Thứ Ba, 4 tháng 4, 2017

Waching daily Apr 4 2017

♪♪♪

♪ I'M SPINNING IN CIRCLES BUT STRAIGHT OUT OF LINES ♪

♪ WITH EVERY EXCUSE I'VE FALLEN IN BEHIND ♪

♪ NOW WATCH ME SELF DESTRUCT, RIGHT ON TIME ♪

♪ I'VE BUILT UP EVERY WALL I'VE HAD TO CLIMB ♪

♪ THAT REAL LIFE AIN'T NOTHIN' BUT ANGER AND DOUBT ♪

♪ AND FAILURE'S A STRANGER I STILL DREAM ABOUT ♪

♪ I HOLD IT DOWN ♪

♪ WELL IT BE SILENCE ♪

♪ THAT GOT TO MY HEAD ♪

♪ ONCE THAT REMINDS ME THAT EVERYTHING ENDS ♪

♪ I HOLD IT DOWN ♪

♪ SO TELL MY DOUBTS I'M COMING HOME ♪

♪ AND PUT MY FAILURE ON THE PHONE ♪

♪ HOLD IT DOWN, LET IT GO ♪

♪♪♪

♪ I GAMBLED MY SOUL WITHOUT KNOWING THE STAKES ♪

♪ NOW I'M FILLING THE HOLE WITH FALSEHOOD AND SHAME ♪

♪ AND NOW MY GUILTY SKIN WILL TURN TO STONE ♪

♪ AND I'M A MAN OF SIN, NOW THAT I KNOW ♪

♪ THAT REAL LIFE AIN'T NOTHIN' BUT ANGER AND DOUBT ♪

♪ AND FAILURE'S A STRANGER I STILL DREAM ABOUT ♪

♪ I HOLD IT DOWN ♪

♪ I HOLD IT DOWN ♪

♪ SO TELL MY DOUBTS I'M COMING HOME ♪

♪ AND PUT MY FAILURE ON THE PHONE ♪

♪ HOLD IT DOWN ♪

♪ AND REAL LIFE AINT NOTHING BUT ANGER AND DOUBT ♪

♪ AND FAILURE'S A STRANGER WE'VE ALL DREAMED ABOUT ♪

♪ I HOLD IT DOWN ♪

♪ I'M SEARCHING FOR ANSWERS BUT LOST IN MY HEAD ♪

♪ NOW I REACH INTO DARKNESS AND TAKE WHAT I GET ♪

♪ I HOLD IT DOWN ♪

♪ I HOLD IT DOWN ♪

♪ I HOLD IT DOWN ♪

♪ I HOLD IT DOWN ♪

♪ I HOLD IT DOWN ♪

♪ SO TELL MY DOUBTS I'M COMING HOME ♪

♪ AND PUT MY FAILURE ON THE PHONE ♪

♪ HOLD IT DOWN, LET IT GO ♪

For more infomation >> Noah Kahan - Hold It Down (Acoustic) - Duration: 3:34.

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A Conquering, Courageous Faith, Part 1 (Hebrews 11:30-31) - Duration: 47:53.

We have been going through the eleventh chapter of Hebrews and we're going to return to that

tonight, but by no means are we going to complete the text before us and I had no intention

of doing that because it opens up to us so much Old Testament scripture.

Hebrews chapter 11, this is known as the faith chapter, stretches into the beginning of chapter

12, as we will see.

We have been reminded all the way through this chapter that anyone who has a relationship

with God has that relationship based on faith and not of works.

We have started all the way back in the book of Genesis to see the examples of faith, or

as they're often known, the heroes of faith.

And we progressed through the patriarchs, arrived at Moses and that took us through

the books, the early books of the Bible known as the Pentateuch.

As we come to verse 30 and following, we pick up the account in Joshua and Judges and references

are made to people who lived in the time of the writing of 1 and 2 Samuel and then 1 and

2 Kings.

And we sweep all the way from there in these final verses through the prophets, you could

say all the way up to John the Baptist.

So from verse 30 where we are introduced to the walls of Jericho, the entry into the promised

land, we go all the way through the prophets in just those few verses.

Obviously not covering all of them, but representative names are given that sweep through that period.

This is important.

This is critically important to the writer of the book of Hebrews.

What is important to him is to convey to his readers that salvation is by faith alone.

You will understand that those people living in the first century in the time of the writing

of the book of Hebrews had been influenced by Judaism and the Judaism that had developed

much earlier than that but was in full force then was a Judaism that taught that salvation

is earned by works and ceremony and ritual, morality.

And the message of the New Testament is that by the deeds of the flesh no person will be

justified.

We're saved by grace through faith, that not of yourselves, not of works lest any man should

boast, as the New Testament epistles inform us.

There is no way to come to God by works, by effort on one's own...moral effort, spiritual

effort, religious effort.

You hear people today who are proud to say they're religious or perhaps more popularly

proud to say they are spiritual.

That gains them nothing with God, no matter how extensive their efforts are at religion

or spirituality, or morality, or ceremony, they achieve absolutely nothing because even

the best that men can do their righteousnesses are filthy rags to God.

So the message of the New Testament is the message that salvation is by faith alone.

That is a message that is a dramatic change for the Jewish hearers and so it needs to

be defended as the true Word of God lest they think that this is some kind of new message,

that the gospel of grace and faith is some aberration, that it is something opposed to

the Old Testament.

And so the writer of Hebrews gives us this jewel of a book that not only was beneficial

to the Jews to whom it was written but for all who will read it through all time to reinforce

the fact that salvation by faith alone is not something that the New Testament invents

but is the age-old and only way that anyone has ever been reconciled to God.

And so, the chapter wants to send that message unmistakably that salvation is by faith alone.

And that's why it begins in verse 3, "By faith..." and verse 4, "By faith..." and verse 5, "By

faith..." and verse 7, "By faith..." and verse 8 "By faith," and verse 9, "By faith," and

verse 11 "By faith," and on and on it goes.

And what is remarkable about this book is its historical reach.

The only way to be saved even in the earliest era of human history was by faith and so the

first person mentioned is Abel.

Abel was told by God that if he wanted to come to God he had to bring a sacrifice and

it had to be an animal.

Death was required by God.

Abel didn't question God, he did exactly what God told him.

He obeyed God and by faith Abel offered to God a better sacrifice.

This is sort of an initial look at salvation by sacrifice, all of which, of course, points

to Christ.

Abel was not saved by his works.

On the other hand, Cain made an effort at a relationship to God by bringing that which

he had produced and it was useless.

And then the story in this chapter moves to Enoch.

Enoch is the one who walked right into the presence of God and didn't die.

He never questioned God either.

He lived such a life of obedience, such a holy life that he did not see death.

He was taken up, it says, because he was so pleasing to God.

And he pleased God because he did what God commanded him to do.

And then there was Noah.

Noah's relationship to God was a relationship of faith.

He demonstrate is faith in the Word of God revealed to him by building a boat in the

middle of the desert, a massive, massive ship.

Over a period of 120 years he proclaimed this God who asked him to do this strange task

as the true and living God, though he was mocked by his contemporaries through all those

years.

He believed that one day it would rain and there would be water to float that boat because

God said that.

So whether you're talking about Abel, Enoch or Noah, they responded to the Word of God

in obedience.

And then we came to Abraham and Abraham, the father of the nation Israel, the first of

the patriarchs believed God, left Ur, spent his life as a nomad and a wanderer and never

in his entire life did he receive what was promised to come through him.

He died without ever realizing the promise.

He passed on the Abrahamic Covenant with all its promises to his son Isaac.

God reiterated the same promise of a great nation of influence across the world of salvation,

of blessing.

God passed it on to Isaac and Isaac never saw it realized and Isaac passed it on to

Jacob and Jacob never saw it realized.

And Jacob passed it on to Joseph and Joseph never saw it realized.

Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and Joseph all died without ever having received the promise.

So they continued to walk with God, to trust God by faith, not by sight.

And we've gone through that in detail.

The message here is, those who were related to God are related to God because they came

to Him by faith and they continue to live by faith.

Life may be difficult.

What God requires may be bizarre, it may be against the grain of your own nature, your

own will.

It may be contrary to culture.

It may seem unreasonable.

It may cause suffering.

It may bring human mockery upon your heart.

It may mean separation from the world.

It may cost you your ambitions.

It may even cost you your life.

But you do it because God said to do it.

That's what marks the people of God.

They obey God.

That's what a relationship to God is about, it's about obedience.

You obey His call to salvation and repentance and faith.

You obey His call to a life of obedience.

It has always been that way.

And so, we have trekked together through the Pentateuch, from Abel to Abraham and his progeny,

the patriarchs.

And we have seen, as the writer helps us, with just brief statements that explode in

our minds the whole account in the Pentateuch, how that always a person's relationship to

God is based on faith.

Faith that is real stands every test.

It is therefore tested and demonstrated in crises, in crises.

Now this message is so important, let's go back just looking at the actual book of Hebrews

and the writer of Hebrews and what he has in mind.

Some years before this letter was written, and we don't know who its writer is, but some

years before it was written, the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ had come to some Jews.

We don't know where they are.

Some were in the land of Israel in some community, some region, some town.

The gospel has come to them and it has come to them by the Apostles themselves.

It is clear that the Apostles were the messengers because in chapter 2 and verse 3, they are

warned not to neglect a great salvation which was at first spoken through the Lord but it

was confirmed to us by those who heard.

God also testifying with them by signs and wonders and various miracles and gifts of

the Holy Spirit.

Signs and wonders belong to the Apostles.

They were authenticating marks to the Apostles.

So this community of Jewish people heard the gospel preached from the Apostles and it was

validated and verified by signs and wonders and empowerment through the Holy Spirit.

Some in the Jewish community embraced that gospel fully.

They believed in that gospel.

They came to Christ.

They left behind the Old Covenant.

They stepped into the wonderful realm of the New Covenant.

Others, however, in that Jewish community had heard it.

They made some kind of an intellectual commitment to its veracity but no heart commitment to

it.

They were outwardly identified with this local group of true believing Jews, but they had

fallen short of genuine salvation so that through this book repeatedly, chapter 2, chapter

4, chapter 5, chapter 6, chapter 10, there are warnings to this group of intellectually

convinced Jews hanging on the fringe of the church that they have to come all the way

to salvation.

Do not neglect the salvation.

That's what it is in chapter 2.

"Don't neglect so great a salvation."

Don't stop short of that.

In chapters 4 and 5 it's "Come all the way to rest."

"Come all the way to rest."

In chapter 6 it's "Don't fall away because if you fall away with full revelation, it's

impossible to be renewed to repentance."

And in chapter 10 it's a warning that if you reject the gospel with the knowledge you have,

you crucify the Son of God and you put Him to open shame.

And how far greater will the judgment, the eternal punishment be on someone who does

that?"

So the warning passage has come throughout this epistle.

To those who are there in the congregation, they will hear this epistle when it is read.

They need to be warned.

And so do any others in any generation who have intellectually assented to the gospel

but have never made the affirmation, the assensus(?) , as the Latin word would indicate it, where

they ascend to this truth with all their hearts.

One perhaps very, very strong and compelling motivation for them to embrace the gospel

is to assure them that it is not a new message, but it is the same old message that God will

reconcile with sinners only one way, and that is by faith.

And in any generation with just a meager amount of revelation, as would be true in the day

of Abel and Enoch and a little more in the time of Noah and a little more in the time

of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and Joseph, at any point in history a relationship with God was

predicated on believing what God had revealed.

