Posted in theology

Two important additions to the church from two years ago, presciently presented and gracefully given

By Elizabeth Prata

This morning Pastor Josh Buice (@JoshBuice) wrote on Twitter,

Two years ago today, a group of us gathered in Dallas, TX to discuss the most dangerous movement to face Christ’s Church in the last 100+ years—#SocialJustice. Big Eva leaders denied such a movement exists. Nobody is questioning it today. Statement on Social Justice & The Gospel.

I agree. Ostrich-like myopia was the order of the day, with the refusals to see what was in front of them and fervent denials of the problem’s existence. But there thankfully were some who saw what was coming and were unafraid to openly confront it. The men who gathered in Dallas to discuss the issue and formulate the Statement  were men like Buice, Justin Peters, John MacArthur, Tom Ascol, James White, Phil Johnson, Tom Buck, Darrell Harrison, Voddie Baucham, Anthony Mathenia, Craig Mitchell, Michael O’Fallon. You know the names. All good and solid men the Lord raised up. They produced a statement of affirmations and denials regarding the encroaching issues of race and social justice, and I thank God for them and the resulting Statement. It was prescient in timing. Continue reading “Two important additions to the church from two years ago, presciently presented and gracefully given”

Posted in giving, theology

On Giving Generously: Amazon Smile

By Elizabeth Prata

Do you know about Amazon Smile? You can tag your favorite charity and a small percentage of all your purchases at Amazon.com goes to that charity as a donation. It doesn’t cost you the customer anything extra. Here is the Amazon web page explaining how it works, but it’s really just that simple. The only thing you need to do is make sure when you shop at Amazon, it’s through smile.amazon.com. I have mine set up as a bookmark. Continue reading “On Giving Generously: Amazon Smile”

Posted in potpourri, theology

Prata Potpourri: Christian Mom Thoughts, Universal phenomenon of religion, Point of no return, more

By Elizabeth Prata

We are in the throes of summer, gardening, bird watching, picnics, hikes, and all the rest that comes with summer. I hope the weather is pleasant for you and your time is full of making memories and family fun. It’s also a time for festivals.

In Maine they have Windjammer days, in Alabama there’s the Secret Stages Music Discovery Festival. Colorado hosts the Scandinavian Midsummer Festival, while Georgia holds the AthFest Music and Arts Festival. Indiana has their Crawfordsville Strawberry Festival while Connecticut has their Blueberry Festival at Sweet Wind Farm. Summer festivals are fun and there is sure to be one near you. Summer is also a time for reading so here are a few essays that hopefully pique your interest! Continue reading “Prata Potpourri: Christian Mom Thoughts, Universal phenomenon of religion, Point of no return, more”

Posted in theology

Exciting news: “Open Hearts in a Closed World”, a free conference!

By Elizabeth Prata

open hearts conf

Hi Ladies, I just want to make you aware of a great opportunity. A free conference this July featuring some wonderful women of the word will be speaking in main sessions and in breakout sessions on a variety of women-oriented topics. The titles for ALL the sessions look great, they’re all things I want to know about! (Please note that the times for sessions is CENTRAL time, not Eastern Standard Time).

Open Hearts Women’s Conference is a free online women’s conference which will start at 9:30am CST, Mon July 13th – Fri July 17th. Viewing will be in IGTV, Youtube, and Facebook Live.

Main Speakers will be Continue reading “Exciting news: “Open Hearts in a Closed World”, a free conference!”

Posted in books, theology

ChristianBook is having a sale, also the Internet Archive of books

By Elizabeth Prata

ChristianBook is having a sale. Many items are up to 89% off. If you spend $35 or more, shipping is free.

There is a caveat: Christian book is littered with false teachers. Their catalog contains mainly false teachers. I took a great deal of time to find good items. But they’re there.

There are a number of John MacArthur, Sinclair Ferguson, RC Sproul, Alistair Begg books, other good authors, as well as gift items (make sure if they have a verse on them it’s not a twisted or shortened verses). I bought a gift item, PLUS:

RC Sproul – What Do Jesus’ Parables mean? (Crucial Questions series)

RC Sproul – What Can We Know About God? (Crucial Questions series)

RC Sproul – Growing in Holiness: Understanding God’s Role and Yours

John MacArthur – Sanctification: God’s Passion for His People

Alistair Begg – Crazy Lazy: A warning against laziness

Leland Ryken – Christian Guides to the Classics: Milton’s Paradise Lost

Andrew Murray – 31-Day Guide to Prayer

Watercolor Notebooks, Set of 3

And the aforementioned gift item.

