SOME ARE SAINTS AND SOME ARE AIN'TS.
If I made a list of the miracles I have witnessed and the ones I have been a part of, you would be pressed to believe in God and His desire to work intimately in the lives of people. But then if I were to make a list of my failures and struggles, you might say, “Where is your God?” I could write a book listing miraculous provision and answers to prayer in which the reality of the Lord’s presence was palpable. But then I could write another book telling of the times I was in “the deep” about to be swallowed up and close to losing everything. I could tell you of friends being healed through prayer and also of others dying in spite of it. I have friends who have experienced miraculous healings and friends who have been raised from the dead. Some have received an immediate response to prayer, and others have suffered what seems an interminable wait as they call on the Lord daily for healing, help, or an “open door.”
I have experienced the people of God, their love for one another, and the presence of God in them in a way that was like being in heaven itself. Then on the other hand, I have seen church people bite and devour one another and leave people bleeding in their wake. We see people of God who truly represent godliness and right living, but we also know of those who have stumbled through sin and hypocrisy. A dear friend once said, “Some are saints and some are aints.”
In my morning intercessions each day, I have included the following prayers:
“Lord, my hope is in the Sovereign, Almighty God.”
“My hope is in Your mercy.”
“My hope is in the Lamb who is worthy to loose the seals and open the scroll.” (Rev.5)
The purpose of God will be accomplished not because we are worthy, but because HE is worthy.
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