And the most important element that He had revealed is that men are sinners and they

need a sacrifice.

And that was the first revelation to Cain and Abel...Abel obeyed it, Cain did not.

The message then of Hebrews 11 is that the way of salvation has always been by faith.

Don't fall back into Judaism.

Don't fall back into old Judaistic patterns.

Be willing to break with the priesthood which is now obliterated when the temple veil was

rent from top to bottom, the priesthood was over.

The Holy of Holies was thrown wide open for anyone and everyone.

Make the break.

The message of the book is "Come all the way to Christ.

Drop the old stuff, come to Christ, come to Him, come to God by faith."

That is the only way.

That, of course, has been the Christian gospel and the Christian message.

This chapter had an introduction in chapter 10 and verse 38.

"My righteous ones shall live by faith," or that very common understanding of it taken

from Habakkuk, "The just shall live by faith."

You've got to live by faith, the only way you can have spiritual life.

And if he shrinks back, my soul has no pleasure in him.

Then the writer of Hebrews says, "We are not of those who shrink back to destruction but

of those who have faith to the preserving of the soul."

Come to God by faith, that's the message of Hebrews.

That's the message that not only sweeps through this chapter, but is reiterated with powerful

force at the beginning of chapter 12, which we will see.

Now as we come to the text before us, in verse 30, we have marched our way up to the walls

of Jericho, historically.

And we now come to some illustrations of faith that are really remarkable.

And here we see the courage of faith.

That is a component of faith that you could actually identify sort of the pinnacle of

faith.

I guess you could say that the validating of anybody's faith is what it will endure.

If it's true faith, it will obey at any price...at any price.

It will demonstrate courage in the face of any opposition, any threat, any suffering.

True faith does not draw back.

It does not fold up.

It does not collapse.

We have seen the life of faith with Abel.

The walk of faith with Enoch.

The work of faith with Noah.

The pattern of faith with Abraham.

The victory of faith with the patriarchs.

We've seen the choices that faith makes with Moses who chooses rather to suffer the reproach

of Christ with his people than to enjoy the pleasures of sin that he has as one of the

elite in Egypt.

Now we come, in a sense, to the pinnacle of faith and that's the courage of faith.

True faith is, most of all, courageous.

That's where it really demonstrates itself.

Any kind of faith in God, any kind of professed faith in Christ that crumbles under certain

pressures is not a true faith.

This is demonstrated to us in the teaching of our Lord in the sermon on the soils where

He describes some people who on the surface look like they're open to receiving the message

and the seed goes in to what He calls the rocky soil and for a little while it springs

up and it looks like a wonderful response and even classifies it as the fact that the

Word, or the Word of the gospel is received with joy.

But then, He says, when the sun comes out, the roots on that kind of soil can't penetrate

to go down deep and get the water because there's rockbed right below the surface, and

so the sun burns the plant and it dies, never having borne fruit.

And Jesus says the sun symbolizes thlipsis , pressure, persecution.

That's the test.

That's the test.

Or it may be that kind of soil that's full of weeds and thorns, never letting go of the

love of the world, the love of this age, the love of riches and eventually that chokes

out the Word.

There are all kinds of temporary believers.

Then there are pressures that come upon all of us that inevitably reveal who's real and

who is not.

So let's look at some of those who were tested and demonstrated the kind of faith...the kind

of courage, I should say, that true faith possesses.

Verses 30 and 31, we may not get pass this.

"By faith, the walls of Jericho fell down after they had been encircled for seven days.

By faith, Rahab the harlot did not perish along with those who were disobedient after

she had welcomed the spies in peace."

Now, as I said, we're moving in the history of the Old Testament, out of the Pentateuch

and in to Joshua.

First we're reminded of the walls of Jericho, teichos in the Greek, referring to an outer

wall, the great massive city wall that surrounded the city of Jericho.

Up to this point, the writer has been citing as examples of faith the great men before

and after the Flood, up until Israel left Egypt.

Moses being the one drawn out of the experience in Egypt and the one who led them out.

They came out of the land of Egypt, they were on their way to the promised land.

Now we're in to the promised land and we're going to meet some of the heroes of life in

the promised land.

By the way, there's an omission.

There's an omission of 40 years of unbelief while they wandered in the wilderness and

the generation of doubters died out.

Now we find the generation that is able to go into the land and the story is given to

us in Joshua chapter 6 .

So let's go back to that for a moment.

You're familiar with it, Jericho was tightly shut because of the sons of Israel.

They had been told that the children of Israel were near by.

They were massive, some would estimate that originally when they came out of Egypt there

were as many as two million.

We don't know exactly how many were left by the time they were ready to enter the land

of Canaan but they were formidable.

Jericho had already been spied out, you remember that earlier in Joshua chapter 2?

And Jericho was not on lock-down because of the sons of Israel.

No one went out, no one came in.

"And the Lord said to Joshua, 'See, I've given Jericho into your hand with its king and its

valiant warriors.

You shall march around the city, all the men who are circling the city once, just do that

for six days.

And seven priests shall carry seven trumpets of ram's horns before the ark, then on the

seventh day you shall march around the city seven times and the priests shall blow the

trumpets.

It shall be that when they make a large blast with the ram's horn, and when you hear the

sound of the trumpet, all the people shall shout with a great shout and the wall of the

city will fall down flat and the people will go up every man straight ahead."

Just natural human skepticism would say.

"Could you go over that again?"

What??

We're going to conquer how?

We're going to march around the wall once a day for six days and on the seventh day

we're going to march around the wall and the seventh time we're going to shout at the top

of our voice and the walls are just going to fall out flat?

I would conclude that obedience to this command would be an act of faith, wouldn't you?

It seems such a strange thing.

And, of course, you know the story.

It's exactly what they did.

They did it and the chronicle is given of each day and then you come down to verse 20,

the people shouted, the priests blew the trumpets.

When the people heard the sound of the trumpet, the people shouted with a great shout, the

wall fell down flat so that the people went up into the city, every man straight ahead

and they took the city.

They utterly destroyed everything in the city, both man and woman, young and old, ox and

sheep and donkey with the edge of the sword.

It was a massive slaughter.

So here we are at the entrance into the land of Canaan, the land of promise, and there's

a demonstration of faith.

Faith on the part of Joshua who is the leader and faith on the part of the people.

Moses is gone.

Joshua is the new leader.

They have crossed the Jordan and in crossing the Jordan they are now sandwiched between

the Jordan and Jericho and Jericho is kind of a frontier fortress, guarding the southern

part of Canaan.

And this is their first obstacle and is the test of their faith.

Are they going to believe God when God tells them what He wants them to do?

Jericho was a strong city, it was barred, it was fortified to take it.

It seemed an impossible task, it was fortified on purpose because it was the guardian city

of the southern part of the land of Israel.

It is one of the cities that scarred the spies and caused them to say, back in Deuteronomy

1:28, "The people is greater and taller than we, cities are great and walled up to heaven."

And, of course, they got punished for that, that's the reason they had to wander around

for four decades, because of their unbelief.

But Jericho had to be captured.

It is the gateway to the land and the people obeyed and it fell exactly as God said it

would.

God commanded them six days, go around each day, on the seventh day go around seven times,

the seventh time it will collapse.

That's exactly what it did.

Maybe they seemed a little embarrassed while all the Jerichoites up on the top of the wall

watched them walk around and then leave six days in a row.

It appeared ridiculous.

Surely they were puzzled as well as frustrated.

This didn't seem a right approach at all.

But they obeyed the Word of God.

They learned not to disobey because the consequences were so severe.

You know this tells us, or reminds us that God delights in slaying the pride of men,

doesn't it?

Not only the pride of the Jews who probably thought they could conquer Jericho just by

their sheer force, even though they had no army and they had no weapons.

But even more so, God delights in slaying the pride of men with regard to the Philistines.

They, thinking back, how they were defeated by a shepherd boy and a stone, and here in

the land of Canaan, suffers its first defeat when people simply walk around its walls and

blow a horn and shout.

But the people exhibit faith.

That is the testimony of Scripture.

That is the testimony of God.

There are four degrees of faith, just to kind of expand that a little bit.

There is faith which receives...faith which receives.

"And the empty-handed beggars come and receive what God has to give."

That's one component of faith.

Then there's faith which reckons.

It's the simplest faith to receive the gift, it's the next level of faith to reckon that

God has made promises and we can count on God to fulfill His promises.

At the point of salvation, you have a kind of a beggar faith, he comes to receive the

gift, she comes to receive the gift.

The next level of faith begins to understand that with this gift are massive promises that

stretch into the endless eons of eternity, full of promise.

Faith reckons that God will fulfill those promises.

Then there is faith that risks.

Because these promises grip the heart and are held with confidence, faith begins to

dare to be obedient in any circumstance.

And then lastly, there's faith that rests.

Throughout suffering it is unmoved.

But always faith rules the life of a true believer.

For centuries the children of Israel had been a nation of slaves in Egypt and for 40 years

nomads in the desert, their great leader was dead.

They were without a military experience, they were without an army, devoid of artillery,

no weapons but the living God was for them and they had come to believe in Him and faith

gained the victory.

That allows me to just give you one thing that I want you to file in your mind, the

demonstration of faith is always obedience.

The demonstration of faith is always obedience.

Faith and obedience are inseparable.

When it says to come to the Christ and put your faith in Him, that's a command and if

you do that, that's an act of obedience.

"This is My beloved Son, listen to Him."

The proclamation of the gospel is in itself a command, repent, believe, that's command

mode.

And any person who embraces Christ in an act of repentance and faith is obeying the gospel.

That's why the Bible talks about that and Romans 1 talks about the need to obey the

gospel.

The gospel is a command, it is a command to repent and believe.

Salvation comes to those who obey.

And everything after that in the life of faith is obeying what God has commanded.

Obeying what God has demanded.

So faith is demonstrated in obedience.

The kind of obedience that has courage, the kind of obedience that will occur no matter

what the price, no matter what the cost, and that's what we're going to learn in this last

section.

We've already seen it in the earlier heroes of the faith, but here in particular it's

about the courage of faith, that faith can't be broken no matter how dire the circumstances

are.

It endures.

It expects triumph.

It expects victory.

Our family, when our children were much younger, had the opportunity to go to the grave of

Robert Moffat, great missionary.

We stood by his grave there in an obscure graveyard that only Christian people would

know even existed.

Patricia was there with me and our children.

And I've read enough about Robert Moffat to have a great appreciation for his life.

But one of the things that's so stunning about him is he labored for years and years and

years among a certain group of people who never saw one single convert, not one.

Some of his far-distant friends in England wrote a letter and asked if they could somehow

send him a gift, that they wanted a gift to give to him to encourage him and demonstrate

their love.

He wrote back and said, "I would like a full communion set."

Full communion set?

It arrived months and months later.

By the time it arrived, there were twelve converted sitting together having communion.

This is a man of great faith who anticipated the fulfillment of the promise of God that

was latent in the call of God to go to this land.

Struggles were immense in his life and ministry.

True faith has the courage to believe God in impossible conflict with ridiculous orders

and incredible promises.

And the experience at Jericho is an illustration of that kind of faith...to do what seems ridiculous,

unnecessary, foolish.

But what marks faith is obedience...obedience

We often talk about that when you say, "Well how do you know when someone's a Christian?"

Anybody who's a Christian obeys the Word of God, that's the pattern of their life.

Perfect obedience?

No.

