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2nd Corinthians Archives - B. Thomas Free Bulletin Articles https://beethomas.com/tag/2nd-corinthians/ Simple Solutions, Free Bulletin Articles and Free Website Content Tue, 16 May 2017 22:59:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 The Superman Devo https://beethomas.com/the-superman-devo/ Fri, 12 May 2017 13:30:09 +0000 http://beethomas.com/?p=1200 Superman was a mighty strong man. He could leap buildings in a single bound. He was powerful enough to stop a train. Superman was faster than a speeding bullet. Even with all that strength, if he came into contact with kryptonite, he became very weak. When he was falling down, barely able to walk, did Superman look strong? No! He was unable to do anything. None of us would say, “Wow! He’s weak and that makes him so strong!”

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This free church bulletin article was written by Brian Humek from Irving, TX. You are free to use this in church bulletins, church emails and on church websites. No credit needs to be given. Simply clicking the book link at the end of this free bulletin article will help more content to be placed on this site. Donate your own bulletin article here.

free Bulletin articlesBible Passage: 2 Corinthians 12:7-10

Superman was a mighty strong man. He could leap buildings in a single bound. He was powerful enough to stop a train. Superman was faster than a speeding bullet. Even with all that strength, if he came into contact with kryptonite, he became very weak. When he was falling down, barely able to walk, did Superman look strong? No! He was unable to do anything. None of us would say, “Wow! He’s weak and that makes him so strong!”

It’s strange that a worker for God, the apostle Paul, boasted in his weakness, his thorn of the flesh. Paul said he delighted in hardships, insults, persecutions, and difficulties. I doubt Superman said, “I delight in the kryptonite.” I’m a bit different than Paul. I really don’t like insults. I’m pretty wary of persecutions. I hardly ever embrace hardships and I distaste difficulties. What’s wrong with me? I’m surely not like Paul. He knew that God’s power is made perfect through our weaknesses.

If we never had any insults, persecutions, hardships and difficulties thrown our way, God’s power would never be made known in our lives. I understand that God wants to do good for us and how could he do good if there is never bad? Maybe I’m beginning to understand that a bit better. God is good. He wants to show us his love for us. Maybe I should sit back and enjoy his miracles, his love, and the amazing and peculiar ways he wants to help me. It won’t be easy to do, but I should try my best. By the way, did you experience any weaknesses yesterday? I did.

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People Are Nice https://beethomas.com/people-are-nice/ Thu, 24 Jul 2014 00:10:19 +0000 http://beethomas.com/?p=804 Our Bible passage today has shown me that when someone has a trouble that I’ve also experienced, I am to use my experience to help them out in any little way I can. I was able to put these verses into action the other night while hanging out at a club to hear a friend play his first one-hour set.

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This free church bulletin article was written by Brian Humek from Irving, TX. You are free to use this in church bulletins, church emails and on church websites. No credit needs to be given. Simply clicking the book on our suggested reading list will help more free content to be placed on this site. Donate your own bulletin article here.

guitarist2 Corinthians 1:3-4

Our Bible passage today has shown me that when someone has a trouble that I’ve also experienced, I am to use my experience to help them out in any little way I can. I was able to put these verses into action the other night while hanging out at a club to hear a friend play his first one-hour set. He typically plays a three song set on open mic night, but he had steadily been improving and becoming more popular at this club. He was the featured artist one evening and given 45 minutes to dazzle the crowd, which he easily did. Then just last week, he was given one hour to play. I don’t know what happened, but even this artist, who will remain nameless, admitted this wasn’t his best performance.

Honestly, I think his disappointment went a bit deeper than that. I wouldn’t call him a perfectionist, but this musician takes his craft quite seriously. You’ll one day hear him on the radio and have an opportunity to see him on a stage near you. He wants to do his best every time out. After his performance last week, almost everyone I heard speak to him said, “Nice job,” or “Great set.” My friend was dismayed by what he felt was the inauthentic nature of the comments. I tried to console him afterwards with my own stories of performing on a stage, rather badly might I add, and having people tell me afterwards how well I had done.

My performing, if you could call it that, was preaching. In preaching school, we had to go to small rural churches and preach God’s word the best we could, which at times, was not so good. But never did I have rotten vegetables thrown at me, nor did I ever have some tell me straight to my face that I bombed. As I wanted to tell my friend that evening outside the club, “Nobody goes to a show hoping to see a car wreck, nightclub stages aren’t Nascar Racetracks, simple as that.” For some reason, I didn’t say those blatantly poetic words. I probably didn’t think of them till later. But what I hope he realizes and I hope I never forget is that people are nice. They want to see the best in others. People, for the most part, do not want to see others fail, bomb, crash and burn, or whatever adjective you might use when someone simply doesn’t perform their best in any given area. People want to see success. They want to see yours and my attempts at whatever…succeed. That’s a wonderful lesson to learn when we can’t understand why people say we’ve done a good job when we really feel deep in our heart that we haven’t.

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