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Three symptoms of a dying church.

very sick at the time, but she did not want to admit it. . . . She never got better. She slowly and painfully deteriorated. And then she died. . . . She, of course, is a church.”
So writes Thom Rainer in Autopsy of a Deceased Church (3–4). One of the defining marks of a dying church is that the people in it don’t realize it’s dying. They don’t know they’re on a one-way journey to the ecclesiastical morgue. There is enough about the church that makes it seem alive and worth showing up to each week, but the symptoms of death pervade.
While the heart of a church is still beating, how can we take its temperature to check if it’s thriving or slowly preparing to gasp its last breaths?

Help from a Doctor

I believe the letter of James is here to help us, whatever kind of church fellowship we’re in. If all is well, it can warn us that all can be lost if we think we are beyond failure. If all is broken, it can comfort and care for us if we think our collection of bruised and bewildered believers is beyond the pale.

“One of the defining marks of a dying church is that the people in it don’t realize it’s dying.”

The reason James can help us so profoundly is that he sees both symptoms and the underlying cause. He is like the physician we visit, convinced our cough is just a cough, only to have him listen carefully to our breathing and then diagnose a much deeper malaise. James goes deep, to the ultimate source of all our problems. He has a sharp scalpel, but he wields it with a gracious, loving hand, because he knows exactly what medicine to prescribe.
He gives us the symptoms, the disease, and the medicine for a dying church.

Three Symptoms of a Dying Church

James lays out three symptoms for us to help us self-diagnose our health: the words we speak, the lines we draw, and ignoring good works.

1. Churches begin speaking angry words.

We get the first hint of this inJames 1:19, “Know this, my beloved brothers: let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger.” The issue surfaces again in James 1:26, “If anyone thinks he is religious and does not bridle his tongue but deceives his heart, this person’s religion is worthless.” By chapter 3, James is giving us a full frontal assault on the damage we can do with our tongues: “And the tongue is a fire, a world of unrighteousness. The tongue is set among our members, staining the whole body, setting on fire the entire course of life, and set on fire by hell” (James 3:6).
James tells us “these things ought not to be so” (James 3:10), but he is having to write precisely because these things can be so. We all know what this is like. In my home, it’s usually Thursdays. I don’t know what it is about this day of the week in particular, but it can be the day when our tongues do their worst. Fuses shorten, tempers fray, words sharpen. Out they come, sibling to sibling, husband to wife, parent to child — and a room is on fire! People get burnt.
And uncontrolled tongues are just a symptom, not the disease.

2. Churches begin drawing ugly lines.

In chapter 2, we discover this church loves partiality. It has favorites. The rich over the poor, the haves over the have-nots. It is honoring certain types of people and dishonoring others. There is an in-crowd in this church and an out-crowd; there is an attraction to the people with means, wealth, and status.

“We are divided on the inside and that is what leads us to cause divisions on the outside.”

Such socioeconomic dividing lines might exist in your church. But even if these particular lines aren’t present, we draw lines in plenty of other ways. It’s what makes us feel safe in physical spaces and social groups, and what causes us to bond with some and ignore others. We draw lines between men and women, students and old people, married and single, employed and unemployed, and no doubt a myriad of other ways too.
We gravitate towards those who can help us and give to us much more than those who have nothing to offer us. It’s why we are so unlike God when we draw lines. God loves the defenseless, the poor and the weak, the people with nothing to contribute, and it’s why religion that is pure before him visits orphans and widows — it cares for the unrewarding of this world (James 1:27).

3. Churches begin ignoring good works.

The letter of James is so challenging because it is written to a church that has faith. It is a church that loves the gospel. The theology is orthodox and all the boxes are ticked. This is a church that loves preaching. They love hearing a sermon. They love the Bible.
But although they love hearing the Bible, they don’t do what it says, and so James blindsides us: no good works, no action, means, in fact, no living faith. You might look like you’re alive. But you’re dead. “For as the body apart from the spirit is dead, so also faith apart from works is dead” (James 2:26).
Bad words, partial lines, no good deeds. If we went to see the doctor with those symptoms and he said to us, “Okay, go away and speak good words, don’t draw lines, and do good deeds,” would that help us? Is that the cure?

