Thursday, September 18, 2008


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Power of the Blood excerpt , different than what I have posted please find here by Bob Sorge .

I purchase this on line as an ebook and then ordered the actual book as well, when I discovered the rich treasures revealing the Heart of God Himself.
It is a worthy read deserving of meditation, and you will find His Presence accompanying the revelation of truth that Bob Sorge is bringing.

This is from the first chapter.

If you want to know what God feels most strongly about, talk to Him about His highest joys and deepest sorrows.
I am persuaded there is nothing God feels more strongly about than the cross of His Son.

While God has known many sorrows (Isaiah 53:3), there was one that eclipsed all others. Never has anything torn and lacerated the infinite depths of God’s heart as deeply and severely as the crucifixion of His beloved Son.

And He’ll never forget.

Look at His cross and all you see is blood. Blood on His scalp, blood on His face, blood on His neck, blood on His shoulders, blood on His arms, blood on His hands, blood on His back, blood on His chest, blood on His legs, blood on His feet, blood on His cross, blood on the ground.

It was a spectacle of blood.

And then came waves of divine wrath as the deeply offended God unleashed upon His Spotless One the punishment for our sins. As the Son endured the barrage of fiery indignation, creation itself turned dark at noonday because of the terror.

None of us knows just how astronomical the pain of God was during those interminable hours of what Thomas Dubay calls, “consummate splendor in monstrous horror.”

It’s because of the intensity of the suffering of the Trinity during the crucifixion that that event stands out, far and above all others, as God’s most memorable event ever.

Because of the pain He and His Son endured, God has deeper convictions and stronger opinions about Calvary and what it accomplished than virtually any other topic.

Jesus’ Abandonment Left God Undone

During His crucifixion, Jesus had dove’s eyes for His Father. By that I mean He had eyes for His Father only.
(Doves have no peripheral vision.) Jesus’ preoccupation with His Father during His suffering is revealed in the way He directed four of His seven cross utterances to His Father.

more another time.

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