It's not the perfection of their life but it is the direction of their life.

We have then a more personal illustration in verse 31.

"By faith, Rahab the harlot did not perish along with those who were disobedient, after

she had welcomed the spies in peace."

Interesting that the word "disobedient" is there, it's the opposite of faith demonstrated

from the same Old Testament account, by the way.

The Holy Spirit chooses the next illustration of faith, conquering faith, courageous faith

and it belonged, of all people, to a prostitute.

A prostitute in the hall of fame?

Well we know one thing, if there were any Jews still believing you got in the Kingdom

of God by works, it would be hard to figure out how Rahab got in to this list.

She's a shocker.

She sort of blasts the sensibilities of the Jews in the community who are still hanging

on to the notion that salvation is given to those who earn it.

She's a Canaanite, not even a Jew.

She's a Gentile.

She's an Amorite.

And the Amorites, their whole seed was devoted to utter destruction being cursed by God.

But Rahab believed God.

And one of the staggering, staggering realities about Rahab is she ended up in the Messianic

line.

Now there were, of course, in Jericho unbelievers who perished, disobedient.

People of Jericho didn't believe, they didn't obey.

This implies that the truth of God had been deposited in their midst.

They mus have received the Word of God to believe or not to believe, to obey or not

to obey.

Some translations say they believed not, but it's apeitheo which means disobedient.

They must have heard the truth about the true and living God.

Maybe they heard the story about them being delivered out of Egypt.

Maybe the message from the spies had been given to some people and been spread.

They sought no mercy from this God, they sought no grace from this God.

They sought no forgiveness from this God.

They had no interest in obeying Him whatsoever.

As a result, the whole city was wiped out, as I read.

All the animals, all the people died by the edge of the sword.

Except Rahab.

Why?

"Rahab welcomed the spies in peace."

Welcomed, dechomai , to welcome with hospitality.

Her story is worth looking at.

Go back to Joshua, we'll take a brief look at it.

Chapter 2, "Joshua sent two men as spies into the land.

'Go view the land especially Jericho.'

They went, came into the house of a harlot whose name was Rahab and lodged there.

It was told the king of Jericho, saying, 'Behold, men from the sons of Israel have come here

tonight to search out the land.'

And the king of Jericho sent word to Rahab saying, 'Bring out the men who have come to

you, have entered your house for they have come to search out all the land.'"

They're coming to spy on us because they're going to conquer us.

"But the woman had taken the two men and hidden them.

And she said, 'Yes, the men came to me but I didn't know where they were from.'

It came about when it was time to shut the gate at dark that the men went out.

'I don't know where the men went.

Pursue them quickly for you will overtake them.'"

Was that the truth?

No, it was a lie.

Was it necessary?

No, it's never necessary.

Would God have protected the spies if she had told the truth?

Absolutely.

We would have just had a different story of how God protected the spies.

This doesn't justify the lie, but we can commend her for her courage in the case of hiding

them.

So she chases away the people who are looking for them, telling them that they have to hurry

because they're out of town and they're going to have to run if they want to catch them.

In the meantime, verse 6, she had brought them up to the roof and hidden them in the

stocks of flax which he had laid in order on the roof.

So the men pursued them on the road to the Jordan, to the fords."

They're chasing them and, of course, they're back in Jericho on her roof underneath the

flax.

"As soon as they who were pursuing them had gone out, they shut the gate.

Now before they lay down, she came up to them on the roof and said to them, 'I know that

the Lord has given you the land.'"

Wow.

"'And that the terror of you has fallen on us and that all the inhabitants of the land

have melted away before you, for we have heard how the Lord dried up the water of the Red

Sea before you when you came into Egypt and what you did to the kings of the Amorites

who were beyond the Jordan, Sihon and Og, two amazing stories, whom you utterly destroyed.

When we heard it, our hearts melted, no courage remained in any man any longer because of

you for the Lord your God, He is God in heaven above and on earth beneath.'"

She believed in the true and living God and she believed fully in all the revelation that

was available to her.

"'Now therefore, please swear to me by the Lord since I have dealt kindly with you that

you also will deal kindly with my father's household and give me a pledge of truth and

spare my father, mother, brother, sisters, all who belong to them, deliver our lives

from death.'

So the men said to her, 'Our life for yours, if you do not tell this business of ours,

it shall come about when the Lord gives us the land we will deal kindly and faithfully

with you.'"

She sent them away, as the rest of the story tells.

They, verse 16, are told, "'Go to the hill country so that the pursuers will not happen

upon you.

Hide yourselves there for three days until the pursuers return, then afterward you may

go on your way.'

The men said to her, 'We shall be free from this oath to you which you have made us swear,

unless when we come into the land you tie this cord of scarlet thread in the window

from which you let us down and gather yourself into the house, your father, your mother,

your brothers and your father's household.'"

In other words, they're not going to know who these people are to spare their life unless

they're all collected in one place and that house is identified, because there are going

to be many of them sweeping in.

"'If you tell this business of ours, then we're free from the oath which you made us

swear.'"

She said, "'According to your words, so be it.'

so she sent them away and they departed.

She tied the scarlet cord in the window.

Go over to chapter 6 verse 21.

We read this a little bit ago.

This last verse is enough in the record of the destruction.

Verse 21, "They utterly destroyed everything in the city, man and woman, young and old,

ox and sheep and donkey with the edge of the sword."

That's just a devastating ting to think about.

"Joshua said to the two men had spied out the land, 'Go into the harlot's house, bring

the woman and all she has out of there, as you have sworn to her.'

So the young men who were spies went in and brought out Rahab and her father, her mother,

her brothers, and all she had.

They also brought out all her relatives and placed them outside t he camp of Israel.

So they burned the city with fire and all that was in it, only the silver and gold and

articles of bronze and iron they put in the treasury of the house of the Lord.

However, Rahab the harlot and her father's household and all she had Joshua spared and

she has lived in the midst of Israel to this day, for she hid the messengers whom Joshua

sent to spy out Jericho."

Jericho the city was rejected and destroyed, Rahab and her family were spared.

What about the destruction of the Canaanites?

Can you legitimize that?

Well historians tell us that the destruction of this Canaanite city and all Canaanite culture

was a great boom to the welfare of humanity from a purely social perspective.

They were so debased.

Believe me, God punishes sin and He has a right to punish it whenever and wherever He

desires.

And He punishes those who do not believe in Him and do not obey His commands.

But in the case of Rahab, she acknowledged faith in the true and living God.

She believed and staked her life on it.

She put herself in a dangerous, dangerous position, hiding spies on the roof.

She staked her life on the fact that this was the true God.

She had a kind of adventurous courage to fling her lot with this deity about which she had

only heard from second-hand sources.

But she believed in the true God and because of that, she was spared.

According to Matthew chapter 1 verse 5, she is placed into the line of Messiah and here's

how it works and this kind of ties in the book of Ruth...Joshua, Judges and Ruth.

She's the mother of Boaz, she's the mother of Boaz, the husband of Ruth.

She is then the great, great grandmother of King David.

How wonderful.

Rahab shows the faith that has the courage to stand in the midst of dire danger.

That's what faith does.

It doesn't crumble because the circumstances are threatening or difficult.

True saving faith, true faith that grips God does what is right, obeys God no matter what

the price.

This is essentially all wrapped up in the words of Jesus that have become so familiar

to us.

"If any man will come after Me, let him deny himself, take up his cross and follow Me."

The price might be death...even horrendous death on a cross.

Well, conquering Jericho was just the beginning and they began to settle in the land of Canaan.

And in verse 32 we meet six men from the settlement of Canaan to the early monarchy.

But we'll learn about them next time.

Lord, we thank You so much for a wonderful, wonderful day.

It's been so rich.

We thank You for folks who have filled up the prayer room this morning, many of them

eager to know the Savior.

We thank You for that.

We pray that the work that You're doing in their lives will overpower all the remaining

malingering longings, hankerings for the world and that the work would be completed, that

we might rejoice and You might be glorified.

Thank You for a wonderful day.

Thank You for Keith and Kristin and the good music tonight we enjoyed.

We're so blessed as a church, so rich in fellowship.

But that which enriches us the most is the vouchsafing, to borrow an old word of the

truth which has been planted in our hearts by the blessed Holy Spirit.

How rich we are to know that truth, embrace that truth, to live by that truth.

May we in every sense demonstrate that true saving faith produces obedient people.

May we be known as those who obey the Word of God and do it joyfully with delight.

And for those who may be among us who are lingering on the edges, they have come to

an intellectual understanding of the gospel but they're in danger of neglecting this great

salvation, forfeiting that eternal rest, falling back, being brought to a far more severe judgment,

we pray, Lord, that You will bring them all the way to Christ, all the way to that spiritual

perfection that is found only in Him.

Use us this week as we serve You and may we in every sense live lives that are overwhelmed

with gratitude for the blessings that are ours both now and forever.

For which we thank You in the name of Christ, and everyone said...Amen.

For more infomation >> A Conquering, Courageous Faith, Part 1 (Hebrews 11:30-31) - Duration: 47:53.

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Reacting to My Latest SUPER awkward Chinese CCTV Performance // - Duration: 7:14.

Hey guys What's up, welcome to another video from Lingling here.

If you think that I seem a little awkard

well it's just because I was filming in this beautiful room and now a man is sitting besides me

and I don't know what he's doing here but I still want to make my video so I'm just trying to get used to it.

So today we're going to do a reaction video because I thought it could be hilarious.

A few months ago I did a video project with CCTV and we made videos about solar terms,

if you watched my vlogs at that time I think it was around October I mentioned it a few times

so anyways, now they finally shared the final video and it is hilarious like, hilarious!

I just had to share it with you guys and I thought why not put it here and then, you know,

you guys could see it together with me and we could react together.

I don't know, I've never done a reaction video before but I'm quite excited so without further ado, let's get started.

I just want to show you guys that my computer is here so when I look down it's because I'm looking at the video

I hope that's cool. Yeah so, let's do it.

I love the introduction, like it's so Chinese it really gives you this Chinese taste or like taste (Chinese).

very Chinesey.

Beautiful pictures from the rice fields, probably from Yunnan. Oh my god

My acting skills are horrible, like oh, oh my god.

We redid this one so many times it was really so awkward, oh my god.

Also the manuscript if you feel like the English sounds weird it's because we tried to correct it but,

CCTV wouldn't' let us, like, rewrite the manuscript, so we just had to kind of go with it and it was so difficult to say it.

Also if you feel like I'm doing a lot of weird pauses, it's because I couldn't wear my glasses so I couldn't see the manuscript.

I had to memorize everything

I actually never learned Jingzhe (solar term) even though I said it's the most difficult character I ever learned, I never learned it.

I didn't even know it, when we started what it was. Not before I started reading the manuscript.

So I don't know about you guys but I feel like the shirt is the worst thing possible.

Now they're not filming it anymore but I feel like "the girls" are just out there in the camera.

It's so difficult to concentrate on anything else 'cause they're just huge, out there because of the shirt.

The shirt is overdoing it way to much.

Appreciate the beautiful spring. I was trying to act.

I really shouldn't be an actor, my acting skills are like out of the window.

"It is Lei Gong" it's not "It's Lei Gong" no no had to be very precise.

I love this part.

I got an animation sword and a hammer, it was amazing.

That one we had to redo so many times because I was so bad. I was just like boom or like boom or like I don't know.

Yeah which one do you think is the cool one?

Different responsibilities.

Again, I actually didn't know this information before I made this video.

