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If Satan Cant Steal Your Dreams... He Cant Control Your Destiny If Satan Cant Steal Your Dreams... He Cant Control Your Destiny

If Satan Cant Steal Your Dreams... He Cant Control Your Destiny Order Printed Copy

  • Author: Jerry Savelle
  • Size: 260KB | 128 pages
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About the Book


"If Satan Can't Steal Your Dreams... He Can't Control Your Destiny" by Jerry Savelle is a motivational book that urges readers to pursue their dreams and goals despite facing challenges and opposition. Savelle emphasizes the importance of faith, perseverance, and determination in overcoming obstacles and achieving success. He argues that as long as individuals stay committed to their dreams and trust in God, they can ultimately fulfill their destiny and experience fulfillment in life.

St. Patrick

St. Patrick St. Patrick, (flourished 5th century, Britain and Ireland; feast day March 17), patron saint and national apostle of Ireland, credited with bringing Christianity to Ireland and probably responsible in part for the Christianization of the Picts and Anglo-Saxons. He is known only from two short works, the Confessio, a spiritual autobiography, and his Letter to Coroticus, a denunciation of British mistreatment of Irish Christians. Patrick was born in Britain of a Romanized family. At age 16 he was torn by Irish raiders from the villa of his father, Calpurnius, a deacon and minor local official, and carried into slavery in Ireland. He spent six bleak years there as a herdsman, during which he turned with fervour to his faith. Upon dreaming that the ship in which he was to escape was ready, he fled his master and found passage to Britain. There he came near to starvation and suffered a second brief captivity before he was reunited with his family. Thereafter, he may have paid a short visit to the Continent. The best known passage in the Confessio tells of a dream, after his return to Britain, in which one Victoricus delivered him a letter headed ā€œThe Voice of the Irish.ā€ As he read it, he seemed to hear a certain company of Irish beseeching him to walk once more among them. ā€œDeeply moved,ā€ he says, ā€œI could read no more.ā€ Nevertheless, because of the shortcomings of his education, he was reluctant for a long time to respond to the call. Even on the eve of reembarkation for Ireland he was beset by doubts of his fitness for the task. Once in the field, however, his hesitations vanished. Utterly confident in the Lord, he journeyed far and wide, baptizing and confirming with untiring zeal. In diplomatic fashion he brought gifts to a kinglet here and a lawgiver there but accepted none from any. On at least one occasion, he was cast into chains. On another, he addressed with lyrical pathos a last farewell to his converts who had been slain or kidnapped by the soldiers of Coroticus. Careful to deal fairly with the non-Christian Irish, he nevertheless lived in constant danger of martyrdom. The evocation of such incidents of what he called his ā€œlaborious episcopateā€ was his reply to a charge, to his great grief endorsed by his ecclesiastical superiors in Britain, that he had originally sought office for the sake of office. In point of fact, he was a most humble-minded man, pouring forth a continuous paean of thanks to his Maker for having chosen him as the instrument whereby multitudes who had worshipped ā€œidols and unclean thingsā€ had become ā€œthe people of God.ā€ The phenomenal success of Patrick’s mission is not, however, the full measure of his personality. Since his writings have come to be better understood, it is increasingly recognized that, despite their occasional incoherence, they mirror a truth and a simplicity of the rarest quality. Not since St. Augustine of Hippo had any religious diarist bared his inmost soul as Patrick did in his writings. As D.A. Binchy, the most austerely critical of Patrician (i.e., of Patrick) scholars, put it, ā€œThe moral and spiritual greatness of the man shines through every stumbling sentence of his ā€˜rustic’ Latin.ā€ It is not possible to say with any assurance when Patrick was born. There are, however, a number of pointers to his missionary career having lain within the second half of the 5th century. In the Coroticus letter, his mention of the Franks as still ā€œheathenā€ indicates that the letter must have been written between 451, the date generally accepted as that of the Franks’ irruption into Gaul as far as the Somme River, and 496, when they were baptized en masse. Patrick, who speaks of himself as having evangelized heathen Ireland, is not to be confused with Palladius, sent by Pope Celestine I in 431 as ā€œfirst bishop to the Irish believers in Christ.ā€ Toward the end of his life, he retired to Saul, where he may have written his Confessio. It is said that an angel conveyed to him that he was to die at Saul, the site of his first church, despite his wishes to die within the ecclesiastical metropolis of Ireland. His last rites were administered by St. Tussach (also spelled Tassach or Tassac). Legends Before the end of the 7th century, Patrick had become a legendary figure, and the legends have continued to grow. One of these would have it that he drove the snakes of Ireland into the sea to their destruction. Patrick himself wrote that he raised people from the dead, and a 12th-century hagiography places this number at 33 men, some of whom are said to have been deceased for many years. He also reportedly prayed for the provision of food for hungry sailors traveling by land through a desolate area, and a herd of swine miraculously appeared. Another legend, probably the most popular, is that of the shamrock, which has him explain the concept of the Holy Trinity, three persons in one God, to an unbeliever by showing him the three-leaved plant with one stalk. Traditionally, Irishmen have worn shamrocks, the national flower of Ireland, in their lapels on St. Patrick’s Day, March 17.

