Miracles
Not To Be Forgotten
The
Faith and Fellowship of Early Alcoholics
Anonymous
Dick
B. Copyright 2005
Part One -
The Bible, the “Impossible,” and Miracles
The Bible, Believing, and the Creator
Sometimes
A.A. Co-founder Bill Wilson used dogmatic
words or phrases that, to him, were
indisputable. And sometimes that very
approach can be helpful in getting
to the heart of the Bible’s authority
as to the Creator, the personal name
of the Almighty, the fact of, and
belief in, His existence. Wilson’s
blunt assertions can also be helpful
in the context of what should be done
if you do dispute his references to
the Creator and the belief in, and
fact of, His existence basic truths
so evident from the words in the Bible.
Abraham and Sarah believed the “impossible”
which the Creator said would come
to pass: Yahweh, the Creator talked
to Abram and made a covenant with
Abram that his name would be Abraham;
for a father of many nations. He also
said that Abraham’s wife would be
called Sarah (the mother of nations),
and that she would bare Abraham a
son. To which, Abraham laughed saying
to himself that he was 100 years old
and Sarah was ninety. Sarah heard
and also laughed. But Yahweh said
to Abraham: Is anything too hard for
Yahweh and stated Sarah shall have
a son. And Yahweh visited Sarah and
did unto her as he had spoken: For
Sarah conceived, and bare Abraham
a son in his old age, at the set time
of which God had spoken to him. See
Genesis 17, 18, 21; Romans 4.
The father of the son with a dumb
spirit believed the “impossible” which
Jesus said would occur: The multitude
brought to Jesus a man with a dumb
spirit which Jesus’s disciples could
not cast out. The father said to Jesus:
if thou canst do anything, have compassion
on us, and help us. To which Jesus
said unto him, “If thou canst believe,
all things are possible to him that
believeth. And straightaway the father
of the child cried out, and said with
tears, Lord, I believe; help thou
mine unbelief. And Jesus cast out
that spirit. See Mark 9:17-37.
The Virgin Mary believed the “impossible”
and conceived and gave birth to Jesus:
Recounting the birth of Jesus, the
Gospel of Luke tells us the angel
Gabriel was sent from God to visit
the Virgin Mary and inform her that
she would give birth to the Son of
God. Having never known a man, Mary
asked the angel how this could be.
To which the angel answered that the
Holy Ghost would come upon her, that
the power of the Highest would overshadow
her, and that she would conceive and
bring forth a son and call his name
Jesus. Said the angel: “For with God
nothing shall be impossible.” Mary
replied: Behold the handmaid of the
Lord; be it unto me according to the
word. And Mary was delivered of that
child. See Luke 1:26-42, 2:5-6.
Now the foregoing, and hundreds of
other miracles impossibilities are
reported in the Bible. They were brought
about by Almighty God, and they are
either believed or not. In this article,
we will discuss just how many such
miracles there were. They either were,
or they weren’t.
The Creator whose name is
Yahweh: Bill Wilson spoke
explicitly of the Creator. Regrettably,
Wilson avoided using the actual personal
Name of the Almighty, the so-called
Tetragrammaton (the four lettered
Name, YHWH - in English). Probably
because Wilson neither knew that personal
name nor had heard of it. But he did
speak confidently about a God personal
to me and did call that God his Creator,
Maker, and the Father of Light Ball
clear references to the Almighty God
of the Bible. Moreover, in his plea
for faith, Wilson flatly declared:
When we became alcoholics, crushed
by a self-imposed crisis we could
not postpone or evade, we had to fearlessly
face the proposition that either God
is everything or else He is nothing.
God either is, or He isn’t. What was
our choice to be? (Alcoholics Anonymous,
4th ed., p 53)
This declaration parallels almost
verbatim a statement frequently made
by Wilson’s spiritual mentor, Rev.
Samuel M. Shoemaker, Jr., in several
of his books, particularly the early
book, Confident Faith. And when Shoemaker
used the God either is or isn’t phrase,
he sometimes cited and certainly was
pointing to the declaration in Hebrews
11:6:
But without faith it is impossible
to please him: for he that
cometh to God must believe that he
is, and that he is a rewarder of them
that diligently seek him.