It's so weird to hear my own voice and my talking is just so random.

I love all the animations here and like music.

My friend she thought the show was made for children because there were so many animations.

And I was like, no it's actually made for grownups like us.

Daily sunlight.

I totally forgot what I had to say there. You can see I stopped, like nervous pause.

Remember an umbrella.

That was such a weird saying; I've never heard this saying before either.

Please comment below if you guys say "Wordy like a granny".

I don't know, I've never heard it before.

The rice fields again.

Yeah, beautiful China.

We got a little panda sound at the end, I love it.

So guys that was the video.

I will put a link below for the actual video so you guys can go and check it out yourselves.

It was an interesting experience, I would say.

It was quite fun because everyone around me, like the staff, everyone was speaking Chinese so I could practice my Chinese

and I also learned a lot because I didn't know about these solar terms before

and I'm always curious when it comes to Chinese culture and history so I thought why not learn some more

and I realized that I'm not an actor and I'm probably never going to be.

I love being on camera but I like to be myself and this video was so much not me and the shirt as well as I said.

The blouse is just, so much going on here in front.

Anyways guys, I just want to show you guys what I've been up to and I want to show you how it's done in China.

This video went through so many censors and it has been redone so many times,

it took them months just to finish the whole, like editing and scripting, oh my god,

like the script was written a few times already and we saw it and we were like, oh my god this is really bad English, like it makes no sense

and we had to redo it again but we couldn't redo it too much because if we did that then CCTV would be like "no no no no", and yeah.

If you're wondering why CCTV has a Facebook page then I can not tell you why. That's just the thing in China.

Cause you know, facebook is blocked in China, and CCTV is supported by the Chinese government and the Chinese government blocked facebook.

Yeah no comments on that one.

Anyway guys, please give me a thumbs up for this little video, subscribe for more videos from Lingling

and leave a comment below if you have any comments on my bad acting skills or you know,

something else you saw in the video or something else you want to say, you know just share whatever you feel like.

Did you have a nice day today? Please let me know in the comments below.

I hope you're having a great day or evening wherever you are in the world

and I'll see you again very very soon so Lingling is out, see ya and zaijian. Bye

For more infomation >> Reacting to My Latest SUPER awkward Chinese CCTV Performance // - Duration: 7:14.

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LA BALADA DE LA CHICA LLUVIA | Daniel Rivera - Duration: 2:36.

For more infomation >> LA BALADA DE LA CHICA LLUVIA | Daniel Rivera - Duration: 2:36.

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Quantico 2x17 Promo "ODYOKE" (SUB ITA) - Duration: 0:31.

For more infomation >> Quantico 2x17 Promo "ODYOKE" (SUB ITA) - Duration: 0:31.

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Kap Dwa A mysterious, 3 5 meter tall, two headed Giant from Pata - Duration: 5:25.

Kap-Dwa: A mysterious, 3.5-meter-tall, two-headed Giant from Patagonia

said to have originally been captured by Spanish sailors in the 1600�s, Kap-Dwa was a two-headed,

3.5-meter tall giant that once lived on Earth. aid to have originally been captured by Spanish

sailors in the 1600�s, Kap-Dwa was a two-headed, 3.5-meter tall giant that once lived on Earth.

There isn�t a shortage of ancient texts and general evidence that supports the notion

that giants existed on Earth. However, you�ve probably never encountered a story like this.

Meet Kap Dwa, a two-headed, 3.5-meter-tall giant from Patagonia.

While there are many elaborate hoaxes that show massive bones and strange-looking skeletons

all around the globe, there are some discoveries that challenge our understanding of life on

Earth. Kap Dwa�s story is beyond fascinating and many find it hard to believe.

So, where did he come from?

The story begins in 1673 when this massive two-headed giant was captured by Spanish sailors

where he remained captive until he was killed while trying to escape from his captivators,

as the Spaniards killed him with a pike through the chest.

The story fades away after that, but it is believed that his mummified remains somehow

got to England in the 19th century.

In 1914, after being passed from one showman to another, the mummified remains of Kap Dwa

ended up at Weston�s Birnbeck Pier. There, his remains spent some 45 years on display

until �Lord� Thomas Howard purchased the remains in 1959. Kap-Dwa continued to amaze

people and somehow ended up in Baltimore Md, in a strange, collection at Bob�s Side Show

at The Antique Man Ltd in Baltimore, owned by Robert Gerber and his wife.

You may think, this is nothing but another elaborate fake.

However, Kap-Dwa does exist and the mummified remains can be found in Gerber�s collection.

Mr. Gerber however, tells a much different story than the above.

According to Gerber, Kap-Dwa was in fact found already dead on a beach with a massive spear

embedded in his chest. The �creature� was mummified by locals in Paraguay�not

Patagonia� until an English Captain called George Bickle came across his remains, eventually

transporting him to England, to a museum in Blackpool where he stayed on display for several

years.

Eventually, the mummified remains were transported back to the Americas to Baltimore.

Ok, so he did exist, does that prove Giants were common in the past?

Well, while it�s certainly possible that such a being may have existed�and Kap-Dwa

is most likely real�there is abundant proof of fake giants all around the globe. This,

however, does not mean that because one of them is fake, all others are as well.

We can find numerous ancient texts and accounts that mention the existence of giants. Some

of these texts can even be found in religious books like the bible.

�There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of

God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the same became

mighty men which were of old, men of renown.� -Genesis 6:4

The Nephilim are believed to have been the offspring of the �sons of God� and the

�daughters of men� before the Deluge according to Genesis 6:4; the name is also used in reference

to giants who inhabited Canaan at the time of the Israelite conquest of Canaan according

to Numbers 13:33.

�And there we saw the Nephilim, the sons of Anak, who come of the Nephilim; and we

were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight.� -Numbers 13:33.

Kap-Dwa may have been real, and our planet is anything but uncommon when it comes to

people with extraordinary height.

The tallest man on Earth, when last measured on 27 June 1940, was found to be 2.72 m.

The issue with the �two heads� can also be explained as �conjoined twins� are

not that uncommon.

It is up to you to conclude whether or not, something like this is possible, and whether

or not the existence of Kap-Dwa proves that in the distant past, giants did exist on Earth,

and there are still many things that remain unexplained on Earth.

For more infomation >> Kap Dwa A mysterious, 3 5 meter tall, two headed Giant from Pata - Duration: 5:25.

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Top 10 Most Beautiful Crowned Birds in the World 2017 - Most Beautiful Crowned Birds - Duration: 5:05.

Most Beautiful Crowned Birds

For more infomation >> Top 10 Most Beautiful Crowned Birds in the World 2017 - Most Beautiful Crowned Birds - Duration: 5:05.

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God's Faithful Discipline (Hebrews 12:4-11) - Duration: 56:39.

Now as we continue in our look at the book of Hebrews and particularly the life of faith

as we have seen it laid out in chapter 11, and then reemphasized at the beginning of

chapter 12, we come to the final section that I want to deal with in this series, and that

is Hebrews chapter 12 verses 4 through 11...Hebrews chapter 12 verses 4 through 11.

I'm going to read that passage.

It is, for most of you, a familiar text of Scripture.

What we want to take it not in its pieces as it is sometimes quoted, but in its whole.

Starting in verse 4, the writer of Hebrews says, "You have not yet resisted to the point

of shedding blood in your striving against sin.

And you have forgotten the exhortation which is addressed to you as sons.

My son, do not regard lightly the discipline of the Lord, nor faint when you are reproved

by Him.

For those whom the Lord loves, He disciplines and He scourges every son whom He receives.

It is for discipline that you endure.

God deals with you as with sons, for what son is there whom his father does not discipline?

But if you are without discipline, of which all have become partakers, then you are illegitimate

children and not sons.

Furthermore, we had earthly fathers to discipline us and we respected them.

Shall we not much rather be subject to the Father of spirits and live?

For they disciplined us for a short time as seem best to them.

But He disciplines us for our good so that we may share His holiness.

All discipline, for the moment, seems not to be joyful but sorrowful, yet to those who

have been trained by it, afterwards it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness."

You will remember that Matthew chapter 18 where we have our Lord Himself giving us the

pattern for church discipline, after having told us how important it is to confront each

other in the church and to confront sin and sometimes to tell the congregation and sometimes

even to put the person out of the church because of the influence that they're having for evil,

there's sort of a difficulty in the mind of the reader to do that, a reluctance to take

on the responsibility of confronting people to that degree and so our Lord says, "Remember

that where two or three of you are gathered together, there am I in the midst."

And that refers to the two or three witnesses engaged in a discipline situation.

So when we do discipline in the church, we're reflecting what our Lord desires for His church

and here is a passage that lays that out.

We do on a one-to-one basis, we do in the life of the church on an open basis what our

Lord is doing in a secret way in the lives of all who are His children.

This is a very important and a very informative passage, one, I think, every Christian should

thoroughly understand.

If you get a grip on the truths in this text, make them your own, you will view your life

in a very, very different way.

And we need to back up a little bit and get kind of a running start.

The Hebrew community is at least in name Christian.

There are true believers who make up the majority, apparently, and there are some interested

Jews on the fringe who haven't yet come all the way to Christ.

What is raising the stakes for even those who have named the name of Christ and certainly

for those who are thinking about it is that having any association with Jesus Christ and

with the church of Christ produces persecution from the surrounding Jews.

And if you go back to chapter 10 verse 32, we read, "Remember the former days when after

being enlightened you endured a great conflict of sufferings, partly by being made a public

spectacle through reproaches and tribulations and partly by becoming sharers with those

who were so treated.

For you showed sympathy to the prisoners and accepted joyfully the seizure of your property,

knowing that you have for yourselves a better possession and a lasting one."

When they became believers or even when they associated with the believers, persecution

was immediate, it was severe.

Some of them literally lost their property.

Their property was seized and taken from them.

They were pressured by that to go back in to Judaism, to let go of the things of Christ

which they had legitimately embraced or superficially embraced, being seriously mistreated raised

the price.

This is reminiscent of our Lord's parable of the soils where the seed goes down, takes

a little root, begins to shoot up but the persecution, the thlipsis , the pressure,

the tribulation causes the seed to die before it ever bears any fruit.

Persecution is very difficult for new believers to bear and it's very threatening to those

who are only considering whether or not to identify with Christ.

Now in response to that, if you're still in chapter 10 and verse 35, he says, "Therefore

do not throw away your confidence."

You've had confidence in Christ.

You've put your trust in Christ.

Don't throw that away because at the end of that is a great reward, a great reward.

Then down in verse 38 he says, "My righteous one shall live by faith and if he shrinks

back, my soul has no pleasure in him.

But we are not of those who shrink back to destruction but of those who have faith to

the preserving of the soul."

So here you have an illustration of people who have made some kind of an external commitment

to Christ, they have come together to assemble with a believing group of Christians, some

genuine and some only in consideration of Christ, the threat is then likely to drive

some of those who are considering Christ away from Christ because the price is too high.

And even some of those who have genuinely come to Christ are in danger of not making

a clean break from apostate Judaism and perhaps even questioning their suffering, asking why

it is now that I've come to Christ that I am so suffering.

Well they need to understand that they have to live by faith.

And you remember that I just pointed out the words of verse 35, "If you will hold on to

your confidence in Christ, if you will continue to live by faith, there is a great reward."

The implications of that tie in with the words of our Lord, "In this world you will have

tribulation.

Be of good cheer.

I have overcome the world."

