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Ozark Christian Schools of NeoshoPO Box 398, Neosho, MO
64850-0398(417) 451-2057 -- www.obicollege.com
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The STANDARD BEARER
“A place where God can help Himself to young lives.” Founder D.
C. BranhamVolume 47, No. 6
“Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man
shall see the Lord” (Hebrews 12:14).Nov./Dec. 2016
WISHING YOU AND YOURSA HAPPY THANKSGIVING AND MERRY
CHRISTMAS!
From the OBI Faculty, Staff, and Student BodyCONVOCATION REPORT,
2016
Praise God for another great Convocation! The Spirit of God met
us in every service. Brother Taylor started us out on the
importance
of the Bible in our preaching, and our walk with God. Brother
Canter explained to us the difference between the carnal man and
the spiritual man and our responsibility to walk in the Spirit so
that we do not fulfill the lusts of the flesh. Brother Floyd
preached great every morning, but I especially liked his sermon on
“Having An Honest Talk With Your Soul.” Time is running out and
there is a great need to make sure that we are ready for the coming
of the Lord and our departure to meet Him. Brother Brimm did an
outstanding job as usual in challenging the young people to
re-establish the lost boundaries in their lives. Wow! If Brother
Nathan Akers was nervous, you sure could not tell it as he
challenged his generation to keep the pledge instead of taking the
parachute.
Brother Randy Snow started his message off with the title, “I
Have Come To Encourage You.” Well, he sure accomplished what he
came to do with the help of the Lord. I felt such an encouraging
and lingering spirit of unity in the altars. It was one of those
altar services so good that you lost track of time and did not want
to see it end. We had some family business to take care of as the
school and the alumni honored Sister Edna White for 25 years of
service, and Brother Gene Canter for 35 years of service. We are
believing the Lord to richly reward them for their sacrifice for
His Kingdom. The congregation was informed that we are believing
God for Brother Don Snow to be able to receive our gratitude for
his service to the church and school at graduation. It was so good
to see Sister Snow in the services worshipping God and getting
blessed. I am always amazed at the dedication of God’s servants
year after year as they pour
their lives into the labor at Ozark Bible Institute and College.
As a school, we would like to personally thank each individual for
your attendance, and your giving to the work here. The financial
needs of the meeting were met, and a wonderful offering for
missions and pledges for the trips of Ozark Christian Missions have
been made for the upcoming year. Our hearts are full of gratitude
and worship for our Savior who has blessed us with such a great
group of people to labor with in the harvest. Please mark your
calendars and come be with us next year if the Lord tarries. Thank
you and God bless you.
By Mike Shelton OBI Academic Dean
Nathan Akers challenging us to take the pledge instead of
bailing out.
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The President Writes 2
(Continued on page 3)
By Daniel E. TaylorPresident
The Incarnation:“The Word
Made Flesh”
“ I n t h e beginning was the Word, and
the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the
beginning with God. All things were made by him; and without him
was not any thing made that was made. In him was life; and the life
was the light of men. And the light shineth in darkness; and the
darkness comprehended it not. There was a man sent from God, whose
name was John. The same came for a witness, to bear witness of the
Light, that all men through him might believe. He was not that
Light, but was sent to bear witness of that Light. That was the
true Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world. He
was in the world, and the world was made by him and the world knew
him not. He came unto his own, and his own received him not. But as
many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of
God, even to them that believe on his name: Which were born, not of
blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of
God. And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we
beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,)
full of grace and truth” (John 1:1-14). The Christmas season is
upon us. The time of the year when God came to the world in the
form of a baby. “The hopes and fears of all the years are met in
thee tonight.” God came near! Paul Harvey on his radio program
helped us get a picture of what the Incarnation was about with
this
story: One raw winter night a man heard an irregular thumping
sound against the kitchen storm door. He went to a window and
watched as tiny, shivering sparrows, attracted to the evident
warmth inside, beat in vain against the glass. Touched, the farmer
bundled up and trudged through fresh snow to open the barn for the
struggling birds. He turned on the lights, tossed some hay in a
corner, and sprinkled a trail of saltine crackers to direct them to
the barn. But the sparrows, which had scattered in all directions
when he emerged from the house, still hid in the darkness, afraid
of him. He tried various tactics: circling behind the birds to
drive them toward the barn, tossing cracker crumbs in the air