Where These Sins Come From

If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him. But let him ask in faith, with no doubting, for the one who doubts is like a wave of the sea that is driven and tossed by the wind. For that person must not suppose that he will receive anything from the Lord; he is a double-minded man, unstable in all his ways. (James 1:5–8)
Lodged in these verses is a term which describes part of the human makeup, a medical term if you like. It’s the word double-minded — literally, the word is “two-souled.” This teaches that it is possible to have a “two-ness” to me, a two-ness corrupting my one-ness.
We know that living with two of you can land you on the psychiatrist’s couch, as she listens to you describe yourself and eventually you are given the diagnosis of schizophrenia. James is saying our deepest problem, the well from which all the symptoms flow, is spiritual schizophrenia: we are divided on the inside and that is what leads us to cause divisions on the outside. A divided heart leads to divided actions.

Living as Two

Just look at how double-ness inside us takes shape outside us:
  • “But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves” (James 1:22). We can be divided between hearing and doing. We love hearing, but we don’t find it so easy to do. We split them off one from the other. We like being in church and we loved the sermon, but by Tuesday we’re struggling (again) to do what God told us to do. Why is that?
  • “My brothers, show no partiality as you hold the faith in our Lord Jesus Christ, the Lord of glory” (James 2:1). James is probing here a very profound reason why we honor the rich over the poor. It’s because one part of us loves the Lord Jesus Christ, the Lord of glory, and another part of us loves the glory of wealth, riches, and prestige. James is calling his readers to not be divided in our glory gaze.
  • “If a brother or sister is poorly clothed and lacking in daily food, and one of you says to them, ‘Go in peace, be warmed and filled,’ without giving them the things needed for the body, what good is that?” (James 2:15–16). We divide faith and good works, thinking we can separate them and safely have one without the presence of the other. Why is that?
  • “From the same mouth come blessing and cursing” (James 3:10). Notice the dividing line splits our mouth. Our speech is not united. It is double in form and content.

When the World Is in the Church

We can see that this letter is all about the problem of double-ness where God intends there to be one-ness. Its main thesis is that there is no point ever trying to fix the tongue, or change the lines we draw, without changing the heart, the source of it all. We will never change how we relate to a poor person and a rich person in the same room unless we realize the real issue is not money but the evil inside: “Have you not then made distinctions among yourselves and become judges with evil thoughts?” (James 2:4).

“The quarreling, the unbridled tongue, the discrimination in our midst reveal that we’re happy to cheat on God.”

Evil thoughts and selfish desiresare our real problem, the kind which are willing even to ignore the damage some people are doing to the whole body if I can stand to benefit from them personally. James does more than give us a sterile medical term for our problem. He calls it adultery. Adultery is the ultimate form of double-ness, a twisted two-ness where there is meant to be beautiful one-ness: “You adulterous people! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God?” (James 4:4).
Imagine a young couple just back from their honeymoon. They are starting out their life together, a new adventure, and in their new flat the doorbell rings. They open it to find an old flame of the husband from years ago: “Hi, I thought I’d come and live with you for a few years!” Before the bride can express her astonishment, the young husband bounds along, gives the woman at the door a hug, and exclaims, “This is going to be so much fun! One big happy family!”
Why is the bride weeping? It’s because of jealousy. Righteous jealousy. It’s because of real love, true love. “Or do you suppose it is to no purpose that the Scripture says, ‘He yearns jealously over the spirit that he has made to dwell in us’?” (James 4:5). Can we hear what God is saying? You like someone else in bed. You like being married to the world as well. The world likes the rich over the poor. The world quarrels and fights and murders and has bitter jealousy and selfish ambition. And when you live like that, it shows you are double in your loves.

[ Download ] Fortune Ebel – Be Glorified

[ Download ] Fortune Ebel – Be Glorified


Gospel music artist, Fortune Ebel releases his latest single titled Be Glorified. The urban contemporary praise song was produced by one of Nigeria’s finest bassists, Enochmam and was mixed and mastered in the United States by 10-time Grammy Award winner, Kevin Bond.
The song which he wrote in 2015 is already an anthem in his home Church, having so far been sang there since very early 2016 before its production this year.
The release of the audio is accompanied by a beautiful video where Fortune performed the song live during service.