There is to be expected difficulty and tribulation in this life, and we live by faith.

We live our lives, as we've been learning in Hebrews chapter 11, we live our lives in

anticipation of something we do not have.

None of us has ever seen heaven.

None of us has ever experienced righteousness in its full perfection.

None of us has ever seen the goodness of God in its full massive reality.

We all believe in that but we believe in something we have not experienced.

We will not experience it until we're in His presence.

We make the sacrifice that is necessary to come to Christ, it's a sacrifice of self,

we deny ourselves, take up our cross, follow Him.

We make the sacrifices that are called for in a life of repentance and a life of holiness

and a life of sanctification by saying no to the lust of the flesh, the lust of the

eyes and the pride of life.

We resist the devil.

We fight against him and the onslaught that comes from his enterprises in the world.

And we do all of this not because we hold in our hand the end of our faith, but because

we believe it is to come.

There is for us a great reward.

We have enough evidence of the promises of God as we go along in this Christian life,

we see Him answer prayer, we see Him providentially order our lives.

We Him pour out blessing upon us.

And we see it enough to anchor our faith.

It is critical for us to hang on in difficult times.

Now we come in to chapter 11 and, of course, what you have in chapter 11 are all these

great people who really illustrate faith.

And they illustrate faith in the sense that they lived and died for something they didn't

receive, whether you're talking about Abel or Enoch or whether you're talking about Noah

or whether you're talking about Abraham, or Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, flowing on down, Moses

all the way down through all the rest of the prophets and holy saints of the Old Testament

who suffered all the things that are indicated at the end of chapter 11...these were people

who did not receive what they hoped for in life.

The promises that were promised to them were not fulfilled.

All the promises to the patriarchs were not fulfilled in this life.

All the promises to Moses were not fulfilled in this life.

All the promises to and through the prophets were not fulfilled in this life.

They didn't even see the great promise of all promises, the coming of the Messiah as

the one to provide salvation.

And that is why verse 39 ends that eleventh chapter by saying, "All these having gained

approval through their faith did not receive what was promised."

They all lived and died before Christ came, before the New Covenant was ratified, before

the gospel was fully understood because God had provided something better for us so that

apart from us they would not be made perfect.

We're on the other side of the cross.

What they only saw by faith, we know by biblical sight, if you will, all of the truths concerning

Christ.

So they were not made perfect.

They died...all of them died in hope for the fulfillment of the promises.

Now we have the promised fulfilled in Christ but we too live by faith and we live for a

future hope in the glory that is to come.

Now having said that and illustrated the courage of all these people, for their lives were

all very challenging, they exhibited great courage which is sort of the crescendo at

the end of the chapter, as you see that they conquered kingdoms, performed acts of righteousness,

obtained promises, verse 33, shut the mouths of lions, quenched the power of fire, escaped

the edge of the sword, etc., etc.

This is the kind of faith that can take anything that comes and it endures.

Now in chapter 12 then, the writer turns to this community of believers and says, "Now

I have showed you that salvation has always been by faith and it is always a matter of

believing what you have not yet received and I call on you to lay aside every encumbrance

and the sin which so easily entangles us and run with endurance the race that is set before

us.

Your call to run a faith race, your call to live your life in anticipation of something

you do not have.

Then he says, "Fix your eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of faith who is the model

of faith.

He did what He did, lived the life He lived, suffered what He suffered for something to

come in the future.

He endured the shame of the cross for the joy that would come after that.

He acted in faith.

He went to the cross in faith.

He expressed a possibility, "My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?"

It seemed as if He had.

But He had, of course, not forsaken Him in the end.

He saw His faith vindicated when God raised Him from the dead.

He was a perfect illustration of faith because He was perfectly obedient, perfectly trusting

and His faith was vindicated.

So look to Jesus as the perfect model of faith.

He despised the shame.

He could see through to the end when He would be seated at the right hand of the throne

of God.

And when you think about your own life, verse 3 says, "Consider Him who has endured such

hostility by sinners against Himself so that you will not grow weary and lose heart, you

have not yet resisted to the point of shedding blood in your striving against sin.

You haven't had to go as far as He has, you haven't had to die for your faith."

So here he is calling them to a life of faith.

Calling them to accept the fact that it's going to be a challenging life, it's going

to be a threatening life.

Nobody has died yet in this community of believers.

Eventually many, of course, would die for their faith in Christ.

Having said all of that about the life of faith, living the life of faith, being courageous

in the life of faith, he then comes to the question, "Why is it that if we have come

into the Kingdom by faith, why is it if we have confessed Jesus as our Lord, if we acknowledged

Him as the one who died and rose again on our behalf, why is it that life is still for

us so hard?

Why is it so hard?"

Is it that somehow Satan has power over God?

Is Satan doing all of this?

Are demons doing all of this?

Some people think so.

Some people think if things go wrong in your life it's the devil.

Why is it that we are going through this?

Why is it that we are suffering?

Why is it that it's so hard?

Why is it that we lost our property?

Lost our homes?

Become alienated?

Why does this have to happen to us?

And the answer comes in verses 5 to 11, "It is the discipline of God....It is the discipline

of God."

That's what it is and that's how you are to see it.

When you have difficulties and challenges in your life, you don't look to Satan, Satan's

not your lord, Satan's not your father, he used to be your father...Jesus said, "You're

of your father, the devil," to unbelieving Jews.

But the devil is not your father, not my father.

We're not under his sovereignty.

He has nothing on us.

In a very real sense, he's been placed under our feet.

We have been delivered from his power, delivered from the evil one.

The issues that come into our life that challenges us, that call for our courage and our faith

to be strong, the struggles, the trials the suffering, the pain is not the work of Satan

in the life of a believer, it is the discipline of God...it is the discipline of God.

Now it's pretty clear, having read that passage, that it's about discipline since the word

is repeated throughout the entire text...all the way down to the last verse.

This is about discipline.

The word is paideia which is used of the training of children.

We talk about pedagogy.

A paidagogos was a child trainer, a child mentor, a child teacher.

Paideia , or paiea is child training, it's part of our training, it's part of our Father's

discipline for us.

The word speaks of whatever occurs in the life of children brought upon them by their

parents to cultivate their soul, including corrective issues, including curbing their

passions, including hedging them against the things that are dangerous.

It is also not just protection but it is instruction with a view to producing virtue, aiming at

the increase of character.

The word doesn't have the idea of punishment is what I'm getting at.

It has the idea of training.

And that's consistent with verse 11 which ends, speaking of those who have been trained.

So you look at the issues of your life that are negatives from the human perspective that

are challenges that are difficult and you have to view them as the training of God in

your life.

The discipline of parents in the training of their children we expect.

And I'll tell you something, we enjoy it.

Nobody enjoys an undisciplined child.

We expect it.

We enjoy it.

A loving father who cares for his children disciplines his children, sometimes painfully.

The Scripture is pretty clear about this.

The discipline is not done by giving your children "time outs."

The discipline is not done by taking away activities.

The discipline scripturally is done with a rod...with a rod.

"Spare the rod, spoil the child."

Corporeal punishment, inflicted pain is the way to train a child, the biblical way.

And that's what God uses in our lives, to train us to get our attention.

God does not necessarily bring to bear serious and severe discipline on us throughout all

our lives, but there are times when He does and always...always for His own purposes...for

our good and His glory.

Mark it, there's a great difference between divine punishment and divine discipline.

I think you can make the distinguishing idea in your mind with the English words, right?

You know the difference between punishment and discipline.

Discipline speaks of training for a good outcome.

Punishment speaks of retribution, vengeance, wrath...that's not what we're talking about.

The Lord doesn't do that with us, there is therefore now no condemnation to those who

are in Christ, right?

Romans 8:1.

So let's not use the word punishment as if God would punish us.

The truth is, He punished Christ for us, right?

So we're not talking about condemnation kind of punishment.

This is something very different.

It doesn't mean it's not painful.

It may be very painful.

Punishment has one purpose, discipline another.

The purpose of punishment is to inflict vengeance.

And punishment from God is eternal.

The purpose of discipline is to produce virtue and discipline is only for a temporal season.

In punishment, God is the judge.

In discipline, God is the father.

In punishment, the objects are His enemies.

In discipline, the objects are His children.

In punishment, condemnation is the goal.

In discipline, righteousness is the goal.

Now, having said that, let me take the word discipline, or the concept discipline, and

break it into three parts, just to help you sort it out a little bit.

I think there are three reasons for the Lord's discipline, three reasons that things in our

lives come along that cause us to struggle, to suffer, that bring pain.

Reason number one we'll call correction.

Reason number one we'll call correction.

We all know that the Scripture is for correction, right?, 2 Timothy 2.

God is in the business of correction.

Every branch He prunes.

That's a painful slicing away.

We have sins in our lives that need the discipline of correction.

Sometimes this correction takes very serious, serious extent.

For example, in the letter to the Corinthians, 1 Corinthians chapter 11, a correction reached

the point where some people were sick because of the way they came to the Lord's table,

and some of them the Lord actually took them to heaven because they were more trouble here

than they were worth.

But it is possible to be sick, according to 1 Corinthians 11, because of sin, the frivolous

sin of coming to the table of the Lord.

You might want to start there when things go wrong in your life.

That's a good place to start.

That's a good inventory.

That's what Job's friends did.

That's kind of a standard approach.

Job started having trouble and then he had trouble upon trouble and trouble after trouble

until the trouble was incomprehensible.

And what did his friends say?

"Ah, you've got a lot of sin in your life, Job.

You must have more sin than we can even comprehend and you've done a good job of hiding it,"

cause they hadn't seen it.

And we think their counsel was foolish because Job wasn't a sinner, but that's the standard

place to start and it's a good place to start.

But when you look at your own life and you begin to see that God is correcting you, you

have to understand this is not punishment for your sin in the sense of final punishment.

This is not condemnation in the sense of final condemnation.

But rather that final punishment, having been borne by Christ, this is correction.

This is not smiting you in wrath.

This is correcting you in love.

And so, you consider the chastening of the Lord in your life as being related to the

sins in your life, having a corrective purpose.

First Peter 5:10, Peter says, "After you have suffered a while, the Lord make you perfect."

It's going to take some suffering.

It's going to take some pain to knock off the carnal aspects of your life.

Judgment begins at the house of God in this sense of correction.

But it's a serious error to get stuck there.

You don't want to get stuck there with Job's friends that made that the final analysis

even though it was wrong.

There's a second reason for discipline and that's prevention...prevention.

Sometimes God's discipline is to prevent sin.

The Lord fences you in and tells you to put a guard on your mouth and a guard on your

eyes, and a guard on your ears and be careful what you expose yourself to.

The Lord demands that you stay away from evil company because evil company corrupts...what?...good

morals.

The scriptures are full of things that are the barriers that the Lord puts into our lives

to shelter us, to separate us from the things that corrupt us.

I think any father knows that, any good parent understands that you put into the life of

your child restrictions.

And if you don't, if you allow your children to be overexposed to the things that corrupt

them...guess what?

They'll be corrupt...they'll be corrupt.

It's preventative discipline.

For example, the Apostle Paul has a horrendous agonizing experience of demonic activity in

the Corinthian church, coming through these false teachers.

It is so severe that in 2 Corinthians 12 he says it's like a stake, like a sharp stake

rammed through my flesh.

This is the stake driven through his flesh.

It's a messenger of Satan, the messenger is angelos , a satanic angel, demonic activity

in the church that he loved in Corinth.

