Saturday, September 24, 2022

Genesis 37:14-36; 39:1-21: Joseph's Hope Beyond the Dark.

Presented to The Salvation Army Alberni Valley Ministries, on the International Day of Prayer against Human Trafficking, 25 September 2022, by Major Michael Ramsay

 

Joseph in our text today was trafficked. His family – his brothers, ten of them, ganged up on him and through him into a pit and sold him to people passing by. The people who bought Joseph took him to a foreign country and sold him as a household servant. His family did not know what had happened to him; his dad never knew what happened to Joseph, his favourite son. Joseph was all alone.

 

Joseph was a domestic servant with no rights. When his employers was done with him he was sent off to jail.

 

Trafficking like this isn’t just a thing of the past. We have worked to try and help many different people who have been trafficked in a number of the places we have lived and worked with The Salvation Army.

 

Here in town there are a couple of businesses that are rumoured to be involved in trafficking people, domestic help, like Joseph – one is a hotel. This hotel apparently has a number of new ‘staff’ come regularly from India, stay and while and then be moved along.

 

I have just heard – not verified – as well that another business in town has a family from Vietnam living in their lunchroom. Of course, from this there are all kinds of stories of international human trafficking and hopefully when an investigation is complete that we be all they are just stories.

 

But human trafficking happens. Like I said, we have been involved in trying to help people out of this circumstance in various places we have lived across this country, and it can and may be happening right here, right now in our community.

 

It is our responsibility to be aware and if you know of anything that needs looking into let the police and/or let me know and lets follow up. That is my call to action for today.

 

Beyond my call to action, I would like to offer the hope that God offers us through the Joseph experience. Joseph was trafficked but -even in his darkest hours and days and years serving as a domestic save and as a prisoner in a foreign jail he had hope and God delivered him. I can’t imagine the horrors of what he – and many others have experienced – but God gave him hope and delivered him in and eventually from his circumstance.

 

Let us pray.




Matthew 5:14; 28:18-20: Signs of Joy

Presented to The Salvation Army Alberni Valley Ministries, Men's Breakfast, 24 September 2022 by Major Michael Ramsay

 

 The other day I was picking up the food truck from the mill. They were doing construction near the exit and so a lady was standing in a reflective vest, with a hard hat on, holding a sign for directing the traffic. I admit I was confused by her methods -at first- for she held the "stop" side of the sign facing me but with her other hand she was beckoning me to approach her in the large Salvation Army Community Response Vehicle I was driving.

 

I drove up to her. She motioned for me to roll down my window, which I did. She then said to me that she knows that The Salvation Army uses the truck around 5pm why am I taking it our around 9am. I explained to her that I had to fill it with gas and the volunteers and staff had to clean and stock it.

 

Then, while I was still stopped, she told me about her job. She mentioned how much she was paid - more than other companies that hold signs for road work. She spoke about the training she underwent and how good it is. She told me how one could get government assistance to pay for work boots and other things needed for the position. She spoke about the monetary benefits; she spoke about the beneficial work conditions. She, assuming I was a volunteer, told me how much she loved her job and how I could apply for a position with the company.

 

I thought it was cute that a new employee who had just gotten her job through an employment training program liked it this much. I said that it sounds like a great job (which it does) and I asked her how long she has been doing it. "Since 1980", she replied. That is 42 years ago at the time of my writing this!

 

Imagine loving your job so much that even after 42 years when you tell someone about it they just assume that you are excited because it is new to you!

 

As I reflected on this I thought of the job that we are all given, Matthew 28:18-20, Jesus tells his followers, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you.” and I think of the excitement that this should bring us - even more excitement that the lady holding the sign had that day! The excitement should be so much that it cannot be contained. It should be like, Matthew 5:14, "You are the light of the world. A town built on a hill cannot be hidden."

 

It is my hope that this joy of the Lord will overflow in all of our lives.

 






Sunday, September 18, 2022

Romans 7: 7-13: The Law: Leave it to Beaver.

Presented to The Salvation Army Alberni Valley Ministry, 18 September 2022, by Major Michael Ramsay

 


We had a great time at the toy run and the food drive this weekend. 2,878.1 lbs. of food were raised from the food drive and an elevator load full of toys from the toy run! Thank you everyone! It was great to be able to be out there serving coffee, doughnuts, publicly praying for the community, serving lunch, picking up toys, setting up, cleaning up and helping in everyway we can. So much of my life in this day and age seems to be spent looking at a computer screen: filling out forms, entering information into databases, answering questions, doing computer tasks from headquarters, emailing and messaging people about this or that or the next thing and since the pandemic struck, Zoom and now Teams has invaded our lives – so that even meetings we used to have in person are carried out on a screen!