toward them, retreating to his house to see if they’d flutter into
the barn on their own. Nothing worked. He, a huge alien creature,
had terrified them; the birds could not understand that he actually
desired to help. He withdrew to his house and watched the doomed
sparrows through a window. As he stared, a thought hit him like
lightning from a clear blue sky: If only I could become a bird-one
of them-just for a moment—then I wouldn’t frighten them so. I could
show them the way to warmth and safety. At the same moment, another
thought dawned on him. He had grasped the whole principle of the
Incarnation. A man becoming a bird is nothing compared to God
becoming a man. The concept of a sovereign being as big as the
universe He created, confining Himself to a human body was, and is,
too much for some people to believe. But you and I believe it and
that makes all the difference. “And the Word was made flesh and
dwelt among us” (John 1:14). Jesus came to reveal to us what God is
really like. He is the complete Revelation of God. He is the way,
He is the truth, and He is the life! He is the Living Word that
enables us to understand the written Word. We were
like the birds in Paul Harvey’s story. And Jesus came and showed
us what God was really like! Is an orange sweet or sour? How should
I know if I have not tasted it? Taste and see that the Lord is
good. Jesus is the revealer of truth. You cannot know God unless
you try and experience Him through Jesus. Before Jesus was born in
Bethlehem, He existed in heaven with His Father. Before Adam and
Eve sinned, Jesus knew He would have to shed His blood to save
fallen man. Jesus has cared about every soul in this world since He
helped His Father create Adam. “The light shineth in darkness”
reminds me of Rembrandt’s painting of the nativity. The light
emanates from the face of the baby in the manger. The other figures
grow increasingly more shadowy, the farther they are from the
Christ child. John’s gospel is for the express purpose of helping
us know and believe in Jesus. “But these are written, that ye might
believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that
believing ye might have life through his name” (John 20:31). John
wasn’t the only disciple to witness about the glory of “the Word
made flesh.” In 2 Peter 1:16, Simon Peter said, “For we have not
followed cunningly devised fables, when we made known unto you the
power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of
his majesty.” John shows us twenty characteristics of God revealed
in the Incarnate Son!• The Lamb of God• The Temple of God• The
anti-type: Serpent Lifted Up• To the woman at the well, I Am• The
Judge of all the earth• I Am the Bread of Life• I Am the Water of
Life
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3———
The President Writes Continued From Page 2• I Am the light of
the world• I Am the Good Shepherd• I Am the Resurrection and the
Life• The King’s Triumphant entry• The Perfect Example• I Am the
Way, the Truth, and the Life• I Am the True Vine• The Precursor of
the Comforter• The Great Intercessor• The King of Truth• The
Willing Substitute• The Resurrection and the Life• The One we must
love and follow for the rest of our life “Who is he that
condemneth? It is Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen
again, who is even at the right hand of God, who also maketh
intercession for us” (Romans 8:34). Paul points out a very
beautiful thing in this verse. First, who is it that condemns us?
God. Who is God? Jesus. The same Jesus that died for our sin, that
rose for our justification,
that is at this moment at the Father’s right hand, and He is
interceding for us; making us and our prayers acceptable! “For he
knoweth our frame; he remembereth that we are dust” (Psalms
103:14). This assures us of His sympathy and help! He was tempted
in all points like us, “yet without sin.” He is a High Priest that
can be touched by our infirmities. When you tell the world about
your sins, they say, “You made your bed, now lay in it.” Jesus
says, “Take up thy bed and walk.” “Behold, a king shall reign in
righteousness, and princes shall rule in judgment. And a man shall
be as an hiding place from the wind, and a covert from the tempest;
as rivers of water in a dry place, as the shadow of a great rock in
a weary land” (Isaiah 32:1-2). A simple definition of the
incarnation is: God becoming a man so He could help us! “Behold a
virgin shall be with child, and shall bring forth a son, and they
shall call his name
Emmanuel, which being interpreted is, God with us” (Matthew
1:23). A man shall be a hiding place from the wind, and a shelter
from the storm! The Incarnation is about God wanting to come near
to us in a way that we can relate to and understand. Young
preachers, Sunday School teachers, that is the basic message of
Christmas. J. W. Moore was told this by the preacher it happened
to: He said that when he first got out of seminary, he wanted to
show everybody how educated he was, so in his first appointment
after graduating from theological school, every Sunday he would
quote great theologians such as Karl Barth, Paul Tillich, Rudolph
Bultmann, and Reinhold Niebuhr. After several Sundays of that,
Tyrone said, “Sister Jones pulled me aside and said, ‘Tyrone, we
don’t care about all of that. Just tell us about Jesus.’”
