Saturday, October 29, 2016

Post 11, part 2-–The Cares of This World (Job and Habakkuk, or A Bigger Vision of God)

                                     http://images.freeimages.com/images/previews/915/atlas-1488224.jpg


                                                                                                                    
     “I find that in my life there are parallels to Paul Newman's character in "Cool Hand Luke."  Now that's switching gears just a bit, isn't it? From Prophets to prisoners….  But, when Luke would try to escape the prison farm and get caught, to punish him, they would make him dig a deep hole (like big enough to bury a Volkswagen) then fill it back up. Then, upon completing that hole, he would be forced to dig another deep hole and fill it up.  After days of no food or rest, constant hole digging, and having to endure continual harassment, the guards would ask,


     "Luke?  You got your mind right?"


      My life is a never ending cycle of "getting my mind right."  Dana Acker
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     This portion of Dana’s email is a challenge to post because Dana used many complete chapters of scripture from Job and Habakkuk to support his position.  If I used all those chapters we’d be accused of trying to publish a book. Where Dana quoted an entire chapter, I have a link to that chapter.  While the reader can read this without clicking these links, much of the strength and meaning of what Dana is saying will be missed if each entire chapter in the Bible isn’t read. What God is trying to say to us through His word, will also be missed. 
    
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Dana continued (see Part 1 for the beginning of this post)


     You are not alone in this, John.  Looking back into the Old Testament, Habakkuk the prophet wrestled with the cares of his age.  Job most certainly had to come to terms with it. The question of being perplexed at the situations around (cares of this life) you seem to never go away, does it?  And it doesn't appear that they will go away until the absolute end of things and the beginning of the New Heavens and Earth. And, you are far from alone in your concerns about such, hence Jesus' caution to His disciples (and to us).


     In both Job's and Habakkuk's cases, God poured water on their burning questions by revealing a vision of Himself to them in ways that got them to take their eyes off their concerns, and put them on Him alone.  By so doing, God filled their vision with something so unfathomably magnificent, so all consuming that everything else, even the nagging and burning question of earthly life problems and concerns no matter how dire, simply paled into insignificance, thus turning their questioning into repentance and worship or both.  Take a look at the vision of Himself that God gave to Job in Job 38.




     All of Job 38 is God asking Job a long series of questions. God, basically asks Job if he (Job) is the Creator, e.g. Job 38:22-24 NKJV


22 “Have you entered the treasury of snow,
Or have you seen the treasury of hail,
23 Which I have reserved for the time of trouble,
For the day of battle and war?
24 By what way is light diffused,
Or the east wind scattered over the earth?


   Dana then copied all of Job 39, where God continues a relentless series of questions and statements about His Creative abilities, e.g.




26 “Does the hawk fly by your wisdom,
And spread its wings toward the south?
27 Does the eagle mount up at your command,
And make its nest on high?
29 From there it spies out the prey;
Its eyes observe from afar.




     Dana then says, as he introduces Job 40, that “…old Brother Job is starting to get the picture…”


Chapter 40 begins:


Moreover the Lord answered Job, and said:


“Shall the one who contends with the Almighty correct Him?
He who rebukes God, let him answer it.”


Then Job answered the Lord and said:


“Behold, I am vile;
What shall I answer You?
I lay my hand over my mouth.
Once I have spoken, but I will not answer;
Yes, twice, but I will proceed no further.”


     And just like "Ginsu Knives" on the late night TV commercials, "Wait, there's more!"  From Job chapter 41:


“Can you draw out Leviathan with a hook,
Or snare his tongue with a line which you lower?
Can you put a reed through his nose,
Or pierce his jaw with a hook?
Will you play with him as with a bird,
Or will you leash him for your maidens?
10 ....Who then is able to stand against Me?
11 Who has preceded Me, that I should pay him?
Everything under heaven is Mine.


      And what does Job do at this point after having gotten real up close and personal with this revelation of God to him? The opening of Chapter 42 says:


     Then Job answered the Lord and said:


“I know that You can do everything,
And that no purpose of Yours can be withheld from You.
You asked, ‘Who is this who hides counsel without knowledge?’
Therefore I have uttered what I did not understand,
Things too wonderful for me, which I did not know.
Listen, please, and let me speak;
You said, ‘I will question you, and you shall answer Me.’


