Turning Point; David Jeremiah – Pulling Others Up

 

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And immediately Jesus stretched out His hand and caught him.
Matthew 14:31

Recommended Reading: Matthew 14:22-33

Logan Hayes was stuck in traffic on Interstate 95 when he noticed a vehicle sinking in a nearby pond. He leaped from his car and jumped in the water. A panicked woman was stuck in the front seat. Logan pulled her out and swam her fifty feet to shore. The woman was pregnant, and hours after the rescue she gave birth to a healthy baby girl. One unselfish act, two lives saved!1

It’s important to keep our eyes open for drowning people. They may be drowning in debt, drowning in sorrow, or drowning in sin. When Peter was sinking beneath the waves, Jesus reached down and pulled him up. Later Peter stretched out his hand to a lame man, pulled him to his feet, and the man began walking and leaping and praising God (Acts 3:7-8).

The same Jesus who knew how to pull Peter from the overwhelming waves can empower us to pull people from their bad places in life. As we attempt to live our lives as Christ did, we have the responsibility of looking out for the interests of others. Ask Him to show you ways to pull others up.

The Bible teaches that we have a Christian duty to help our neighbors in their time of need. We are called by God to bring the water of life for both soul and body.
Billy Graham

  1. “Good Samaritan Rescues Pregnant Woman From Sinking Car in Florida,” 6ABC Action News, February 10, 2026.

 

 

 

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Our Daily Bread – Team Effort in Christ

 

Pity anyone who falls and has no one to help them up. Ecclesiastes 4:10

Today’s Scripture

Ecclesiastes 4:9-12

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In 1869, construction began on the Brooklyn Bridge in New York City. Soon after work commenced, chief engineer Washington Roebling became very ill. His wife, Emily, pitched in to help. She studied his plans, revised specifications, and gave instructions to his assistants. Emily assisted her husband in any way she could, and when the bridge opened in 1883, she rode in the first carriage across it. Her husband praised her “remarkable talent” and “her thorough knowledge of the work and plans.”

Such teamwork is beautiful and the secret to the most meaningful work of our lives. Solomon explained the basis of teamwork in Ecclesiastes: “Two are better than one, because they have a good return for their labor: if either of them falls down, one can help the other up” (4:9-10). And Paul said we should view teamwork as a key to the work of the church: “There are many parts, but one body” (1 Corinthians 12:20). He further explained that there should be “no division in the body” (v. 25) as everyone serves together, caring for each other.

In our work, our family, or in the life of the church, none of us are in this alone. We need each other when someone falters, and we need each other as we combine our talents. Teamwork is vital as we set out to accomplish what God wants us to do.

Reflect & Pray

In what ways can you team up with others to do God’s work? How have you been helped by a teammate in serving Christ?

Thank You, dear God, for guiding me to work together with others. Please help me to be the kind of helper others can depend on.

Today’s Insights

Ecclesiastes may seem like little more than a string of musings from an embittered sage. Any coherent message we do find is steeped in futility. Chapter 4 is typical as the philosopher surveys “toil and all achievement” (v. 4) through a bleak, earthbound lens. “There was a man all alone,” he says. “There was no end to his toil, yet his eyes were not content with his wealth” (v. 8). When we live for ourselves, contentment eludes us. The writer provides hope, however: “Two are better than one” (v. 9), and “a cord of three strands is not quickly broken” (v. 12). Left to ourselves, our human pursuits are truly in vain. God intended for us to live in community, interdependent on each other. Most of all, He wants us to live with Him at the center of our lives (see 12:1, 13-14). In Him, toil becomes teamwork as He helps us accomplish what He wants us to do.

For further study, read Should We Be the Acts 2 Church?.

 

 

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Denison Forum – Supreme Court rules on transgender athletes in girls’ sports

 

The US Supreme Court handed down a ruling Tuesday rejecting President Trump’s bid to end birthright citizenship and another upholding state restrictions on transgender athletes. The latter was good news to me since I am the grandfather of a school-age granddaughter.