ADRIENE BELT, OBI Senior I am so thankful for Ozark Bible
Institute and College, for all the things I have learned and am
continuing to learn. Over my summer break, I had the opportunity to
teach a children’s Sunday school class for about eight weeks, and I
realized just how helpful my classes at OBI have been. I’m a senior
this year, and I am looking forward to seeing what God will do in
my life this school year. If there is one thing I have been taught
while being here, it would be the fact that there is always more to
learn.
STUDENT TESTIMONIES
PRESTON MOREINO, OBI Junior This past summer God opened the door
for me to intern with Pastor Randy Snow, and go on a missions trip
to Zambia. God proved Himself faithful to me in many different
ways. While at Faith Tabernacle, I saw God move in hopeless
situations, save lost souls, and raise up His next generation of
young people. In Zambia, I was blessed to be a part of playing with
shoeless children, feeding hungry kids, and sharing the love of the
Father with the fatherless. God is good, and I plan to keep helping
my home church, as well as returning to Zambia to see the
incredible things God has in store.JAALA COOPER, OBI Senior This
has been an exciting and informative few years in my life! I’ve
been blessed with the opportunity to work in both our Children’s
Church and Youth Group at Bible Holiness. This has been a lovely
time of putting into practice the things I’ve learned at OBI. As I
enter my senior year, I’m looking back at my three previous years
at school, and I realize how much those years have changed me.
Doctrinally, foundations were laid my freshman year. Sophomore year
showed me how to better love my Lord and all of His people,
providing a good frame. Junior year I learned more about
practical
ministry, adding solid walls and roof. Now I am getting ready to
finish this building of my ministry so it can be used by
Christ.
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4OBI Guatemala Update
By MikePennington
OBI GuatemalaField Director
Donation CouponYes I would like to Contribute to OBI Guatemala’s
mission work.
� One Time Gift $_____________� Monthly Gift $______________
� Toyota Work Pickup $______________Thanks and God Bless you is
our prayer!
Radio
$275 eac
h month.
General
operatio
ns
$3000 e
ach mon
th.
Pastoral prayer during graduation
Two mothers from Mexico and parents from Nicaragua
Brother Craig Benner brings the message at graduation
Fourteen 2016 graduates
FINISHINGTHE COURSE “But watch thou in all things, endure
afflictions, do the work of an evangelist, make full proof of thy
ministry. For I am now ready to be
offered, and the time of my departure is at hand. I have fought
a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith:” (2
Timothy 4:5-7). The apostle Paul encourages Timothy in this passage
of Scripture in
regard to his calling into the ministry. He addresses spiritual
alertness, patient endurance in difficulties that may arise, his
ministerial work ethic, and the fulfillment of his ministry. Paul
knew that he was about to leave this world for the next, and he
could assert that he had fought evil well, finished his course, and
maintained and guarded the faith. The year 2016 is drawing to a
close. Decisions have been made in our lives this year that affect
eternity for ourselves and others that we influence. May God grant
us the moral character to continue to press
on in His kingdom until the finish line. Fourteen young people
finished their course at the Bible School in Guatemala and
graduated on October 8. There were a lot of visiting pastors,
family and friends at the ceremony. Brother Craig Benner, who
served as director for the school 25 years ago, was the speaker. We
appreciate the spirit that was present as these students finalized
their Bible school training to go out into the harvest field for
our Savior. Keep them in your prayers. Thanks for all that you do
for this ministry.
For souls, The Penningtons
Toyota Work Pickup goal of $10,000, about $8,600 already
received.
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Ozark Christian Missions Report 5
By Rachel Prihoda2006 OBI Graduate
“TO WHAT PURPOSE
IS THIS WASTE?”
