Benjamin West, Wikipedia, public domain, life of the artist

 

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The Mystery Weapon

Posted by Cor Unum Abbey on February 12, 2018
Posted in: devotional life, personal devotion, spiritual warfare, Uncategorized. 1 Comment

Milton_preface

 

“Would to God that all the Lord’s people were Prophets!”  (Numbers 11:29)

 

Jehoshaphat appointed men to sing to the Lord and to praise him for the splendor of his holiness as they went out at the head of the army, saying:

 

“Give thanks to the Lord,
    for his love endures forever.”

 

As they began to sing and praise, the Lord set ambushes against the men of Ammon and Moab and Mount Seir who were invading Judah, and they were defeated.   When the men of Judah came to the place that overlooks the desert and looked toward the vast army, they saw only dead bodies lying on the ground; no one had escaped.

 

 

I might be inclined to say, for the sake of today’s entry, that this was a battle won by singing! That is not quite the case, for it was a battle won by the Lord while those appointed by the king sang of the holiness of their God, but, what a way to fight!

 

Let me say right away, for those conscientious about their singing, truly, truly, it isn’t tone and pitch that the Lord is looking for, and if your singing voice leaves something to be desired for the Top 40, when you break through it will be all the more powerful! If you can’t quite, then do let someone else do the singing … cd, MP3, Sirius … but sing along. Just for forty days. Afterward, we’ll see! One of the voices I most love to hear is in the throat of a woman who knows she does not sing as well as others, but she sings anyway, always. Oh, the sound of her voice!

 

Besides, we are singing home, usually alone, to the rafters and to God. Other than He, only angels and demons will hear us. The ones will rejoice, and the others tremble, particularly because Lucifer with his terrific musical ability is fallen from his high place, and WE SING!

 

There is no mistaking, here and in other places in Scripture, there were in Israel ministering warriors, those who sang and made music before the Lord, whose praise was vibrant, resounding to the skies, sometimes going out before the armies of Israel and sometimes worshiping while the Lord fought for them, majestic in holiness, stalwart, brave, their mouths filled with praise.

 

Let us set our Lenten fasts as the Lord leads, and as He has already instructed, even commanded, let us fast with JOY and with the voice of PRAISE, singing our intercessions, our prayers, our love, our confidence in this God, this Majesty, Who triumphs in gladness and exaltation, even our own!

Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another in all wisdom, singing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, with thankfulness in your hearts to God. (Colossians 3:16)

 

 

From Blake’s Milton

Text for “Jerusalem”, a British anthem

Wikipedia, by permission, public domain

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