 ABOUT FORTUNE EBEL
Fortune Ovie Ebel hails from Uzere in the Isoko South Local Government Area of Delta State. Officially, he commenced his music career in 2012 and while still singing as a Background Vocalist, he offered several stints of BGV Stewardship under the Ron Kenoly Brothers, Asu Ekiye, Renown American Saxophonist – Angelina Christie, Micah Stampley on three different occasions and Donnie McClurkin in 2017 and 2018. As a lead singer serving in the Lagos Metropolitan Gospel Choir – LMGC of House On the Rock, Lagos, Nigeria, he served as praise leader at The Experience 2017 with over six hundred thousand people present live and millions watching online across many countries.
His songs such as Eze Mo and My Miracle are sheer beauties to listen to and his latest Single Be Glorified has been an anthem in his home Church House on the Rock for over two Years.
He is the Creator of the Kingdom-Minded Music Community called ‘Kingdom Realm’ and he also founded ‘Royal Affairs’ – being the label arm of his music industry.
CONNECT WITH FORTUNE EBEL
Twitter: @Fortuneebel
Instagram: @Fortuneebel_
Facebook: @Fortuneebel_
BE GLORIFIED BY FORTUNE EBEL
                  THE LYRICS
Verse 1:
Sovereign Father, You reign on high
We sing praises to You
Grace and love, You’ve given us
We sing praises to You
And we thank You because Your kingdom has come
We sing praises to You
Pre Chorus:
Halle-Lujah!
Halle-Luu-Jah!
Halle-Lu-Jah!
Ha-LLe-Lu–Jah!
Chorus:
We praise You the living God
Saviour, thank You for Your love
We praise You the living God
Ha-LLe-Lu–Jah
Be glorified
Verse 2:
Sovereign Father, You reign on high
We sing praises to You
Grace and Love, You’ve given us
We sing praises to You
God, we bless You because Your Kingdom has come
We sing praises to You
Pre Chorus:
Halle-Lujah!
Halle-Luu-Jah!
Halle-Lu-Jah!
Ha-LLe-Lu–Jah!
Chorus:
We praise You the living God
Saviour, thank You for Your love
We praise You the living God
Ha-LLe-Lu–Jah
Be glorified
The Vamp:
We sing praises
To You our strength!

[ Download ] Brain Samson- Obrigado + Tell It All |Mp3 Download

[ Download ] Brain Samson- Obrigado + Tell It All |Mp3 Download


Brain Samson is an inspirational songwriter, solo artist and a true worshiper whose inspiration is solely by the holy spirit, and as such he has devoted himself to receiving from the holy spirit who is at the centre, with the sole aim of connecting humanity to divinity.
Obrigado means thank you and it was inspired by a conscious attempt to see what really counts that cannot be counted as most of the things that can be counted does not really count. The gift of life, salvation of my soul, the air I breathe, the gift of the holy spirit and many more cannot be counted and this is what really count hence OBRIGADO to the one who made it Possible.
What God has done for us we cannot tell it all, The song TELL IT ALL talks about God’s unfailing love day in day out.
God never disappoints his own..  our voice will disappoint us even if we remember some things. its just too much and so therefore we cannot TELL It All.
                      
CONNECT
Facebook: Brain Samson
Twitter: @Brain_samson
Instagram: BrainSamson

The Voice Of Plateau_ Grand Finale/Launching

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What Does The Bible Say About Baptism?

Martin Luther, the great Protestant Reformer, said, “There is on earth no greater comfort than baptism.” Luther was famous for fighting against sin and Satan by preaching to himself, “I am baptized! I am baptized!”
Luther was not claiming to be saved simply because he was baptized. Rather, he rightly perceived the wonder and glory of baptism. He saw the visible, external act of baptism as an objective reminder of the invisible, internal reality of new birth and the faith through which we are saved on the basis of Christ alone. Luther was, after all, the great champion of justification by faith — as well as one captivated by the power and grace of baptism.
Yet, as a baptist, I can’t help but observe that something was missing in Luther’s reminder to himself about his baptism. Luther was what we call a paedobaptist (or infant-baptist). He himself was baptized as an infant, not in response to a profession of his own faith, but because of the faith of his parents — the faith they prayed would be manifest someday in their newborn son. Luther himself supported and practiced infant-baptism not only of adult converts, but also of the infants of Christian parents.
How much more powerful would recalling his baptism be if he could actually recall it? What if his baptism would have been an expression of saving faith already plainly present in his soul, rather than just a hope and prayer of his parents?

