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Showing posts from January, 2022

LESSONS FROM A BOAT

Dear Friends I posted this article almost 3 years ago. I am re-posting it now because of its encouraging insights. It deals with the significance of a "boat" and how we should face the "storm" when it seems the Lord has sent us on ahead without Him, and when it feels like the Lord is "passing us by." ---Billy Long LESSONS FROM A BOAT "Immediately He made His disciples get into the boat and go before Him to the other side...Then He saw them straining at rowing, for the wind was against them. Now about the fourth watch of the night He came to them, walking on the sea, and would have passed them by." Mark 6: 45-52 “He made His disciples get into a boat.” The “boat” is significant because it represents a context from which we can not easily escape. The disciples, on that small boat in the middle of the sea, could not simply change their minds and walk away from the problems and issues at hand. They could not escape the process; they had to ri...

FRAGRANCE

My mom wanted me to drive her to the store to do some shopping. So I splashed some cologne on my face and went on ahead of her to the car and took my seat. She soon came out of the house and sat in the front seat on the passenger’s side and immediately began sniffing the air. I watched as she leaned forward and started checking the bottoms of her shoes. Turning to me she said, “Billy, check the bottom of your feet and see if you stepped in any dog poop before you got into this car.” I went through the motions of checking my shoes, but I knew it was the cologne. I never used that particular brand again. Smells range from pleasing fragrance to repulsive odor. The sense of smell can strengthen our romantic attraction to someone we love or wonderfully enhance the pleasantness of a room. The sense of smell is vital to our enjoyment of good food, but also senses decay and corruption and warns us to discard that which is unfit for consumption. A bad smell can be repulsive to the point of prod...

LEARNING WISDOM…THE HARD WAY

BREATHE ON ME When my sister Eva got the mumps, my cousin William saw this as an opportunity to make himself sick so he could skip school. He came over to our house a few mornings before getting on the school bus, went to her sickbed, leaned over with his face right in front of hers, and said, “Breathe on me.” I watched as Eva took a couple deep breaths and exhaled in his face as he inhaled deeply. It wasn’t long before he woke up one morning to find he had the mumps. He was so happy because he knew he would not have to go to school. But to his chagrin, he looked out the window to see that it had snowed, a very rare experience for us at Longs crossroads near the South Carolina coast. He had to stay in bed while all the neighborhood kids were out playing in the snow...and not having to go to school. IT WON’T HURT IF YOU DO IT QUICKLY On another occasion when we kids were playing in the yard, my cousin William came over to the house limping. “What’s the matter with your foot?” I asked. ...

THROUGH IT ALL

There was a popular song a few years ago that said, “Through it all I’ve learned to trust in Jesus, I’ve learned to trust in God.” It speaks of standing in faith and obedience in good times and in bad times. We must love Jesus Christ and hold to Him during the good times blessing and prosperity and in the hard times of adversity and perplexity. To be fully trained as God’s servants we need to walk in faithful obedience in the full range of experience from “pit” to “peak” and everywhere in between. Like the disciples we want to see God’s miraculous presence and glory on the mount of transfiguration. But we also need to be tempered and seasoned by the fires, testing, and disciplines of obedience. There is a depth and substance in those who have endured and continued faithful to the Lord in the full range of experience on the mountain, through the valley, and on the plateaus and level places in between. We gain spiritual substance and depth as we walk with Jesus through desert places as w...

PREVENTING ADULTERY: A Letter from Leonard Terry

Dear Friends, One of my recent posts was a letter I had sent to warn a friend about the dangers of adultery. My friend Leonard Terry, a pastor in Canada, wrote a wonderful follow-up to that letter. He gives us some really good advice on how to prevent unfaithfulness in marriage. I hope you will read his message. He concludes his post with a great testimony in the last paragraph. I think you will be blessed by his comments. Billy Long PREVENTING ADULTERY A Letter from Leonard Terry Hey Billy, Thanks for the letter you wrote to the person who was committing adultery. I agree with everything you said. I agree that it was an act of great love to confront the person with the truth God has given us. The Bible does tell us to correct one another in love. However, an observation I have made about our response in the general culture of the evangelical, charismatic communities is that we have often approached marital relationships to help them only after they are in trouble. Adultery actually be...