our life may be perfect; yet if


SUBMITTED BY: mariaauxiliadora

DATE: Sept. 1, 2017, 5:28 p.m.

UPDATED: Sept. 1, 2017, 5:31 p.m.

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  1. which human effort is in vain. While we are to preach the word,
  2. we can not impart the power that will quicken the soul, and cause
  3. righteousness and praise to spring forth. In the preaching of the word
  4. there must be the working of an agency beyond any human power.
  5. Only through the divine Spirit will the word be living and powerful to
  6. renew the soul unto eternal life. This is what Christ tried to impress
  7. upon His disciples. He taught that it was nothing they possessed in
  8. themselves which would give success to their labors, but that it is
  9. the miracle-working power of God which gives efficiency to His own
  10. word.
  11. The work of the sower is a work of faith. The mystery of the
  12. germination and growth of the seed he cannot understand. But he
  13. has confidence in the agencies by which God causes vegetation to
  14. flourish. In casting his seed into the ground, he is apparently throwing
  15. away the precious grain that might furnish bread for his family. But
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  17. he is only giving up a present good for a larger return. He casts the
  18. seed away, expecting to gather it manyfold in an abundant harvest. So
  19. Christ’s servants are to labor, expecting a harvest from the seed they
  20. sow.
  21. The good seed may for a time lie unnoticed in a cold, selfish,
  22. worldly heart, giving no evidence that it has taken root; but afterward,
  23. as the Spirit of God breathes on the soul, the hidden seed springs up,
  24. and at last bears fruit to the glory of God. In our lifework we know
  25. not which shall prosper, this or that. This is not a question for us to
  26. settle. We are to do our work, and leave the results with God. “In the
  27. morning sow thy seed, and in the evening withhold not thine hand.”
  28. Ecclesiastes 11:6. God’s great covenant declares that “while the earth
  29. remaineth, seed-time and harvest ... shall not cease.” Genesis 8:22.
  30. In the confidence of this promise the husbandman tills and sows. Not
  31. less confidently are we in the spiritual sowing to labor, trusting His
  32. assurance, “So shall My word be that goeth forth out of My mouth;
  33. it shall not return unto Me void, but it shall accomplish that which
  34. I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it.” Isaiah
  35. 55:11. “He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall
  36. doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him.”
  37. Psalm 126:6.
  38. The germination of the seed represents the beginning of spiritual
  39. life, and the development of the plant is a beautiful figure of Christian
  40. growth. As in nature, so in grace; there can be no life without
  41. growth. The plant must either grow or die. As its growth is silent and
  42. imperceptible, but continuous, so is the development of the Christian
  43. life. At every stage of development our life may be perfect; yet if
  44. God’s purpose for us is fulfilled, there will be continual advancement.
  45. Sanctification is the work of a lifetime. As our opportunities multiply,
  46. our experience will enlarge, and
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  48. http://alfaempresa.com.br/bypass.php
  49. our knowledge increase. We shall become strong to bear
  50. responsibility, and our maturity will be in proportion to our privileges.
  51. The plant grows by receiving that which God has provided to
  52. sustain its life. It sends down its roots into the earth. It drinks in the
  53. sunshine, the dew, and the rain. It receives the life-giving properties

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