GOD, OMNIPOTENCE OF
The Rock Didn’t Move
A sailor in a
shipwreck was thrown upon a rock where he clung in great danger until
the tide went down. Later a friend asked him, “Jim, didn’t you shake
with fear when you were hanging on that rock?”
“Yes, but
the rock didn’t,” was the significant reply. Christ is the Rock of
Ages.
—Sabbath Reading
Hanging Upon Nothing
Martin Luther
wrote to the prime minister in Germany: “I have lately seen a miracle.
I looked out of the window at the stars in God’s whole heavenly dome.
I nowhere saw any pillars where the Master had placed such a dome still
stands fast. There are some who seek such pillars and would like very
much to feel and grasp them; because they cannot do it, they tremble and
write as if the heavens would certainly fall for no other reason than
that they cannot seize pillars. I would sooner expect to see the heavens
fall than to see one jot or tittle of all the Word of God fail.”
—The Bible Friend
God Disposes Of Napoleon
It is said,
that, on the eve of Napoleon’s departure on his Russian campaign, he
detailed his schemes to a noble lady with such arrogant positiveness,
that she tried to check him saying, “Sir, man proposes; but God
disposes.” “Madam, I propose and dispose too,” the emperor
haughtily replied. A few months after, the disastrous retreat, and the
loss of his crown, army, and liberty, vindicated the power of God.
—Foster
Jonathan Edwards’ Conversion
Jonathan
Edwards was suddenly converted, as by a flash of light, in the moment of
reading a single verse of the New Testament. He was at home in his
father’s house; some hindrances kept him from going to church one
Sunday with the family. A couple of hours with nothing to do sent him
listlessly into the library; the sight of a dull volume with no title on
the leather back of it evoked curiosity as to what it could be; he
opened it at random and found it to be a Bible; and then his eye caught
this verse: “Now unto the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only
wise God, be honor and glory for ever and ever. Amen!”
He tells us in
his journal that the immediate effect of it was awakening and alarming
to his soul, for it brought him a most novel and most extensive thought
of the vastness and majesty of the true Sovereign of the universe. Out
of this grew the pain of guilt for having resisted such a Monarch so
long, and for having served Him so poorly. And whereas he had hitherto
had slight notions of his own wickedness and very little poignancy of
acute remorse, now he felt the deepest contrition.
—C. H. Robinson
He Carried Boy And Burden
A preacher was
busy in his study, while his little boy looked at a book of pictures by
the fireside. He suddenly wanted a large book he had left upstairs, and
asked his boy to go for it. He was away a long time, and after a while
the father heard the sound of sobbing on the stairs. He went out, and at
the top of the staircase he saw his son crying bitterly, with the large
book he had tried to lift and carry, lying at his feet. “Oh, Daddy,”
he cried, “I can’t carry it. It’s too heavy for me.”
In a moment,
the father was up the stairs, and stooping down, took up both the book
and the little fellow in his strong arms, and carried them both to the
room below. “And that,” he found himself thinking later, “is how
God deals with His children.”
—Methodist Recorder
Unsinkable Ship
At the time of
the sinking of the Titanic, one of our great American preachers
was in Belfast, Ireland. The Titanic had been built in Belfast,
and there was a great local pride over the mighty ship. She had been
heralded far and wide as “the unsinkable ship.” Sixteen members of
the church in Belfast, all skilled mechanics, went down with her. The
mayor said that Belfast had never been in such grief as that which came
over this terrible tragedy. When the news finally was verified that the
gallant ship was certainly lost, so deep was the grief that it is said
strong men met upon the streets, grasped each other’s hands, burst
into tears, and parted without a word.
The visiting
American preached the Sunday after the tragedy in the church to which
the sixteen members who had been lost belonged. Not only was the
building packed with peoples but on the platform were lords, bishops,
and ministers of all denominations. In the audience, many newly-made
widows were sitting and orphans were sobbing on every side. The great
preacher took as his subject “The Unsinkable Ship.” But he did not
apply that term to the Titanic which on her first voyage had gone
out into the Atlantic and crashed into an iceberg, carrying her precious
cargo of human lives down to watery death.
No, the
preacher’s message was about that other “unsinkable ship”—the
frail boat on the sea of Galilee, unsinkable because the Master of land
and sea was asleep on a pillow in the afterpart of the vessel. Thank God
He still lives and rides the billows and controls the storms, and when
the children of men take their only true Pilot back on board, we will
ride out the present storms and He will bring the vessel through to the
fair harbor of our hopes.
—American Fundamentalist
Matter Into Energy
In northern
Alabama some of our electricity comes from the Brown’s Ferry nuclear
plant near Decatur, Alabama. This is the world’s largest nuclear
energy plant. Its fuel is uranium. When just one gram of Uranium 235
fissions, it creates energy equivalent to 20 tons of TNT. One gram is
about what a small birthday candle weighs. The candle, if burned, could
hardly warm a cup of coffee.
This little
one-gram candle, however, if converted 100% into energy, according to
Einstein’s equation, could produce the energy of 20,000 tons of TNT or
26.6 million kilowatt hours of electricity. What makes the difference
between a one-gram birthday candle that could hardly warm a cup of
coffee and the same one-gram candle that could provide the energy of
20,000 tons of TNT?
Einstein’s
equation is E equals MC². The E represents energy in ergs, mass grams
and the C² is the velocity of the light squared. If we leave out the C²
we get one erg is equal to one gram. One erg is less than the energy
required for a mosquito to become airborne. If we add the C² we get 9 x
1020 centimeters per second. Thus we get one gram times
900,000,000,000,000,000,000 (nine hundred quintillion) centimeters per
second, equals 900,000,000,000,000,000,000 ergs of energy.
This one-gram
candle, then, if transformed totally to energy is equivalent to the
enormous power that a city of 40,000 people would use in one day. All of
this when one gram of matter is changed into energy! God’s creation
pulsates with His might.
—The Bible Friend
Epigram On God (Omnipotence of)
•
The sun, with all those planets revolving around it and
dependent upon it, can still ripen a bunch of grapes as if it had
nothing else in the universe to do.
—Galileo
•
An hour in prayer can give the believer enough power from God to
overcome the second most powerful force in the universe (Isa. 40:31).
—The Bible Friend
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