Kindness in a World Gone Mad

I was waiting in line with my sons for a roller coaster when the T-shirt caught my eye:Ā  Kindness is free — so sprinkle that stuff everywhere . I’m sympathetic to the message at one level. To many, the world feels meaner in recent years, and perhaps especially so since the last election cycle, COVID-19, and civil unrest. Yes, genuine human kindness, in the most basic of senses, has often been sorely lacking. More kindness would indeed be nice, and perhaps shine in new ways in times when we’re coming to expect meanness and outrage everywhere. But as admirable as the instincts behind the message are, the initial claim is badly mistaken. No, real kindness — the kind we really long for and need — is not free. And perhaps it would help us all to come to terms with that up front. Real kindness is costly. This Harsh World Deep down, we know that we live in a mean world — too mean to keep the meanness constantly at the forefront of our minds. Yet at times — more frequent for some than others — the meanness, the evil afoot in this world, accosts us. Even as bright as some days appear, there is a ā€œpresent darknessā€ ( Ephesians 6:12 ), still under the sway of ā€œthe god of this worldā€ ( 2 Corinthians 4:4 ). Pretender though he is, and numbered his days, his ā€œdomain of darknessā€ ( Colossians 1:13 ) is real, and ā€œthe power of darknessā€ ( Luke 22:53 ) treacherous. And not only has the worldĀ  out there Ā gone mad, but far too often the sway of the world, and the indwelling sin in us all, brings that meannessĀ  in here , into the people who profess to be Christ’s. Tragically, the very people who are to make Jesus known by their love for each other ( John 13:35 ) can be harsh, quarrelsome, impatient, shrill, nasty. It’s only human to respond in kind. But Christ requires of his church what is more than human:Ā  respond in kindness . Virtue in a Vacuum? In part, internal conflict in the Ephesian church prompted Paul’s second letter to Timothy. At the letter’s heart, the aging apostle gives his protĆ©gĆ© this arresting charge: The Lord’s servant must not be quarrelsome butĀ  kind to everyone , able to teach, patiently enduring evil, correcting his opponents with gentleness. God may perhaps grant them repentance leading to a knowledge of the truth, and they may come to their senses and escape from the snare of the devil, after being captured by him to do his will. ( 2 Timothy 2:24–26 ) Christians have long celebrated kindness as one of theĀ  heavenly virtues . Yet we live in a day that often makes very little of kindness. We assume it’s free. We celebrate ā€œrandom acts of kindness.ā€ We think of kindnessĀ  without context . Of course, in our mean world, it is pleasant to be surprised by a stranger’s kindness, free and random as it may seem. Sure, sprinkle that stuff everywhere. But the Christian vision of kindness is far deeper, more significant, and contextualized. ā€œKindness is not random or free, but a costly, counter-intuitive response to meanness, rather than responding in kind.ā€ Christian kindness is no common courtesy or virtue in a vacuum, but a surprising response to mistreatment and hurt. It is not random or free, but a costly, counterintuitive response to meanness, to outrage, rather than responding in kind. As Don Carson comments onĀ  1 Corinthians 13:4 , ā€œLove is kind — not merely patient or long-suffering in the face of injury, but quick to pay back with kindness what it received in hurtā€ ( Showing the Spirit , 79). Companions of Kindness One way to see that Christian kindness is not random is to observe the kind of company it keeps, especially in the letters of Paul — who would be ā€œthe apostle of kindness,ā€ if there were one. No one sprinkles costly kindness like Paul. Among other graces, kindness often appears hand in hand with patience and compassion. Patience appears side by side with kindness, and in the same order, inĀ  2 Corinthians 6:6 Ā andĀ  Galatians 5:22 : ā€œpatience, kindness.ā€ So also, Paul presses them together inĀ  Romans 2:4 , in speaking of divine patience and kindness: ā€œDo you presume on the riches of his kindness and forbearance and patience, not knowing that God’s kindness is meant to lead you to repentance?ā€ So too, as we’ve seen, Christian pastors — ā€œthe Lord’s servantā€ in the midst of conflict — ā€œmust not be quarrelsome but kind to everyone, . . . patiently enduring evilā€ ( 2 Timothy 2:24 ).Ā  Kind to everyone  — isn’t that surprising? The opponents here are false teachers. They must not be coddled or encouraged. Rather, they must be exposed and corrected — and yet that is no license to treat them harshly or with meanness. Opponents can be patiently endured and gently corrected. In fact, it would not beĀ  kind Ā to a false teacher, or the church, to let him continue in error. Exposing his error and gently correcting him is kindness. As for compassion,Ā  Ephesians 4:32 Ā memorably explains the command to ā€œbe kind to one anotherā€ with the word ā€œtenderheartedā€ (or ā€œcompassionate,ā€ GreekĀ  eusplanchnos ). Kindness is an expression of a tender, compassionate heart.