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#11 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Natal Transvaal
Posts: 5,632
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Here's the song I was thinking of earlier:
1. O Lord since time began You've had one aim, one goal. Your purpose will and plan Is centered 'round all man. New, new, new, Your goal is so new. Take us Lord possess us to be channels for You. 2. You love to call the young To carry out Your move, To leave the old behind, To have a change in mind. New, new, new, Your move is so new, We will be the people with this age-turning view. 3. Don't let us settle down, Be occupied or set. But living, open, new, Fresh, empty, young in You! New, new, new, Your life is so new, You're the living One we wholly give ourselves to. 4. You long that Christ Himself, Be known and realized, Experienced, expressed, In a full and living way. New, new, new, our Christ is so new, We are here for nothing on this earth but for You. So two things come to mind: First is when did Christ become so old, that He had to become so new? Second, if this "new Christ" doesn't care about the poor, the sick, and the weak then He is probably a "different Christ" that Paul was warning us about. If this was a Christ where we said to the rich man "You sit here" and to the poor man, "You sit over there, under my footstool", then this was a different Christ that (James 2:1-4) warned us about. If this was a new Christ where we elevated men and made distinctions among ourselves, and then ignored righteousness when our elevated men (our "Moses" and "Noah") were found to be with feet of clay like the rest, what kind of Christ is this? All the excitement and shouting cannot cover a lack of discernment. Just some things to think about. I'm not trying to present anything definitive here. Just thinking aloud. Asking questions.
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"Freedom is free. It's slavery that's so horribly expensive" - Colonel Templeton, ret., of the 12th Scottish Highlanders, the 'Black Fusiliers' |
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