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7 illustrations for sermon preparation
Joseph Spurgeon Exell observes that this man may pray correctly with his lips while harboring two catastrophic beliefs: first, "I shall not be moved"—immunity from consequence; second, "God hath forgotten.
The psalmist presents a full-length portrait of the unawakened sinner, drawn by the unerring pencil of truth.
Exell's Victorian exposition identifies three characteristics of true humility before Elohim.
This declaration from Psalm 10:7 captures a foundational truth: *dikaiosyne* (righteousness) is not merely a divine attribute among many, but the quality binding all of Elohim's perfections into perfect unity.
God possesses unspeakable glory and greatness—the blessed and only Potentate sustaining all creatures and glorified in every work.
Joseph Exell's Victorian commentary illuminates a profound spiritual reality: the human mind possesses a moral obtuseness toward divine obligation that no natural intellect can overcome.
Their humility is mere theater, a calculated mask worn to deceive the vulnerable.
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