Here are some good posts for your weekend reading:
A Simple Way to Pray Every Day – Nick Aufenkamp (DG)
The problem of our prayerlessness is not simply with our smartphones or schedules. The problem is with our hearts. So, if we really want to grow in our prayer life, we must take aim at something much deeper than surface distractions: our most inward affections and desires.
Pride Is Poisoning Your Happiness – Jonathon Woodyard (DG)
But how do we lean away from pride and toward humility? There are a number of strategies for the fight, but let me focus on just one: consider fighting pride with pleasure.
How Much Entertainment Is Too Much? – Tim Challies
It is good for us to consider the place of entertainment in the Christian life. What is the purpose of entertainment? How much is enough? How much is too much?
Boring Church Services Changed My Life – Daniel Darling (CT)
Because somewhere in your congregation are children singing words they don’t know, listening to Scripture they don’t understand, and fighting sleep during a sermon that doesn’t hold their interest. They don’t realize it yet, but the Spirit of God is pressing the gospel message, through yet another “boring” church service, deep within their hearts.
Hope you have a great Lord’s Day!
Prayer should not be regarded as a duty which must be performed, but rather as a privilege to be enjoyed, a rare delight that is always revealing some new beauty.
Young people, you must pray, for your passions are strong, and your wisdom is little.
At all events, we are not likely in this day to err on the side of praying too much.
Real prayer, earnest prayer, is hard work. Satan has a special ill-will at praying people.
Most Christians pray sometimes, with some prayers and some degree of perseverance, for some of God’s people. But to replace “some” by “all” in each of these expressions would be to introduce us to a new dimension of prayer.
What if the main object in God’s idea of prayer be the supplying of our great, our endless need – the need of himself?
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