“I have heard of You by the hearing of the ear,
But now my eye sees You.
Therefore I abhor myself,
And repent in dust and ashes.”

     What happened to Job's burning questions?  Where are his life situations now?


     OK, now let's look at Habakkuk.  In the first chapter of Habakkuk's prophecy, we find the prophet genuinely disturbed over the problems being caused by his own people, the Hebrews.  A little further on, Habakkuk is even more disturbed over God's plan to use the Babylonians (Chaldeans--now modern day Iraq) to be the rod in God's Hand, so to speak, to chastise and smite the very people whose wickedness and rebellion he was complaining to God about in the first place. 


     So Habakkuk, in mentioning his one concern to God, then walks away, not with a solution of his design, but rather two "cares of this world" questions with which to deal. “Thanks God.”  Most of us would react that way.  Read God's response in revealing Himself to Habakkuk Chapter 2:




     Wow!  While Job's new and large vision of God ended in repentance, see how Habakkuk's response is that of worship--he even wrote a song--a hymn about what he had seen (Chapter 3):




17 Though the fig tree may not blossom,
Nor fruit be on the vines;
Though the labor of the olive may fail,
And the fields yield no food;
Though the flock may be cut off from the fold,
And there be no herd in the stalls—
18 Yet I will rejoice in the Lord,
I will joy in the God of my salvation.


19 The Lord God is my strength;
He will make my feet like deer’s feet,
And He will make me walk on my high hills.


To the Chief Musician. With my stringed instruments."


      When the nagging questions regarding earthly difficulties arise, and cause consternation or frustration, it is indicative of our gaze being on the problem(s) and not on God.  It's like Job.  When confronted with truly seeing God (as God revealed Himself to Job by His Word) all of his present problems paled into insignificance.

      At the risk of entering the department of redundancy department, when God directs our gaze to the problem (as opposed to our looking at it with just our human eyes and emotions,) it is not to further frustrate us, but rather to see said problem through His eyes. It is to touch our hearts, so that we humbly offer our lives in order to take His love, comfort, and message of redemption in any way HE chooses for us, and in ways that we are able, to those who are the victims of problems that are even worse than ours.  Not trying to make doctrine here, but just some perspectives upon which to ponder.


      And lastly from 1Thess. 4:13 and following:


13 But I do not want you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning those who have fallen asleep, lest you sorrow as others who have no hope. 14 For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so God will bring with Him those who sleep in Jesus. 15 For this we say to you by the word of the Lord, that we who are alive and remain until the coming of the Lord will by no means precede those who are asleep. 16 For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of an archangel, and with the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first. 17 Then we who are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. And thus we shall always be with the Lord. 18 Therefore comfort one another with these words.

     That is our greatest and really, only hope, John.  Nothing else is as important. The comfort we seek is right there.  No matter what stripe of end-times theology one embraces, the one thing we ALL walk away with, and can take comfort in, is that when it is all said and done…"And thus we shall always be with the Lord."


     I find that in my life there are parallels to Paul Newman's character in "Cool Hand Luke."  Now that's switching gears just a bit, isn't it? From Prophets to prisoners….  But, when Luke would try to escape the prison farm and get caught, to punish him, they would make him dig a deep hole (like big enough to bury a Volkswagen) then fill it back up. Then, upon completing that hole, he would be forced to dig another deep hole and fill it up.  After days of no food or rest, constant hole digging, and having to endure continual harassment, the guards would ask,


     "Luke?  You got your mind right?"


     My life is a never ending cycle of "getting my mind right."

     Praying for you and Carol.


     Love you Brother,    


     Dana


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

Friday, October 21, 2016

Post 11, part 1-The Cares of This World (or A Bigger Vision of God).