It is a weird place to be, societally speaking. I grew up in a generation and a household that did have a TV – but we were always told that too much screen time and sitting too close to the screen was bad for you; as a result we kids were often thrown outside: to climb a tree, kick around a soccer ball, or ride our bikes over to a friend’s house (hoping they would have a TV that we were allowed to watch)

I remember when I was in elementary school one show that I used to go over to a friend’s house to watch after school was Leave it to Beaver. Does anyone remember Leave it to Beaver?

Heather and I have found old episodes of Leave it to Beaver on-line and, when we get a chance, we enjoy watching it together. Leave it to Beaver is an old black-and-white show that ran from 1957 to 1963 (it was already in re-runs even by the time I remember watching it as a child). The show was about a family with a mother (June) and father (Ward) and two brothers (Wally and Theodore, also known as the Beaver). One thing that strikes me is how this series stands the test of time. You can watch this show that was made in the1950s today, in the 2020s, and the themes are still relevant. That is really something - especially when I think of other shows and movies I have watched with much less of a time gap where I really need to stop, think, and remember the cultural references of even the 1990s, for instance.

Heather and I watched an episode this week entitled ‘the Pipe’ and that episode really reminded me of our scripture passage today from Romans Chapter 7. Reading again from verses 7-8, 11-13:

7 What then should we say? That the law is sin? By no means! Yet, if it had not been for the law, I would not have known sin. I would not have known what it is to covet if the law had not said, ‘You shall not covet.’ 8 But sin, seizing an opportunity in the commandment, produced in me all kinds of covetousness…11 For sin, seizing an opportunity in the commandment, deceived me and through it killed me. 12 So the law is holy, and the commandment is holy and just and good.

13 Did what is good, then, bring death to me? By no means! It was sin, working death in me through what is good, in order that sin might be shown to be sin, and through the commandment might become sinful beyond measure.

https://archive.org/details/leave.it.to.beaver.complete.series/Season+2/Leave+It+To+Beaver+-+S02E09+-+The+Pipe.avi

In this episode Beaver’s family gets a pipe as a gift from friends who are visiting Germany. Beaver’s brother and parents don’t smoke. Beaver isn’t allowed to smoke until he is 21 – he is about 7 years-old. One day when his parents are out, Beaver and his friend Larry convince each other to try to smoke the pipe. They first try to smoke coffee in it and then after that doesn’t really work, a couple of days later, they try smoking tobacco. The story focuses in part on this and on the fact that Beaver’s dad suspects and blames Wally, Beaver’s much older brother, when he notices that the pipe has been smoked. It is quite an interesting episode. This is how my mind related it to Romans Chapter 7:

The rule (the law) here stated that Beaver wasn’t supposed to smoke at least until he was 21. Once he began dwelling on that rule, he began to be tempted to break that rule. Without having the pipe at his house and the rule never to smoke it, he and Larry may never have tried to smoke – but with the rule in place they were drawn to break it…more and more.

Sin deceived them. They deceived each other. Sin grabbed them and they suffered for it. Sin grabbed them and their brother suffered for it. Sin grabbed them and their father suffered for it.

When Beaver and Larry smoked the pipe, Beaver’s parents found the pipe and could easily see that someone had smoked it. Beaver’s dad assumed it was Beaver’s older brother, so he confronted Wally and then punished Wally. Beaver suffered the natural consequences of smoking – he felt sick! And more: he and his family suffered the consequences of his deception.

The more I read the New Testament (especially Paul) about the Old Testament Law, the more I am convinced that the Law cannot stop anyone from falling prey to Sin. And in some cases, we may never have been tempted to sin if we had never heard of the Law. Sometimes the mere fact of being told not to do something can propel us towards that very thing. I remember one instance where as a teenager someone was challenging me to a fight that I had no intention of fighting – but… then… with each person who came to me and told me not to fight the other person because they were, bigger, stronger, a black belt in this, that or the next thing; I was drawn into this fight that I never wanted to have in the first place – and then a few seconds later when I broke the person’s hand, I felt bad, the person felt bad and sore, and we all suffered the consequences of this thing that I never wanted to do in the first place. I have heard similar stories of people trying alcohol or cigarettes or other substances this very same way – they were never drawn to it until they knew that they were told not to do it. I think the ‘War on Drugs’ failed for this very reason.

