Monday, July 30, 2007

Pure and Holy





Romans 8:1-2

"Therefore, there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, because through Christ Jesus the law of the spirit of life set me free from the law of sin and death."

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

The Bible really isn't a 'nice' book?






Would you read an obscene publication?

Would you read a book that detailed acts of violence, rape and cannibalism?

According to this report from ABC Newsonline the Television and Entertainments Licensing Authority (TELA) in Hong Kong, which oversees the publishing industry, said it had received 208 complaints that text within the Bible is indecent.

The complaints were apparently sparked by a Chinese language website which called on readers to pressure TELA to reclassify the Bible as an indecent publication.

I guess that's one of the things I like about the Bible. It's about real life.

In real life nasty stuff does happen. That doesn't mean that God approves of all the violence and evil that lurks in our world but it does mean that he's not trying to sweep it under the carpet.

Over the years we've turned Christianity into a nice, safe set of beliefs for good people.

I really don't understand how that happened.


If you read through the Bible you see that life is messy, even for God's people.

David is one of the Bible's heroes yet he stole another man's wife then had the husband killed. God didn't condone that behavior but he did show David forgiveness and let him move on with his life.

When Jesus was accused of all kinds of things including hanging out with prostitutes and drunkard.
We sometimes like to think that Jesus only met with such people to turn them into 'nice' people but the Bible doesn't support that view alone.



He ate with them and spent time building relationship with them. He knew them & He wanted them to see that there was more to life, that life could be fuller and richer, that their past didn't have to dictate their future.

The Bible records the messy parts of life. It lets me know that I'm not alone. I don't have to be caught up with guilt.
The Bible lets me know that being a follower of Jesus isn't all about behaving well and having a neat life.
It is more than that…

REVIVE US AGAIN !!!



Title: Revive Us Again
Author: Warren Wiersbe
Read Psalm 80:14-19

Look at two important words in Psalm 80. One is return. "Return, we beseech You, O God of hosts; look down from heaven and see, and visit this vine" (v. 14).
The other word is revive. "Then we will not turn back from You; revive us, and we will call upon Your name" (v. 18).

God had departed from His people. He had planted this vine, the nation of Israel, in the land of Canaan. He had cast out the other nations to make room for Israel.
The vine took root and began to bear fruit. But the people of Israel began to sin against the Lord.

Instead of being distinctively separate, they began to imitate the other nations and visit their altars and participate in their sacrifices.
So God said, "If that's the way you want it, you can have it." God left His people.
The word Ichabod means "the glory has departed" (I Sam. 4:21).

Jesus said, "I will never leave you nor forsake you" (Heb. 13:5).
God will never take away His presence, but He will take away His power and His blessing.
If necessary, He will withhold that extra anointing He wants to give us. Verses 18 and 19 are a prayer for revival: "Revive us, and we will call upon Your name. Restore us, O Lord God of hosts; cause your face to shine, and we shall be saved!"

* * *
God will never leave you, but there are times when He may need to withhold His power and blessing because of sin in your life.
Are you in need of God's restoration?
He hears the prayer of revival. Ask Him to clean your heart and then pray Asaph's prayer.

Treasured the Lord !!!




One of the greatest tragedies in life is wasted opportunity
- not making the most of what God has given us. We came into this world with certain abilities, and when God saved us,
He gave us gifts and the grace to exercise those gifts to help others, to build our own lives and to glorify His name.

This is why God puts us through certain experiences.
Asaph said, "You have brought a vine out of Egypt; you have cast out the nations, and planted it. You prepared room for it, and caused it to take deep root, and it filled the land" (vv. 8,9).
That vine, of course, was the nation of Israel. God delivered Israel from Egypt and planted her like a luxurious vine in the land of Canaan.
But soon He had to break that vine. He had to discipline His people.
The vine was not producing the fruit God wanted it to produce.

God blesses us to make us a blessing.
He planted the people of Israel in the land that they might, by their life and testimony, bear spiritual fruit, letting the Gentile nations know about the true and living God.
He gave them an opportunity to show the other nations what He could do for those who would trust and obey Him. Instead, the vine became like all the other vines.
The Israelites compromised and sinned. So God had to cut down His vine and discipline His people.