And they're buying in to these false teachers and it's like running a spear right through

him.

And so he goes to the Lord and he says, "I prayed three times to have it removed...three

times the Lord would get them out of that church, three times that the Lord would take

away my agony and my pain.

And the Lord didn't do it.

The Lord said this, 'I'm allowing this to happen to keep you from exalting yourself,

to protect you from pride, to protect you from self-glory, to protect you from feeling

too confident about the greatness of your accomplishments.'"

The Lord will do some amazing things, even turn loose demons in a church to make life

miserable for the pastor of that church in order to keep that man humble.

So sometimes discipline comes from God for correction, and sometimes it comes for prevention.

You who have suffered greatly in life know that it draws you to the Lord and away from

the world, does it not?

There's a third reason for God's discipline, that's education.

It's designed to teach you the experiences of life that lead to deeper fellowship with

God.

There are things that come that just educate you.

They educate you toward God.

I think of Peter...and toward others...I think of Peter in Luke 22, this familiar passage,

Jesus says, "Satan's desired to have you that he might sift you like wheat."

But He says...Jesus says to Peter, "After it's over, and you're turned around, you will

strengthen the brethren."

You can't become an educator to strengthen others unless you've been through the trials

they've been through.

Part of the discipline of God is to raise the level of your sympathy, and to raise the

level of your comfort.

You remember in 2 Corinthians chapter 1, Paul says, "Look, I suffer, I suffer all the time."

He lays it out in the very introduction of 2 Corinthians 1.

And then he says this, "I have had all these sufferings that I might be comforted by God

so that I might comfort you."

So, some suffering is corrective.

Some suffering is designed to simply prevent us from going down paths into sin and some

suffering is designed to educate us.

On the surface, we might not know that.

We might not know that, you have to search that in your own heart.

Job's friends were totally wrong.

What was the purpose in Job's suffering, as far as Job was concerned?

I know God was trying to prove a point to Satan, but as far as Job was concerned, what

was the purpose of his suffering?

Was it correction?

No.

Was it prevention?

No, because he was not a man who was walking near the edge of the world.

It was education.

And he understands that.

At the very end, this is what he says, chapter 42 verse 6, "I had heard of you with my ear,

now my eye sees you."

The end result of what happened to Job was a clearer vision of God and four verses later

in verse 10 of chapter 42 he says, "And now I pray for others."

He had been educated to the place where he saw God like he had never seen Him before,

which made him a better man and a better teacher of others, more sympathetic.

Well, that's the background of discipline and why it happens.

So verse 5 says, we do need to get to the text, "You have forgotten the exhortation

which is addressed to you as sons."

You should be expecting this.

Why is this a shock to you?

You remember this morning we read 2 Corinthians where Paul says, "Let me prove I'm an Apostle,"

and he endeavors to give testimony to the legitimacy of his apostleship by the immensity

of his pain and suffering.

Try that on a prosperity gospel.

Try that on the prosperity preacher.

It's the opposite.

Just as the Apostles legitimacy was manifest by his suffering, so our legitimacy as saints

is manifest by our suffering.

And it's not random suffering, it's not willy-nilly suffering, it's not Satan doing this, we aren't

his, we have a loving heavenly father who is doing the discipline for his own purposes.

So have you forgotten the exhortation which is addressed to you as sons?

Look, you're Jewish people.

Did somehow you forget the book of Proverbs?

Did you forget Proverbs chapter 3 verses 11 and 12, "My son, do not regard lightly the

discipline of the Lord nor faint when you are reproved by Him?

For those whom the Lord loves He disciplines and He scourges every son He receives."

How important is it to quote to these Jewish people from the familiar Proverbs that say

you should expect it, my son, and not regard it lightly and not faint under it, but understand

the Lord loves and therefore disciplines.

The Lord receives and therefore scourges.

It's the nature of being your loving Father."

So he wants his Jewish leaders to recall the words of Proverbs 3 so they will see that

this is to be expected, this is to be anticipated, this discipline that comes from the Lord.

So the scriptures that were written before for our learning that we might through endurance

and comfort from the scriptures have hope, Romans 15 says, are where the writer turns.

Have you forgotten that exhortation addressed to you as sons?

Proverbs were not written for unbelievers but for believers and do we remember that

the book of Proverbs was primarily a tool put in the hands of fathers for the instruction

of sons and daughters as well?

And be reminded that the exhortations there are just that, they are exhortations addressed

to you.

That is a very important thing that the Scripture in the Proverbs though written long before

this group of Jewish believers ever came together was addressed to them.

This is the timelessness of Scripture, it is equally addressed to us.

Now, I have a few minutes left so I'm just going to cover the rest of this rapidly.

I want to show you two perils in discipline.

I want to show you two proofs in discipline.

And I want to show you two products in discipline.

Two perils in discipline, what can go wrong?

Well there in verse 5, you could regard lightly the discipline of the Lord, or you could faint

when you're reproved by Him.

Those are the opposite extremes, right?

You think it's a minor thing, or it literally knocks you flat.

Either of those extremes is unacceptable.

Do not regard the discipline of the Lord lightly.

Don't misjudge its urgency, its important, be it for correction, make that heart examination,

be it for protection, get in line and stay away from the edges of sin, be it for education,

take your lessons and become a sympathetic teacher to others who suffer.

But do not treat it lightly.

Whatever troubles come into your life, whatever trials come into your live, view them as the

discipline of God.

You can treat them lightly by being callous, by not thinking spiritually about them, or

by complaining, becoming sour and bitter.

Like Israel in the wilderness, you can complain all the time.

Arthur Pink said, "God always chastens twice if we're not humbled by the first."

Remind yourself of how much sin there is yet in you, view the corruptions of your own heart

and marvel that God has not smitten you more severely and more often.

Form the habit of heeding the disciplines that come.

You can also treat them lightly by simply seeing them as some kind of unjust act.

You can treat them lightly by failing to change, being obstinate.

You don't want to take a shallow look at the trials of life.

Take a deep look, deep spiritual look.

Secondly, and on the other extreme, it says from Proverbs 3:11, "Nor faint when you're

reproved by Him."

This is just as bad.

This is to sink down in some level of despondency.

This is when you get so discouraged, so low you're going to the medicine cabinet all the

time just to cope and you're coming around all the time with a "poor me" story thinking

sympathy instead of being exercised by the discipline, you give up, you become kind of

inert.

Psalm 34:19 says, "Many are the inflictions of the righteous."

Expect them...expect them.

The Psalmist could be melancholy, couldn't he?

He had a way of getting out of it did David.

Psalm 42, he finally says to himself, "Why are you cast down, O my soul?"

right?

Why are you in this depressed condition?

Why are you disquieted in me?

Hope in God, I will yet praise Him.

Climb out of your despair.

You should never despair about the trouble that comes to your life, never.

It is the discipline of God, you should rejoice in it.

So those are the two perils.

Treat it lightly, or be literally crushed under it.

There are also two proofs in discipline.

Discipline proves two things.

See if you can see them there, verses 6 through 8.

"For those whom the Lord loves, He disciplines and scourges every son whom He receives.

It is for discipline that you endure.

God deals with you as with sons, for what son is there whom his father does not discipline?

But if you are without discipline of which all have become partakers, then you are illegitimate

children and not sons."

Did you see them there?

There are two things that are proven by discipline...one, God's love; two, your sonship.

That's right, first God's love.

Two great things become clear in His discipline, two wonderful realities are proven.

First, whom the Lord loves He disciplines.

That's why you don't faint.

That's why you don't ignore or despise the discipline of God, it all proceeds from His

love.

Have that sweet assurance that everything that comes into your life comes from God's

love.

I can tell you, I've lived long enough to know, that it's the pains of life that drive

you to Him.

It's the pains of life that purge your soul.

It's the pains of life that make you a better believer, a more sympathetic teacher.

A man one day was walking up to a stranger and he said, "Why are you looking over the

wall?"

And the man said, "Because I can't see through it."

So I say to you, do what David did, look over the wall.

You can't see through it, why are you troubled, you don't need to be.

Get the upward look.

Revelation 3:19 and there are a lot of passages that I'm not going to give you tonight, "Those

whom I love, I reprove and discipline.

Therefore be zealous and repent.

Those whom I love I reprove and discipline."

Was it love that elected us?

Were we not chosen by sovereign love?

In love, Ephesians 1, in love having predestined us."

Was it love that redeemed us?

Did not God love us when we were enemies?

"It is love that effectually calls us, in loving kindness I have called you," Jeremiah

31:3.

It's all about love.

It's all motivated by love.

Read Lamentations 3:31 to 33 for a good illustration of that.

It is...love is understandable to us because we know that any father who really loves his

child, disciplines that child.

Because why?

Because he wants the best from that child and he knows that in the heart of that child

as in his own heart resides the worst.

Every mass murderer, every serial killer, every pervert of every kind was once somebody's

little child with a heart of innocence that hadn't yet expressed itself.

A loving father disciplines for correction, for protection, for education because he loves

the child and he feels the pain.

My Dad always used to say to me, "This hurts you more than it does me..(he said it backwards),

and then he'd wallop me.

And I didn't buy it.

I...I just didn't buy it until I became a father.

Isaiah 63:9 says, "In...speaking of Israel...in all their affliction, He was afflicted."

Sure He feels the pain but He understands the benefit.

The discipline proves He loves you.

Secondly, it proves you're sons.

Verse 6 says, "He scourges every son whom He receives."

God...verse 7...deals with you as with sons.

What son is there whom his father doesn't discipline?"

If you're without discipline, of which all have become partakers, then you're illegitimate

children and not sons.

All of our Father's sons are going to experience discipline.

You have all these people running around preaching this silly notion that all God wants you to

be is slap-happy all the time.

Quite the contrary.

Every son He scourges.

Proper training must include corporeal correction of behavior.

"He that spares the rod...as I said from Proverbs 13...spoils the child.

But he that loves him, chastens him many times."

Proverbs 19:18, "Chasten your son while there's hope and let not your soul spare for his crying."

Proverbs 22:15, "Foolishness is bound in the heart of a child but the rod of correction

will drive it far from him."

Proverbs 23:13 and 14, "Withhold not correction from the child for if you beat him with a

rod he shall not die.

You'll beat him with a rod and deliver his soul from hell."

What a promise.

Proverbs 29:15, "The rod and reproof give wisdom but a child left to himself brings

his mother to shame."

Certainly our world is full of testimonies to that, huh?

It is for discipline that you endure.

In other words, discipline is the essence of enduring spiritual development, spiritual

life.

God is dealing with us as sons.

So, we've seen the perils in discipline.

We've seen the proofs of discipline, that He loves us and that we're true sons.

There are two products in discipline, finally.

Two things that God produces.

They're obvious.

Verse 9, "Furthermore we had earthly fathers to discipline us and we respected them, shall

we not much rather be subject to the Father of spirits and live?"

We respect our earthly fathers, shouldn't we respect our spiritual Father, right?

We give honor to our earthly father for the discipline that he gives to us out of love

and because we're sons.

Shouldn't we do the same with our heavenly father because this is what it produces, the

first thing...life.

Be subject to the spiritual Father and live...and live.

This, by the way, is in contrast to Deuteronomy 21:18 to 21.

Deuteronomy 21:18 to 21 describes a situation where you have a child that's disobedient,

a child that's rebellious, a child that's dishonor to the parents.

And you know what the prescription is for that child?

Kill the child...kill the child.

Capital punishment for a rebellious, disobedient child.

