Look at today’s Devotional By Joseph Princes
(READ IT FRIST and then read my personal feelings on it.)
(READ IT FRIST and then read my personal feelings on it.)
(WE WOULD LOVE TO HEAR BACK FROM YOU SO PLEASE LET US KNOW WHAT YOU THINK... FEED BACK IS A GOOD THING...)
My Personal Notes for Today:
Good Evening
This is totally new to me. Talking about blogging in the evening to all of you. So Today's Devotional looks at "Guaranteed By Covenant" I must be up front with all of you that this is something that is TOTALLY new to me to be studying. It's something that makes me very happy and sad and at a total non understanding about this subject... But As I was reading the following things jumped off the page to me and it's working on my heart. ..
* What is a covenant? It is like a contract. Yet, it is more than a contract. A contract is binding only for a period of time, like five years or seven years, or until certain terms are fulfilled. But a covenant is perpetual. It is permanent. The only way out is through death. That is why marriage is a covenant, not a contract. It is permanent — “Till death do us part”.
Note: The Biggest thing that I loved about reading the above part is "Till death do us prat" I truly love death but Im even more in love with the word "part"
*The word "BLESSER" just jumped off the page at me... I have not seen this work before and so I looked it up...
here is what I came up with...
Information: blesser bless'er n.
WORD HISTORY The verb bless comes from Old English blœdsian, blēdsian, blētsian, "to bless, wish happiness, consecrate." Although the Old English verb has no cognates in any other Germanic language, it can be shown to derive from the Germanic noun *blōdan, "blood." Blœdsian therefore literally means "to consecrate with blood, sprinkle with blood." The Angles, Saxons, and Jutes, the early Germanic migrants to Britain, used blœdsian for their pagan sacrifices. After they converted to Christianity, blœdsian acquired new meanings as a result of its use in translations of the Latin Bible, but it kept its pagan Germanic senses as well.
Read more about the word go to: http://www.answers.com/topic/bless#ixzz2HXGbzKkO
* The breakthrough you are waiting for is guaranteed by covenant!
Note: the BREAKTHROUGH is GUARANTEED to US in and throw a COVENANT with the LORD JESUS CHRIST.. .
In Closing: God has bound Himself to a covenant, an iron-clad guarantee of His blessings and provision in your life.
Blessings,
Rev. David Betts
This is totally new to me. Talking about blogging in the evening to all of you. So Today's Devotional looks at "Guaranteed By Covenant" I must be up front with all of you that this is something that is TOTALLY new to me to be studying. It's something that makes me very happy and sad and at a total non understanding about this subject... But As I was reading the following things jumped off the page to me and it's working on my heart. ..
* What is a covenant? It is like a contract. Yet, it is more than a contract. A contract is binding only for a period of time, like five years or seven years, or until certain terms are fulfilled. But a covenant is perpetual. It is permanent. The only way out is through death. That is why marriage is a covenant, not a contract. It is permanent — “Till death do us part”.
Note: The Biggest thing that I loved about reading the above part is "Till death do us prat" I truly love death but Im even more in love with the word "part"
*The word "BLESSER" just jumped off the page at me... I have not seen this work before and so I looked it up...
here is what I came up with...
Information: blesser bless'er n.
WORD HISTORY The verb bless comes from Old English blœdsian, blēdsian, blētsian, "to bless, wish happiness, consecrate." Although the Old English verb has no cognates in any other Germanic language, it can be shown to derive from the Germanic noun *blōdan, "blood." Blœdsian therefore literally means "to consecrate with blood, sprinkle with blood." The Angles, Saxons, and Jutes, the early Germanic migrants to Britain, used blœdsian for their pagan sacrifices. After they converted to Christianity, blœdsian acquired new meanings as a result of its use in translations of the Latin Bible, but it kept its pagan Germanic senses as well.
Read more about the word go to: http://www.answers.com/topic/bless#ixzz2HXGbzKkO
* The breakthrough you are waiting for is guaranteed by covenant!
Note: the BREAKTHROUGH is GUARANTEED to US in and throw a COVENANT with the LORD JESUS CHRIST.. .
In Closing: God has bound Himself to a covenant, an iron-clad guarantee of His blessings and provision in your life.
Blessings,
Rev. David Betts
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