Repent, Believe, Be Baptized

Luther is not alone in leaving something to be desired in his vision of baptism. God has embedded his sacraments with more than meets the eye. For all of us, the “visible words” of the ordinances teem with depths of wonder and power into which we grow and mature. Christians of all stripes can anticipate shades and textures of meaning in Christian baptism we have yet to realize.
Before I lay out six of the most important New Testament texts to consider, let me acknowledge at the outset that godly evangelical pastors, scholars, churches, and seminaries stand on both sides of this question. The issues are many, and the arguments often complex, and I have great respect for many dear infant-baptist brothers and sisters.
Nevertheless, we credobaptists (or believer-baptists) — who baptize, typically by immersion, only those who give a credible profession of faith — have a deeper case than only what’s on the surface of the biblical text. For instance, as you often hear from believer-baptists, if you go looking in the New Testament for an example of an infant being baptized, you won’t find one. We don’t overlook the obvious, but we do go further and deeper.

Mark 1:5

All the country of Judea and all Jerusalem were going out to [John] and were being baptized by him in the river Jordan,confessing their sins.
Without exception in the New Testament, baptism is tied to repentance and faith in the baptizee. John’s baptism, the precursor to Christian baptism, was explicitly, repeatedly, and irreducibly tied to repentance.“They were baptized by [John] in the river Jordan, confessing their sins” (Matthew 3:6). John said, “I baptize you with water for repentance” (Matthew 3:11). In the Gospels and Acts, John’s baptism is summarized as “a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins” (Mark 1:4Luke 3:3; alsoActs 13:2419:4). Then, in telling the story of the early church, Acts repeatedly ties Christian baptism to repentance and faith:
  • Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins” (Acts 2:38).
  • “Those who received his wordwere baptized” (Acts 2:41).
  • “When they believed Philip as he preached good news about the kingdom of God and the name of Jesus Christ, they were baptized, both men and women. Even Simon himselfbelieved, and after being baptized he continued with Philip” (Acts 8:12–13).

Acts 18:8

Crispus, the ruler of the synagogue, believed in the Lord, together with his entire household. And many of the Corinthians hearing Paulbelieved and were baptized.
Infant-baptists often point to the “household baptisms” mentioned in Acts 16:3318:8, and1 Corinthians 1:16 and argue that any infants in these households would have been baptized. However, as John Piper writes,
Nowhere in Scripture is there any instance of an infant’s being baptized. The “household baptisms” (mentioned in Acts 16:1533and 1 Corinthians 1:16) are exceptions to this only if oneassumes that the household included infants. But, in fact, Luke steers us away from this assumption, for example in the case of the Philippian jailer (Acts 16:32), by saying that Paul first “spoke the word of the Lord . . . to all who were in [the jailer’s] house,” and then baptized them. (Brothers, 156–157)
In Acts 18:8, Luke clarifies immediately, in the ensuing sentence, that simply being in the newly Christian household was not enough for baptism. Belief in Jesus was prerequisite: “Crispus, the ruler of the synagogue,believed in the Lord, together with his entire household. And many of the Corinthians hearing Paulbelieved and were baptized” (Acts 18:8).
The believer-baptist argument goes deeper than such instances in the Gospels and Acts, but we often begin here. And not just in the early-church narratives, which can be thorny in terms of prescription, but also in the Epistles. Four anchor texts in the apostolic letters bind baptism and faith with a clarity and simplicity that is unmatched in the infant-baptist argument.

Galatians 3:26–27

In Christ Jesus you are all sons of God, through faith. For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ.
Paul assumes that those who have been baptized and those who have saving faith are the same group (with no sanctioned outliers). Faith and baptism belong together in the church’s practice and in the individual Christian’s experience. Those who evidence saving faith should be baptized. And those who have been baptized have given expression to saving faith.
No allowance or provision is made here, or elsewhere, for some who would have been baptized apart from a profession of faith, in anticipation of faith to come.

Colossians 2:11–12

In [Christ] you were circumcised with a circumcision made without hands, by putting off the body of the flesh, by the circumcision of Christ, having been buried with him in baptism, in which you were also raised with him through faith in the powerful working of God, who raised him from the dead.
The mention of circumcision is important because one of the main arguments for infant-baptists is that as circumcision was administered to every male born into God’s first-covenant people, so baptism should be applied to every child (male and female) born into believing families of God’s new-covenant people, the church. However, this is not what Colossians 2, or any other New Testament text, says about circumcision.
Here “the circumcision of Christ” refers to his being cut off, at the cross, for our sins, and the “circumcision made without hands,” which Paul applies to every believer, is spiritualcircumcision, that is, new birth (as commentator Doug Moo notes, “the connections . . . are betweenspiritual circumcision and baptism,” Colossians, 269, n18).
Of these new-covenant people who are born again, circumcisedin heart, Paul expects the new-covenant inaugural rite of water baptism to have been applied. As we’ll explore more below, the new-covenant recipients of baptism, as the counterpart to old-covenant circumcision, are those who have new birth (not mere natural birth), a spiritualcircumcision which does not happen apart from faith.Colossians 2:11–12, likeGalatians 3:26–27, presumes active and professed faith in allbaptized, not just their parents.

