“Double, Double Toil and Trouble”

The title is taken from the chant of the three witches as they stir the cauldron in Act IV, Scene 1 of Shakespeare’s “Macbeth.”  The rest of the line is “Double, double, toil and trouble; Fire burn and cauldron bubble.”  I’m certainly not advocating Bill Shakespeare’s fictitious concept of witches and cauldrons producing problems in our lives, but do you ever feel as if you’ve received more than your share of difficulties?  Or to switch metaphors, that “Murphy’s Law” was written about you?  Does it seem as if anything possibly could go wrong, it does?  Then perhaps this lesson will help.

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From wherever it is taken the point is that it suits here. And For this kind of work reading must be good enough.

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Daily Verse

“[Doxology] Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out!”

- Romans 11:33

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