That is not to say that these rules are bad – again as shown by our culture’s current drug policy: drug use is seemingly encouraged and people are dying because of it. Rules in general and the Law in the Bible especially, are things that people and society have worked out over time in and through their relationship with God and each other. The Law, the Ten Commandment and more are not there to tempt us to sin. They are there to share with us the collective knowledge and experience of the way the world works. If one lies, cheats, steals, commits adultery, covets, murders, etc., the natural consequences will naturally be bad. They may be very bad. Not a punishment but a natural consequence. The results of doing these things are often terrible and sometimes unimaginably so. The Law isn’t a list of arbitrary dos and don’ts; it is a great warning from history, experience, our elders, and God Himself because He loves us and He doesn’t want any harm to come of us.

The problem comes when people focus on the Law, when we focus on rules, when we focus on prohibitions; when we do that, Sin can step in and tempt us to do things that are self- and others-destructive. Instead of this, as we spend time with God, He will let us know what is best to do; this is what I think it means when the Bible says the Law will now be written on our hearts (Jeremiah 31:31-34).

The more I live and the more I read, the more I think about sin as the way it is portrayed here in Romans Chapter Seven and also in Genesis Chapter 4 and elsewhere. Genesis 4:7b, God says to Cain, “But if you do not do what is right, sin is crouching at your door; it desires to have you, but you must master it.” I used to think of sin like it was simply doing a bad thing -there is that element to it; however, the more I read the Bible the more I think of Sin as almost a force pulling you away from all the peace, contentment, and joy of holiness; pulling us towards in some case an actual and/or a metaphorical ‘living Hell’.

The Law was meant to help point out the ways in which Sin tries to draw us away from the Love of God but, of course, no rules can fully do that. The only thing that can keep us in the love of God, is the love of God. Again, this is what I think it means to have the law written on our hearts (Jeremiah 31:31-34).

We have all heard the analogy over and over again of the counterfeit bill. The way one spots counterfeit money is not by studying counterfeit money; they way one stops counterfeit money is by studying real money – when you are intimately familiar with what is real you instantly notice what is not real.

The way we know how to have perfect peace, the way we know how to have perfect love, the way we know how to best be a blessing to God, ourselves, and others, is not to study rules about how not to behave. The way we know how to be the best, blessed follower of Christ we can be, is to spend time following Christ. The more time we spend with God – praying and reading our Bible, meditating, singing and talking to Him, the more we grow in the likeness of Christ and the more we are naturally compelled to avoid those actions that can destroy ourselves and others. Jeremiah 31:33-34 records it this way:

33 But this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the Lord: I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. 34 No longer shall they teach one another, or say to each other, ‘Know the Lord’, for they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, says the Lord; for I will forgive their iniquity, and remember their sin no more.

Let us pray.

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Saturday, September 10, 2022

Luke 10:25-37: Well Done My Good and Faithful Servant

Presented to The Salvation Army Alberni Valley Ministries, 11 September 2022 by Major Michael Ramsay

 

Queen Elizabeth II was Promoted to Glory this week. she had a strong Christian faith that has been evident throughout her life. As well as her formal role as 'Defender of the Faith and Supreme Governor of the Church of England', her personal faith was evident even before she was crowned. 'Pray for me’, she urged us all prior to her coronation, ‘that God may give me wisdom and strength to carry out the solemn promises I shall be making, and that I may faithfully serve Him and you, all the days of my life.’

 

The theme of service to God and her neighbour even ran throughout her coronation ceremony and she mentioned time and time again, very publicly throughout the years that she was inspired by the sacrificial life of Jesus Christ, who said of himself: I ‘did not come to be served, but to serve’. She said, ‘For me the teachings of Christ and my own personal accountability before God provide a framework in which I try to lead my life.’

 

In 2008 the Queen encouraged us all: ‘I hope that, like me, you will be comforted by the example of Jesus of Nazareth who, often in circumstances of great adversity, managed to live an outgoing, unselfish and sacrificial life … He makes it clear that genuine human happiness and satisfaction lie more in giving than receiving; more in serving than in being served.’

 

The Bible passage the Queen referred to most often in her public addresses is the one we are looking at briefly today. Luke 10:25-2 emphasises this theme of service. Most of what I have to say here are words that God has previously shared through our ptg Queen. In four of her Christmas broadcasts alone she has talked about the parable Jesus told of a ‘Good Samaritan’.