Remember, God has planted you where you are that you might be a blessing.
He wants you to take deep root. He wants you to bear rich fruit. And if you will draw upon His spiritual power, He will enable you to be a blessing.
Bloom where you are planted and bear fruit to the glory of God and the enrichment of others.



* * *
God has blessed you with certain abilities so you may invest them in others and bring glory to Him.
As you use your God-given talents, you glorify Him and bless others.
Draw from God's spiritual resources and let Him use you to enrich others.

Do not wait until...

Monday, July 23, 2007

Harden heart



“Therefore, just as the Holy Spirit says, "TODAY IF YOU HEAR HIS VOICE, DO NOT HARDEN YOUR HEARTS AS WHEN THEY PROVOKED ME, AS IN THE DAY OF TRIAL IN THE WILDERNESS.” (NASB) Hebrews 3:7-8

What is it to harden the heart?

It is to commit the will or mind against the claims of God and of humanity. To harden the heart is to commit the soul in a spirit of disobedience, and self-will, and stubbornness, against God and his government.



How men harden their hearts.

It is always a voluntary act to harden the heart, and a voluntary state when the hardness of heart is continued.

- It is being an act of the mind or of the will, the mind always assigns to itself some reason for taking this position of self-will, and for maintaining this position of stubbornness against God.

- It is a matter of consciousness that the will has indirectly a great control of the feelings.

- If the mind commits itself by an act of will to any position, the feelings are brought to adjust themselves to the will's position; not always directly and instantly, but the feelings will soon come to sympathize with the attitude taken by the will.

- The reason is very obvious, the feelings are influenced by the thoughts, and the thoughts are directed by the will.

- When the will, then, is committed to a dishonest position, it will always use the intellect dishonestly; and by a dishonest use of the intellect will foster such thoughts as to prevent the feelings.

- This is common experience, as every one knows who has paid any particular attention to his own state of mind. A voluntary stubbornness always locks up the sensibility, and closes it against that class of emotions that would naturally result from a different attitude of the will.

- If the mind takes a position against God, it will use the intellect to justify its position, or to excuse it; consequently it will indulge only in thoughts, and arguments, and reflections, that justify its position, and therefore that poison and pervert the feelings and bring them into sympathy with the will.

- Men harden their hearts, then, by an uncandid and selfish use of the intellect, assigning to themselves such reasons for their conduct as to justify their taking this position.

You wil know when you go & try... heeheeheehee

1 Baccarat Restaurant
01-01 Plaza By The Park,
51 Bras Basah Road
Tel: 6884-9929

Opens: 11am to 2.30pm and 6.30 to 10pm on weekdays, 11am to 3pm and 6.30 to 10.30pm on weekends

Prices: Lunch costs $29 per person and dinner is $38. For now, for every three diners at lunch, one gets to eat for free. There is a 25 per cent discount for dinner

THIS huge buffet restaurant was opened last October by home-grown chef Daniel Koh. It offers more than 100 Chinese, Western and Japanese dishes prepared by 20 chefs. Its highlight? Seven action counters where chefs prepare hot dishes ranging from teppanyaki to pasta.

The 10,000 sq ft restaurant can seat 300. Mr Koh, who has been in the food industry for 32 years, says the restaurant saw 15,000 customers in its first month.

Our favourite is its kumamoto oysters from Canada, which tasted fresh and succulent. Other must-try items include the wine pear and stewed white fungus with papaya and rock sugar dessert.

WHERE





Embracing an international cuisine concept, Sakura serves up to 100 different varieties of Japanese, Western and Oriental foodfare everyday. To briefly entice you, appetizers include baked oysters, lobster salad, mussels, cold prawns and sashimi. The main entrees encompass an assortment of dim sum, Teppanyaki(Include lamb chop, salmon and beef, etc.), tempura and grilled items. A wide selection of mouth-watering sushi will also be prepared on the spot by the chefs for all consummate sushi fans. Last but not least, deserts such as cheesecakes, fruits, ice cream and beverages complete the buffet with a satisfying touch.

