Unless God
IN the book
of psalms David 139 acknowledged “you knit together me, Thank you for making me
so wonderful.” IN our passage God calls us to be generously, for what do we
store up things for; God gives to us according to our ability. When we give of
ourselves we receive. I love St. Francis Prayer, I have used it often in the
recovery site / papers.. Why..? because like Jars of Clay song “Love for the
Savior.” For a couple years I would read / Pray the saint Francis Prayer every
morning before I left my home. The Serenity Prayer every-night, as talking to
God about the day and day to come. My Point; we need to build a relationship
with our God, inasmuch as He knows our thought and desires of our heart, we
will forge forward in this journey successfully the more we spend time with
God. God will make our lives flourish in fruits of the Spirit.
Be
generous: Invest in acts of charity. Charity yields high returns. Don't hoard
your goods; spread them around.
Be a blessing to others. This could be your last night. When the clouds are full of water, it rains.
When the wind blows down a tree, it lies where it falls. Don't sit there
watching the wind. Do your own work. Don't stare at the clouds. Get on with
your life. Just as you'll never understand the mystery of life forming in a
pregnant woman, So you'll never understand the mystery at work in all that God
does. Go to work in the morning and stick to it until evening without watching
the clock. You never know from moment to moment how your work will turn out in
the end. ( Ecclesiastes 11:1-6 *NIV )
The Serenity Prayer is the common name
for an originally untitled prayer, most commonly attributed to the theologian Reinhold Niebuhre The prayer has
been adopted by Alcoholics Anonymous and other-twelve-step
programs. In 2008, Yale Book of Quotations editor Fred R. Shapiroo published
evidence that a version of the prayer existed by 1936. Shapiro believes that
this casts doubt on Niebuhr's authorship of the prayer.
The best-known form is:
God grant me the serenity
To
accept the things I cannot change;
Courage to change the things I can;
And
wisdom to know the difference.
Prayer of Saint Francis
The Prayer of Saint Francis is a
Christian prayer. It is attributed to the 13th-century saint Francis of Assisi,
although the prayer in its present form cannot be traced back further than
1912, when it was printed in France in French, in a small spiritual magazine
called La Clochette (The Little Bell) as an anonymous prayer, as demonstrated
by Dr Christian Renoux in 2001. The prayer has been known in the United States
since 1936 and Cardinal Francis Spellman and Senator Hawkes distributed
millions of copies of the prayer during and just after World War II
1 Prayer
2 History
3 Quotations
4 Historical studies
5 Spirituality
6 References
7 External links
Prayer
Many different versions of the
prayer exist. The most popular is the following:
Lord, make me an instrument of
Thy peace;
where there is hatred, let me sow
love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master,
grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console;
to be understood, as to
understand;
to be loved, as to love;
for it is in giving that we
receive,
it is in pardoning that we are
pardoned,
and it is in dying that we are
born to Eternal Life.
Amen.
An alternate version is found in Chapter 11 (Page 99) of the "Twelve Steps
and Twelve Traditions", a book published by Alcoholics Anonymous World
Services, Inc.
Lord, make me a channel of thy
peace;
that where there is hatred, I may
bring love;
that where there is wrong, I may
bring the spirit of forgiveness;
that where there is discord, I
may bring harmony;
that where there is error, I may
bring truth;
that where there is doubt, I may
bring faith;
that where there is despair, I
may bring hope;
that where there are shadows, I
may bring light;
that where there is sadness, I
may bring joy.
Lord, grant that I may seek
rather to comfort than to be comforted;
to understand, than to be
understood;
to love, than to be loved.
For it is by self-forgetting that
one finds.
It is by forgiving that one is
forgiven.
It is by dying that one awakens
to eternal life.
Amen.
The hymn version of Make Me A
Channel of Your Peace is an anthem of the Royal British Legion and is usually
sung every year at the Service of Remembrance in November at the Royal Albert
Hall, London. It goes as follows:
Make me a channel of your peace,
Where there is hatred let me
bring your love,
Where there is injury your pardon
Lord,
And where there's doubt true
faith in you.