                       Clouds
      When the nagging questions regarding earthly difficulties arise, and cause consternation or frustration, it is indicative of our gaze being on the problem(s) and not on God.  It's like Job.  When confronted with truly seeing God, as God revealed Himself to Job by His Word, all of his present problems paled into insignificance.  Dana Acker
   
     Jesus said, “These things I have spoken to you, so that in Me you may have peace. In the world you have tribulation, but take courage; I have overcome the world." John 16:33 NASB


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But First, John Writes
            After this post initially came together, Dana and I talked about it and we’ve decided to do a little editing. We’re going to reverse the Biblical order—i.e., instead of starting with the Old Testament with Job and Habakkuk, we’re going to begin with some ideas of Jesus’. Dana thought the first section deals more with the Kingdom of God. (While I feel it is more of the cares of the world. Or perhaps the two are related?) While we think this is a page turner, that view might not be shared by everyone. So once again, rather than a really long post and valuable read, we’re going to make this a two-parter. 


            Jesus talked about the cares of this world several times. There is Mark 4:19, and the sowing of the seeds. Or what about the rich young ruler in Mark 10:17-27. https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=mark+10%3A17-22&version=NIV  And of course there was the rich man who Jesus warned about building more barns, and losing his soul Luke 12:16-21 https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke%2012%3A16-21


            One final thought before we begin. Carol, my wife, and I were discussing this morning what might happen to us and to America, depending on who gets elected in the imminent presidential election.  I’m trying to change, but usually, I’m a glass half empty kind of guy. One of my thoughts was that the cares of this life may not matter too much after the election, because America as we’ve known it, may be gone. IF that were to happen, our grasp on the things and cares of this life should be quickly abandoned and we should turn to the Kingdom of God.


            So let’s look back several years to when this first began after I telephoned Dana with, guess what, another problem.
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Dana responded to my telephone call to him:


     It was good talking with you yesterday, even if the subject matter wasn't the most lighthearted.  Still God is able, and He will provide your needs.  I have been praying for you since then:  1) That God would provide you a job,  2) That God would send His peace to you and Carol, and,  3) That God would reveal His will for your live (lives) should it be different from what we are praying.


     For most of my Christian life I have devoted a large block of my devotional and study time to that concerning the end times, and the coming of our Lord.  Of late, I have found myself in Luke's depiction of the Olivet Discourse in Luke 21.  It is a passage that parallels Matthew 24 and Mark 13.  It is a passage that can always start a "discussion" even among committed students of the Word.  It contains terms with which theologians and pastors and Bible students have wrestled and debated and disagreed for a long, long time.


     The passage "telescopes" (as Alistair Begg puts it,)  "...the camera zooms in and out) back and forth between the near future (in that day) and the end of the world.”  Because Jesus moves between the destruction of the Temple in 70 AD, and His final coming, and doesn't give near as many details as to how those events are going to play out, it unfortunately has given false license to many modern Evangelicals to dream up or calculate out their own extra-Biblical interpretations, and argue and argue and argue about them until they are blue in the face.  More sadly still, they argue about them to point of division and hard feelings between brothers and sisters in the faith.  I’m pretty sure that wasn’t God’s purpose for giving us Prophetic Scriptures.


      The passage is much less about "...the times of the Gentiles," and other such cryptic matters than it is about staying alert.  In Luke 21:34-36 Jesus states:


     34 “But take heed to yourselves, lest your hearts be weighed down with carousing, drunkenness, and cares of this life, and that Day come on you unexpectedly. 35 For it will come as a snare on all those who dwell on the face of the whole earth. 36 Watch therefore, and pray always that you may be counted worthy to escape all these things that will come to pass, and to stand before the Son of Man.”


      Now most Christians' hearts are not weighed down with carousing and drunkenness (hopefully), although Jesus did specifically warn of these things to the 12 who were closest to Him.  But the third element of the exhortation is that of the "heart [being] weighed down with the cares of this life." That would lead to the point of Christians being unprepared for His unexpected coming.  Interesting too that Jesus equates being "...weighed down [with] the cares of this life," "...with carousing and drunkenness." 


      Knowing that we have to take things into context, I do find it quite curious "...carousing, drunkenness, and cares of this life," are mentioned in the same breath. It's not "...carousing, drunkenness, and..." adultery, or cursing, or looking at dirty pictures, or brawling, or smoking opium, or stealing...” any of which most Christians would naturally insert after "...carousing, drunkenness, and...", but instead it's “worrying.”