I haven’t documented these statements
because I have already written about
them explicitly many times, particularly
in my titles such as The Good Book
and The Big Book. But as to their
truth and importance, I am certainly
reminded of one of Wilson’s most insistent
(even arrogant) assertions about his
own Big Book and its utility. Wilson’s
assertion (found in an early draft
of his proposed Big Book) is:
Our description of the alcoholic,
the chapter to the agnostic, and our
personal adventures before and after,
have been designed to sell you three
pertinent ideas: (a) That you are
alcoholic and cannot manage your own
life. (b) That probably no human power
can relieve your alcoholism. (c) That
God can and will. If you are not convinced
on these vital issues, you ought to
re-read the book to this point or
else throw it away (emphasis added)
The Creator is: In
that book (the basic text of A.A.),
Wilson specifically referred without
qualification, definition, limitation,
or apology to the Creator. He did
so twelve times in the Big Book’s
basic text (See for example Alcoholics
Anonymous, 4th ed., pp. 13, 25, 28,
56, 68, 72, 75, 76, 80, 83, 158, 161).
As to the Bible, from which Wilson
clearly derived his references to
the Creator, we need not merely rely
upon the many Bible references to
the English word created (e.g. Genesis
1:1).Nor upon the Bible’s references
to creation (e.g. Mark 10:6). For
the Bible itself unequivocally uses
the English word Creator some five
times (Ecclesiastes 12:1; Isaiah 40:28,
43:25; Romans 1:25; 1 Peter 4:19).
It therefore is more than fair to
say the William Griffith Wilson, Co-founder
of A.A. and author of its Big Book,
believed the Creator to be a fact
- a fact accepted and to be accepted
by all his readers. Otherwise, he
implied, they could throw his book
away! In fact, Bill’s co-founder Dr.
Bob supplemented Bill’s dogmatic suggestion
by stating in Bob’s own personal story
that he felt sorry for anyone who
was an atheist, an agnostic, a skeptic,
or [is among those who] have any other
form of intellectual pride which keeps
you [them] from accepting what is
in this book [the Big Book]. See Dr.
Bob’s personal story on page 181.
The co-founder Dr Bob concludes with
this assurance: Your Heavenly Father
will never let you down! another explicit
reference to Yahweh, the Creator.
The Bible makes the unique personage
of the Creator crystal clear. Quoting
the Almighty Himself, it states that
He (the Creator) gave us His personal
name. That name a four lettered name
often translated in English as YHWH
is accepted by most modern scholars
as properly being translated into
English as Yahweh (See the many translations,
used by Roman Catholics, Protestants,
and Jews, and listed in my bibliography).
For just one example, see The Scriptures
(Northriding, Republic of South Africa:
Institute For Scripture Research (PTY)
LTD, 1998).
There is far too much good material
already written much actually studied
by A.A. co-founder Dr. Robert H. Smith
(Dr. Bob) and his wife Anne Ripley
Smith to justify my doing more in
this part than just summarizing the
volumes of healing detailed in the
Old Testament, the Gospels, and the
Book of Acts. The details of these
healings are clear, well-known, and
well discussed in a host of fine books
I’ll include in the bibliography accompanying
the last part of these articles. But
I do want to repeat and list again
the picture A.A. Founders Bill Wilson,
Dr. Bob Smith, Anne Smith, Henrietta
Seiberling, T. Henry Williams, and
Reverend Sam Shoemaker of New York
had before them as the A.A. program
was being shaped first in Akron and
later reshaped and reduced to writing
in New York.
Moreover, you should begin and quest
of your own for Bible miracles and
healings with an open Bible in front
of you. If you cannot accept what
is in that book, don’t throw it away.
Someone else may experience a miracle
just by hearing it and believing what
it records. But you may just walk
away and take with you all the Bible
commentaries and miraculous healing
books. They’re just the product of
the human mind.
There is only one Creator:
The Bible’s own first verse in Genesis
1:1 says: In the beginning God created
the heaven and the earth. That’s all
the power you’ll ever need! What greater
power is there? Whether accomplishing
His purpose through a big bang, a
spoken word, or miraculous divine
fiat, Yahweh, the Creator created.
One wag spoke of this tremendous act
of power, using baseball language:
In the big inning, God! The Bible
begins with the greatest and most
miraculous power imaginable, the greatest
miracle of all - a power and a miracle
in fact unimaginable by your five
senses. Yahweh created the heavens
and the earth.