Make me a channel of your peace,
Where there's despair in life,
let me bring hope,
Where there is darkness, only
light,
And where there's sadness, ever
joy.
O Master grant that I may never
seek,
So much to be consoled as to
console,
To be understood as to
understand,
To be loved as to love with all
my soul.
Make me a channel of your peace,
It is in pardoning that we are
pardoned,
In giving to all men that we
receive
And in dying that we are born to
eternal life.
[edit]History
Summarising the Christian Renoux'
book on the prayer, an article by Egidio Picucci on the 19-20 January 2009
issue of L'Osservatore Romano says that the earliest record of the prayer is
its appearance, as "a beautiful prayer to say during Mass" in the
December 1912 number of the small devotional French publication La Clochette,
"the bulletin of the League of the Holy Mass". In 1915, Marquis
Stanislas de La Rochethulon, president of the Anglo-French association Souvenir
Normand, which called itself "a work of peace and justice inspired by the
testament of William the Conqueror, who is considered to be the ancestor of all
the royal families of Europe", sent this prayer to Pope Benedict XV. The
Pope had an Italian translation published on the front page of L'Osservatore
Romano of 20 January 1916. It appeared under the heading, "The prayer of
Souvenir Normand for peace", and with the explanation: "Souvenir
Normand has sent the Holy Father the text of some prayers for peace. We have
pleasure in presenting in particular the prayer addressed to the Sacred Heart,
inspired by the testament of William the Conqueror". On 28 January 1916,
the French newspaper La Croix reprinted, in French, the Osservatore Romano
article, with exactly the same heading and explanation. La Rochethulon wrote to
the newspaper to clarify that it was not a prayer of Souvenir Normand, but he
chose not to mention La Clochette, the first publication in which it had
appeared. Because of its appearance on L'Osservatore Romano and La Croix as a
prayer for peace during the First World War, this prayer then became widely
known.
[edit]Quotations
Mother Teresa of Calcutta made it
part of the morning prayers of the Roman Catholic religious order she
established, the Missionaries of Charity. She attributed importance to it when
receiving the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo in 1979 and asked that it be recited.
Margaret Thatcher, who in that same year won the 1979 United Kingdom general
election, paraphrased the prayer on the doorstep of 10 Downing Street,
surrounded by a throng of reporters, as she set out the aims of her Government
after having "kissed hands" with Queen Elizabeth II and become Prime
Minister. Archbishop Desmond Tutu, winner of the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize,
declared that it was "an integral part" of his devotions. In October
1995, President Bill Clinton quoted it in his welcoming speech to Pope John
Paul II on his arrival in New York to address the United Nations. Nancy Pelosi
used it when she became Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives in
2007.[2]
Musical adaptations of the prayer
include those by Sebastian Temple[1], John Foley, Sarah McLachlan, Moya
Brennan, Sarah Hart, Rob Stroh, the Ragamuffin Band, Peter Torsiello, and Singh
Kaur.
The prayer is recently quoted in
the movie Rambo by a priest as he blesses Sylvester Stallone before he sets off
into Burma to rescue humanitarian workers. The use of a passage such as this is
in a similar context to the use of Ezekiel 25:17 in the movie Pulp Fiction.
The medic Eugene Roe recites part
of the prayer in the episode "Bastogne" of Band of Brothers.
The prayer was used in a slightly
abbreviated form in the 1972 film, Brother Sun, Sister Moon.
The prayer is also included in
the song "The Shattered Fortress" by Dream Theater Dream Theater
Better Tomorrows
Http://BetterTomorrows.Tripod.com
Little bit of History concerning
this prayer, I know that with the Love, Grace, and mind for God will we can
always strive to meet the payer in our lives.
Falcon Better Tomorrows
May the wind Always be at you back,
May you always walk with God.
May your heart be enlightened
so you may know the hope to
which God has called you.
---
Eph, 1:18
Dr. Raymond Blank, Saundra
Redding.
Wohali, Falcon, Zack, Cindy, Carl.
Crimes Against Children
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E-Mail: BetterTomorrows@Email.com
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Unless we trust in God we work in Vain.
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