     Is being weighed down to the point of ineffectiveness and spiritual drowsiness by worrying about the cares of this life equally as bad drunkenness in the Savior's thinking?  In Christendom we like little ditties like, "Don't drink, don't chew [tobacco, I'm assuming] and don't be seen with girls who do."  We don't have so many ditties about being "...weighed down with the cares of this life." 


     Jesus warned as much in His parable of the sower and the seed, in Matthew 13, where He explains to His disciples the meaning of said parable:


.      22 Now he who received seed among the thorns is he who hears the word, and the cares of this world and the deceitfulness of riches choke the word, and he becomes unfruitful."


     There is a thread there, don't you think?  I am extremely aware of and touched by your situation, and could I wave a magic wand and make it all right, I would.  I pray and beseech God on your (and Carol's) behalf, but I cannot help but wonder if this situation might be a test--the word "might" being the operative word here.


     Yes the times are tough, and the situation is tense and immediate, but could the "cares of this life" be causing you to lose sight of the "...the Kingdom of God and His righteousness?"  Because in "Seek[ing] first the Kingdom..." truly lies the answer to your dilemma.


     Kingdom theology is largely ignored or reinterpreted to mean something else in pop-Christian culture.  The term "kingdom" is often relegated to "Heaven," in the minds of many Christians especially because Matthew uses the term "Kingdom of Heaven," whereas the other Gospel writers say "Kingdom of God."

     Two things:


     First, Matthew was a Hebrew Jew writing to other Hebrew Jews.  To use the name "God" in that sense would be akin to writing a letter to the NAACP and referring to Martin Luther King in the most disparaging way.  Matthew's audience would have immediately turned him off, if not instantly sanctifying him with handfuls of great big rocks.  Hence the discrepancy.


     Second, many see the term "kingdom" as referring to a geographical location (i.e. God's Kingdom—stands for Heaven, the 'place' where He rules), when in reality it is a term actually referring to time.  Many years ago I heard a lecture on The Kingdom of God by Dr. Gordon Fee, then of Fuller Theological Seminary.  He taught that when one says the kingdom of Henry the VIII, it is not referring to England, inasmuch as it is referring to the time in history when Henry the VIII ruled England.  Hence the Kingdom of God refers to the "time" when God rules, not the place. 


      It's not that God has not always overseen His creation, but as Mark, in his Gospel points out, Jesus entered His ministry proclaiming that "...the Kingdom of God is at hand (or near)."  Also if one would care to do the study, one would find that the subject about which, Jesus taught the most was on the Kingdom of God.  Hands down. That’s a great trivia question at Christian get-togethers. Nobody gets it right.  They guess everything but the Kingdom of God.  But I digress….


      The seeking first of Jesus' reign in and over your life is the most important thing you can do in this life. And the earnest doing of that will see all things added to you—that you need, not necessarily what you want.  Your real need is a bigger vision of Christ.


            (This is continued. See Part 2 next week)


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

Sunday, October 16, 2016

Post 10—The Miracle Suit, or Jehovah Jireh




My thanks to friend and blogger Lynne Burkholder (link to her blog  http://lynnetreichlerburkholder.blogspot.com/  ) who took this photo of the “miracle suit.”  I think she was trying hard not to laugh, first at the colors and second that I can no longer fit into it. Not because I don’t want to, but the photo you see is no longer that of a strong and trim, young, Bible school student. I wore this suit when I was about 160 pounds.  I’m well north of 200 now. However, as fun as this might be, the most important thing about this suit, is not just how God provided it, but that He is Jehovah Jireh.  Genesis  22:14 NIV,

So Abraham called that place The LORD Will Provide. And to this day it is said, "On the mountain of the LORD it will be provided."

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Introduction to this back and forth of emails:

            There are lots of ways that God will provide. He can give peace in a time of personal crisis. He can be a defender in a wrongful lawsuit. He can turn the paths of hurricanes. He can heal a severe illness or something as simple as a cold. He can help meet an unexpected cash crisis. Or He can help someone get a visa for their passport. Or, or, or. or....The thing to remember is that since He is the Creator, He can provide whatever He wants whenever He wants because He is The Provider.