Begin with the Bible, the Creator,
and the truth: The starting
points for researching miracles and
healings, then, can all be found in
your own open Bible: (1) God is (Hebrews
11:6). (2) God this Creator has a
personal name Yahweh (Exodus 3:15).
(3) That personal name Yahweh is His
alone. (4) He has other names and
titles. He’s the Creator and Maker.
To some, He is the Father. By many
He is called God, Adonai, ALORD, El
Shaddai, Elohim, and Love. But He
has given us His own personal name,
which is YHWH - Yahweh. Of that name,
Yahweh Himself says:
Thou
shalt not take the name of the LORD
[Yahweh] thy God in vain. . . (Exodus
20:7)
Glory ye in his holy name. . . (Psalm
105:3)
A. . . holy and reverend is his name
(Psalm 111:9)
And I will sanctify my great name.
. . (Ezekiel 36:23)
Just
as the United States has many presidents,
so the world and even the Bible refer
to many gods. But the Bible distinguishes
Yahweh the Creator any and all other
gods or god. It enables anyone to
think of Him in personal terms and
as a personal God with a personal
name, as differing from the proliferating
gods of yesterday and today such as
light bulbs, Jupiter, door knobs,
higher powers, graven images, and
the devil himself.
Yahweh is a personal name; and if
He is called by His name, you can’t
get mixed up by titles, other names,
and other gods. The Bible itself says
there are gods many. But there is
only one named Yahweh. There is only
one Creator. There is only one Creator
who is. And this is the Creator who
performs the miracles, beginning with
that described in Genesis 1:1, or
enabled them to be performed by His
son, by angels, by servants, and by
you.
Part
Two: The Old Testament Miracles of
Yahweh, the Creator
The
Scope of Bible Miracles:
There
are plenty of discussions of Old Testament
signs, wonders, miracles, and healings.
You can find some good ones in my
bibliography. But whatever you may
think of its theology there is one
discussion that really highlights
and details all the miracles of the
Old Testament. In fact, it makes clear
that the very Bible itself is a miracle
whose contents were revealed to men
by God. Its very contents list one
miracle after another. The title is
that of Dr. Herbert Lockyer: All The
Miracles of the Bible: The Supernatural
in Scripture Its Scope and Significance
(Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan
Publishing House, 1961). Lockyer starts
us off with these comments:
A
miracle has been defined as a work
wrought by a divine power for a divine
purpose by means beyond the reach
of man. . . . Webster’s definition
of a miracle is clear and concise
event or effect in the physical world
deviating from the known laws of nature,
or transcending our knowledge of these
laws; an extra-ordinary, anomalous,
or abnormal event brought about by
a super-human agency. . . . the Bible
does not set itself to define miracles
from the standpoint of nature or science,
but from the standpoint of the moral
source, the moral power, the moral
aim, and the moral effect which they
represented. . . . The term miracle
then, from the Biblical standpoint
is used to describe the wonderful
phenomena accompanying Jewish and
Christian revelations, especially
at critical moments. The Biblical
conception of a miracle is that of
some extraordinary work of deity transcending
the ordinary powers of nature and
wrought in connection with the ends
of revelation (pp. 13-14).
Viewed
as Lockyer presents them, Bible miracles
reveal the prerogative of deity to
exercise almightiness in any realm.
Here are some of the divisions: (1)
Power over nature -miracles having
to do with the Red Sea, Jordan, stilling
storms, water into wine, walking on
sea; pillar of fire, fiery furnace;
Manna, feeding hundreds or thousands;
thunder, floods, withered trees, opened
doors. (2) Power over disease provision,
prevention, and permission of diseases
ranging from boils, leprosy, poisonous
serpents, withered hands, blindness,
deafness, dumbness, lameness, infirmities.
(3) Power over death resurrections
of Elijah’s bones, the three Christ
raised from the dead, the resurrection
of Christ, and apostolic resurrection.
(4) Power over demons covering the
witch at Endor, demoniacs, lunacy,
unclean spirits. There are many more.
The Common Shortcomings of
Most Lists: A few more words
from Lockyer will be helpful:
A
surpassing feature of one’s quest
for works of profit is the fact that
there is no theological treatise,
at least known to the writer, dealing
with all the miracles of the Bible.
