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Hold Thou me up, nor let me swerve from Love’s excelling way. —R.C. Chapman Affectionately known as the Apostle of Love, preacher and evangelist R.C. Chapman, who lived to the ripe old age of ninety-nine, devoted his long life to living Christ and loving others. Those familiar with Chapman’s life and his expositions of the Scriptures will find in his letters a deeper insight into the heart of the man whose chief interests were always his Lord and his neighbor. Chapman’s first-person account of his missionary travels to Ireland and continental Europe reveals a world shrouded in the darkness of Roman Catholicism, a state which Chapman and his companions prayed and worked to change. His letters of counsel to parishioners and friends display “a tender interest in the things of others, a heart in which abode the words of Christ” (Henry Hake, from the introduction). In them, readers can find advice and comfort for a wide variety of life’s troubles. “For though ye may have ten thousand instructors in Christ, yet ye shall not have many fathers.” 1 Cor. 4:15 “Robert Cleaver Chapman tried his best to be forgotten, but God intervened on our behalf.” –Jon Bloom, Desiring God -
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If I come from a broken family, how can I turn my life around? The solution seems obvious: leave home, marry a Christian, start my own family. Do things different from the way my parents did. So why do so many who try this wind up making all the same mistakes their parents did? Marrying a Christian and following God together are essential—but your parents’ sin still affects you, and it will affect your children after you. This is generational bad news. "I…am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me, but showing love to a thousand generations of those who love me and keep my commandments" (Deut. 5:9-10). How do we turn this generational curse into a thousand generations of blessing? The key is honoring your parents—even those who are not honorable, or not even Christians. You (and your children) need your parents, and they need you. Restoring these relationships will change your life. Don’t wait for your parents to make the first move—your love and obedience to God can bring love for a thousand generations. -
“Although our circumstances change for good or ill, who the Lord is and what he has done for us never changes. We can therefore rejoice in him always.” – Heather Torosyan Join retired missionary and avid Bible teacher Heather Torosyan for an encouraging walk through the book of Philippians. This brief categorical study covers the context and main themes of Paul’s epistle to the Christians of Philippi. Learn how:- Rejoicing in the Lord is the root of all other joy.
- Where there is grace, suffering can be faced with power, not defeat.
- We each have a role to play in spreading the gospel.
- God the Father is the source of the living grace which we need daily.
- True humility is not an action only, but a quality of mind.
- Every aspect of the Christian life is centered around Jesus Christ.