“Now when Jesus was in Bethany, in the house of Simon
the leper, there came unto him a woman having an alabaster box
of very precious ointment, and poured it on his head, as he sat at
meat. But when his disciples saw it, they had indignation, saying,
to what purpose is this waste?” (Matthew 26:6-8). We were reading
Matthew, chapter 26, during our classroom daily Bible reading and
as my students read over this story, I just couldn’t seem to forget
the mental picture the story inspired. The Biblical eating area is
filled with the guests of Simon the leper, pressed around Jesus,
listening to His every word, as they devour the food before them.
The unnoticed woman quietly, shamefacedly, subtly makes her way to
her objective. Her heart pounds and her palms sweat as she finally
arrives behind Him. All at once it seems as if her pounding heart
is all that is heard in the room as, one by one, curious eyes
finally notice her standing there cradling her most valued
possession—the precious alabaster box. Soon in the hush which fills
the room, all that is heard is the Master’s voice, teaching and
admonishing those about Him. He is aware of her, but knowing her
heart He gives her the opening she needs to do what she must. Her
hands tremble as she fumbles with the expensive box, but sudden
strength fills her hands as she breaks the box and allows her
priceless worship to anoint her Lord’s head. Now the Master’s
voice
falls silent, but as the aroma of the adoration fills the room,
something else fills the hearts of those sitting around.
Astonishment, questions, and shock fill the mind, but shame and
conviction fill the heart. To cover the shame and conviction, soon
one of the twelve demands, “To what purpose is this waste?” The
disgust and disdain that drips off of the question is clearly
evident, even though we were not in the room to see the rest of the
disciples nod and voice their agreement. You see from their
perspective, it WAS a waste. Something done that had no meaningful
outcome. In Mark it tells us that only “some” had indigestion, oops
sorry, indignation over the sacrificial action. Can you image what
the others thought of her? Can you image the picture of heartfelt
worship that was forever imprinted on their mind? This question is
sometimes asked of missions trips. “To what purpose is this waste?”
Especially of SHORT term mission trips. Why waste good money to
send someone for such a short period of time? Could not the money
be used for the missionaries already on the field? While I agree
missionaries can always use funding, I do not agree with the “waste
of good money.” A missions trip for anyone, but especially for
ministers in training, is always a positive investment! First of
all, any amount of money, effort, or outreach done for our Master
is constructive for His Kingdom. Secondly, the impact on the
individual who experiences ministry in a different culture is
forever imprinted on their mind. In our given “safety zone” of
ministry, we often fall into a rut of living the life or
ministering the ministry. In our comfort zone, we have normalities
we rely on, but when these are taken away we acquire new
experiences
which stay with us for a lifetime. A face takes on a glow with
the knowledge that Someone (Jesus) loves them. The excitement
dancing in the eyes as they receive a long-awaited Bible. The
exhilaration that makes their bodies dance for the sheer thought
that someone would travel around the world, just to come to their
small village and talk to them. The anticipation of approval as the
culturally prepared meal is set before the distinguished guest.
These experiences, whether good or bad, will change the way
ministry is approached and carried out. These memories replace the
normalities and give an individual a renewed reason to keep on,
keeping on. Thirdly, short-term missions trips not only impacts the
person going, but it is a chance to “have compassion and pull them
out of the fire.” Missions trips, or better said, ministry
opportunities are an opportunity to change a life of those
receiving the message. Those people who have not heard of the
Gospel, hear the message. Those who won’t come to church to hear
the local preacher, come to see. Those who are discouraged, can go
on. This is what ministry is about, not just in our safety zone,
but to the far reaches of the world. Fourthly, missions trips are a
chance to help strengthen the full-time missionaries in their
ministry. Full time missionaries live outside of their comfort
zone. For the missionaries and their families, it is often a breath
of fresh air to have a team come along beside and help bear the
burden of souls. This assistance encourages missionaries more than
just an “extra” offering for a special project. Yes, for some
people, it is considered a waste to take a short-term missions
trip. Something done with no meaningful outcome. But to Jesus, it
is not a waste. Just like the expensive worship poured out on Him,
He knows the costs of everything we do for Him. And He sees it as
beautiful.