 

In 1985 she encouraged us that this passage ‘reminds us of our duty to our neighbour. We should try to follow Christ's clear instruction at the end of that story: "Go and do thou likewise".

 

In her 1989 reference to this pericope she said, ‘Many of you will have heard the story of the Good Samaritan, and of how Christ answered the question (from a clever lawyer who was trying to catch him out) "who is my neighbour?" Jesus told of the traveller who was mugged and left injured on the roadside where several important people saw him, and passed by without stopping to help. His neighbour was the man who did stop, cared for him, and made sure he was being well looked after before he resumed his own journey.”

 

‘It's not very difficult to apply that story to our own times and to work out that our neighbours are those of our friends, or complete strangers, who need a helping hand. Do you think they might also be some of the living species threatened by spoiled rivers, or some of the children in places like Ethiopia and Sudan who don't have enough to eat? … it would be splendid to think that in the last years of the twentieth century [and even now into the 21st Century] Christ's message about loving our neighbours as ourselves might at last be heeded.’

 

In 2004 Her Majesty returned again to the same parable and, most recently, in her 2020 broadcast on Christmas Eve from Windsor Castle, where she had been isolating with her husband Prince Philip due to the Covid-19 pandemic, “In the United Kingdom and around the world, people have risen magnificently to the challenges of the year. And I am so proud and moved by this quiet, indomitable spirit. To our young people in particular I say thank you for the part you have played.

 

“This year, we celebrated International Nurses’ Day, on the 200th anniversary of the birth of Florence Nightingale. As with other nursing pioneers like Mary Seacole, Florence Nightingale shone a lamp of hope across the world.

 

“Today, our frontline services still shine that lamp for us – supported by the amazing achievements of modern science – and we owe them a debt of gratitude. We continue to be inspired by the kindness of strangers and draw comfort that – even on the darkest nights – there is hope in the new dawn. Jesus touched on this with the parable of the Good Samaritan. The man who is robbed and left at the roadside is saved by someone who did not share his religion or culture. This wonderful story of kindness is still as relevant today.

 

Good Samaritans have emerged across society showing care and respect for all, regardless of gender, race or background, reminding us that each one of us is special and equal in the eyes of God. The teachings of Christ have served as my inner light, as has the sense of purpose we can find in coming together to worship.

 

“In November, we commemorated another hero – though nobody knows his name. The Tomb of the Unknown Warrior isn’t a large memorial, but everyone entering Westminster Abbey has to walk around his resting place, honouring this unnamed combatant of the First World War – a symbol of selfless duty and ultimate sacrifice.

 

“The Unknown Warrior was not exceptional. That’s the point. He represents millions like him who throughout our history have put the lives of others above their own, and will be doing so today. For me, this is a source of enduring hope in difficult and unpredictable times.

 

She continued on in her Christmas address, “Of course, for many, this time of year will be tinged with sadness: some mourning the loss of those dear to them, and others missing friends and family members distanced for safety, when all they’d really want for Christmas is a simple hug or a squeeze of the hand. If you are among them, you are not alone, and let me assure you of my thoughts and prayers.

 

“The Bible tells how a star appeared in the sky, its light guiding the shepherds and wise men to the scene of Jesus’s birth. Let the light of Christmas – the spirit of selflessness, love and above all hope – guide us in the times ahead. It is in that spirit that I wish you a very happy Christmas.”

 

I am not going to add very much to the Queen’s words here. I am just going to offer each and everyone of you this encouragement. As you are a part of this team, you did not walk on the other side of the road, you did not hide from your responsibility and your sense of duty. You do not put your own welfare ahead of others. Everyday that you are out there serving your neighbour in the name of Jesus – be it handing out food and clothing, providing showers, shelter, interment services, visiting people in hospitals (if you are allowed!) and care homes, running kids programs and church services, serving at toy runs, providing school supplies and walking in parades to raise awareness; anytime you do any of this and the much more that each of you here does in Jesus’ Name, on a personal level you are doing as doing this for God as well. And as such you are the good Samaritan.