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John wrote:

Friday, June 10, 2011, 10:29 AM

Hi Dana

             Thanks for the updates on Cherie. We pray for her/you all very frequently....

            Just this morning I saw another news report on the people of Joplin, MO. There is now some kind of disease that is ravaging them. People are still losing their homes and lands due to the Midwest floods. Japan. Thailand. The lack of humanity in Afghanistan or many places in Africa or the Middle East....

            Do you remember when we were at Bible school and you gave me that sport coat that was the color of mustard and blue and black checks that was a match perfect to a pair of trousers that Scott gave me?  

Your foxhole buddy

John

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Dana Acker wrote:
 
On Fri, Jun 10, 2011 at 2:26 PM, Dana Acker wrote:
     Oh wow--the miracle suit!  Yes, I do remember it now!  And you still have it.  Cool.  Thanks for the Hudson Taylor piece--I'll read it this weekend. I've always considered him one of the real quasi-modern day heroes of the faith, and will look forward with anticipation to reading it.  As for the job, I pray daily for your situation, and will continue so to do until I hear different.  Seems like most of the more meaningful things that have happened to me over the course of my life happened as a result of losing a job.  Like you said, God isn't out of business.  But you are up there on my prayer list. 
     I don't know, but I'd appreciate your prayers on the aforementioned subject (which we will address in a future post). There are still a lot of things in my life that would affect any such decision. I know God is able to take care of all that if it is truly His will for me, so I'm not anxious or stressed about it, but I am keeping my ear close to the train tracks and doing a lot of listening these days.
     Trish got bad news from the cardiologist this week....They have referred her to a cardio-thoracic surgeon in Winston for what most likely will be open-heart surgery to repair the valve.  She was quite disappointed, and could use your prayers as well.  We are awaiting an appointment date.
      Thanks again for the HT (Hudson Taylor) piece. 
  Love you, Bro.
 
Dana
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Then John wrote:

 Jun 10, 2011 at 4:23PM

Hi Dana

   Carol and I will begin to pray for Trish about the heart valve.

   I've attached one other letter, but read the Hudson Taylor letter first. (Readers, if you click on this, once it opens. Then scroll down one of the book’s pages to page 503 to read some of the things God provided to and through this man of faith.)


   Got to go start dinner. Since I'm not working out of the house, most evenings I fix dinner. Thank God Carol is a good cook and likes to cook, but this is something that I can take off her shoulders since she's struggling in the work-a-day world every day.

   As Brother Carr used to write when he’d close a letter, “Yours for the Harvest,”


John

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Today, John writes more on the Miracle Suit, and God’s provision

While in bible school, Dana and I palled around with three other guys: Scott, Alan, and Bill. One weekend, Scott asked me to accompany him for a weekend away from campus up to his family's cabin in the Catskills. While we were there, he pulled out a pair of dress trousers in the colors of mustard, blue, and black. They were a good quality wool, dress trousers, and they fit.   At that time I was into bold patterned clothes. I had a pair of red plaid dress trousers, and a buffalo check lined winter coat that could be reversed and worn inside out.

Then a little while later, I got a surprise summons from the Dean of Men of the college. He just happened to be William (Bill) Acker, Dana’s dad.  He had seen me wearing those mustard plaid trousers, and recognized color and pattern.  (In all fairness, I was hard to miss when wearing them.) Bill called me over to his home one day and pulled out of his closet a sport coat he had purchased in North Carolina. The sport coat was not only the very same colors as the trousers, but it was the same exact plaid!!!  Dana was there as a witness. As I questioned Bill about when and where the coat was purchased, and remembering what Scott said, they were purchased over 600 miles distant from each other and at least five to seven years apart.

            As I look at the colors now in the light of day, mustard and blue and black (or is it pumpkin or brown or auburn) plaid, the pairing up of them, under those circumstances (and I believe any circumstances) was a MIRACLE. 