Somehow Old Testament miracles, which
are as numerous, if not more so, than
those found in the New Testament,
are sadly neglected. . . . In several,
we have scant references to some of
the miracles performed by the prophets
and the apostles, but a complete and
comprehensive list is lacking (p,
25).
Usually theological treatises dealing
with Bible miracles, either for or
against, omit any reference to the
Bible as a miracle in itself. It is
not only a Book relating credited
miracles everything associated with
the Bible is miraculous. . . Everything
about the Bible is supernatural, and
in spite of all destructive criticism
has done to weaken its authority,
it remains an ever-present miracle
(p. 26).
Lockyer
points to the oft-ignored scope of
miracles: (1) Miracle of
its inspiration as originally written
the Bible is wholly inspired. The
divine inspiration of Scripture was
the unvarying conviction of the Christian
Church until the dominance of liberalism
towards the close of the last century.
(2) Miracle of its antiquity a sacred
which took some 1,500 years to complete
has been in existence in its completed
form for almost two millenniums. (3)
Miracle of its accuracy Archeology,
for example, has proved to be an invaluable
aid in confirming Bible records. (4)
Miracle of its harmony Though written
by some 40 writers over 1,500 years,
its 66 books agree. (5) Miracle of
its preservation. (6) Miracle of its
preparation only a small fraction
of residuary variation in the text.
(7) Miracle of its abiding power a
triumphant ministry to a world in
need. (8) Miracle of its circulation
still the world’s best seller though
thousands of years old.
A
Birds Eye View of the Old Testament
Miracles
We
continue with Lockyer’s enormous summary.
You will have to do a lot of reading
to cover all the miracles he points
out in the Old Testament (Lockyer,
All The Miracles of the Bible, supra,
pp. 28-148). But here is an overview,
as to which you will find Lockyer’s
chapter and verse documentation.
The Miracles of the Books
of Moses: (1) The Miracle
of Creation - of the world, of man,
and the earth’s development from chaos
to light to firmament to dry land
to vegetation to life in water and
air and land, to man. (2) The Miracle
of Enoch’s Translation. (3) The Miracle
of the Flood. (4) The Miracle of Babel.
(5) The Miracle of Plagued Pharaoh.
(6) The Miracle of the Smoking Furnace
and Burning Lamp. (7) The Miracle
of Sarah’s Conception. (8) The Miracle
of Blinded Sodomites and of Sodom
and Gomorrah.(9) The Miracle of Lot’s
Wife. (10) The Miracle of Closed Wombs.
(11) The Miracle of Hagar’s Well.
(12) The Miracle of the Burning Bush.
(13) The Miracle of the Leprous Hand.
(14) The Miracle of the Rod. (15)
The Miracle and Miracles of Moses.
(16) The Miracles of the Nile, the
Frogs, the Lice, the Flies, the Murrain
of Beasts, Boils and Blains, the Locusts.
(17) The Miracles in Exodus as to
the Darkness, Death of the Firstborn,
Cloud and Fire, Red Sea. (18 The Miracles
in Exodus, Leviticus, Deuteronomy,
and Numbers as to the Journey, Marah’s
Healing Waters, Manna, Quails, Smitten
Rock, Victory Over Amalek, at Sinai,
at Taberah, of Miriam’s Leprosy, Aaron’s
Rod, the Brazen Serpent, of the Well,
Balaam’s Ass, and Moses’ Death. Many
of these have become so accepted and
so much a part of our language that
we frequently hear expressions about
the Creation, the Flood, Babel, Sarah’s
conception, Sodom and Gomorrah, the
Burning Bush, the parting of the Sea,
the Journey of the children of Israel,
and Manna.
The Miracles of the Historical
Books: (1) Dividing of the
Jordan. (2) Miracle Appearance. (3)
Jericho. (4) Gibeon. (5) The Sun Standing
Still. (6) Miracles in the Book of
Judges. (7) Samson. (8) Samuel’s history.
(9) David’s career. (10) Solomon’s
Reign. (11) Elijah. (12) Elisha. (13)
the healings. Again, what the Bible
did not directly contribute, the Negro
Spirituals and Hollywood Epochs have
made a part of our language and understanding.
The Miracles in Post-Captivity
Books: Strong evidences of
God’s almightiness are to be found
in the books of Ezra, Nehemiah, and
Esther.