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Echoes From The Past
(Continued on page. 7)
THEFOUNDATION
FOR HOLYLIVING
God expects His peo-ple to live holy lives. That
is the plain teaching of the Bible. It is hard to understand how
some Christians can reject it.
GOD EXPECTS HOLINESS Notice three portions of God’s Word which
should remove all doubt about God’s require ments in this area.
First, “Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the
church, and gave himself for it; that he might sanctify and cleanse
it with the washing of water by the word, that he might present it
to him-self a glorious church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any
such thing; but that it might be holy and without blemish”
(Ephesians 5:25-27). We believe this cleansing is done on this
earth. Titus 2:11-12 says, “For the grace of God that bringeth
salvation hath appeared to all men, teaching us that, denying
ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously,
and godly, in this present world!” The life of holiness is possible
now in spite of the evil world around us. And Jude 24 helps
establish that God expects holiness in His children, “Now unto him
that is able to keep you from falling, and to present you faultless
before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy.” But how does
holiness come? What are its dynamics? The Psalmist asked a relevant
ques-tion and immediately suggested the an-swer: “Wherewithal shall
a young man cleanse his way? By taking heed thereto according to
thy word” (Psalm 119:9). This answer seems very simple, but I
be-lieve there is more here than meets the casual glance. Let us
consider a few por-
tions of the Word which, if diligently heeded and applied, will
produce a cleansed way―a holy life. Romans 6:6 strikes at the very
heart of the matter: “Knowing this, that our old man is crucified
with him, that the body of sin might be de-stroyed, that henceforth
we should not serve sin.” It is obvious that the “old man” is the
source of all our trouble. Thank God, the “old man” has been
crucified, and the “body of sin” has been “destroyed” (rendered
inactive or inoperative). We are told in Romans 6:10 that when
Christ died, “He died unto sin;” so when we died with Him, we also
died unto sin. In verse 11, we are further told to “reckon”―to
calcu-late―ourselves “to be dead indeed unto sin.” We are not told
to hope or wish ourselves dead unto sin, but to reckon it to be a
fact. As we do this hour by hour and day by day, we find that the
power of the sinful nature is actually broken. It is like the
situation recorded in 2 Samuel 3:1, “There was long war between the
house of Saul and the house of David: but David waxed stronger and
stronger, and the house of Saul waxed weaker and weaker.” Could we
not para phrase and say regarding the sanctified soul, “Now there
was long war between the flesh and the Spirit, but the Spirit waxed
stronger and stronger, and the flesh waxed weaker and weaker”
(Galatians 5:17).
HOLINESS THROUGH THE INDWELLING CHRIST
There is a step farther in the dy-namics for holiness. We have
seen the death of the “old man,” but now, in his place, we see the
ever pres-ent, glorious, victorious, indwelling Christ. “I am
crucified with Christ: never theless I live; yet not I, but Christ
liveth in me” (Galatians 2:20). He thinks, sees, hears, goes, and
does through me!
A proper realization and appropri-ation of this glorious fact
can produce nothing but ho liness in every area of our lives. The
verse continues: “The life which I now live in the flesh I live by
the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for
me.” As in the case with the “old man,” when we reckon or calculate
hour by hour and day by day the presence of the indwelling Christ,
the reality of His presence becomes increasingly precious and
effective. There is another passage of Scrip-ture which sheds light
on this subject. In the latter part of the seventh chap-ter of
Romans and the first verses of the eighth chapter, Paul introduced
several laws. One of these is “the law of sin and death,” which is
in our members (Romans 7:23). This law operates through the “old
man” and brings one into grueling captivity. It appears to be a
hopeless situa-tion. But, Hallelujah, another law is introduced in
Romans 8:2, and it pro-vides us with complete freedom. It is called
“the law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus.” It is definitely
stated that this law makes us “free from the law of sin and death.”
When we are free from this terrible bondage, we are free to live a
life of holiness. We can allow this blessed liberating law to
operate by giving ourselves to prayer, praise, thanksgiving, and
making melody in our hearts to the Lord. As we walk hourly and
daily in the light of this fact that “the law of the spirit of life
in Christ Jesus” is operating within us, what is potential in God’s
provision becomes actual in our experience.