Romans 6:3–4

Do you not know that all of uswho have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk innewness of life.
As in Colossians 2, the baptized are those who have been buriedinto Jesus’s death and raised to new life in him. Not only does the image suggest immersion, rather than sprinkling or pouring, but more importantly, “newness of life” testifies to new birth and its effects, not mere first birth.
An “old self,” into which we were born (Ephesians 2:1–3), has been crucified (Romans 6:6) or put off (Ephesians 4:22Colossians 3:9). And Paul says such is true of “all of us,” all the baptized. We all now “walk in newness of life,” not in the oldness of our first birth. The infant-baptist argument that presumes faith in the newborn does not do justice to the litany of New Testament texts about conversion, putting off an old man, and walking in newness of life.

1 Peter 3:21

This text is often avoided, by believer- and infant-baptists alike, because it raises the question about what it meant by “baptism . . . now saves you.” However, if we understand the verse aright, we both clear up that confusion and see further confirmation that baptism is nothing less than an objective expression of subjectiverepentance and faith (new birth) already present (not simply hoped for) in the baptizee.
Baptism . . . now saves you, not as a removal of dirt from the body but as an appeal to God for a good conscience, through the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Peter anticipates we will be surprised to hear “baptism . . . saves you,” so he immediately explains. He does not mean that the external act of baptism, “as a removal of dirt from the body,” has salvific power on its own. Rather, the instrument connecting the believer to Christ for salvation is the invisible condition of the heart (faith) that is being externally expressed in baptism.
Baptism demonstrates objectively and externally the subjective and internal “appeal to God for a good conscience.” Baptism saves not as an outward act but through the inward faith it expresses. Peter’s statement hangs together on baptism expressing a saving,spiritually newborn condition of heart in the believer.

Plausible or Biblical?

Beyond the instances in the narratives, and the didactic words of the apostles tying baptism to faith, we also make our argument on theological and covenantal grounds. I’ll leave that for the next article, but there is something fitting about not moving on to those arguments too quickly. Essential to the credobaptist position is doing justice to the demonstrable teaching of the New Testament.
The best infant-baptist voices typically provide admirably plausible, reasonable, and consistent arguments. The key issue for us as Christians, however, should not be whether the argument is plausible and consistent, but whether it istaught by the actual text of Scripture.
While we must move on, in due course, to the more theological and covenantal arguments, we dare not pass too quickly over the plain, stubborn, obvious readings of the New Testaments texts. Whatever your tradition, a good argument for the nature and application of Christian baptism cannot ignore or minimize what the Bible actually says, including these six important texts

The Night That Took My Wife

If I could have known somehow that the Lord would call my wife, Kyra, home to be with him, I would have begged him to take me instead. Our girls were only six, four, and two. What hope did I have of raising them alone? The thought was unthinkable. It simply didn’t make sense.
But, as we know all too well, the Lord’s ways are often not our ways. So, on August 14, 2015, I woke up to a new reality and a new, previously unthinkable world, one which did not include my precious wife to live and walk and parent alongside.

The Day We Lost Kyra

The day prior, Kyra and I were packing up and preparing to return to Rome, Italy, where we had been living, working, and serving the evangelical church for six years. We had been in Georgia visiting family and were excited to get back home, returning to our friends and the work the Lord had called us to.
Since it was our last evening together with family, we went out to dinner and then elsewhere for dessert. While we enjoyed each other’s company, no one could have imagined the events that were about to unfold, how that evening would conclude. No one dared to think that those would be the final words we would exchange with Kyra, at least here on this earth.
The ride home was pensive and quiet. I was driving, Kyra was in the passenger seat, and our two youngest daughters were in car seats behind us. Our oldest daughter rode home with her grandparents. Unbeknownst to us, up ahead on the road we were traveling, a truck driver was checking his cargo and preparing to depart for West Virginia.
Before leaving, he exited his truck to inspect his vehicle. In doing so, he failed to set the parking brake. Immediately the truck began to roll down the ramp that led to the highway we were traveling.
The timing was such that the fully loaded semi entered the highway the exact moment we were passing the truck ramp and collided with our vehicle. The impact was tremendous. Our vehicle was pushed across the northbound lanes of traffic, the median, then the southbound lanes of traffic before crashing against the guardrails on the far side of the road. Kyra took the brunt of the impact and was killed immediately.

