I’ve been musing about how to contribute to this blog on a Sunday. I want to rest from my writing labors, so to speak, but don’t want to abandon the blog altogether. I’ve decided to share with you some of the gleanings from what I’ve been reading each week. May the writings of these Christians in some way edify and encourage you and bring you godly enlightenment. I’ll post one of my favorite photos from each week at the end.
Selections from the Tabletalk of Martin Luther
Heaven and earth, the castles and palaces of all Emperors, Kings, and Princes, are no way sufficient to make a dwelling-place for God; yet, in a silly human creature that keepeth his Word he will dwell.
No man, without trials and temptations, can attain to the true understanding of the Holy Scriptures.
When one asked where God was before Heaven was created, St. Austin made answer thereunto and said, He was in himself. And as another, said Luther, asked me the same question, I said, He was building Hell for such idle, presumptuous, fluttering spirits and inquisitors. [note: this quote actually made me laugh out loud. Oh, Luther!]
The Golden Alphabet, an Exposition on Psalm 119 by Charles Spurgeon
He who made us desire to learn will be sure to satisfy the desire.
If God keeps us, we will keep His way, and it is a great comfort to know that it is God’s way to keep the feet of His saints in the right way. Yet we are to watch as if our keeping of the way depended wholly on ourselves, because according to this verse [v. 33], our perseverance does not rest on any force or compulsion, but on the teaching of the Lord.
We are in a state of complicated ruin, from which nothing but grace can deliver us.
He who delights in the law should not doubt that he will be enabled to run in its ways, for the feet are sure to follow where the heart already finds its joy.
Finding Truth by Nancy Pearcey
We encounter postmodernism most often in the form of political correctness. Multiculturalism. Identity politics. Speech codes. Rules for politically correct speech have become de rigueur in most social institutions.
Postmodernism virtually defines a person’s identity in terms of the groups to which he or she belongs.
Materialism reduces humans to products of physical forces. Postmodernism reduces them to products of social forces. Whenever a philosophy absolutizes something less than God—no matter what it is—the result is reductionism, a lower view of the human person.
By contrast, Christianity offers a transcendent truth—a perspective not bound by the spirit of the age. It liberates individuals to think critically about the prevailing ethos.
Letters to Malcolm, Chiefly on Prayer, by C.S. Lewis
Some people feel guilty about their anxieties and regard them as a defect of faith. I don’t agree at all. They are afflictions, not sins. Like all afflictions, they are, if we can so take them, our share in the Passion of Christ. …we all try to accept with some sort of submission or afflictions when they actually arrive. But the prayer in Gethsemane shows that the preceding anxiety is equally God’s will and equally part of our human destiny. The perfect Man experienced it. And the servant is not greater than the master. We are Christians, not Stoics.
We may ignore, but we can nowhere evade, the presence of God. The world is crowded with Him. He walks everywhere incognito. And the incognito is not always hard to penetrate. The real labour is to remember, to attend. In fact, to come awake. Still more, to remain awake.
That last quote of Lewis’s is a real zinger for me. It will be my prayer as I take my walks and write this blog. Let me attend, come awake, and remain awake to God’s incognito presence in this world!

I’ll probably delete this in the morning.