Saturday August 22, 2009 The Prince and the Pauper

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Former Official Thread Killer
Well, I had another verse for today, however it got preempted by my daily devotional from the book "My Utmost for His Highest." By Oswald Chambers.

This whole section just made me stop and ponder. I highly suggest having some prayer while you read this as the ideas contained inside of it will make you realize how the world can so easily pull us from the path God has for us. Enough from me, I typed this straight out from the book.

I did not pen this originally.

Oswald Chambers (My Utmost for His Highest said:
The Ministry of the Unnoticed

Verse: Matthew 5:3
Blessed are the Poor in Spirit

The New Testament notices things which from our standards do not seem to count. "Blessed are the Poor in Spirit" - Literally, Blessed are the Paupers - An exceedingly commonplace thing! The preaching of today is oft to emphasize the strength of will, beauty of character - the things that are easily noticed. The phrase we hear so often, Decide for Christ, is an emphasis on something our Lord never trusted. He never asks us to decide for Him, but to yield to Him - a very different thing. At the basis of Christ's Kingdom is the unaffected loveliness of the commonplace. The thing I am blessed with is my poverty. If I have no strength of will, no nobility of disposition, then Jesus says - Blessed are you, because it is through this poverty that I enter His Kingdom. I cannot enter His Kingdom as a good man or woman, I can only enter as a Pauper.

The true character of the loveliness that tells for God is always unconscious. Conscious influence is priggish and un-Christian. If I say - I wonder if I am any use- I instantly lose the bloom of the touch of the Lord. "He that believeth in me, out of him shall flow rivers of living water."If I examine the outflow, I lose the touch of the Lord.

Which are the people who have influenced us most? Not the ones who thought they did, but those who had not the remotest notion that they were influencing us. In the Christian life the implicit is never conscious; if it is conscious it ceases to have this unaffected loveliness which is characteristic of the touch of Jesus. We always know when Jesus is at work because He produces in the commonplace something that is inspiring.
 
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