With seating capacity ranging from 300 to over 600 at the 8 outlets, it is no wonder that Sakura has become a popular pick for companies to hold their corporate functions and wedding reception too.

http://www.sukigroup.com.sg/sakura.htmSuki Sakura International Buffet Restaurant



Buffet Prices
(Exclusives 7% GST) Weekdays Orchard Outlet Only
Lunch $20 $22
Dinner $24 $26
Kids $10.90 $11.90
(additional $2 on weekend, PH & Eve of PH)

Suki Sakura International Buffet Restaurant Outlets

HOTLINE 6262 0880

(1) 1A Tampines Street 92 #01-00 Safra Tampines 6784 8197
(2) Blk 190 Toa Payoh Lorong 6 #03-512 6252 8197
(3) Blk 87 Marine Parade Central #01-500 (2nd level) 6345 8197
(4) Omni Theater Science Centre 21 Jurong Town Hall Rd 6566 8197

Subsidiary

(1) 1 Pasir Ris Close #02-02 Downtown East 6755 8197
(2) 93A Clementi Road Clementiwood Park 6474 8197
Sakura International Buffet Restaurant (*******)
Clementi Woods Park, 93A Clementi Road, (S) 129781
Type of Restaurant(s): Buffet / Catering / Halal
Cuisine(s) Served: International Buffet
Nearest MRT Station(s): Clementi
Buses: 183,33,188,96
Telephone: 6474 8197

(3) 321 Orchard Road Orchard Shopping Centre #02-01/06 6735 8197
(4) Jurong West Sport Complex Jurong West St 93 6899 8197
(5) Singapore Science Centre 21 Jurong Town Road 6566-8197

Meals Served: Lunch / Dinner / Supper
Opens: 12noon to 2.30pm and 6pm to 9.30pm
Prices: Lunch at $20 on weekdays and $22 on weekends. Dinner at $24 from Mondays to Thursdays and $26 from Fridays to Sundays

THE latest eatery of the home-grown Suki restaurant group opened a month ago. It specialises in Japanese dishes. While its spread is not as wide as the other buffet restaurants featured here, its selling point is its affordable prices. There are about 100 dishes including eight kinds of sashimi and shark's fin soup.

The newest of five buffet Suki restaurants can seat about 320 people in its 7,000 sq ft space.

Mr Mohamed Borhan, the group's area manager of the group, says two more outlets are in the works, including a two-storey eatery in Clementi Woods. Once ready in April, it will be the biggest buffet restaurant in Singapore.

The dimsum section is especially delicious.

Kushin bo

Kuishin-Bo (The Authentic Japanese Buffet Restaurant)

Paper Steamboat





3 Temasek Boulevard Suntec City Tower 1 #03-002 (Besides Toy 'R' Us)
Tel: 6238 7088 Website: www.kuishinbo.com.sg Email: suntec@kuishinbo.com.sg
Operation Hours
Daily 11.30am - 10pm (Closed 3pm-5.30pm)

Lunch (Mon-Fri)
Adult $23.80++/Child $16++ below 1.4m/Senior Citizen less 10%
Lunch (Sat, Sun & PH)
Adult $25.80++/Child $16++ below 1.4m/Senior Citizen less 10%

Promotion rate if you could complete your buffet lunch within 60mins the price for Adult is $19.80++
(Applicable for wkdays & promotional period only)

Dinner (Sun-Thurs)
Adult $31.80++/Child $16++ below 1.4m/Senior Citizen less 10%
Dinner (Fri, Sat, Eve of PH & PH)
Adult $39.80++/Child $16++ below 1.4m/Senior Citizen less 10%

Carousel



Royal Plaza on the Scotts
Carousel

Take a good look at the website... if you have not tasted the wide spread in Carousel... You would not regret trying!!!
Yummy yummy!!!


http://dining.royalplaza.com.sg/

Thursday, July 19, 2007

THE CONSCIENCE


The Conscience, Revisited
by
John MacArthur
All Rights Reserved

Drugs, therapy, entertainment—they’re all used to silence a guilty conscience.
But for the Christian, the conscience is the key to freedom.

In 1984, an Avianca Airlines jet crashed in Spain. Investigators studying the accident made an eerie discovery. The “black box” cockpit recorders revealed that several minutes before impact a shrill, computer-synthesized voice from the plane’s automatic warning system told the crew repeatedly in English, “Pull up! Pull up!”

The pilot, evidently thinking the system was malfunctioning, snapped, “Shut up, Gringo!” and switched the system off. Minutes later the plane plowed into the side of a mountain. Everyone on board died.