The Miracles in the Poetical
Books: The records in Job,
Psalms, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes
are loaded with pages and pages of
materiel on God’s providence, guidance,
and deliverance.
The Miracles in the Prophetical
Books: Prophecy is itself
a miracle. The books of Isaiah, Jeremiah,
Ezekiel, and DanielBwhether exemplifying
miracles by the authors or testimonies
to the miraculous power of GodBproclaim
the words of men who spoke for God
and who received messages from God.
Some twelve other prophetical books
contain predictions of events not
within human foresight, and proof
that the establishment of predictions
has been brought about which surpass
human power and are not from man’s
sagacity, nor the event from man’s
will and design. These are Hosea,
Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah,
Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai,
Zechariah, and the concluding Malachi.
A
Focus on Healing Miracles
In
Morton T. Kelsey, Psychology, Medicine
& Christian Healing. Rev. and
exp.ed. (San Francisco: Harper &
Row Publishers, 1966), some very important
contentions are made.
Kelsey points to what he calls some
of the most touching and best-remembered
stories of Old Testament healings
accounts which we have summarized
by chapter and verse below. But Kelsey
contends there are two distinctly
different strands pertaining to sickness
and sin in the Old Testament. As to
the first strand, Keley said:
Health
and wealth are the rewards of God,
and sickness, poverty, and misfortune
were divine punishments. From the
beginning the law went into detail
about the kind of disease Yahweh would
send upon those who did not live by
his covenant. . . . There is certainly
no question how sickness was looked
upon in this major strand of the Old
Testament; it was sent by Yahweh to
punish people for breaking the ritualistic
or moral law (pp. 27-28).
As
to the second strand, he said:
The
other strand of belief about healing
found in the Old Testament is not
as wide or obvious as the teaching
accepted by Hebrew leaders. It is
expressed in certain healing stories,
in some of the Psalms, in the hopes
of certain passages of Isaiah, and
in the gigantic protest of the book
of Job. This element is the one Jesus
followed, the base from which he acted.
As we have already seen, in the Old
Testament there was no question, in
theory, that Yahweh could heal. In
several places remarkable instances
were recorded. Some of the most touching
and best-remembered stories are those
in which children were given to women
who were barren (p.33).
What
then is the truth? Is Yahweh the punishing
God we often hear mentioned by Roman
Catholics in A.A. meetings a God who
visits sickness and punishment on
disobedient people? Or is He the God
of love, of whom Dr. Bob and his wife
Anne so often spoke in early A.A.?
In Healing: Pagan And Christian (London:
Society For Promoting Christian Knowledge,
1935), author George Gordon Dawson
comments, p. 90:
The
standpoint of the Old Testament, generally,
is that good health results from holy
living. It is a divine gift and the
reward of loving service. Any cure
of disease was regarded as a gift
from Yahweh, and resulted from forgiveness.
The sick person made his peace with
Him by repentance, intercession, and
sacrifice. The right spiritual relationship
was restored. The soul was at rest,
and the inner life being calm the
bodily symptoms disappeared.
Alan
Richardson wrote at pp. 3-4:
.
. . in the Old Testament the historically
decisive event, which became for the
Hebrew mind, the symbol and type of
all God’s comings in history is the
Miracle of the Red Sea. The Miracle
Stories of the Gospels (London: SCM
Press Ltd., 1941).
Again,
what is the truth? A God of wrath,
punishment, and justice? A God of
love, forgiveness, and salvation?
To answer could provide you with volumes
of commentaries and opinions.
Here, we’d prefer to pass on from
the statements and observations of
commentators. Let’s look at the Bible.
First,
the Specific Examples of Healing
Children
given to women who were barren
(Genesis 18:10, Judges 13:5, 24; 1
Samuel 1:19-20; 2 Kings 4:16-17).
The healing of Miriam’s leprosy
(Numbers 12:1-15; 2 Kings 5:1-14).
The healing of Jeroboam’s
paralyzed hand (1 Kings 13:1-6).
Raising from the dead by Elijah
and by Elisha (1 Kings 17:17-24;
2 Kings 4:1-37).
Salvation of the Israelites
from the later plagues in Egypt
(Numbers 21:6-9).
Miracles wrought by Moses
(Exodus 7 - 17).