I bought 11 items for $35, for an average of $3.18 apiece. Whenever you see something like 89% off, or free shipping, it’s often worth it to take advantage in order to add to your bookshelves. It takes money of course, and some time- like today with sifting through the garbage to get the gold, but building a home theological library or to own books ready to give away, can be done even on the most modest budget.

Did you know that the Internet Archive not only links to cached web pages that otherwise are unavailable to view, but they also have digitized many books? And they lend them for free. Yes, free.

I am reading the biography of Phyllis Schlafly, the woman in the 1970s who led a charge to stop the ERA, which was the Equal Rights Amendment. The Amendment was a proposal to amend the Constitution of the United States to add equality clauses for women. In the book, the biographer quoted extensively from a book Schlafly wrote in 1977 called the Power of the Positive Woman. I loved the quotes I read in the biography and got curious about the book she was quoting from. I searched for the Power of the Positive Woman in order to buy or borrow it from the library, but the book was not in any of the entire state of Georgia’s libraries, nor was it available on Amazon, ABE books, or other used bookstores. However, I found it for free on the Internet Archive!

Annotation 2020-06-15 130041

When you go to Archive.org, click at the top on BOOKS, and you’ll see the following-

You can borrow books for up to two weeks. They also offer a free, limited preview of the book you’re seeking. This will be helpful for research especially, if I want to search for something but don’t want to spend the money to buy the book but just check some details.

In the Internet Archive, there are also old radio shows, classic TV programs, and old movies you can watch. Did you ever see the pilot of The Beverly hillbillies? I just did, lol.

Anyway I hope any of this information helps. With things getting ever more expensive, anything we can find for low prices or even for free, helps. Have a wonderful day!

Posted in discernment, theology

You’re not wonderful

By Elizabeth Prata

I’m not wonderful either.

Sisters, aren’t we continually inundated with messages like, “You are a mighty warrior of God!” Or, “You are royalty, Daughter of the King!” We’re all Queen Esthers. We have royal blood flowing through our veins. We’re all Mighty Warrior Princesses.

Wonderful.

Except it’s not. Continue reading “You’re not wonderful”

Posted in theology

Toppling Statues, a Historical and a Biblical Perspective

By Elizabeth Prata

The anarchy continues. Riots, takeovers, protests. Now the lawless rioters are demanding to defund the police, dictating that Rhode Island drop the “plantations” from its full name, and toppling statues. Because, racism. The statues to which these anarchists object are Confederate statues, Christopher Columbus, or politicians.

In one case, police stood by in Portsmouth VA as rioters defaced a statue, and when they began to topple part of it, a man was hit with chunks and put into a coma.

Elsewhere, they defaced Philadelphia’s Matthias Baldwin statue, apparently ignorant of the fact that Baldwin was an abolitionist 30 years before the Civil War, advocated for freedom of blacks, advocated for them being allowed to vote, and hired them in his shops. Continue reading “Toppling Statues, a Historical and a Biblical Perspective”

Posted in encouragement, theology

My silly reluctance to read the Bible

By Elizabeth Prata

There are a lot of songs of praise to and about God in the Bible. We think of Mary’s Magnificat at Christmas time. We think of the Psalms and their exaltation of Yahweh throughout. Simeon’s song. But there are so many others.

I follow a Bible reading plan that is chronological according to when the Bible book is written. So that means Job is the first book in the plan and Revelation is the last one. I just finished reading through Ezekiel.

When I was first saved the Lord saw fit to put in me an interest in Old Testament prophets. So that meant as a babe in Christ I was weaned on Jeremiah, Nahum, Obadiah and so on. I came to understand that was something a bit different as a new Christian than the logical progression of reading John and Acts and the other 3 Gospels. But I cut my teeth on the prophets and I love them and I’m familiar with them. Continue reading “My silly reluctance to read the Bible”

Posted in prophecy, theology

Are things spinning out of control? (Answer: No)

By Elizabeth Prata*

If you read the news today it seems like everything is out of control. I mean, really.

I think every sphere in which we live; food, transportation, government, war, medicine, peace, etc. seems like it’s going wonky. Does it seem like every sphere of our lives are unraveling, undergoing pressure, or otherwise getting worse? It sure feels like things are spinning out of control.

They’re not.

I was musing on God’s orderliness. Time and time again in the Bible He shows us just how much He is in control. Everything happens in His schedule, in His timetable, in His timing, for His reasons. Nothing escapes His notice. Nothing happens unless He causes it, allows it, or oversees it and then brings it all to the Good for those who love Him.

You have to read the Bible a lot to get this broad of an overview and this much of a grounding. I can put in Bible verse after bible verse, but it wouldn’t broaden the scope enough to illustrate what I’m saying. The best thing to do is read Matthew 1-3. I’ll synopsize here.