When I saw that tragic story on the news shortly after it happened, it struck me as a perfect parable of the way modern people treat guilt—the warning messages of their consciences.

The wisdom of our age says guilt feelings are nearly always erroneous or hurtful; therefore we should switch them off. But is that good advice? What, after all, is the conscience—this sense of guilt we all seem to feel?


The conscience is generally seen by the modern world as a defect that robs people of their self-esteem. Far from being a defect or a disorder, however, your ability to sense your own guilt is a tremendous gift from God. He designed the conscience into the very framework of the human soul. It is the automatic warning system that cries, “Pull up! Pull up!” before you crash and burn.

The conscience, Puritan Richard Sibbes wrote in the seventeenth century, is the soul reflecting upon itself. Conscience is at the heart of what distinguishes the human creature. People, unlike animals, can contemplate their own actions and make moral self-evaluations. That is the very function of conscience.

The conscience has an innate ability to sense right and wrong. Everyone, even the most unspiritual heathen, has a conscience:

When Gentiles who do not have the Law do instinctively the things of the Law, these, not having the Law, are a law to themselves, in that they show the work of the Law written in their hearts, their consciences bearing witness, and their thoughts alternately accusing or else defending them.” (Romans 2:14-15, emphasis added)


The conscience entreats you to do what you believe is right and restrains you from doing what you believe is wrong. But don’t equate the conscience with the voice of God or the law of God.

It is a human faculty that judges your actions and thoughts by the light of the highest standard you perceive. When you violate your conscience, it condemns you, triggering feelings of shame, anguish, regret, consternation, anxiety, disgrace, and even fear. Conversely, when you follow your conscience, it commends you, bringing joy, serenity, self-respect, well-being, and gladness.

The word conscience is a combination of the Latin words scire (“to know”) and con (“together”). The Greek word for “conscience” is found more than thirty times in the New Testament—suneidesis, which also literally means “co-knowledge.”

Conscience is knowledge together with oneself. That is to say, your conscience knows your inner motives and true thoughts. It is above reason and beyond intellect. You can rationalize, trying to justify yourself in your own mind, but a violated conscience will not be easily convinced.

The Hebrew word for conscience is leb, usually translated “heart” in the Old Testament. The conscience is so much at the core of the human soul that the Hebrew mind did not draw a distinction between conscience and the rest of the inner person.


Thus, when Moses recorded that Pharaoh “hardened his heart” (Exodus 8:15), he was saying that Pharaoh had steeled his conscience against God’s will.

When Scripture speaks of a tender heart (2 Chronicles 34:27), it refers to a sensitive conscience. The “upright in heart” (Psalm 7:10) are those with pure consciences. And when David prayed, “Create in me a clean heart, O God” (Psalm 51:10), he was seeking to have his life and his conscience cleansed.

Multitudes today respond to their conscience by attempting to suppress it, overrule it, or silence it.

They conclude that the real blame for their wrong behavior lies in some childhood trauma, the way their parents raised them, societal pressures, or other causes beyond their control.

Sometimes people convince themselves that their sin is a clinical problem, not a moral one—and therefore define their drunkenness, sexual perversion, immorality, or other vices as “diseases” or “conditions.”

To respond to the conscience with such self-excusing arguments is tantamount to telling the conscience, “Shut up, Gringo!”

It is possible virtually to nullify the conscience through repeated abuse. Paul spoke of people whose consciences were so convoluted that their “glory is in their shame” (Philippians 3:19; cf. Romans 1:32).


Both the mind and the conscience can become so defiled that they cease making distinctions between what is pure and what is impure (Titus 1:15).

After so much violation, the conscience finally falls silent.

Morally, those with defiled consciences are left flying blind.

The annoying warning signals may be gone, but the danger certainly is not; in fact, the danger is greater than ever.

Furthermore, even the most defiled conscience will not remain silent forever.

When standing at the Judgment, every person’s conscience will side with God, the righteous judge.

The worst sin-hardened evildoer will discover before the throne of God that he has a conscience that testifies against him.

The conscience, however, is not infallible. Nor is it a source of revelation about right and wrong. Its role is not to teach you moral and ethical ideals, but to hold you accountable to the highest standards of right and wrong you know.

Both tradition and truth inform the conscience, so the standards it holds you to are not necessarily biblical ones
(1 Corinthians 8:6-9). The conscience can be needlessly condemning in areas where there is no biblical issue.