However, the Court’s ruling on transgender athletes does not end the controversy. The justices determined that states can constitutionally ban biological boys from girls’ sports teams, not that they must. Now, as with the Dobbs decision on abortion, the conflict returns to the states. At present, twenty-seven states limit school sports for women and girls to athletes whose biological sex is female. In the remaining states, biological girls have no such protections.

As our nation nears its 250th birthday, this issue points to a factor that was foundational to our founding and remains vital to our future.

“Our Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor”

I was privileged recently to visit the National Archives in Washington, DC, where I stood before the original Declaration of Independence. Its writing was difficult to read in some places and impossible in others due to the parchment’s circuitous and sometimes perilous journey to its present location. As a result, I could make out John Hancock’s iconic, oversized signature, but many of the other names have faded over time.

Continue reading Denison Forum – Supreme Court rules on transgender athletes in girls’ sports

Harvest Ministries; Greg Laurie – Original Condition

 

 Restore us, O LORD God of hosts; Cause Your face to shine, And we shall be saved! 

—Psalm 80:19

Scripture:

Before we get too deep in our discussion of revival in our country, we should probably define the term. What is revival exactly? Too often believers mystify the word without understanding its true meaning. Revival is simply another word for “refreshment” or “restoration.”

A psalmist wrote, “Won’t you revive us again, so your people can rejoice in you?” (Psalm 85:6 NLT). Another psalm says, “Restore us, O Lord God of hosts; Cause Your face to shine, And we shall be saved!” (Psalm 80:19 NKJV). Revival carries with it the idea of returning something to its original condition.

Think of someone who buys a beat-up old car from a junkyard. They do bodywork on it. They repaint it. They drop a new engine in it. They put new tires on it. And when you see it cruising down the road, you can hardly believe it’s the same car. That’s called a restoration.

Think of a plant that’s beginning to wither. You give it some water and take it out into the sunshine, and it comes back to life again. Think of the fatigue you experience when you work out in the hot sun all day. Then think of the feeling you experience when you come inside an air-conditioned house and drink some cool water. Revival is the spiritual equivalent of that kind of restoration and refreshment.

A spiritual revival is when God’s people come back to life again because they’ve been refreshed. They’ve been refilled. They’ve been restored to their original condition.

The United States experienced a remarkable revival a few decades before the Declaration of Independence was signed. The impact of that revival reverberated powerfully in the founding of our nation. Being restored to that original condition could look like many different things in our country. Noah Webster, often referred as the Father of American Scholarship and Education, offered a starting point when he said, “The moral principles and precepts contained in the Scriptures ought to form the basis of all our civil constitutions and laws. . . . All the miseries and evils which men suffer from vice, crime, ambition, injustice, oppression, slavery and war, proceed from their despising or neglecting the precepts contained in the Bible.”

For the church, which is the spiritual center of our nation, being restored to the original condition would resemble the description of Paul and Silas found in Acts 17:6: “These who have turned the world upside down” (NKJV). The church is meant to impact the world, not be impacted by it. It’s meant to disrupt the status quo and not to settle for it. The church is meant to shine a light on the darkness of this world and not to ignore it or make excuses for it.

Revival encourages us to embrace the full extent of our God-given potential. It compels us to do the hard work to become the best possible versions of ourselves—as individuals, as a church, and as a nation.

 

Reflection question: What would a spiritual refreshing or restoration look like in your life? Discuss this with believers like you on Harvest Discipleship!

 

 

 

Harvest.org | Greg Laurie

Days of Praise – No Complaints

 

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“And when the people complained, it displeased the LORD: and the LORD heard it; and his anger was kindled; and the fire of the LORD burnt among them, and consumed them that were in the uttermost parts of the camp.” (Numbers 11:1)

The Lord is not pleased when we complain about our circumstances, no matter how grievous they may seem to us. Our example is Christ, always. “For even hereunto were ye called: because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that ye should follow his steps” (1 Peter 2:21).

The children of Israel complained once too much. Forgetting all of God’s blessings in miraculously freeing them from slavery and providing for all their needs, they repeatedly complained about their lot, one thing after another. “But with many of them God was not well pleased: for they were overthrown in the wilderness. Now these things were our examples, to the intent that we should not lust after evil things, as they also lusted. . . . Neither murmur ye, as some of them also murmured, and were destroyed of the destroyer” (1 Corinthians 10:5–6, 10).