For millennia, the People knew that there would come a Messiah to redeem them and bring them to sinless glory. They waited and they waited and they waited. It seemed like a long time was passing. And a long time was passing. But in God’s orderliness, this is how time was passing:

So all the generations from Abraham to David are fourteen generations, from David until the captivity in Babylon are fourteen generations, and from the captivity in Babylon until the Christ are fourteen generations.” (Matthew 1:17).

Orderly. Precise. Jesus arrived at the fourteenth generation of the fourteenth generation of the fourteenth generation, just as planned.

When the Magi arrived, Herod was troubled, and all Jerusalem with him. (Mt 2:3). So Herod called the priests and teachers and asked about this birth and where it was supposed to take place. They replied:

So they said to him, “In Bethlehem of Judea, for thus it is written by the prophet: ‘But you, Bethlehem, in the land of Judah, Are not the least among the rulers of Judah; For out of you shall come a Ruler Who will shepherd My people Israel.‘” (Matthew 2:5-6)

Jesus was born in Bethlehem, just as He planned. Orderly.

Herod was much troubled and he decided to kill the boy Jesus, this coming King he had heard of, by killing all the tots under the age of two. But God sent an angel to Joseph, advising him to flee to Egypt. And so another prophecy was fulfilled.

When he arose, he took the young Child and His mother by night and departed for Egypt, and was there until the death of Herod, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Lord through the prophet, saying, “Out of Egypt I called My Son.” (Matthew 3:14-15)

Herod’s massacre then happened, and so the prophecy of Jeremiah was fulfilled–

A voice was heard in Ramah, Lamentation, weeping, and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children, Refusing to be comforted, Because they are no more.” (Matthew 3:18).

God sent the People their first prophet in 400 years, a man to announce the coming kingdom and to call for repentance: John the Baptist. This was to fulfill he “who was spoken of by the prophet Isaiah, saying:

The voice of one crying in the wilderness: ‘Prepare the way of the LORD; Make His paths straight.'” (Matthew 3:3).

Orderly. He was spoken of to come, and he came.

If you take the broad view you see that all had happened just as it should. You see that it is all happening now just as it should. Though daily events seem out of control, over the long term they are actually very orderly.

As an example, you look at this Reubens painting it looks like chaos.

The mothers of the slain babies sure didn’t feel like life was orderly- it felt like it was spinning out of control. As the angel shook Joseph’s shoulder and told him to flee to Egypt, it sure must have felt like things were spinning out of control. You know how you feel when you get a 2 am phone call! It is scary at best and chaotic at worst, especially if the call brings bad news, especially if you have to run out to the police station or to the hospital.

I understand how the people of Jesus’ day would be confused, the disparate verses calling for a Bethlehem-born, lamenting Rachel, out of Egypt, Nazarene presaged by a Nazrite eating locusts and honey didn’t seem to fit together. But then, just as suddenly, they did. His prophecy is perfect and perfectly orderly.

If you feel like life is getting out of control, I understand. There’s high crime, wantonness, bloated lusts. But they too are prophesied

Tell us, when will these things be? And what will be the sign of Your coming, and of the end of the age?” And Jesus answered and said to them: “Take heed that no one deceives you. For many will come in My name, saying, ‘I am the Christ,’ and will deceive many. And you will hear of wars and rumors of wars. See that you are not troubled; for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet. For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. And there will be famines, pestilences, and earthquakes in various places. All these are the beginning of sorrows. (Matthew 24:3b-8).

All these things must come to pass. And then He will call for us, and suddenly everything we have been told for thousands of years in the twinkling of an eye will become past history.

God has everything in control. If you are saved by His grace, your soul is secure. Everything is progressing just as it should be. Nothing is out of control.

Did you know that over 100 prophecies in Daniel 11 alone were fulfilled exactly? Such Godly precision!

It is happening now in an orderly way, precisely, and perfectly. And no matter what occurs in my life, no matter how low my bank account gets, or how many rumors of reduction in force swirl past my ears, no matter how many times I have to hide in the tub with a pillow over my head from tornadoes, no matter how empty my refrigerator gets, I know He has everything in control. That knowledge is the securest place I could possibly be, and I wouldn’t trade it. I am grateful for His grace, His perfection, His plan, His love for keeping me sheltered in this wonderful knowledge.

If you would like to partake of the sweetness of His security, knowing everything is perfect in the world according to His plan, then repent of your sins. Appeal to Jesus as your savior from the wrath of God, and fling yourself on Him in sorrow for your crimes against Him. He will forgive you. And then I would be blessed to say to you, “Welcome to the family of God.”

*A version of this essay first appeared on The End Time on March 16, 2012