 

This is my encouragement to us today, let us keep on serving God by serving our neighbour in His Name. Like the Queen, let us put duty and service to God and our neighbour before all else in our lives. Let us love one another and let us work together so that on that day when each of us meets our Maker, He will indeed greet us with, ‘well done my good and faithful servant’

 

Let us pray





Saturday, September 3, 2022

Luke 11:11-13, Matthew 7:9-11: In Concert with God

 Presented to The Salvation Army Alberni Valley Ministries, 10 September 2022, by Major Michael Ramsay

 

We dropped Sarah-Grace off in Victoria on Friday. She is starting her third-year classes at UVic this year. She got the keys to the new apartment she is renting - for the school year anyway. It is nice. It’s big and near UVic. She seems to have a nice roommate as well: Arora. She is a fellow Salvationist who goes to the Citadel and plays in the band. It was a real blessing to be able to find a place and a roommate like that: a miracle and blessing, for sure.

We had a good week away this week. We were at what used to be called ‘business camp’ or ‘Officer Camp’, I believe; now it is called ‘Leadership Camp’: It was good.

It was great to see many of our fellow Officers and other leaders in the division. It was good to connect with old friends and it was strange to see just how many new faces are in the division/province. The Salvation Army is usually really good at providing opportunities for leaders to connect, network, learn, and worship together – probably better than most organizations. However, due in large part to Covid-19, we have not been able to get together for a long time. This explains why there seemed to be so many new faces and I think a lot of the Officers have missed that contact with one another. The Salvation Army really is a family. Metaphorically speaking, yes, but also literally; I mean it actually is a family – so many people are related.

Rena and Tim have 1 Officer son and 1 Officer-type son (they explained all the designations at camp. I am not sure I understand them all; what title/rank are your sons? Jeremy (Amanda) is a Lieutenant and Neil (Jen) is a…?) Also there was other family to this corps at Gibson’s, we saw Holly at camp. Holly is part of the camp staff and she is the Greunhauges granddaughter. She helped lead worship among other things. I did go up to her and introduce myself. So many people are related in our organization and many of those who aren’t are still very family-like.

Our scripture today speaks to family. Specifically, 11: 11:13 says this: “Which of you fathers, if your son asks for a fish, will give him a snake instead? Or if he asks for an egg, will give him a scorpion? If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!” [Matthew says “good gifts”]

This passage specifically speaks about a father’s relationship to his children and how much he loves them. These words obviously strike a chord with me. I was able to see all three of my children this week. It was a real blessing. There are not many weeks when that happens anymore. On Monday Heather and I travelled over to the camp together and were able to spend time playing cards on the way and at the camp we were able to paddle board and even just hang out a bit, which was great. Sarah-Grace and Susan came later that day. On the last day of camp Sarah-Grace and I got up at 5am or so and spend the next almost 24 hours together. We went to a concert.

For back in Christmas 2019, Grandma had bought Rebecca, Sarah-Grace and I tickets to a big concert in Seattle: it wasn’t until now, 32 months later that we actually got to go to the concert! More than 2 and half years later the concert finally happened! It kept getting postponed because of Covid-19. We were wondering if the concert was ever going to happen – and not just because of Covid-19. The bands we went to see were not young people. Many of them started performing in the 1970s or at the early 1980s. I am sure (other than the opening bands) all of them are way more than eligible for pensions or seniors discounts anyway and many of them have health problems. We weren’t sure if they would all be alive or healthy enough to perform.

We also weren’t sure what we would be doing after a 32 month, a 2-and-a-half-year gap. I could have been posted anywhere across this country in that time and not be able to go. Either of my daughters could be working or going to university anywhere in the world or anything else could have happened in our lives and we may not be able to go. The concert was in a foreign country so any number of things could have happened with that tool.

We did get to go and it was a good concert. It was a lot of bands I knew as a teenager or a young man. The performers were mostly amazingly fit and did a really good job. One musician, Brett Michaels, even played an harmonica, a mouth organ solo; he was almost as good as Reinhart – not quite but almost! The concert was very good – and very long. The concert itself was 7 hours! This made for an exceedingly long day. Like we said before, Sarah-Grace and I were up about 5am, we picked up Rebecca around 8am, drove across the border and into Seattle in plenty of time for a 4:30pm concert and then drove back home after 11:30pm, after fighting with all the concert traffic and slow going at the border, we finally got back to Rebecca’s house around 3:30am. It was a full day. It was a good day. It was one I was looking forward to spending with my daughters for a long time – 32 months!