God may not deal with a complaining Christian as severely as He did with His chosen people, Israel, but we can be sure He is displeased when we, who have received the blessing of eternal salvation by His gracious gift through Christ, forget His benefits and complain about His testing. “Do all things without mumurings and disputings,” He has commanded (Philippians 2:14)—that is, without complaining and arguing about our treatment.

We can be confident that He allows these difficulties for some good purpose in preparing us for our service for Him in eternity. We should not forget what happened to the complainers in ancient Israel. “Now all these things happened unto them for examples: and they are written for our admonition” (1 Corinthians 10:11). HMM

 

 

 

https://www.icr.org/articles/type/6

Joyce Meyer – Take Time for God

 

. But those who wait for the Lord [who expect, look for, and hope in Him] shall change and renew their strength and power; they shall lift their wings and mount up [close to God] as eagles [mount up to the sun]; they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint or become tired.

Isaiah 40:31 (AMPC)

We live in a time-crunched world, and just about everything we do seems urgent. The enemy has been extremely successful in his scheme to keep people from praying and spending time in the Word by keeping us so terribly busy. We live under incredible pressure and run from one thing to the next—to the point that we often neglect the things that are really important in life: God, family and other relationships, our health, and building up our spiritual lives.

Then we get more and more stressed out—and the only way to deal with that and get life back in order is to get with God and listen to what He says to us. It’s true; we really cannot handle life apart from Him. We cannot handle the pressure, confusion, and stress without Him. Our marriages will suffer, our children will suffer, our finances will get messed up, and our relationships won’t thrive if we do not spend time in the Word and in prayer.

God will strengthen us and enable us to handle life peacefully and wisely if we start praying about things instead of merely trying to get through the day. When we take time with God and listen to His voice, He renews our strength and enables us to handle life without growing weary. But we have to start by using the time we have wisely and always putting God first.

Prayer of the Day: God, help me slow down and spend time with You. Teach me to put You first and trust You to strengthen me each day, amen.

 

 

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Max Lucado – A New Chapter for Life 

 

Play

The anxious heart says, “There’s trouble out there!” So you don’t sleep well, you don’t laugh often, misfortune lurks…it’s just a matter of time. As a result, you’re anxious.

How can this be? Our cars are safer than ever. We regulate food and water and electricity. Yet if worry were an Olympic event, we’d win the gold medal. Keep in mind anxiety is not a sin; it’s an emotion. It can, however, lead to sinful behavior.  When we numb our fears with six-packs or food binges, or when we peddle our fears to anyone who’ll buy them, we’re sinning.

Jesus gave this word: “Be careful, or your hearts will be weighed down with…the anxieties of life.” (Luke 21:34 NIV). God made you for more than a life of angst and mind-splitting worry. He has a new chapter for your life, and he is ready to write it.

 

 

 

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Today in the Word – Moody Bible Institute – Keys to Blessedness

 

Read Matthew 5:5–8

What does it mean to be meek? Campus minister Derek Rishmawy asserts: “We don’t understand the virtue of meekness and tend to think it indicates weakness. Meekness is a gentleness that restrains us from anger. Meekness is not something we can achieve in our own earthly strength. It is something only Jesus can give.”

The “meek” or gentle are the third group of people named as blessed or happy in the Beatitudes (v. 5; Ps. 37:11). The blessings in the Beatitudes, including meekness, are blessings we can and should pray for; they are also qualities or virtues to which we should aspire. Commentator Frederick Dale Bruner describes the meek as “those who make no claims for themselves before God or before other people.” Surprisingly, for reasons similar to those implied in verse 3, they will “inherit the earth,” despite not being aggressive or ambitious. The earth is the Lord’s to do with as He chooses.

The fourth group are people who “hunger and thirst for righteousness” (v. 6). They are in fact starving for righteousness. They desire to be utterly free from the power of sin and completely conformed to the image of Christ (Rom. 8:29). These people will be “filled” or satisfied, which can only happen through the work of our righteous God.

