Saturday, July 18, 2015

GROWTH CAN CHANGE A LIFE AND IT DID AND IT WILL

These One A Days are added to daily.
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              There are over 900 stories and commentaries on this blog. It is added to daily.

Click on http://wyrickswritings.blogspot.com to read selected Sermons from over 50 years of Rev.  Wyrick's ministry.
 
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       Every aspiring Christian would like to be a cedar of Lebanon, but the fact is the world is full of weeping willows.  The church is full of God.  The world is full of the Godless.  And we spend more time in the world than we do in church

      And to the comments above we have the words of the Psalmist..."Be like a tree planted by the rivers of water ({Psalm 133)  And later the Psalmist wrote, "Grow like a cedar of Lebanon." (Psalm 92:12)

      The trees of Lebanon became giants that held up the roof of Solomon's temple.  They grew slowly but they grew strong.

      And planted by rivers of water they had great chance to reach their potential.    

      It doesn't take an expository genius to see that what all this is saying is that if you have a good root system and a great source of living water what grows is a spiritual giant or at the least certainly not a spiritual midget.

      Or as a very fundamental truth expounds, "What does not grow...dies."

      So feed...on what?   And Jesus quoting Moses said, "Man does not live by bread alone."  

      And how and why?  It's called "hungering and thirsting for righteousness."

      It's called growing up...or Christian maturity...or whatever other term best suits your way of thinking but it all means the same thing...

      A constant ongoing question to begin each day with, "What would Christ do?"

      Which is really a question concerning a self improvement program undergirded by the creator who made you...

      and making certain statements to yourself.

      Such as..

      Until you can make of yourself a person you can live with, you will not have a self that others will want to live with.

      And...if you do not live in a manner you can love yourself you will find it difficult to love others.

      Nor to be ignored...beware of a person who lives like an oven...always heating but never cooking anything.

      It was back in the beginning of my ministry that I wrote the following words and it had taken quite awhile to put them together following way, "I pray not to believe in God as gentlemen believe.'

      And not long thereafter I learned of a man named James Alexander Bryan.

      In Birmingham they called him "Brother Bryan."

      And I now share with you a story about "Brother Bryan" that defines the man.

      In the slums of the great city, with its shadowy back-alleys and foreboding air, a gentle knock filtered through the door to the figure outside,

      "Gwan an' open the door, Sally, see who it is."

      Sally, a raged little red-headed urchin, pulled up the few remnants of her tattered stockings, smoother her well washed, well worn dress and opened the door.

      Seeing who stood there she cried out, "Mom, it's religion come to see us."

      Brother Bryan began his life on God's green earth, in the midst of the rending of it.  In the year 1863, just 50 miles north of Fort Sumter, where 2 years before shells had fallen to begin the Civil War.

      He early learned of want and suffering, and pain, and death. 

      No other state suffered from the war as did the state of South Carolina.

      But in the midst of it all Christ was the center of the home where this little boy grew toward manhood.

      Religion in his home was as natural as the rising or the setting of the sun.

      It was considered as necessary as food and raiment and sometimes indeed there was more of it than the latter.

      His early schooling was of meager variety. 

      But...at the age of 14...by the grace of God, he was sent to live with his father's sister in Raleigh.  There at Lovejoy Academy he spent three fruitful years filling his eager mind.

      Here, also, he publicly accepter his Lord.

      From Lovejoy, a scholarship, made possible further study at the University of North Carolina.

      He began to develop his talent for public speaking.

      While in college his father died.  At the same time he was debating between the ministry and law.

      Teaching for a time to help his widowed mother he then accepted a scholarship to Princeton Theological Seminary.

      With $1.85 in his pocket he arrived at the Seminary to prepare himself for the ministry.  Early on it was obvious to all who knew him that there was something special in this young man.

      Writing 45 years later, one of his Seminary friends wrote of him, "I always felt that he was a modern St. Francis of Assissi.  His Christ like spirit and is untiring devotion to his Master have been an inspiration to me always."