            For those readers who only think of miracles such as the feeding of the 5000 or raising Lazarus from the dead, God also cares about the little things. I believe that since He is also known as Abba, or Father, He wants to provide not only for our needs, but also, sometimes, for our wants. There is, what I believe to be, a lot of confusion on this, which we will deal with more in a future post.

            Purchased in two entirely different regions of the country and years apart, the material looks as if it were cut from the same bolt of cloth. As you can see from the recent photograph, I still have that "suit" and right now it is hanging in the foyer of our home. Carol calls it my miracle suit (and she still can't believe I actually used to wear it). Why have I kept it all these years? Why do I sometimes pull it out of the closet and literally blow off the dust? I do it because when I need a reminder that God can do anything and provide anything at any time, I get it out as a type of altar of remembrance of His power and provision.

            Joshua 4:1-8New Living Translation (NLT) Memorials to the Jordan Crossing

            4 When all the people had crossed the Jordan, the Lord said to Joshua, “Now choose twelve men, one from each tribe. Tell them, ‘Take twelve stones from the very place where the priests are standing in the middle of the Jordan. Carry them out and pile them up at the place where you will camp tonight.’”

                 So Joshua called together the twelve men he had chosen—one from each of the tribes of Israel. He told them, “Go into the middle of the Jordan, in front of the Ark of the Lord your God. Each of you must pick up one stone and carry it out on your shoulder—twelve stones in all, one for each of the twelve tribes of Israel. We will use these stones to build a memorial. In the future your children will ask you, ‘What do these stones mean?’ Then you can tell them, ‘They remind us that the Jordan River stopped flowing when the Ark of the Lord’s Covenant went across.’ These stones will stand as a memorial among the people of Israel forever.”

                So the men did as Joshua had commanded them. They took twelve stones from the middle of the Jordan River, one for each tribe, just as the Lord had told Joshua. They carried them to the place where they camped for the night and constructed the memorial there.

                In the above emails, we also talked about Hudson Taylor. He’s not a household word today, unfortunately. He’s rarely mentioned in sermons today, unfortunately. Except for old timers like me, I doubt if many have read his stuff today, unfortunately. But here was a man who knew that God will provide. For example, click on the link to an account of Taylor being down to his last bag of rice.  http://blog.godreports.com/2013/07/hudson-taylors-last-bag-of-rice/    

            As this post developed and has moved to more on Hudson Taylor, I searched our book shelves for a book on him. I found Hudson Taylor’s Spiritual Secret by Dr. and Mrs. Howard Taylor, published by Moody Press.  https://www.amazon.com/Hudson-Taylors-Spiritual-Secret-Classics/dp/0802456588   Hudson Taylor has been called the founder of modern missions. He was the founder of the China Inland Mission. What was his secret? By prayer and faith he believed God and His word, and acted upon it.  (See the link above to the last bag of rice as an example.) 

            Now that I think about it, I believe many of our current readers have probably heard of Taylor because many of you are not Gen Xers or Millennials.  How can we get this out to them? Think what young people could do if they really got turned on to faith and prayer and they had examples such as Hudson Taylor to mentor them, even if after the fact.

            I could go on, but I’ll close. E. M. Bounds, one of the 19th Century’s giants of prayer  https://www.amazon.com/Complete-Works-Bounds-Essentials-Possibilities/dp/1604593822  is quoted in the fore front of Taylor’s book. I will quote, and where the word “men” is used, I would have the reader substitute “men and women.”  (Please note that Bounds was born in 1835.)

            “Men are God’s method. The church is looking for better methods; God is looking for better men (and remember to add women)....What the church needs today is not more machinery (or I would add electronic gimmickry) or better, not new organizations or more and novel methods, but men whom the Holy Ghost can use—men (and women) of prayer, men mighty in prayer. The Holy Ghost does not come on machinery, but on men. He does not anoint plans, but men—men of prayer....(and women of prayer)”

            “....It is not great talents or great learning or great preachers that God needs, but men great in holiness, great in faith, great in love, great in fidelity, great for God....”  E. M. Bounds

            Hudson Taylor knew God would provide because he became a man of the Word,  prayer and faith. Taylor saw God provide, as quoted on the back cover of the book on Taylor’s Secret, because he had “absolute dependence on God.”