HOLINESS THROUGH THE INDWELLING SPIRIT
Let us consider one further dy-namic for holiness. It is found
in Ro-mans 8:3,4. The law of God, which is holy and just and good
would like to work holiness
By W. H. KeslerOBI’s first
Academic Dean
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7———
Echoes From The Past Continued From Page 6
Alumni In Action Continued From Page 8
he killed a thousand Philistines and piled them up in heaps.
Great victo-ries every one; victories that he would remember in the
days to come. As Christians in our struggle for deliver-ance, we
also have encountered our fair share of afflictions. We too have
had to face our roaring lions, and with the help of the Lord we
have escaped from Satan’s clutches. We have, with the help of the
Lord, ripped up the gates that barred our deliverance and carried
them away. When we were outnumbered, the Lord provided the weapons
that would give us complete victory.
Samson’s Strength As we read through the chronicles of Samson’s
exploits, we find the one common refrain was that “the Spirit of
the Lord came upon him.” The se-cret to all of Samson’s victories
can be attributed to the work of the Spirit in his life. He would
experience the unquestionable power of the Spirit in order to
accomplish tasks far beyond his physical ability. On every
occa-sion the Spirit would move on him, and through its power he
would de-feat enemies and win great victories.
Samson’s Solution Samson stands face to face with a greater
number of Philistines than he has ever faced before. But with hands
bound and an enemy shouting in his face, the Bible tells us that
“the Spirit of the LORD came mightily upon him, and the cords that
were upon his arms became as flax that was burnt with fire, and his
bands loosed from off his hands (Judges 15-14). “When the enemy
shall come in like a flood, the Spirit of the LORD shall lift up a
standard against him” (Isaiah 59:19). The weapon of choice on this
day was the jawbone of an ass that Samson used to defeat a thousand
Philistines. It was the greatest victory that Samson had
experienced up to this point. God will be faithful to bring victory
out of the great trial of your life. While Samson was rejoicing
over this current victory, he soon faced an even greater enemy.
This enemy was different than anything that he had ever faced
before. Every other obstacle of his past could be overcome with
power and might. He would just put his mighty hands upon it and
with the strength of the Spirit he would crush, break, or lift. Now
he faces an internal enemy that he could not put his hands on, the
enemy
was thirst. All of Samson’s strength and power could not defeat
this en-emy. After all of the victories that he had come through,
he would now per-ish at the hands of an invisible force. Have you
ever faced an enemy that was like nothing you’ve ever faced before.
All of the secrets that have led to your past victories seem to be
ineffective against this enemy. Samson’s victory came from a most
unlikely source. Like Dave Roever, we may en-counter an obstacle
that is greater than anything we may have faced in our life. We,
like Samson, may be ready to despair that we might even be saved.
What Samson found was that victory sometimes comes from the most
unlikely sources. Who would have ever imagined that a well could
spring up in a jawbone of an ass. Your source of victory, may be
unusual to say the least, “...but will with the temptation also
make a way to escape...” (1 Corinthians 10:13). You will find His
grace and His strength will fight for you when all else has failed.
Start looking for your unconventional escape.
An Unconventional Escape(Continued from page 8)
within us. It cannot do so because our sinful flesh simply will
not cooperate. The holy law of God and the sinful flesh of His
creatures always clash. Usually the flesh wins. This leads to
worldly and unholy living. But God has the answer. “What the law
could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God sending
his own Son in the like ness of sinful flesh, and for sin,
condemned sin in the flesh.” What God condemns, we should reckon
and calculate to be condemned. Je-
sus once cursed or condemned a fig tree. Immediately it began to
dry up from the roots. May we believe God and see com-monly
practiced, yet unholy, conduct be-gin to dry up from the roots! And
we must not overlook the glo-rious pos sibility suggested in verse
4, “That the right eousness of the law might be fulfilled in us,
who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.” This is
holi-ness! This God-pleasing righteousness is not fulfilled by us
but in us. It is ac-complished by the indwelling presence of the
living Christ through the power of the Holy Spirit. Our part is to
realize and appro priate the fact that the “old man”
has been crucified, the “body of sin” has been destroyed, and
the resurrect-ed Christ has been enthroned within.