With that being the original standard, parents had an awful lot at stake because they had

a legitimate, God-given reason to have their child executed if that child was not an obedient,

responsive, respectful child.

And that is why it says here in this verse that our spiritual Father wants to subject

us to discipline that will give us life, not death; eternal life, abundant life.

It's not just that we will live eternally, it's that we'll really live.

You know, the believer who is most obedient is living the Christian life at its max, right?

The more rebellious you are, the more undisciplined you are, the more disobedient you are, the

less you enjoy life.

Second thing is not only life in its fullness, but verse 10, "They disciplined us for a short

time, our earthly fathers, that seemed best to them, but He disciplines us for our good

so that we may share His...what?...His holiness."

So that's the second product in discipline...holiness.

So we get a full, rich, enjoyable life and holiness.

Oh, we'll have eternal life and we'll have eternal holiness but this is talking about

here and now.

You received the promise of eternal holiness when you put your faith in Christ.

Discipline does not contribute to that.

You received eternal life when you were saved.

Discipline doesn't contribute to that.

Discipline contributes to how much you enjoy this life and all its riches in Christ and

how you progress down the path of godliness and holiness and the two are inseparable,

right?

Because really living is connected to living a life of virtue.

And the Lord keeps up the discipline throughout our lives to accomplish these ends.

One final word.

You say, "Well, it seems a little counter-intuitive, this idea, you know, of becoming a Christian

and now all of a sudden I'm coming under this discipline."

And so, in verse 11 he kind of acknowledges that.

"All discipline for the moment seems not to be joyful but sorrowful."

I mean, let's be honest, right?

When you're going through the agony and the pain, whether it's an illness or a job loss

or an economic stress, or trouble with your children, or trouble with your spouse, or

who knows what it is, a myriad of things, it doesn't seem joyful at the time, it seems

sorrowful.

Yet to those who have been trained by it, if you'll see it for what it is, training,

correction, protection, education, and you learn your lessons, it will yield the peaceful

fruit of righteousness.

Your life will be just filled with the products that righteousness produces.

Carnal senses react negatively...of course.

Natural reason reacts negatively.

We find no joy in the cancer diagnosis.

We find no joy in the unresolved conflicts that come into our relationships.

We go through a terrible time grieving over them and feeling the pain and the sorrow.

But afterward...that's the big...that's the big word...afterward.

For the moment it's not joyful but afterward it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness.

Righteousness and peace go together, don't they?

When you're righteous, you're at peace.

So, there's...there's the issue of discipline laid out for us.

And this completes the picture of living by faith and understanding that the life of faith

is a life of challenges, it's a life of trials and suffering as it was for all the people

in chapter 11 and has been for all the people who have ever lived by faith.

But we triumph over that faith by focusing on Jesus who also triumphed in the midst of

the most horrendous suffering anyone would ever or could ever even conceive of.

The discipline of God is building us up to righteousness so that we can live lives that

are marked by peace.

Father, we thank You again tonight because Your Word is alive and powerful, refreshing,

challenging, instructive.

Thank You for teaching us.

Help us now, Lord, to understand the implications of this in our own lives, to look at life

perhaps differently, to see that we are not being victimized by Satan, we're not being

victimized by Your enemies, we are being trained by You toward righteousness.

This is all about sanctification.

Thank You for loving us that much that You would make us sons, that You would love us

by conforming us even in this life through our suffering to the very image of Christ,

Your true and eternal Son who Himself was perfected through suffering.

We love You as a faithful Father and desire to be the children that You would have us

to be, sons that You would not be ashamed of.

Work that work in us for Your glory, we pray.

Amen.

For more infomation >> God's Faithful Discipline (Hebrews 12:4-11) - Duration: 56:39.

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Heroes & Generals - Debatable Classes. Герои и Генералы - Сомнительные Классы. ENG SUBS - Duration: 4:27.

Each soldier on the battlefield plays his role, depending on his class.

A role in need is a role indeed.

Well, the ones we have today are not very needed.

Re-co-n

Recon is a very debatable class. After recent update, the price decreased to 208K credits. And do you know what did I pay to get him?

541K...

541K!!!!

Calculations about how much money I F***** can be done by a preschooler!!!

Okay, chill...

The starter weapon is...

MOSIN NAGANT

We met again...

I can sense that profit will be none... And I was right!

The difference between recon and infantry is that he is only able to ride a bike and exclusive reconaissance armor. He has more mods for Mosin, which makes 200+ meters sniping possible, and thats what he gets point for.

But in the combat where you will you get 10K you will have to pay 4 for repairs. But you will never die, cause you will be a bush sitting faggot. Summing up, recon is a relax class, or antistress. That's exactly what duch hunters do.

Ge-ne-ral

General... He must be really cool, cool enough to worth A GAME TITLE. To get him, you must level up any soldier to level 18 and make him a general. To understand what general is we need to know what WAR is. In a nutshell, after you get a level 12 soldier, you can by ATs(assault troops). You can deploy them on the Europe map, for Warfunds. About that in next windows. You send those to assault or defend cities. There are big cities. Capture 15 out of 23 for your side to win. Now, what are pros of general? Well... He can lead AT's of all classes... Have more AT slots... What are cons? You will lose your soldier.

His equipment goes to warehouse where you can give it to others... General cannot take part in battles himself. You will exchange the FPS gameplay for... this mess... Justify it yourself. Like strategy games a lot - get him. He can also be bought for 1969000 credits. Get your money prepared...

For more infomation >> Heroes & Generals - Debatable Classes. Герои и Генералы - Сомнительные Классы. ENG SUBS - Duration: 4:27.

-------------------------------------------

Grey's Anatomy 13x19 Sneak Peek "What's Inside" (HD) Season 13 Episode 19 Sneak Peek - Duration: 1:07.

Meredith: Okay. There she is.

Hey, we heard --

Meredith: Open fetal surgery.

Exciting, huh?

Yeah, I mean, that'll be

the tiniest heart you've ever operated on.

It'll be the tiniest heart I have ever operated on.

You guys talked to Hunt, huh?

Yeah, we're just checking in.

I mean, it's a big operation.

Amelia: A risky one.

I mean, it's an ambitious first day back.

Meredith: We want to make sure you're okay.

Would you stop?

How is this supposed to help me be okay?

How is this supposed to help me go in there

and do the impossible?

Now's the part where you guys

are supposed to tell me how awesome I am,

like I do for you all the time.

Sorry.

You are awesome.

Okay, don't.

And I was having a great day.

I found a special surgery that I was excited about,

that I knew I could excel at, and I wasn't worried

for one second about whether I'd be able to perfect it --

Not for one second until you guys got here,

and now I am a little worried,

so thank you for your support.

♪♪

♪♪

For more infomation >> Grey's Anatomy 13x19 Sneak Peek "What's Inside" (HD) Season 13 Episode 19 Sneak Peek - Duration: 1:07.

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U.S. Cities Passing Resolutions To Force Congress To Impeach Trump - Duration: 4:09.

Cities across the United States are taking up resolutions to try to force the Republican

controlled Congress to investigate Donald Trump and just perhaps proceed with impeachment

hearings.

Cities like Cambridge, Massachusetts, Alameda, California, Berkeley, California, Richmond,

California ... They have all all taking up these resolutions to tell congress that you

cannot continue to sit idly by as our President continues to violate the Emoluments Clause

in the United States constitution.

What that specific clause says, is that a sitting President or politician cannot take

money from a federal or state government or a foreign entity and use it at their own businesses

to line their own pockets.

If there is one thing that Donald Trump has been successful at since he's been in inaugurated,

it's taking money from the federal tax payers, paying it to his own businesses that he then

gets the profits from.

At this point, we're in April, we still do not have a firm confirmation that Donald Trump

has created a blind trust.

We do not know if he knows where his money is.

We never got his tax returns.

We don't know what investments he has.

We know obviously the Trump branded properties.

We know Mar-a-Lago.

We know the other gold courses.

We know Trump Hotel in DC and Trump Tower in New York City.

We don't know what else.

We do know at one point, he had interests in the Dakota Access Pipeline.

He had a financial stake in it.

We don't know if it's officially gone or not, but he signed that.

All of these are instances of direct violations of the Emoluments Clause.

The security detail, living in New York City at Trump Tower, protecting Melania and Barron

Trump, that's our money.

That's taxpayer money being spent on this, given to Trump Tower, so that these people

can stay there.

I mean, we've $17,000 just for the Secret Service to rent golf carts at Trump owned

properties.

Trump gets the profits form that.

That's what these cities are trying to tell Congress.

He is getting rich off of this office and you're doing nothing.

You know, the investigation could probably take less than a week at this point, because

the evidence is overwhelming at this point, but as Rand Paul said, and I swear to God

I'm going to repeat this everyday until 2020, "It doesn't make sense for Republicans to

investigate Republicans."

That's what Senator Rand Paul told us.

Is it likely that we'll get anything out of this Republican Congress?

No.

Unless the chorus of voices throughout this United States gets so loud that they can't

ignore it.

That is what we can do.

We can talk about it.

We can sign on to these resolutions.

We can make it happen.

We've seen how well they respond to public pressure.

The death of the AACA is proof of that.

We can do it with this, but if Republicans still refuse, don't worry, 2018 is just around

the corner.

We can remake Congress.

We can completely shift the balance of power in there and finally get some people in office

that will take seriously Donald Trump's violations of the US Constitution, because if we're going

to continue having to live with Republicans who won't investigate the easiest solution,

is to replace them with Democrats.

For more infomation >> U.S. Cities Passing Resolutions To Force Congress To Impeach Trump - Duration: 4:09.

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KIDS DRINK THE STARBUCKS SECRET MENU! (Butterbeer, Skittles, Pink Drink) | Kids Vs. Food - Duration: 7:31.

♪ (French accordion music) ♪

- (FBE) Today, you'll be drinking this.

- Oh, Starbucks. I love Starbucks.

- I don't like coffee because it tastes really bad.

- (gasping) Coffee!

I love coffee! Coffee is delicious.

Coffee!!!

- It's coffee! We're trying coffee!

Maybe I had coffee before.

I drank some of my dad's.

(whispering) Don't tell my dad.

- It is Starbucks and I bet it's going to be some weird coffees.

- (FBE) We're going to have you try drinks from the Starbucks secret menu.

- They have a se-- oh yeah, I've heard of the secret menu.

- (FBE) But don't worry. None of them are actually coffee.

- Aww.

(in disappointment) Okay.

- I don't really go to Starbucks that much.

- My main thing that I get at Starbucks is a vanilla milk.

I'm a little bit scared.

- (FBE) Here is your first drink. - Oh, yummy.

It looks good.

- It looks like a type of root beer float.

- It tastes like milk.

It tastes like a shake, like a vanilla shake.

- Mmm!

It has a cinnamon taste.

Apple! Apple cinnamon.

Oh my god. I'm going to drink this whole thing.

- Not that bad.

Kind of tastes cinnamonny.

- It tastes like it has a lot of milk.

Sugar... a hint of banana.

- It's like sour, sort of, but it's sour/sweet,

and it's really smooth.

Maybe like caramel?

- (FBE) That was an apple pie à la mode frappuccino.

It's a cream-based frappe with apple juice, cinnamon dolce syrup,

whipped cream blended in, and caramel drizzle.

- Hmmm.

Very complicated.

- It kind of tastes like apple pie.

It tastes sweet.

- Write all these down because next time I go to Starbucks,

I'm going to be like, "Can I have the secret menu?