God loves us all, just as I, or any other father/parent here loves their own children, and He wants to spend time with all of us just as we like spending time with our children. This passage in Luke is speaking about prayer (Matthew presents this quote as part of a collection of other sayings in Chapter 7). This Chapter in Luke opens with the Lord’s Prayer. Prayer is one key way in which we are able to spend time with God. We can come to God when we are distraught and tell him our problems, concerns, worries, like we would a confidant. We can tell Him what we need and what we think we need and He will hear us. He loves us even more than we parents love our children. He will never give us bad gifts when we ask for good gifts – and I would go even further, I would say He would never give us bad gifts when we ask for bad gifts and even more: he would never give us less than what is best for us, even if we unknowingly are asking for such. God loves us so much that He wants us to come to Him about all of this stuff. Parents: think about how you feel if your child (adult or otherwise) has a difficulty that you are able to help them with but they never come to you. Your heart breaks for them; you can help. Think of how much comfort you want to offer your children when they are going through difficult times – God wants to offer you this comfort as well. This passage in Luke specifically mentions that God will send us the Holy Spirit: God, the Holy Spirit is the Comforter!

This is what this passage is saying. God knows how much His disciples (whom Jesus is specifically addressing here) love their children and God knows how much you and I, who are parents, love our children; God says to us, that even as much as we –  wicked, evil, less than perfect parents, anyway  - love our children and will give them good gifts as we are able, so God loves us so much more that He will give us good gifts, yes, as Matthew records, but even more. As Luke records, God will give us His Holy Spirit, the comforter Himself. God loves us more than even we love our family, biological and otherwise. He wants us to spend time with Him in prayer and otherwise.

It was a real blessing to spend time with our extended Salvation Army family at Leadership camp this week and learn what we needed to learn. I think there was a lot of teaching after I left. Before I left there were some great Salvation Army family moments. Sure, there was some complaining; sure, there was some hesitations about restructuring and other things; there were certainly some seeking confirmation that the Army and/or our leadership and/or their colleagues still love them (we do!); there were a few questions; and sure there were not always the complete answers but I think we all left not only having learned something but having experienced the comfort of God through our colleagues, our friends, and our leaders. I think this comfort was something that many officers really needed and I praise the Lord for it.

I was also very thankful that I was able to chat about my book, Salvogesis Guidebook to Romans Road (www.facebook.com/romansroad) this weekend. I was quite humbled to be asked to present. It is quite an honour for me to be able to address my colleagues like this. During my talk we had an opportunity to share how God had spoken to us, how the Holy Spirit had moved in our lives, and more – all related directly to sharing the Gospel and Salvation God encouraged me (and us) greatly through this! After I had an opportunity to present, Officers and others came up to me sharing experiences of when they saw others come to know the Lord and experience His Salvation and this is exciting and this relates very much to our pericope today.

Salvation is this: Salvation is spending time with God in prayer and otherwise. Salvation is like us as a child paddle-boarding or playing cribbage with God; Salvation is like us as an adult getting a ride to our new home as He helps us get everything set up, and comforts us in our anticipation of what is to come; Salvation is like us going to a concert and cheering, laughing, and playing with our Father in Heaven. Salvation is being in a relationship with God as a son or daughter is with a loving parent. Salvation is being able to come to God and know that He will give you all you need, that He will love you and that He will comfort you and Salvation is knowing that He will be with us all throughout everything here and now and the extra bonus beautiful thing about this Salvation is that it does not end when our time here on earth ends, it will continue on for eternity.

 

Let us pray. 

 

 

Referenced Materials:

[1] Craddock, Fred B. Luke (Interpretation: Louisville, Kentucky, USA: John Knox Press, 1990)

[2] Culpepper, R. Alan. Luke (NIB 8: Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon, 1995)

[3] Hendricksen, William. Exposition of the Gospel According to Luke (NTC: Baker Academic: Grand Rapids Michigan, 2007)

[4] Isaak, Paul John. Africa Bible Commentary, (Nairobi, Kenya: Word Alive Publishers, 2010). Luke 11:1-13 Prayer and God's reign: 11:5-13 The Habit of Asking, Seeking, and Knocking

[5] Leifeld, Walter L. The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Pradis CD-ROM:Luke/Exposition of Luke/V. Teaching and Travels Toward Jerusalem (9:51-19:44)/B. Teachings (10:25-11:13)/3. Teaching on prayer (11:1-13), Book Version: 4.0.2

[6] Lenski. R.C.H. The Interpretation of St. Luke’s Gospel (Augsburg, 1963).

[7] Ramsay, Michael. Salvogesis Guidebook to Romans Road (The Salvation Army: Vancouver Island, 2022)