Our Unexpected New Journey

Passing motorists stopped and helped the best they could by pulling one of our daughters from the car to safety. Her leg was broken and head cut badly. Myself and our youngest daughter remained trapped for approximately two hours before rescue workers could free us from the wreckage. Miraculously we both suffered only minor injuries. Kyra was trapped in the vehicle with us, but I was aware the Lord had taken her.
We were taken to different hospitals, and family slowly began to arrive. Our oldest daughter came to visit me where I had been taken, but was not yet aware of what had happened. I remember, like it was yesterday, having to tell her that Mommy wouldn’t be coming home. I can still see the tears she cried in sadness and confusion.
I was released that evening and travelled to the hospital where our other two daughters had been taken, and passed a long night by their sides. The next several days would be a whirlwind of emotions swept up in planning and attending a funeral and learning to face an utterly different reality. It was also the beginning of a new journey.

Extra Measures of Grace

This new journey would teach me and my family about new measures of God’s amazing grace that we had previously known nothing about.
These extra measures of grace are deeply rooted in the gospel of the Bible. This good news is that those who place their faith in Jesus Christ are forgiven their sins and receive a new life. They are no longer slaves to sin, but are now slaves to righteousness (Romans 6:18). This new life in Christ is radically different than the previous one, in which we were enslaved to fear, worry, uncertainty, and sin. Faith in Christ frees the believer and radically transforms his perspective on life. The fear, worry, and uncertainty of the old life is replaced by peace, hope, and the certainty of salvation.
By no means, however, does faith in Christ guarantee a life free of hardship and suffering. It is, in fact, the opposite. Suffering is not an exception for the believer, but the norm. the apostle Paul warns his disciple that all who desire to live a godly life in Christ will experience suffering (2 Timothy 3:12). Trials are to be expected.
The hope of the gospel, however, is that life in Christ frees us from the fear that suffering and trials produce. Whereas sin enslaves us to fear, the gospel frees us from fear and enslaves us to grace. The apostle Peter states clearly, “After you have suffered a little while, the God of all grace, who has called you to his eternal glory in Christ, will himself restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish you” (1 Peter 5:10).

Suffering Imprisons Us to Grace

Loss and suffering, then, imprison us to the grace of God and teach us that apart from him there is no lasting hope and peace. Grace radically transforms our perspective on facing grief and hurt, and teaches us that we can even have joy in our suffering. Through faith in Christ, we are no longer slaves to fear and hopelessness, but slaves to grace — the grace God pours out on us through his Son’s perfect obedience and sacrifice.
Thanks to the extra measures of grace he poured out on me and my family, the unthinkable task of being a single father to three little girls, while living in a foreign country, became possible. Were it not for his abundant grace, I would have remained a slave to fear and hopelessness. Instead, I am a slave to his grace, and I am slowly but continuously being restored, strengthened, and established.
In the days, months, and years since Kyra’s passing, it is God’s grace alone that has given my girls and me (and the rest of our family) the ability to endure the trials placed before us. Because of his amazing grace, we have even had great joy and peace, as the Lord has worked and continues to work through his calling Kyra to be with him.
By God’s grace alone, evidenced through the love and care of the church, the girls and I returned to our lives and ministry in Rome three months after Kyra passed, something I thought would have been impossible. By his grace, we are still here today.

Amazing Grace in Abundance

Having three young daughters to raise, and considering the realities that come along with them growing and getting older, I naturally began to wonder if the Lord would ever provide another wife and helpmate for me. My daughters wondered aloud whether they would ever have another mother in their lives.
We hoped that would be the Lord’s plan, but we knew that his grace was sufficient, and that he would continue to provide for us as he had all along. Dependent on God’s grace was where we landed, and it was (and still is) a good place to be.
Late last year, God’s grace was once again revealed in a very tangible way as the Lord brought my wife, Steppie, into our lives. Once again, we are a family of five, and almost every day someone tells me how happy the girls are since Steppie came into their lives. The difference she has made is evident to all.
With the two simple words “I do,” Steppie became a wife and the mother of three young girls. Like us, she is learning what it means to be a slave to God’s grace, while she lives a life she had never considered or imagined. Dependent on God’s grace, she too is finding great joy and pleasure in this story, despite the challenges her new reality constantly presents.