The fifth group who are blessed or happy are the “merciful” (v. 7). Augustine interpreted this quality specifically as coming to the aid of the poor and needy. Appropriately, they themselves “will be shown mercy.”

The sixth group are the “pure in heart” (v. 8). According to D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones in Studies in the Sermon on the Mount, this phrase means genuine, sincere, and single-minded in one’s devotion to God. Such people “will see God,” an incredible blessing and promise.

Go Deeper

Identify one of the qualities or virtues mentioned in the Beatitudes where you desire to grow. Why are most of these attributes not valued in the eyes of the world?

Pray with Us

Lord, the qualities Jesus teaches in the Sermon on the Mount come directly from You. Whether we need more meekness, mercy, righteousness, or purity of heart, will You help us grow in these areas?

Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God.Matthew 5:8

 

 

 

https://www.moodybible.org/

Turning Point; David Jeremiah – Your Strength, Lord!

 

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He is able to aid those who are tempted.
Hebrews 2:18

Recommended Reading: Psalm 27:1-5

What’s the strongest animal on earth? African elephants, which are also the largest land animals. Much of their strength is concentrated in their trunks, which have more than forty thousand muscles. Think of that! Forty thousand muscles just in their trunks! Humans only have six hundred muscles in their entire bodies. These massive animals can carry more than six tons, knock down mature trees, and lift more than six hundred pounds with their trunks. But their trunks are also very gentle and can pick up a single blade of grass. The useful appendage also serves as a snorkel when the creatures swim underwater.

God has built incredible strength into His creation—the power of the atom, the explosion of volcanos, and the measureless energy of the sun. Our God possesses endless energy, which is never depleted or exhausted. We say He is omnipotent—all powerful.

His limitless strength is available to us when we’re tempted or tested. Hebrews 2:18 says, “He is able to aid those who are tempted.” When you feel yourself being tempted or tested, try praying: Your strength, Lord! A simple prayer for help, sincerely offered, avails much!

To be tempted is in itself no sin. It is the yielding to the temptation…which we must fear.
J. C. Ryle

 

 

 

https://www.davidjeremiah.org

Our Daily Bread – Remaining in Jesus

 

Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood remains in me, and I in them. John 6:56

Today’s Scripture

Luke 22:14-23

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Today’s Devotion

“A pleasure is full grown only when it is remembered.” These words, uttered by a character in C. S. Lewis’ book Out of the Silent Planet, depict the joy one has in reminiscing over cherished experiences in life. Though we rightly delight in the breathtaking scenery along the path of a hike or in sharing an important milestone with a loved one, what we feel might be merely the initial pleasure. Often, later reflection on such moments (and those like them) compound the joy of having experienced them.

Perhaps this is another reason Jesus instructs His disciples to regularly share in what we call the Lord’s Supper. As He shared the Passover meal with them the night before His death, He infused it with a new layer of meaning. When partaking of the unleavened bread and “fruit of the vine,” Jesus described them as representing His body and His blood (Luke 22:19-20). His disciples were to share this meal regularly, doing so “in remembrance of [Him]” (v. 19).

The Jewish people remember how God delivered them from Egypt through celebrating Passover (see Exodus 12:17). Those who trust in Jesus’ sacrifice retell God’s deliverance from the consequences of sin by partaking of the Lord’s Supper—a somber, yet joyful remembrance. By sharing in it regularly, we practice what it means to “remain” in fellowship with Jesus (see John 6:56) and savor the pleasure of our communion with Him.

Reflect & Pray

How is remembering important in your worship of God? What might you remember about His work in your life today?

Please help me, dear Father, to remember Your good works!

Today’s Insights

God commanded the Jews to observe the Passover to remind them how the blood of the lamb saved them from death. The Passover, a family meal, commemorated their new beginning as God’s redeemed people (Exodus 12). Jesus gave the bread and wine new meaning when He celebrated the Passover with His disciples before going to the cross (Luke 22:15-20). He instituted a new remembrance meal—the Lord’s Supper or Communion—as a reminder that He’s “the Lamb of God” (John 1:29), “our Passover lamb” (1 Corinthians 5:7), who was sacrificed to take away our sins. In 1 Corinthians 11, Paul writes of the Lord’s Supper in a worship setting, instructing us to celebrate it “in remembrance of [Him]” (v. 25): “Whenever you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes” (v. 26). Celebrating Communion is an act of worship where we remember His sacrifice for us.

