Adventures in the Far West

Robert Lee Berry
Adventures in the Land of
Canaan

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Title: Adventures in the Land of Canaan
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ADVENTURES IN THE LAND OF CANAAN
By Robert Lee Berry

FOREWORD
This book comes out of our heart. It is intended to go to the hearts of
others. Some of the things written here were learned by long and bitter
experiences. Our "Adventures" were very real, and it is our hope that
some of them our readers will never have. The real battles are fought
within, and the struggle for mastery goes on in the soul, hidden in the
mysterious depths of the spirit. Usually these battles are fought out
alone, many times when others are not aware that anything of moment
is happening.
Super-critical minds may not find this book interesting; we do not
know; we wrote with no other intention than to bless the hearts and
lives of the great common man and woman.
We hope you will enjoy this book. We hope it will do you good. If it
does, our purpose will be achieved, and we shall thank God, whose
help we gratefully acknowledge in the writing of this book.
R. L. Berry.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introductory: The Land of Canaan
1. Getting Ready to Enter Canaan
2. The Crossing of the Jordan
3. The Jordan Memorial Stone

4. Troubles of Lingering at the Crossing
5. Exploring Canaan by Faith
6. The Best Inheritance in Canaan
7. In the Hands of Giant Accuser
8. Conflicts with Giant Mistake
9. In the Dungeon of Giant Discourager
10. The Torments of Giant Bad Feelings
11. The Routing of Giant Doubt
12. The Wine of Prayer
13. Pilgrims of the Victorious Life

ADVENTURES IN THE LAND OF CANAAN

INTRODUCTORY

CHAPTER
THE LAND OF CANAAN
The story of the Israelites from their being in bondage in Egypt to their
conquering Canaan is a type of the experiences of a man from his
bondage in sin to his entire sanctification.
As a Scriptural basis for these remarks, see Galatians 3:6-29, where
Paul, the great Apostle to the Gentiles, quotes a part of the Abrahamic
covenant and applies it to Gentile Christians, the complete fulfillment
of the covenant being expressed in verse 14, where the promise of the
Spirit is spoken of as the "blessing of Abraham." It is also made plain
in this chapter that salvation in Christ makes us "Abraham's seed," and
therefore "heirs according to the promise." Hence the promise to
Abraham has its complete fulfillment in New Testament salvation.
In Romans 4, Paul again dips deep into the promise of God to Abraham
and brings forth beautiful teaching which shows that, to him, God's
promise to Abraham was spiritual as well as material, that there was to
be a spiritual seed as well as literal seed, and that "faith" is as potent as
natural birth in making men children of Abraham. Also in these verses
Abraham is made the "father of us all," even of Gentiles, which of
course could not be true except in a spiritual sense.

The same subject is treated again in chapter 4 of Hebrews. Here the
figure is "rest." The rest of the Israelites was their settling in Canaan,
and in verse 6, speaking of the fact that some did not enter rest because
of unbelief, allusion is made to the failure to enter Canaan from
Kadesh-barnea. Then ten spies brought back such a bad report that the
whole camp wept, and would not go over.
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