Welcome to Toward The Mark
A Magazine for Young Christians of All Ages
Inside This Issue:   Milk |  Meat |  Exercise |  Rest |  The Bridgeman's Son | Search the Scriptures! | PDF Version

Current Issue

Back Issues

Contact Us

 
null
null
null
audioteaching.org

null
 

Follow Me
(Click to View Article)



"Jesus saith unto him … Follow thou me".

Milk: Addresses to the Seven Churches in Asia
Part 6
(Click to View Article)



"The address to the church at Philadelphia is the most encouraging word to the soul of the seven addresses".

Meat: The Golden Preface
(Click to View Article)



"The words 'in the bosom of the Father' are to be understood as His eternal place, a place He never left, and indicate that though He took the relative place by becoming Man, nevertheless He is absolutely God.".

Exercise:
Guarded Lips
(Click to View Article)



"Perhaps we err more in this respect than in anything else. Let your speech be always with grace seasoned with salt".


Rest: The Love of Christ
(Click to View Article)



"In His deep love for you He went into the distance and darkness and depths of desolation of the cross. 'It is Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again'".

How to Maintain the Truth
(Click to View Article)


"

...the truth itself will slip away from them"

A Song and a Prayer
Click to View Article)

"...Past all Thy sorrow, now on the Throne,Thou without ceasing lovest Thine own,"

The Bridgeman's Son

Many years ago, in a small house on the bank of the Hudson River, there lived a man with his wife and his little son. He was in charge of the train bridge, a large swing bridge near their house that he had to open for big boats to pass by and close so trains could cross the river. Since he could not leave his post during the day, his wife would carry his lunch over the bridge to him.

One day, however, his wife could not make the trip to the little house on the other side of the bridge where he sat at the controls, so mother asked the little boy if he thought he was big enough to take Daddy’s lunch to him. He felt very honored to be asked to do this job alone. He assured his mother that he would be very careful and do a good job, so she kissed him and sent him on his way.

As he approached the big bridge, he felt a little unsure, but seeing where his father was at the other end gave him fresh courage. Carrying the lunch basket, which was almost as big as himself, he slowly made his way down the tracks. His father, realizing it was now approaching noon-time looked out the window, He was happy to see how big his little boy was getting, and lovingly watched him take his small, careful steps. On and on the little boy trudged, looking only straight ahead, when to the father’s horror a train whistled for the bridge. The signal down the tracks let the train know that the bridge was already closed, so it did not slow down. The father quickly realized that his son was in the very middle of the bridge, and would have no chance to escape the oncoming train. As the train came into view, the father thought that he could save his son by opening the bridge-but that would cost the lives of all those on the train. Bravely, he held the bridge closed, and the speeding train made it safely to the other side.

The people on the train were saved, but at the great cost of the Bridgeman’s son. Saving those people cost the father his only son, and it cost the son his life. Just like the Bridgeman in the story, God "spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all" (Romans 8:32).In His great love for us, God chose to give "His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life" (John 3:16). When God saw our terrible, lost condition brought on because of sin, He (the righteous Judge) knew the sentence of everlasting punishment that was ahead of us. He also knew the one way for us to be saved from that judgment, so He sent His only Son to become our Savior. Jesus, by suffering sin’s judgment-in our place-on the cross of Calvary, has provided salvation and pardon for all who will accept it. Consider the cost paid by the Father and the Son to offer salvation to you. There is no need for you to bear your burden of sin any longer, nor face its required punishment of separation from God in the torment of eternal hell (Revelation 20:15). Jesus paid the price for you; all you need to do is trust Him today as your Savior.

Search the Scriptures
(Click to View Article)

  1. What king was famous for having an enormous iron bed?
  2. Who were the two army captains that murdered their king as a favour to David and were then executed by David for treachery?
  3. Where was Paul when an angel assured him that he would be brought before Caesar?
Give us your feedback: Click Here.