This is very good.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Carleeta Manser 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, February 22, 2009 4:24 AM
  Subject: {dbilg} Joseph Honored the Creator


  Joseph Honored the Creator 

  The king . . . made him master of his household, ruler over all he
  possessed, to discipline his princes as he pleased and teach his elders
  wisdom. Ps. 105:20-22, NIV. 

  >From the dungeon Joseph was exalted to be ruler over all the land of Egypt.
  It was a position of high honor, yet it was beset with difficulty and peril.
  One cannot stand upon a lofty height without danger. As the tempest leaves
  unharmed the lowly flower of the valley, while it uproots the stately tree
  upon the mountaintop, so those who have maintained their integrity in humble
  life may be dragged down to the pit by the temptations that assail worldly
  success and honor. But Joseph's character bore the test alike of adversity
  and prosperity. The same fidelity to God was manifest when he stood in the
  palace of the Pharaohs as when in a prisoner's cell. He was still a stranger
  in a heathen land, separated from his kindred, the worshipers of God; but he
  fully believed that the divine hand had directed his steps, and in constant
  reliance upon God he faithfully discharged the duties of his position.  . .


  In his early years he had consulted duty rather than inclination; and the
  integrity, the simple trust, the noble nature, of the youth bore fruit in
  the deeds of the man. A pure and simple life had favored the vigorous
  development of both physical and intellectual powers. Communion with God
  through His works and the contemplation of the grand truths entrusted to the
  inheritors of faith had elevated and ennobled his spiritual nature,
  broadening and strengthening the mind as no other study could do. Faithful
  attention to duty in every station, from the lowliest to the most exalted,
  had been training every power for its highest service. He who lives in
  accordance with the Creator's will is securing to himself the truest and
  noblest development of character. . . . 

  There are few who realize the influence of the little things of life upon
  the development of character. Nothing with which we have to do is really
  small. The varied circumstances that we meet day by day are designed to test
  our faithfulness and to qualify us for greater trusts. By adherence to
  principle in the transactions of ordinary life, the mind becomes accustomed
  to hold the claims of duty above those of pleasure and inclination
  (Patriarchs and Prophets, pp. 222, 223). 

  As a shield from temptation and an inspiration to purity and truth, no other
  influence can equal the sense of God's presence. "All things are naked and
  opened unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do." He is "of purer eyes
  than to behold evil, and canst not look on iniquity." This thought was
  Joseph's shield amidst the corruptions of Egypt. To the allurements of
  temptation his answer was steadfast: "How . . . can I do this great
  wickedness, and sin against God?" Such a shield, faith, if cherished, will
  bring to every soul (Education, p. 255). 

  >From Lift Him Up - Page 63


  

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