      He spent his first summer's work while in Seminary at a small Presbyterian church in Hendersonville, North Carolina.

      But the second summer, he served, where after he finished Seminary he was to serve for the remainder of his life.

      The church was not large.  It sat on the corner of Avenue G and 23rd. Street....Birmingham, Alabama.

      Located in Jones Valley, stretching 65 mountain guarded miles, this little town, still in the embryonic state, was to grow and grow and grow and with it Brother Bryan.

      The young man began his ministry with a funeral.  He was to have some 8000 more.

      Marry some 5000 couples, preach some 50,000 times, and lead some 8000 to a profession of faith in Jesus Christ.

      But this is not all...

      for it was here that he began to be called not Rev. Bryan...but brother Bryan.

      It was appropriate for this is what he called everyone he met, black or white, rich or poor...so that the term became synonymous with him.

      In the first years of his ministry, brother Bryan tried to be minister, Sunday School Superintendent, soloist in the choir, and preacher all combined.

      For this reason, three years after he begun there, he became seriously ill.  They told him he needed six months rest.

      But all he said was, "If I am that sick, I had better get to work."  From that day on he never spent as much as a week of illness in bed.

      His early ministry was marked by an evangelistic urge which led him to the Cumberland mountain section, a section by-crossed by civilization.

      Once during a service there, word spread round, that on either side of the aisle sat two feuding mountaineers, each with a gun in his shirt and hate in his heart.

      Young Bryan preached God;s love in Christ with all his heart.  When the invitation came, one of the pistol toting giant mountaineers came down the aisle not to shoot, but to give his heart to Christ.

      "Breck, if you're a saved man, you'll lay the pistol in your shirt on this table."

      He did.

      Then turned, walked to the other man, and challenged him to do the same.  Both men found Christ on the same day. (available on amazon.com

Religion in Shoes:Brother Bryan of Birmingham)

      His life is a series of such stories of compassion.  When he read Jesus words "Inasmuch as ye did it unto one of the least of these my brethren, yet did unto me," he took them to heart and echoed them in every action every day.

      He knew that bread for some was as difficult to acquire almost as diamonds from a diamond mine.  He watched so many on the edge of starvation and he did more than just shake his head in regret.

      If you had asked him during his days of earthly living how many people he helped he would most likely have answered, "I don't know.  I am too busy to keep records.  I leave that to the angels."

      And where did the money come from for such benevolence?

      From his lips poured prayer and from God's mercy, people seemed to sense his need.

      It was said he was the only man in Birmingham who could enter a pool hall or a bar and pray, and have not a snicker burst the stillness of the air, but rather every head bowed reverently before the sincerity of this man's prayer.

      He said this about prayer, "The pastor must live on his knees.  He must advance on his knees.  He must visit on his knees.  He must prepare to preach on his knees.  When we pray and our prayers do not go any higher than our hands or the roof of our room, we are not to blame God.  The prayers are unanswered because we have not met some condition.  The conditions of unanswered prayers are faith, a life with the sins forgiven, the unselfishness which would not use the gift of prayer to satisfy an unworthy desire."

      As to race...the only race that counted was the Christian race. He ministered to Hungarians, Slavs, Germans,Bohemians, Chinese, Japansese, Frency, Armenians, Sicilians, Italians, Greeks, Irish, Scots, Africans, English, East Indians, etc...

      He ministered to them spiritually,, physically and even mentally.

      On Sunday afternoons he taught them English.

      Ah, what a world this would be if there had been and were today more Brother Bryans.

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Waste no more time arguing about what a good man should be. Be one.


