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Dealing with Failed Leadership

Posted May 08, 2010 by Adrian Ebens in Newsletters
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Dealing With Failed Leadership

This is an extremely challenging question for all of us at some time and many of us at the present time. What lessons can we learn from the life of Abraham in dealing with this question.

I invite you to read the following article on this subject

Dealing with Failed Agencies (Now found in book Divine pattern)

The Return of Elijah

The Return of Elijah Manuscript is almost completely available to registered members.

CLICK HERE to access it.


For those who cling to the notion that the term Begotten only applies to Christ in the incarnation please consider the following

Before the foundations of the world were laid, Christ, the Only Begotten of God, pledged Himself to become the Redeemer of the human race, should Adam sin. Adam fell, and He who was partaker of the Father's glory before the world was, laid aside His royal robe and kingly crown, and stepped down from His high authority to become a Babe in Bethlehem, that by passing over the ground where Adam stumbled and fell, He might redeem fallen human beings. He subjected Himself to all the temptations that the enemy brings against men and women; and all the assaults of Satan could not make Him swerve from His loyalty to the Father. By living a sinless life He testified that every son and daughter of Adam can resist the temptations of the one who first brought sin into the world.

Christ brought men and women power to overcome. He came to this world in human form, to live a man amongst men. He assumed the liabilities of human nature, to be proved and tried. In His humanity He was a partaker of the divine nature. In His incarnation He gained in a new sense the title of the Son of God. Said the angel to Mary, "The power of the Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God" (Luke 1:35). While the Son of a human being, He became the Son of God in a new sense. Thus He stood in our world--the Son of God, yet allied by birth to the human race.  1SM 226