For summaries, see New Bible
Dictionary, Second Edition
(England: Inter-Varsity Press, 1982),
pp. 457-65; Kelsey, Psychology, Medicine,
& Christian Healing, supra, pp.
35-36; Lockyer, All The Miracles of
The Bible, supra, pp. 25-148.
Second,
Some Old Testament Bible Verses to
Study
Exodus
15:26:
And
[Yahweh] said, If thou wilt diligently
hearken to the voice of the Lord [Yahweh]
thy God, and wilt do that which is
right in his sight, and will give
ear to his commandments, and keep
all his statutes, I will put none
of these diseases upon thee, which
I have brought upon the Egyptians;
for I am the Lord [Yahweh] that healeth
thee.
Deuteronomy
4:29-31:
But
if from thence thou shall seek the
Lord thy God, thou shalt find him,
if thou seek him with all thy heart
and with all thy soul. When thou art
in tribulation, and all these things
are come upon thee, even in the latter
days, if thou turn to the Lord thy
God, and shalt be obedient unto his
voice; (For the Lord thy God is a
merciful God;) he will not forsake
thee, neither destroy thee, nor forget
the covenant of thy fathers which
he sware unto them.
Deuteronomy
4:39-40:
Know
therefore this day, and consider it
in thine heart, that the Lord he is
God in heaven above, and upon the
earth beneath: there is none else.
Thou shalt keep therefore his statutes,
and his commandments which I command
thee this day, that it may go well
with thee, and with thy children after
thee, and that thou mayest prolong
thy days upon the earth, which the
Lord thy God giveth thee, for ever.
Deuteronomy
7:8-9, 11-15:
But
because the Lord loved you, and because
he would keep the oath which he had
sworn unto your fathers, hath the
Lord brought you out with a mighty
hand, and redeemed you out of the
house of bondsmen, from the hand of
Pharaoh king of Egypt. Know therefore
that the Lord thy God, he is God,
the faithful God, which keepeth covenant
and mercy with them that love him
and keep his commandments to a thousand
generations.
Thou shalt therefore keep the commandments,
and the statutes, and the judgments,
which I command me this day, to do
them. Wherefore it shall come to pass,
if ye hearken to these judgments,
and keep and do them, that the Lord
thy God shall keep unto thee the covenant
and the mercy which he sware unto
thy fathers. And he will love thee,
and bless thee, and multiply thee:
he will also bless the fruit of thy
womb, and the fruit of thy land, thy
corn, and thy wine, and thine oil,
the increase of thy kine, and the
flocks of thy sheep, in the land which
he sware unto the fathers to give
thee. Thou shalt be blessed above
all people. . . . And the Lord will
take away from thee all sickness,
and will put none of the evil diseases
of Egypt which thou knowest, upon
thee; but will lay them upon all them
that hate thee.
Psalm
103:2-3:
Bless
the Lord, O my soul, and forget not
all his benefits. Who forgiveth all
thine iniquities; who healeth all
thy diseases; Who redeemeth thy life
from destruction; who crowneth thee
with lovingkindness and tender mercies.
Psalm
107:9-20:
Then
they cry unto the Lord in their trouble,
and he saveth them out of their distresses.
He sent his word, and healed them,
and delivered them from their destructions.
Psalm
91:11-16:
For
he shall give his angels charge over
thee, to keep thee in all thy ways.
They shall bear thee up in their hands,
lest thou dash thy foot against a
stone. Thou shalt tread upon the lion
and adder; the young lion and the
dragon shalt thou trample under feet.
Because he hath set his love upon
me, therefore will I deliver him:
I will set him on high, because he
hath known my name. He shall call
upon me, and I will answer him: I
will be with him in trouble; I will
deliver him, and honor him. With long
life will I satisfy him, and shew
him my salvation.
The
Word of God, as it is set forth in
the Old Testament, tells us that Yahweh
has given us commandments and statutes
and commands us to obey them. It tells
us He loves us, forgives us, heals
our diseases, redeems our lives from
destruction, and crowns us with lovingkindness
and tender mercies. It tells us we
can cry out to him in trouble and
be saved from our distresses, be healed
of our diseases, and be delivered
from destructions. He will guide us.
He will protect us. He will not forsake
us if we obey Him. And he certainly
commands. But His commandments are
not grievous. And this is the love
of God–that we obey His commandments.
END
Copyright
© Dick B.