CONCLUSION I have endeavored to show that God expects holiness
in the lives of His people. We have looked at the dynamics whereby
this overcoming, victorious, holy life may be ours in practical
day-by-day experience. May God give us the perception to see what
He desires. And may He help us to apply His provision to
ac-complish within our lives the stan-dards He requires.
THE FOUNDATION FORHOLY LIVING
(Continued from page 6)
6
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Alumni In Action
2015-2016Officers
Randy Snow, [email protected]
Mark Hutson, [email protected]
Sheila Shelton, [email protected]
ANNOUNCEMENTS & PRAYER Please remember Brother & Sister
Don Snow in your daily prayers for healing and strength. Also
please remember Brother Wallace Joice as he is deal-ing with heart
issues.
BIRTHS Blake and Amanda (Schmidt) Long a new baby girl, Ro-salie
Gracelyn July 9, 2016.Jared and Vicki (Guy) Myrick had twin boys,
Harrison Glen, Grant Charles July 26, 2016. Tommy and Andrea
(Hutson) Hammond a new baby boy, Thomas Reed III (Tripp) July 27,
2016.
David BrimmOBI Graduate 1984
Ben and Leah (Mosier) Brenner had twin girls, Aubrey &
Ashlyn August 25, 2016. Nathan and Melanie (Laudel) Sherer a new
baby Girl, Hayleigh September 21, 2016. Timothy and Keirstan Miles
a new baby boy, Talon Austin September 24, 2016.
WEDDINGS Jeremy Stoughton and Susanna Shaffer August 12, 2016.
Ryan Whitley and Ashley Snow September 16, 2016. Ben Childs and
Andrea Patton September 17, 2016. Phillip Holloway and Jordan
Satterwhite September 23, 2016. Anderson Richardson and Bethany
Derr October 1, 2016. Jon Paul Ramey and Robin Bennett October 29,
2016.
ANUNCONVENTIONAL
ESCAPE “And he found a new jawbone of an ass, and put forth his
hand, and took it, and slew a thousand men therewith.
And he was sore athirst, and called on the LORD, and said, Thou
hast given this great deliverance into the hand of thy ser-vant:
and now shall I die for thirst, and fall into the hand of the
uncircumcised? But God clave an hollow place that was in the jaw,
and there came water there-out; and when he had drunk, his spirit
came again, and he revived: wherefore he called the name thereof
Enhakkore,
which is in Lehi unto this day” (Judges 15:15-19). The story of
Dave Roever is stir-ring to say the least. Eight months into his
tour of duty in Vietnam he was burned beyond recognition when a
phosphorus grenade exploded in his hand as he prepared to throw it.
Af-ter numerous surgeries and fourteen months in the hospital, he
survived to tell of his miraculous recovery. Though many of us have
experienced trials in our lifetime, few of us can say that we have
experienced any-thing close to the story of Dave Ro-ever. While
most Christians may never encounter such an enormous test, there
may be some who are ex-periencing trials like they have never
experienced before. In the text that we have presented to you,
Samson is faced with a trial like he has never experienced before.
Let us look first at Samson’s Sur-vival, then Samson’s Strength,
and lastly, Samson’s Solution.
Samson’s Survival In Samson’s struggle to deliver the people of
Israel from the hold of the Philistines, he encountered many
conflicts. In each of these encoun-ters, Samson relied on his
strength and power to defeat the enemy. He used his bare hands to
rip apart a roar-ing lion and with the strength of his mighty arms
he picked up the gates of the city and carried them away. With the
jawbone of an ass (Cont. on pg. 7)
Thanks to the OBI Alumni for their kind rec-ognition of my
twenty five years working at OBI. The flowers and gift card were
greatly appreci-ated. I enjoyed my interaction with the students
and am thankful for the many lasting friendships made over the
years. I loved them all! PS “And I dare say I fed them lots of
cookies.”
I wish to thank all the alumni and the administration and
faculty and everyone who contributed to the honor given me at
convocation for my years of service at 0BI.
Edna White, OBI Librarian Gene Canter, OBI Instructor and OCM
Director
RETIREMENTS
If you have a change of address or if you desire to receive more
or fewer copies of “The Standard Bearer,” please indicate your
desire at: 417-451-2057 or: [email protected]