Can I have this?"

- (FBE) Here is your next one.

- I definitely know there's whipped cream on it.

- I feel like it's going to be a little bit of a strawberry taste

because, like, it has some reddish type down there.

- Mmm, this tastes good!

It tastes like strawberry, my favorite fruit.

- That is definitely strawberry.

I really like strawberries.

And it's also really smooth.

Goodness, that is good!

- It tastes like shampoo.

Don't ask me how I know what shampoo tastes like.

- That aftertaste tastes like those weird flavored cookies.

- It tastes like grapejuice... and I don't like grapejuice.

- It just tastes like cereal.

Kind of tastes like Captain Crunch.

- (FBE) So that was a Captain Crunch frappuccino.

- What?!

- (FBE) It's made to taste like the cereal.

It's a strawberries and cream frappuccino

with caramel, toffee nut, and hazelnut syrup.

- What? Captain Crunch?

I did not get Captain Crunch or hazelnut at all.

- It's fruity, but...

this doesn't really taste like it.

- I think it's good.

They should make this for free.

- (FBE) Here is another one. - Another one!

Ooh, it's in a cup.

I don't know what it looks like.

(whimpering)

It smells like cinnamon.

- I feel like I have a little bit of a Cheerio taste.

- This does not taste that good.

It tastes like hot almond milk.

- It tastes like those caramel ones?

- It tastes like milk with cinnamon mixed in it.

- I taste vanilla, like, a lot of cream, vanilla cream.

- It tastes like something I would have next to a fireplace

on a cold winter's night.

I'm thinking eggnog, pumpkin spice... something like that.

- (FBE) So that was hot butterbeer, and it's supposed to taste like the drink

they enjoy in Harry Potter. - This...

is supposed to taste like butterbeer?

- I love butterbeer.

This is butterbeer?

This does not taste like anything from the butterbeer at Universal Studios.

- (FBE) So it is a whole milk steamer,

and it has caramel, toffee nut, and cinnamon dolce syrup.

- Whoa! (giggling)

That's not what I expected it was going to be.

- In these drinks, it's all says syrup, syrup, syrup!

- (FBE) Okay, here is the next one.

- Okay, this is definitely something strawberry

because I can see strawberries floating on the top of it.

- It's pretty.

If it has strawberries, I'm going to definitely

probably going to like this.

- It's like pink.

I feel like it'd be a bubble gummy taste.

- It's strawberry. And it's sweet.

- Ugh.

It's kind of like strawberry lemonade, but waterier.

- (gasping) Oh my gosh! It's so good!

It tastes like strawberry milk.

- It's sour a little bit.

It's like a strawberry tart.

- (FBE) So that one was the Pink Drink.

It blew up on Instagram last year for its color.

It is made with their strawberry acai refresher,

coconut milk, and strawberry.

- I think I've heard of this before.

- See, that's how I remember because on Instagram I got a blowup

of every single person, their own account,

had at least one or two pictures of the Pink Drink.

- I really like the color.

And I really like how they put strawberries into it

so you can really see what it's going to taste like

before you even drink it.

- (FBE) Here is your last secret drink.

- Okay, this looks like actual coffee, but I know it's not.

- It looks like it has chocolate.

(smacking lips)

It tastes like pumpkins and apples

and then some strawberry and bananas.

It tastes a little bit like Jolly Rancher to me.

- Mmm! (uncertainly) Mmm.

This is weird.

I'm getting a tiny bit of apple, and also some strawberry in there.

It tastes like the Pink Drink, and the Captain Crunch combined.

- It's a little mixed strawberries and I don't like strawberries.

- It kind of tastes like taffy.

- It's like a real bit, like, strong fruitish taste.

- (FBE) That one was Skittles.

It is a strawberries and cream frappuccino

with vanilla and raspberry syrup. - You're kidding, right?

What? That's Skittles?

I have to try again.

It doesn't really taste a lot like Skittles.

- I love Skittles!

(gasping) That's my favorite candy in the world.

Oh my goodness.

- It kind of tastes like Skittles.

I mean, I have to say, they did get it pretty good,

pretty spot on.

- (FBE) So which one of these drinks would you recommend people try?

- I recommend the apple pie one.

- Butterbeer.

- The Captain Crunch.

- The Pink Drink.

- Skittles.

- The Skittles one.

- Probably the butterbeer.

It tastes the best out of all of these.

- I liked the Harry Potter butterbeer the best.

I would have to say that these were actually pretty good.

- Thank you for watching this episode of Kids vs. Food

on the React channel.

- What should we try next?

Let us know in the comments.

- Don't forget to subscribe.

We have new shows for you every week.

- Bye, everyone!

- Hey, guys, I'm Katie, one of the React channel producers.

Thank you so much for watching this episode.

Now, I'm off to Starbucks for, like, the third time today.

Bye, guys!

For more infomation >> KIDS DRINK THE STARBUCKS SECRET MENU! (Butterbeer, Skittles, Pink Drink) | Kids Vs. Food - Duration: 7:31.

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Phoenix Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Lawyer | My AZ Lawyers - Duration: 0:32.

If you want to protect your assets, home,

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For more infomation >> Phoenix Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Lawyer | My AZ Lawyers - Duration: 0:32.

-------------------------------------------

Phoenix Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Lawyer | My AZ Lawyers - Duration: 0:25.

Filing for a Chapter 7 results in a

liquidation of assets and clearing of

debts. This option is not for everyone.

It requires certain financial

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filing for chapter 7 bankruptcy is the

best option for you, consult with a

bankruptcy lawyer today. Give us a call

at 602-509- 0955 to talk with one of

our lawyers.

For more infomation >> Phoenix Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Lawyer | My AZ Lawyers - Duration: 0:25.

-------------------------------------------

war face - Duration: 0:06.

AAAAAA

THAT'S A WAR FACE, NOW LET ME SEE YOUR WAR FACE

AAAAA

For more infomation >> war face - Duration: 0:06.

-------------------------------------------

March Progress Report [Ger Dub] | März Fortschrittsbericht [Deutsche Synchro] - Duration: 10:25.

For more infomation >> March Progress Report [Ger Dub] | März Fortschrittsbericht [Deutsche Synchro] - Duration: 10:25.

-------------------------------------------

Phoenix Arizona's Best Bankruptcy Lawyers | My AZ Lawyers - Duration: 0:33.

Struggling with financial difficulties

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For more infomation >> Phoenix Arizona's Best Bankruptcy Lawyers | My AZ Lawyers - Duration: 0:33.

-------------------------------------------

The Hunt for Water on the Moon - Duration: 5:20.

The Moon.

It's a dry, dusty landscape.

Devoid of life, and certainly devoid of water.

Or is it?

Certainly that's how people picture the Moon,

and it was the Apollo astronauts' experience.

It was so dry and dusty that it caused serious problems with their equipment.

But in the decades since the Apollo missions,

astronomers have learned that there's much more water on the Moon

than we ever imagined.

And that water, in the form of ice, could hold the secret to colonizing the Moon,

and make it a perfect stop-off point for a mission to Mars.

The first time scientists seriously suggested we might find water on the Moon

was in 1961, when researchers at Caltech published a paper on the topic.

They said we might find water ice in craters near the Moon's poles.

There, in that shadowy, cold environment,

it would be possible for ice to survive for millions of years.

But it wasn't until 2009 that we were able to prove them right.

Astronomers knew that asteroid and comet impacts would've

brought some water to the Moon.

And there's more water forming on the Moon all the time,

when the hydrogen in solar wind interacts with oxygen in the rock and dust.

Bringing water to the Moon is one thing, but keeping it there is another.

Originally, few people thought there would be any water on the Moon.

For one thing, the temperature swings wildly between day and night,

reaching an average high of 107 degrees Celsius,

above the boiling point of water.

For another, even water vapor doesn't survive long on the Moon.

That's because the sunlight decomposes it into hydrogen and oxygen,

and then that lightweight hydrogen escapes the Moon's weak gravity.

In fact, when Apollo astronauts brought back Moon rocks with traces of water,

people were so sure the Moon was dry,

that they just assumed the samples had been contaminated.

Even ten years ago, while astronomers suspected there might be water,

they hadn't been able to prove it.

So how did we finally discover it?

Well, the short answer is we threw stuff at the Moon to see what would happen.

The long answer is that it took decades of unmanned missions

and careful measurements.

The first really solid evidence for water on the Moon came in 1994

with NASA's Clementine probe.

By bouncing radio waves into shadowy parts of the Moon,

we were able to discover areas of the Moon that reflected like an icy surface,

instead of a rocky one.

The results weren't enough to say

that there was definitely water ice down there,

but it was a tantalizing hint that there might be.

Next came Lunar Prospector in 1998.

This NASA probe measured the contents of the Moon's regolith.

Scientists used the data to calculate how much hydrogen was in the regolith,

which was important, since water — aka H2O — has hydrogen in it.

Lunar Prospector found that there was a lot more hydrogen near the poles,

suggesting we might find water there.

But there was a wrinkle: the extra hydrogen they'd found near the poles

was bound up in what's known as a hydroxyl group,

which consists of a hydrogen and oxygen atom.

These hydroxyl groups are found in water,

but they can also be bound to minerals.

So they might not have been signs of actual water the way we imagine it.

At the end of its mission,

Lunar Prospector tried something else to solve the water mystery.

It pointed itself towards the surface of the Moon and crash landed.

The goal was to try to throw some water into the atmosphere

where it could be detected.

It was a great idea, but it didn't work out the way astronomers had hoped.

They didn't find anything new.

But then, in 2008, things really kicked off.

First, a study came out that analyzed lunar samples from the Apollo missions.

They showed that those samples really did contain water,

hidden away inside ancient beads of lava,

proving that the Moon once had plenty of the stuff.

Next, the Indian spacecraft Chandrayaan-1

did a similar trick to Lunar Prospector,

and crash-landed in a crater to see what would be thrown up.

And this time, astronomers found clear signs of hydroxyl groups

in the lunar soil.

Over at NASA, they rushed to launch a satellite

that could settle the question once and for all.

They called it the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite.

It reached the Moon in late 2009, and produced similar plumes of debris

by crashing the rocket that carried it there into a crater.

Then, it flew through the debris plume and tried to detect water.

The data showed pure, crystalline water-ice.

Since there are no visible slabs of ice on the surface near the impact site,

this probably came from small chunks mixed in with the lunar regolith.

When researchers analyzed the data,

they estimated that in just that one 20-meter crater, there were 100 kg of ice.

This is a big deal for future space missions.

For one thing, humans obviously need water to, you know… stay alive.

And bringing it with us is expensive, because water's heavy!

For another, you can use water to create rocket fuel.

If we went to the Moon today, we'd have to bring any fuel we needed

for the return journey with us.

That's a lot more weight to blast up out of Earth's atmosphere.

Being able to create rocket fuel on the Moon would make space travel,

including missions to Mars and beyond, much more practical.

And the more we know about the nature and amount of water on the Moon,

the closer we get to finally colonizing our closest neighbor.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space,

and thanks especially to our patrons on Patreon

who help make this show possible.

If you want to help us keep making episodes like this,

you can go to patreon.com/scishow to learn more.

And don't forget to go to youtube.com/scishowspace and subscribe!

For more infomation >> The Hunt for Water on the Moon - Duration: 5:20.

-------------------------------------------

The Phoenix Bankruptcy Process | My AZ Lawyers - Duration: 0:33.

A few people are afraid or do not fully

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