Jordan Newsletter
August 2003





Lydia Bennett 8-3
Randy Blair, Jr. 8-4
Tabitha Bateman 8-24
Andrew Whittier 8-30
Jonathan Freeman 8-31




August
1/2 Kings 20, 212/Zephaniah 1-3
3/Habakkuk 1-34/2 Kings 22-25
5/ Ohadiah Jeremiah 1, 2
6/Jeremiah 3-57/Jeremiah 6-8
8/Jeremiah 9-129/Jeremiah 13-16
10/Jeremiah 17-2011/Jeremiah 21-23
12/Jeremiah 24-2613/Jeremiah 27-29
14/Jeremiah 30-3215/Jeremiah 33-36
16/Jeremiah 37-3917/Jeremiah 40-42
18/Jeremiah 43-4619/Jeremiah 47-49
20/Jeremiah 50-5221/Lamentations 1-5
22/1 Chronicles 1-323/1 Chronicles 4-6
24/1 Chronicles 7-925/1 Chronicles 10-13
26/1 Chronicles 14-1627/1 Chronicles 17-19
28/1 Chronicles 20-2329/1 Chronicles 24-26
30/1 Chronicles 27-2931/2 Chronicles 1-3





SMILES FROM THE BIBLE

Q. What kind of man was Boaz before he married?
A. Ruthless.

Q. What do they call pastors in Germany?
A. German Shepherds

Q. Who was the greatest financier in the Bible?
A. Noah. He was floating his stock while everyone else was in liquidation.

Q. Who was the greatest female financier in the Bible?
A. Pharaoh's daughter. She went down to the bank of the Nile and drew out a little prophet.

Q. What kind of motor vehicles are in the Bible?
A. David's Triumph was heard throughout the land. Also, probably a Honda, because the apostles were all in one Accord.

Q. Who was the greatest comedian in the Bible?
A. Samson. He brought the house down.

Q. What excuse did Adam give to his children as to why he no longer lived in Eden?
A. Your mother ate us out of house and home.

Q. Which area of Canaan was especially wealthy?
A. The area around Jordan. The banks were always overflowing.

Q. Who is the greatest baby sitter mentioned in the Bible?
A. David. He rocked Goliath to a very deep sleep.

Q. Which Bible character had no parents?
A. Joshua, son of Nun.











Wasn't July filled with God's blessings? The ability to celebrate our country's freedom, the Hinkles visiting once again, the lovely ladies wearing their bonnets! Hope everyone had a blowout on the 4th. The Hinkles brought the house down again with great music and a wonderful sermon. I hear they might be back again! Always keep this family in your prayers, they travel so much spreading God's word. It's a tremendous ministry that they have undertaken.
Sister Judy has suggested that the 2nd Sunday of every month be Hat Day. Every lady is invited to wear a hat on that day. I've seen some pretty unique ones! So, that date will be Aug. 10th. Can you believe it's August already. Are you ready for back to school? It will be starting very soon now. Will we have any seniors this year? How about those just starting junior high? Do they still have junior high? My... how things have changed since the dark ages when I went to school :)
* On a personal note, I'd like to take this time to thank everyone for their prayers for my mom, she is home now and doing very well. Thank you to the ones who visited her in the hospital. God bless you all.


Like the Cedars of Lebanon
by Mrs. Charles E. Cowman

"What I do thou knowest not now, but thou shalt know hereafter" (John 13:7).

We have only a partial view here of God's dealings, His half-completed, half-developed plan; but all will stand out in fair and graceful proportions in the great finished Temple of Eternity! Go, in the reign of Israel's greatest king, to the heights of Lebanon. See that noble cedar, the pride of its compeers, an old wrestler with northern blasts! Summer loves to smile upon it, night spangles its feathery foliage with dewdrops, the birds nestle on its branches, the weary pilgrim or wandering shepherd reposes under its shadows from the midday heat or from the furious storm; but all at once it is marked out to fall; The aged denizen of the forest is doomed to succumb to the woodman's stroke!

As we see the axe making its first gash on its gnarled trunk, then the noble limbs stripped of their branches, and at last the "Tree of God," as was its distinctive epithet, coming with a crash to the ground, we exclaim against the wanton destruction, the demolition of this proud pillar in the temple of nature. We are tempted to cry with the prophet, as if inviting the sympathy of every lowlier stem--invoking inanimate things to resent the affront--"Howl, fir tree; for the cedar has fallen!"

But wait a little. Follow that gigantic trunk as the workmen of Hiram launch it down the mountain side; thence conveyed in rafts along the blue waters of the Mediterranean; and last of all, behold it set a glorious polished beam in the Temple of God. As you see its destination, placed in the very Holy of Holies, in the diadem of the Great King--say, can you grudge that "the crown of Lebanon" was despoiled, in order that this jewel might have so noble a setting?

That cedar stood as a stately prop in Nature's sanctuary, but "the glory of the latter house was greater than the glory of the former!"

How many of our souls are like these cedars of old! God's axes of trial have stripped and bared them. We see no reason for dealings so dark and mysterious, but He has a noble end and object in view; to set them as everlasting pillars and rafters in His Heavenly Zion; to make them a "crown of glory in the hand of the Lord, and a royal diadem in the hand of our God." --Macduff

"I do not ask my cross to understand,
My way to see--
Better in darkness just to feel Thy hand,
And follow Thee."

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