Toward an Old Testament Theology

– Walter Kaiser, Jr. Zondervan. It traces the biblical theology of the Old Testament from age to age and shows how it relates to the New. 2ProphetU2ProphetU is an online magazine/website, started by Warren Wiersbe and Michael Catt, to build up the church, seek revival, and encourage pastors. […]

Toward Rediscovering the Old Testament

– W. Kaiser Jr. Zondervan. A scholarly study of the place of the Old Testament in the church, this book is very readable and practical for the expository preacher. If you have the idea that the Old and New Testaments are competitors, then read this book and start enriching your sermons 2ProphetU2ProphetU is an online […]

The Contemporaries Meet the Classics

– Leonard Allen. Howard Publishing. This is a solid collection of writings on prayer from the classical to the contemporary. You’ll find enriching insights from C. S. Lewis, Max Lucado, Andrew Murray, John Calvin, Jim Cymbala, Charles Wesley, Tony Evans and others. The book deals with the Purpose of Prayer, the Psalms as Prayer, Patterns […]

Volume 02, Issue 17

September 16 Typesetting machine patent, 1857 General Motors founded by William C Durant, 1908 September 20 Magellan starts 1st successful circumnavigation of the world, 1519 September 22 Irving Berlin composer, dies at 101, 1989 Italo Marchiony granted patent for the ice cream cone, 1903 Commercial TV begins in England, 1955 Death of Charlotte Elliott, 82, […]

Wally’s World Revisited

By Warren W. Wiersbe A year ago I told you about my nephew, Wally Watts, who pastors in Southern California. He had produced a new hymnal for his upwardly mobile congregation. His new tunes shifted from conventional terms (“wretched” and “worms”) to more self-actualized expressions (“Glorious Things of Me Are Spoken”). Well, his hymnal was […]

When God Prays

Discovering the Heart of Jesus in His Prayers – Skip Heitzig. Tyndale. A solid resource to use if you are going to do a series on the prayers of Jesus. Every preacher and teacher should do a study on the High Priestly Prayer of Jesus, for your people and your own edification. This is a […]

Ideas For Fall

By Warren W. Wiersbe Of course you’ve been thinking about your autumn preaching plans! You’ve noted that September 1 is Labor Day Sunday, not the best day to start a new series; and October 27 is Reformation Sunday. Advent begins December 1, and Christmas is on a Wednesday. So is New Year’s Day! Happy planning! […]

Volume 03, Issue 18

September 9 Matthew Henry started to write the NT portion of his famous Commentary, 1712. September 14 Handel completed the Messiah after working without interruption for 23 days, 1741. Francis Scott Key wrote the words to the national anthem, 1824. September 28 William the Conqueror landed in England, 1066. 2ProphetU2ProphetU is an online magazine/website, started […]

"Covetousness is dry drunkenness." - Thomas Watson

"He is not a covetous man, who lays up something providentially; but he is a covetous man, who gives out nothing willingly." - William Secker

"A poor man doth want many things, a rich miser wants everything." - John Boys

"It is the love, not the lack of money, that makes men churls." - John Trapp

"It is a common saying that a hog is good for nothing whilst he is alive: not good to bear or carry, as the horse; nor to draw, as the ox; nor to give milk, as the cow; nor to keep the house, as the dog; but fed only to the slaughter."

"So a covetous, rich man, just like a hog, doth no good with his riches whilst he liveth, but when he is dead his riches come to be disposed of. "The riches of a sinner are laid up for the just." - Andrew Willet

"They are fools that fear to lose their wealth by giving, but fear not to lose themselves by keeping it." - John Trapp

"Covetousness is called idolatry, which is worse than infidelity, Colossians 3:5; for it is less rebellion not to honour the king, than to set up another king against him…" -- Henry Smith

"Antichrist is Mammon's son." - John Milton

"To dispense our wealth liberally, is the best way to preserve it." - Isaac Barrow

"We must be convinced that covetousness, I mean that our covetousness, is a vice; for it holds something of a virtue, of frugality, which is not to waste that which one hath; and this makes us entertain thoughts that it is no vice; and we often say that it is good to be a little worldly; a little covetousness we like well; which shows that we do not indeed and in heart, hold it to be a sin. For if sin be naught, a little of sin cannot be good. As good say, a little poison were good, so it be not too much." - Richard Capel

"Covetousness puts money above manhood." - Billy Graham

'Take heed and beware of covetousness.'
'Take heed and beware of covetousness.'
'Take heed and beware of covetousness.'
What if I should say nothing else these three or four hours?" - Hugh Latimer, preaching before King Edward VI