No Better Place to Be

This story could be written by any number of people who have faced similar and devastating trials. Just this week, news arrived of friends of our family that lost their second daughter in just two years to an illness. Neither of their daughters had yet reached the age of eight. What devastation and heartache!
One might wonder how it is even possible to have hope and peace amidst such brokenness. Thankfully this family knows Christ as their Savior, and despite the inevitable hurt and pain, God’s grace will be shown to them in ways they never could have imagined.
God will bring extra measures of grace, wave upon wave, that will bring a deep and real hope and peace — hope and peace that only faith in the living Christ can provide. His grace will be sufficient, just as it has been for us. Along with this family and many others, we are slaves to God’s grace, and there is no better place to be.

[ Download ] Bamidav ft Mr Impress – Dance To The Lord

[ Download ] Bamidav ft Mr Impress – Dance To The Lord

BAMIDAV SONG 2.jpg
Exceptional Gospel minister and recording artiste, Bamidav, returns with a thanksgiving titled “Dance to the lord” featuring Mr Impress and produced by TR Rockz.
”Dance to the lord” is a dynamic and uplifting piece to start your day with rejoicing. The song which is delivered in a combination of English, Yoruba and French languages is a song of joy, gratitude and praise all finding their root from the word of God.
Listen, Download & Share

[ Download ] Tai Jay – Next Level

[ Download ] Tai Jay – Next Level

Gospel music minister Tai Jay releases the single “Next Level” off the album “Do Your Dance.”
“Next Level,” a contemporary Praise song combines urban elements with conventional Gospel music elements to deliver a declarative message. Tai Jay announces the next level irrespective of what the obstacles may be. It is a song of faith that defies the circumstance to declare victory.
Tai Jay is a singer/songwriter. She is also a teacher and an entrepreneur, an ordained Minister in the Redeemed Christian Church of God RCCG {VH Parish}. She joined the RCCG VOV choir under the Ministration of Pastor Leke Sanusi on arrival in the UK. She is the founder of God Praiser/Worshipper Music Ministry which has metamorphosed into a Gospel online radio.
Tai Jay has also been part of numerous choir groups including the Festival of Life Choir, Balm in Gilead Choir, Good Women Fellowship Choir and more. She has released other songs including “I Need You Holy Spirit,” “Do Your Dance,” “It’s a Good Thing,” amongst others.
Listen & Download

Connect:
Twitter: @Overseasfb | @TaijayGPW
Facebook: God Praiser Worshipper | Tai Jay
Instagram: @taijay_gpw | God Praiser Worshipper
Youtube: Tai Jay GPW
URL: GodPraiserWorshipper.com

[ Download ] Femi Matthews – E Strong || @Femi Matthew

[ Download ] Femi Matthews – E Strong || @Femi Matthew

Introducing to the music scene, a unique gospel artiste, Femi Matthew. He is the winner of the famed Port Harcourt Shift (2017 set) and is one with a great sound that is able to pierce through your heart and make great impact, affecting you with creative lyrical content and adding value to your music with his simple way of presenting top notch music. He fuses soul music with gospel music.
His latest song, “E Strong” is not just any song but a unique sound. It is craftily written in Nigerian pidgin English to buttress the power of God’s love to fix up our total person so we can perfectly fit His will.
The song typifies someone drenched in love and in awe of the power of that love.
The song was produced by the very amazing Becky Jay.
CONNECT WITH FEMI MATTHEW
Instagram | Twitter: @OfficialFemiMatthew
Facebook: Femi Matthew

[ Music Video ] NGEE – Love || Official Video +Audio

[ Music Video ] NGEE – Love || Official Video +Audio

Nigerian Gospel Artiste NGEE officially releases the video of her highly acclaimed and absolutely loved single “Love“.
The video was shot at various beautiful locations by Carel Films.
Guest appearance was made by Samsong.


WATCH VIDEO BELOW
Don’t Forget To Subscribe To Her YouTube Channel For Interesting Updates!!! 
Connect With NGEE On:
Facebook: NGee
Instagram: @ngeemuzic
Twitter: @ngeemuzic