In fact, it can try to hold you to the very thing the Lord is trying to release you from (Romans 14:14, 20-23)!

The conscience, to operate fully and in accord with true holiness, must be informed by the Word of God. So even when guilt feelings don’t have a biblical basis, they are an important spiritual distress sign.

If your conscience is misfiring—sending out signals from a weak conscience—that should spur you to seek the spiritual growth that would bring your conscience more in harmony with God’s Word.

Your conscience reacts to the convictions of your mind and therefore can be encouraged and sharpened in accordance with God’s Word.

The wise Christian wants to master biblical truth so that the conscience is completely informed and judges right because it is responding to God’s Word.

A regular diet of Scripture will strengthen a weak conscience or restrain an overactive one. Conversely, error, human wisdom, and wrong moral influences filling the mind will corrupt or cripple the conscience.

In other words, the conscience functions like a skylight, not a light bulb.

It lets light into the soul; it does not produce its own. Its effectiveness is determined by the amount of pure light you expose it to, and by how clean you keep it.


Cover it or put it in total darkness and it ceases to function.

That’s why the apostle Paul spoke of the importance of a clear conscience (1 Timothy 3:9) and warned against anything that would defile or muddy the conscience (1 Corinthians 8:7; Titus 1:15).

Or, to switch metaphors, your conscience is like the nerve endings in your fingertips. Its sensitivity to external stimuli can be damaged by the buildup of calluses or even wounded so badly as to be virtually impervious to any feeling.

Paul also wrote of the dangers of a calloused conscience (1 Corinthians 8:10), a wounded conscience (v. 12), and a seared conscience
(1 Timothy 4:2).

Psychopaths, serial killers, pathological liars, and other people who seem to lack any moral sense are extreme examples of people who have ruined or desensitized their consciences.

Can such people really sin without remorse or scruples? If so, it is only because they have ravaged their own consciences through relentless immorality and lawlessness.

The conscience is an inextricable part of the human soul.


Though it may be hardened, cauterized, or numbed into apparent dormancy, the conscience continues to store up evidence that will one day be used as a testimony to condemn the guilty soul. But for the Christian, the conscience is a tremendous asset of spiritual growth.

Take time each day to inform your conscience by reading God’s Word.

Never train yourself to ignore your conscience, but respond quickly to its warnings.

And then cleanse your conscience through consistent confession as you seek forgiveness from those you’ve sinned against—whether God or others.

Those things will strengthen your conscience so that you can enjoy the freedom and blessings of a clear conscience before God.

Friday, July 13, 2007

Turn or burn



Turn Or Burn

Luke 13:3b (NIV) "But unless you repent, you too will all perish."

Matthew 4:17 (NIV) From that time on Jesus began to preach, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is near."

Matthew 3:2 (Phi) "You must change your hearts and minds, for the Kingdom of Heaven has arrived!"

Mark 6:12 (TEB) So they went out and preached that people should turn away from their sins.

Acts 2:38 (NIV) Peter replied, "Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of
your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit."

The Two Ways
The "way" we are looking:

1) will make sense if we look long enough;

2) will create desire to move in that direction; and

3) will lead to something. First, we will look at how this applies to man's way.

Proverbs 14:12 (NIV) There is a way that seems right to a man, but in the end it leads to death.

If our line of sight is along our own way, or the way of the world, then this will begin to make sense to us as we continue to meditate on it, even if the way we are looking is really stupid. With this mindset, desire will spring up, which is the fuel that will lead us to destruction.

James 1:14-15 (NIV) But each one is tempted when, by his own evil desire, he is dragged away and enticed. Then, after desire
has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is full-grown, gives birth to death.

Ezekiel 18:23-31 (NIV) "Do I take any pleasure in the death of the wicked?" declares the Sovereign Lord. "Rather, am I not
pleased when they turn from their ways and live?...

Because he considers all the offenses he has committed and turns away from them, he will surely live; he will not die... Repent!

Turn away from all your offenses; then sin will not be your downfall. Rid yourselves of all the offenses you have committed, and get a new heart and a new spirit. Why will you die, O house of Israel?"

Ezekiel 33:11 (NIV) ... "I take no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but rather that they turn from their ways and live. Turn! Turn from your evil ways!..."