Ā  Colossians 3:12 Ā puts all three together, with humility and meekness: ā€œPut on then, as God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, compassionate hearts, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience.ā€ Kindness, we might say, is a kind of secondary virtue. Compassion and patience, in various ways, make kindness possible. A compassionate heart leads to kindness, and external actions that give expression to that kindness. So also, patience makes internal kindness and its external acts possible. Patience gives emotional and practical space for kindness to ripen and move outward in physical acts. True kindness and its expressions (which are not random or free) complete and extend its companion virtues. The fruit of kindness needs the roots of patience and compassion, and they need kindness. Costly Kind Our young kids are still honest enough with themselves, and us, to admit to how costly kindness can be. When a sibling is mean, or someone on the playground, their natural response (and ours) is not to be kind, but to respond in kind. Which is why we consider kindnessĀ  a Christian virtue  — which doesn’t just happen spontaneously without practice and the enabling of the Holy Spirit. Kindness, Paul says, is the produce of the Spirit ( Galatians 5:22–23 ;Ā  2 Corinthians 6:6 ), not of the natural human heart. Real kindness requires intervention from the outside, both from God’s Spirit and also his divine Son stepping into our mean world, showing us a different way, and doing it, climactically, to our eternal salvation and joy. As my wife and IĀ  have learned Ā in almost fifteen years of marriage, kindness toward each other begins with God’s kindness toward us in Christ. Only then can we really find the resources to overcome evil with good, triumph over annoyance with patience, and rise above meanness with kindness. In other words, the heart of how we become kinder — not with free, random, imitation kindness, but with thick, genuine, Christian kindness — is knowing and enjoying the kindness of God toward us, and doing so specifically by feeding on, and taking our cues from, the very words of God. Behold His Kindness Our world, in its rebellion and cosmic treason, is no meaner than in its meanness to God himself — God who is holy and just. And yet what shocking kindness he displays, even toward the unbelieving. Our heavenly Father ā€œis kind to the ungrateful and the evilā€ ( Luke 6:35 ). Even those who live the hardest, meanest of lives are surrounded by rays of God’sĀ  common kindness , as we might call it: beautiful days, human minds and bodies and words, friends and family, food and shelter, the everyday divine kindnesses we take for granted until they’re gone. ā€œEven those who live the hardest, meanest of lives are surrounded by rays of God’s common kindness.ā€ As Paul preached at Lystra, even ā€œin past generations,ā€ before Christ, when God ā€œallowed all the nations to walk in their own ways,ā€ he showed the unbelieving his common kindness, and ā€œdid not leave himself without witness, for he did good by giving you rains from heaven and fruitful seasons, satisfying your hearts with food and gladnessā€ ( Acts 14:16–17 ). Such kindness even in our day, gratuitous as it may seem to us, is not wasted. It is not random but has purpose: ā€œmeant to lead you to repentanceā€ ( Romans 2:4 ). Yet in the fullness of time, ā€œthe goodness and loving kindness of God our Savior appearedā€ ( Titus 3:4 ), bringing salvation — God’sĀ  special kindness  — through faith in Christ. Such divine kindness not only brought eternal rescue for God’s long-chosen people, but it engrafts even strangers into God’s ancient tree of blessing through faith ( Romans 11:22 ). Jesus is Kindness incarnate, whose yoke is not severe, but (literally)Ā  kind Ā ( Matthew 11:30 ). He is the Lord whom we, with new Spirit-given palates,Ā  taste as kind Ā ( 1 Peter 2:3 ). Kindness Coming As Christ, by his Spirit, shows kindness to us, in his word and in our lives, he also forms us into instruments of his kindness to others. ā€œGod in Christ forgave you,ā€ Paul says inĀ  Ephesians 4:32 . Therefore, ā€œBe kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another.ā€ Ultimately, it is the kindness of God that melts an unforgiving spirit, softens a hard heart, and transforms unkind actions. In Christ, we become the kind of people whoĀ  see others , andĀ  have compassion Ā for them, andĀ  exercise patience Ā toward them, andĀ  show kindness Ā to them, knowing not only that we ourselves have been shown kindness but that ā€œin the coming ages [God himself will] show the immeasurable riches of his grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesusā€ ( Ephesians 2:7 ). We have only begun to taste the kindness of our God.

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