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Friday: Further Thought – Be Who You Are — 5 Comments

  1. “Be who you are”? I are a Christian, therefore I be a Christian unto the end. Hince forth is laid up for me a crown. Maurice the text and meaning from chapter and book please.

  2. I once heard a famous Adventist pastor (now deceased) say something that encouraged me greatly as I considered my new found faith in Christ and the Adventist message. I can’t remember the exact words, but I remember clearly the message. When we need the faith that can move mountains, God will give it, but every day, we must exercise faith (trust) given us in the smaller things. Jesus is the author and finisher of our faith (trust). It comes from a personal experience with the Word of God. Then he said, something that is so true and simple, we cannot overlook it. “Little time with Jesus, little faith. Much time with Jesus, much faith.” Peter had spent “much time with Jesus” and demonstrated a faith that would move mountains for generations to come.

  3. In answer to question # 1, I think we fail to “be what we are” in Jesus because we are not always focused on Jesus and His Character but we are focused, instead, on the world and worldliness around us. The world has an expectation of us that we are led to think we have to live up to. We cannot live up to the expectatation of the world and Heaven also. It’s one or the other.

    We need to be continually asking for and permitting the Holy Spirit to be the primary motivation of our will. His Love will make us like Jesus, not conforming to this world. We will, then, be a light in this world.

  4. In answer to question # 5, I find that that trust in God is my antidote for grief. He is trustworthy. There is no need to spend lots of time and energy on grief when we are trusting in God for everything.

    When we know God as He is we know that all things do work together for good for His true children.

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At a camp meeting 40 years later, I happened to see Dr. I. demonstrating some kind of health product, if I remember correctly. (In my mind, I see only the image of him, much older, but still looking much like he did when I was a student, with a friend by my side.) I lingered a little but did not introduce myself. I briefly wondered whether he recognized me. I’m fairly sure that I was as recognizable to him as he was to me.

Had he changed? Or did he still feel superior in his “humility”? Should I talk to him? I didn’t know how to approach him, and was busy with friends. I still don’t know whether I should have said something. (Maybe I’m just a coward.)

If God wants him to see my story, his and my identity are clear enough in this post, that God can direct him to it.