"We are most of us far too ready to "seek great things" in this world: let us "seek them not" (Jeremiah 45:5)." - J. C. Ryle

"Greatness and riches are a perilous possession for the soul." - J. C. Ryle

"Much trouble is caused by our yearnings getting ahead of our earnings." - Anonymous

"Covetousness is the blight that is withering our church life in all directions." - Samuel Chadwick

"He is much happier that is always content, though he has ever so little, than he that is always coveting, though he has ever so much." - Matthew Henry

"The soul of man is infinite in what it covets." - Ben Jonson

"The itch of covetousness makes a man scratch what he can from another." - Thomas Watson

"I have heard thousands of confessions, but never one of covetousness." - Francis Xavier

"Wealth is the devil's stirrup whereby he gets up and rides the covetous." - Thomas Adams

"Seeking empties a life; giving fills it." - Anonymous

"Faith is the sovereign antidote to covetousness." - John Calvin

"Covetousness is commonly a master-sin and has the command of other lusts." - Matthew Henry

"Poor people are as much in danger from an inordinate desire towards the wealth of the world as rich people from an inordinate delight in it." - Matthew Henry

"There are two sins which were Christ's sorest enemies, covetousness and envy. Covetousness sold Christ and envy delivered him." - Thomas Manton

"We may love money without having it, just as we may have money without loving it." - J. C. Ryle

Covetousness

Getting Their Attention

Adapted from: The Lost Art of a Great Speech When it comes to great acts, I have a spot in my heart for Elvis impersonators. I’ve seen an Asian Elvis, an Elvis with an Afro, a kid Elvis and I’ve paid homage at the Church of Elvis. But the king of Elvis impersonators is a […]

"According to a survey conducted by Robert Half International, Inc., working parents are willing to cut their pay and hours by as much as 21 percent to spend more time with their families; 76 percent would also forfeit career advancement for more family or personal time. The simplicity trend has almost become its own religion." - Leadership Winter 1997

"With the appearance of the two-bathroom home, Americans forgot how to cooperate. With the appearance of the two-car family, we forgot how to associate, and with the coming of the two-television home, we forgot how to communicate." - Dr. John Baucom, quoted in New Man, Jul/Aug 1997, page 15

"Despite the pessimistic headlines announcing that the strong family in America is an endangered species, I refuse to give up hope. Who says 'endangered' means 'doomed'? If we're ingenious enough to preserve the bison, whooping crane, and humpbacked whale, I'm convinced we can preserve the family." - Charles Swindoll in The Strong Family, Zondervan, 1994

"The family is not one of several alternative lifestyles; it is not an arena in which rights are negotiated; it is not an old-fashioned barrier to a promiscuous sex life; it is not a set of cost-benefit calculations. It is a commitment for which there is no feasible substitute. No child ought to be brought into the world where that commitment from both parents is lacking." - James Q. Wilson, quoted in Readers Digest, March 1996, pg. 32

"When we envision the church as an idealized family, we are not capable of welcoming the stranger. When family is the only metaphor we use, people with whom we cannot achieve intimacy, or with whom we do not want to be intimate, are squeezed out. Since intimacy often depends on social and economic similarities, church then becomes a place of retreat rather than true hospitality. Such a church does everything in its power to eliminate the strange and cultivate the familiar. Such a church can neither welcome the stranger nor allow the stranger in each of us to emerge." - Molly Marshall, quoted in The Other Side, Nov/Dec 1996, page 57

"A survey reported in the Wall Street Journal found that out of 100 CEOs 85 say they would like more family time, but only seven said they actually expect to make it happen. - Vital Ministry, Sep/Oct 1997, page 49

"Fathering is not a pure science. All fathers fail, but the mark of a true father is what he does after he fails. - Ken Canfield, quoted in Ministries Today, May/Jun 1996, page 106

"Kevin's father used to say, 'If the son's not a better man than his father, they're both failures.' - Kevin A. Miller, editor of Leadership

Family

Faithfulness

By Joseph Parker  Nehemiah 7:2 A Description of Moral Character. The Scriptural Expression of Moral Character. He was faithful. The Lack of Appreciation of Moral Character. The Importance of Moral Character. A Specific Aspect of Moral Character. The Statement of the Pre-eminence of Piety. “He feared God…” The Illustrations of Pre-eminent Piety. Abraham the friend […]

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