"THE CHALLENGE FOR CONSIST BEHAVIOR PART IV - PART II"
1. Void of Spiritual Intoxication -
2. Endure Spiritual Heartache -
3. Proclaim Spiritual Truth -
5062 144,000 Evangelists
Speaking of the 144,000 evangelists who will preach at the Great Tribulation, Walter K. Price says:
“One hundred forty-four thousand Jews saved, plus a multitude which no man can number out of all the nations who have been washed in the blood of the Lamb! And all this within the limits of the tribulation period. What a revival! Neither Pentecost in the first century, nor the Reformation on the Continent, nor the evangelical revival in England, nor the Great Awakening in the Colonies, could match this spiritual awakening. Neither Luther, Wesley, Whitefield, Finney, Moody, Sunday nor Billy Graham, individually or collectively, could muster such statistics as these.
“The world is yet in store for its greatest spiritual revival in which vast multitudes beyond comprehension, will be saved. This is a phase of the tribulation period that has been little noted. Such emphasis has been put upon the horror of the tribulation that we have lost sight of the fact that it will also be a time of unprecedented revival.”
4. Complete Spiritual Assignment -
677 Possible To Be Christian Without Church?
Question: Can I be a Christian without joining the church?
Answer: Yes, it is possible. It is something like being:
A student who will not go to school.
A soldier who will not join an army.
A citizen who does not pay taxes or vote.
A salesman with no customers.
An explorer with no base camp.
A seaman on a ship without a crew.
A businessman on a deserted island.
An author without readers.
A tuba player without an orchestra.
A parent without a family.
A football player without a team.
A politician who is a hermit.
A scientist who does not share his findings.
A bee without a hive.
—Wesleyan Christian Advocate
The Perfect Church
I think that I shall never see
A Church that’s all it ought to be:
A Church whose members never stray
Beyond the Strait and Narrow Way:
A Church that has no empty pews,
Whose Pastor never has the blues,
A Church whose Deacons always deak,
And none is proud, and all are meek:
Where gossips never peddle lies,
Or make complaints or criticize;
Where all are always sweet and kind,
And all to other’s faults are blind.
Such perfect Churches there may be,
But none of them are known to me.
But still, we’ll work, and pray and plan,
To make our own the best we can.