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            QUOTES BELOW ARE FROM WYRICK'S WRITINGS...CLICK ON THE FOLLOWING TO TAKE YOU THERE... http://wyrickswritings.blogspot.com

(These are selected sermons from over 50 years of ministry)

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CLICK ON  www.go60.us   IT WILL TAKE YOU A NEW WEBSITE FOR SENIORS....click on "Voice" on the home page and then on the list of authors click on Neil Wyrick 

Recent articles Rev. Wyrick has written for this web site are:  REFLECTIONS


·         Here Comes Summer (July 2012)

·         Spring (May 2012)

·         Let it Snow, Let it Snow, Let it Snow (April 2012)

·         Wayward and Windy (April 2012)


Just remember that “the pain of discipline will cost you pennies, whereas the pain of regret will cost you millions.”

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How can we keep our faith from being a weak and fruitless thing?  How can we not be foolish little men and women groveling in the dark shadows of overeager egos. 


          Well, first we must do more than just pray.  We must believe in our own prayers.

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Anxiety out of proportion makes us become like a centipede trying to put his best foot forward.

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        It's an old joke, I went to the doctor and I said, “Doc, when I do this, it hurts.” And the doctor said, “Then don't do that.”

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        How many things have you been anxious about that were things which you knew before you got into them were probably going to create some problems for you?  And if you asked your doctor, or your minister, or common sense and your God, all of them would have said, “Don’t do that.”

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        To buy into the community of accountability we have to realize that like bikers we are divided into two categories.  Those who have fallen and those who will fall for anything. None of us are perfect.

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          Think on it this way, some philosopher of old wrote it and it endures because there is so much truth in it… every right implies a responsibility; every opportunity, an obligation; every possession, a duty

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      Some of the sermon titles posted recently

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Before you decide to purchase or not purchase his book THE SPIRITUAL ABRAHAM LINCOLN.... view his Award Winning One Man Dramatization of Lincoln (since he wrote the script for this drama it will give you an insight into what you will find in the book itself)

Available on Amazon.com in printed form and on Amazon Kindle Books. and at many other sites

TO VIEW THE LINCOLN One Man DRAMA and 3 other dramas; Ben Franklin, Martin Luther & Charles Wesley

click on the following URL

http://www.speakerneil.com/

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BELOW ARE MORE QUOTES FROM NEIL'S RECENTLY POSTED SERMONS

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A QUOTE FROM THOUGHTS POSTED ON MY OTHER BLOG WYRICK'S WRITINGS ENTITLED


       Two stores faced each other across a very busy street.  Their owners were in constant competition with each other.  One day, the owner of one store put out a sign that read – If you want it, we have it!

Almost immediately the other owner put out a sign –If we don’t have it, you don’t need it!



A QUOTE FROM THOUGHTS POSTED ON MY OTHER BLOG WYRICK'S WRITINGS ENTITLED

WHO ARE YOU?

NO…WHOSE ARE YOU?

       Who are you?  Whose are you?

You influence and are influenced according to the answer you give.     

Are you are the flavor of the month because you are determined to be like everyone else no matter what?  If so, consider being more independent in our thinking and actions...because God wants you to grow up.

It may be easier being someone's shadow but wouldn't you really rather be a sun. 



       QUOTE FROM THOUGHTS  POSTED ON WYRICK'S WRITINGS ENTITLED "Who Are You?  Whose Are You?"

       This is an old quote, and a romantic one as well but, nevertheless, can anyone say of you, “I love you not because of who you are, but because of who I am when I am with you.

            QUOTE FROM THOUGHT PIECE POSTED ON WYRICK'S WRITINGS ENTITLED

" WHEN A NATION STRAYS TOO FAR FROM BEING MORAL IT IS WELL ON IT'S WAY TO BECOMING A MESS

        James 4:17

To him therefore who knows to do good, and doesn’t do it, to him it is sin.

        Someone once said: “A belief is what you hold, a conviction is what holds you!”

        So what holds you, constructs you, leads you with a push when needed?

       Quotes POSTED ON WYRICK'S WRITING ENTITLED WHO ARE YOU?

NO…WHOSE ARE YOU?

        In a Peanuts cartoon strip Peppermint Patty is shown talking to Charlie Brown.

