Biola's Board of Trustees: (I. to r.) Dr. George Peek, Dr. Ray Myers, Robert Welch, Dr. Chase, Dr. Sutherland, Dr. Lloyd Anderson, Dr. Foster Bens, John Batchelor. (Standing) Dr. Robert Crawford, Dr. Feinberg (several board members are not pictured).
proper with the necessary adora tion and praise of our Lord. It contains an earnest desire for the coming kingdom with attendant submission to the will of God. There is a petition for the mainte nance of our human bodies with a request for God's greatest gift, the forgiveness of our sins. It asks for a necessary forgiving attitude toward our fellow man. There is a prayer for safety in the midst of temptation as we seek deliverance from the power of evil and the evil one. It concludes with a great confession of faith in the ultimate triumph of the Lord. It is indeed perfect in every respect. If at times Page 55
doctor murmured the last words, the ship went completely under. He reached out for something to which he could cling. Floating by was the board to which the con fessional had been fastened. In the novel he found deliverance through prayer. It proved to be his ultimate resource. There were three things Jesus taught men about prayer. That which He gave as an instruc tion to His disciples was a model for them as well as us. This in it self is one of the greatest lessons in prayer anyone could ever re ceive. Everything we ought to use in our own praying is found in this perfect pattern. The address is
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