Turn Or Burn

2 Tim 2:19 (NIV) "The Lord knows those who are his," and "everyone who confesses the name of the Lord must turn away
from wickedness."

When at first we hear "repent or perish", it seems harsh.

But as we turn, we see that it is an incredible gift to have something to turn to.

If not for God's love, our only option would be to perish. But the grace of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ has appeared. To have the option to turn is sweet indeed.

Acts 3:19 (NIV) "Repent, then, and turn to God, so that your sins may be wiped out, that times of refreshing may come from the Lord."

Hebrews 12:2a (NIV) Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith.

Thursday, July 12, 2007


You Can Experience
God's Presence
by Repentance with Joy!
Enjoy a deeper Christian life!
You Can Grow Even in Difficult Areas
because You Can Taste Heaven Now!

Repentance is more than just what you do after you do something wrong. Repentance is a biblical practice—an activity that describes something you can do for great personal growth and change.

In biblical terms, repentance means to change your mind about sin and about God. The word repentance is used most of the time where we are to change our mind after sin.

"...If you return to the Lord with all your heart, remove the foreign gods...from among you and direct your hearts to the Lord...He will deliver you..." (1 Sam. 7:3).

To me, "directing our heart toward God," sounds like a repentance where we "change our mind" about sin and about God, BEFORE we do something wrong.

We are to repent so as to remove the obstacles that keep us from abiding in Christ. Doing this, involves getting our heart to hear the truth of the scriptures so that God can use His word to change us from the inside out.

Deep level change isn't going to happen just because you know something in your head. Being effective at "changing your mind" requires taking steps to train your heart that it is right, good, and safe to turn and draw near to God. You have to take steps to calm your fears and build your faith. You have to become a teacher and your own heart has to become your student. By this, you can change from the inside out.


The Benefits of Repentance

The benefits of repentance are many. The Bible says, "...repent and return, so that your sins may be wiped away, in order that times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord" (Acts 3:19).

The benefits of repentance are that you find freedom from unwanted and sinful behaviors, damaging pursuits, harmful reactions, long term addictions, co-dependence.

You even find freedom from subtle sins of the heart. But that isn't all. You also experience a "refreshing" from the "presence of the Lord." By repenting so as to experience God's presence, your single-hearted love and devotion toward God will increase greatly. Abiding in Christ becomes realistic. The deeper Christian life becomes practical.

Abiding in Christ

Repentance is toward abiding in Christ. By "abiding" I believe the Bible means we are to stay inside the presence of God. Christians have Christ inside them but we are also told to "abide in Him."

This means we are to stay inside the radiant presence of Christ -- 24 hours-a-day. By this we "...walk in the Light as He Himself is in the Light..." (1John 1:7).

Abiding in the presence of God is the same thing as abiding in the presence of the kingdom of God.

We abide in Christ by repentance that removes obstacles so we can draw near to God, learn to stay there, and learn to let Him draw near and stay near to us.


Understanding your thirsty desires for God and how to repent makes abiding in Christ realistic for anyone.


Drinking From God


"Drinking from God" to also mean "feeding" on Him.

Drinking from God is the same thing as receiving His presence or letting God draw near to us.

Learning to drink from God is important because without learning to actually receive His presence we can't abide in Christ.


It is by learning to keep on drinking like a branch on a tree that we abide inside the presence of God all the time.

Monday, July 9, 2007

Today is a day that reality strikes...
Sin a terrible, horrible, nasty stronghold...
Book of James brought us an overview of the heart of God... & the intensity of sin...
The fruits of sin...
The pain that sin brought...
The process of sin...

A song came to me... when I sat in the garden of Blk K level 3 (Nanyang Polytechnic)...
Under the scorching sun... I sat with tears dripping...
The sky is still as blue as yesterday... but today is totally different...
It seemed dark to me...

Anyway, the song echoes liked legion of angels singing...

The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases
His mercy never flows to an end...
They are new every morning...
New every morning...
Great is Thy faithfulness ...Oh Lord...
Great is Thy faithfulness...

Singing I love You Lord...
Singing I love You Lord...
Singing I love You Lord...
I love You... I love You Lord...

Father, have mercy on us all...
All have fallen short of Your glory...

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

School of Modern Levites



Welcome to School of Modern Levties online from FCBC