“Guess what, Chuck? It’s the first day of school and I got sent to the principal’s office.

And it’s your fault!”

Charlie Brown responds, “My fault? How could it be my fault? Why do you say everything is my fault?”

To which she declares, “You’re my friend, aren’t you, Chuck? You should have been a better influence on me.”

In the comics, it’s funny… but in real life it’s much more complicated.

       Would you like to read the entire thought piece?  Then... TO TAKE YOU TO THE WYRICK'S WRITING'S SITE

                   click on the following


          Yes, God loves you the way you are but he loves you too much to let you stay that way.

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      Click on the URL below to WATCH NEIL IN HIS WORLD FAMOUS ONE MAN DRAMATIZATIONS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN, BEN FRANKLIN, CHARLES WESLEY AND MARTIN LUTHER


       To Order and Read Neil's 9th book THE SPIRITUAL ABRAHAM LINCOLN

       GO TO amazon.com

       QUOTES ABOUT THIS WONDERFUL INSPIRING INFORMATIVE book

       STILL RECEIVING RAVE REVIEWS 8 YEARS AFTER IT'S PUBLICATION.

       "Positive, powerful utterances...skillfully enhancing our understanding and appreciation of Lincoln while revealing the Divine source of his strength."

       Lt. Colonel C.A. Olsen (Ret.) Asbury College (Professor Ret.)

       "The Spiritual Abraham Lincoln is an extremely well written book that investigates what might be termed the spiritual side of President Lincoln. It's both scholarly and very readable. I came away impressed at Mr. Wyrick's portrayal of the President and with an altered and enlarged vision of the man:'

       William Hoffman, Award winning fiction writer; author of Blood and Guile, and Wild Thorn

       "Wyrick has authored a wonderful examination of the spirituality of one of American history's most devoutly religious leaders...a pleasant and readable book that has a rich depth of information."

              Maynard Pittendreigh Presbyterian minister

        "When it comes to invoking religion in support of any of their decisions, politicians need to sit at the feet of Abraham Lincoln. Reinhold Niebuhr once called him 'America's greatest theologian.' Why so great? Because he invariably distinguished between human works and the works of the Almighty. As Wyrick says, 'He wore the mantle of humility easily: because he was more impressed with what God was doing in the world than with what he, president of the United States in the midst of an awful crisis, was doing. That is why in his last major speech he distinguished between both human causes in the Civil War and the Almighty's 'own purposes.' Lincoln would have agreed that it is better to leave God-talk out of politics than to decorate human proposals with divinity. This is a book for our American time. Through his careful study of Lincoln's career, Wyrick compels us to remember that piety belongs in politics only when piety transcends politics."

       Dr. Donald W. Shriver

       Emeritus professor at Union Theological Seminary in New York. Author of An Ethic for Enemies: Forgiveness in Politics

        "V. Neil Wyrick's fine work allows the reader to appreciate Abraham Lincoln's Christian commitment and his prophetic role in American history. Should have a wide readership."

       James H. Smylie Professor of Church History (Ret.) Union Theological Seminary, Richmond, Virginia

       "Neil Wyrick's The Spiritual Abraham Lincoln should be read by anyone attempting to understand the man who was probably the most complex person to ever hold the office of president of the United States. Dr. Wyrick is intent on demonstrating that the spirituality so often expressed in Lincoln's writings and speeches was not merely lip service to a Deity, but rather expressions of a profound faith in a real God. It was this faith that provided the wisdom, compassion, insight and sometimes steel that Lincoln would need in full measure as he led the United States through the Civil War. Dr. Wyrick's clear and unpretentious style of presentation is very much in keeping with the character ofhis subject, and in so doing, Wyrick makes his point very well that Lincoln, his beliefs, and the faith that formed them, are as relevant to a troubled America in 2004 as they were in 1863."

       Daniel Allen Butler, author of "Unsinkable"; The Full Story of the RMS Titanic, The Lusitania and The Age o f Cunard

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