 

 

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Denison Forum – A win and three losses for President Trump at Supreme Court

 

The US Supreme Court on Monday upheld presidential authority over commissioners on regulatory agencies. However, it blocked President Trump’s attempt to remove Lisa Cook from the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. It ruled against his party by upholding state laws that count mailed ballots if they are postmarked by election day but received after. And it rejected the president’s request to throw out a jury’s finding that he sexually abused the writer E. Jean Carroll in the mid-1990s and later defamed her.

My purpose in referencing this news has nothing to do with the merits of these cases or the lack thereof. Rather, it is to identify one of the many ways America’s founding was unique among the nations of the world, a factor that is especially relevant and urgent today.

“A government of laws, not of men”

Two hundred and fifty years ago, monarchs, sultans, and autocrats ruled their nations. The idea that a court of nine unelected people could overrule the leader of the country was a foreign concept.

Continue reading Denison Forum – A win and three losses for President Trump at Supreme Court

Harvest Ministries; Greg Laurie – An Urgent Wake-Up Call

 

 This is all the more urgent, for you know how late it is; time is running out. Wake up, for our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed. The night is almost gone; the day of salvation will soon be here. So remove your dark deeds like dirty clothes, and put on the shining armor of right living. 

—Romans 13:11–12

Scripture:

This month, we celebrate the 250th anniversary of the founding of our nation. And this month’s devotions will tie into that celebration. They will also tie into our nation’s greatest need at the quarter-millennium mark in our history: the need for revival.

Let me start with a few questions. Think of the last time you got a phone call in the middle of the night. Did the person begin the conversation with the question, “Did I wake you?” If so, did you have the urge to say, “No, I was already awake”?

Sometimes when I watch television with my wife, she will pick a show that I don’t find very interesting, like some British baking show. And before long, I’ll fall asleep. And when I open my eyes, I’ll find my wife staring at me. “You were sleeping,” she’ll say. And my first instinct is to say, “No, I wasn’t,” even though I woke myself up with my own snoring.

What is it about human nature that causes us to deny that we’re sleeping? Maybe we see tiredness as a weakness. Maybe we’re reluctant to admit that we’re not bright-eyed, bushy-tailed, and fully alert every second of the day.

It’s one thing to be physically asleep and not own up to it. It’s quite another thing to be spiritually asleep and deny it—and not just for an individual believer. A nation can be spiritually asleep, and I think that’s the condition the United States finds itself in right now.

This week we will celebrate the grace that God has shed on our country. We will recount the many blessings He has bestowed on us over the past 250 years. Our celebrations will be marked by loud music and fireworks. Yet even then, we will go on spiritually sleeping.

So as the Fourth of July approaches this year, I will be praying for a revival for our nation. And revival begins with a spiritual awakening—a profound awareness of our distance from God and our need to close that distance.

I will be praying for a sense of spiritual urgency among God’s people. The apostle Paul wrote to the believers in Rome, “This is all the more urgent, for you know how late it is; time is running out. Wake up, for our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed. The night is almost gone; the day of salvation will soon be here. So remove your dark deeds like dirty clothes, and put on the shining armor of right living” (Romans 13:11–12 NLT).

It’s time to sound the alarm. The time for revival has come.

 

Reflection question: How can you be a “spiritual alarm clock” to the people God has placed around you? Discuss this with believers like you on Harvest Discipleship!

 

 

 

Harvest.org | Greg Laurie

Days of Praise – The Reverend God

 

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“He sent redemption unto his people: he hath commanded his covenant for ever: holy and reverend is his name.” (Psalm 111:9)

It is most interesting that the adjective “reverend” is used only this once in the entire King James Bible. And there it applies to God, not to any man!

However, the Hebrew word so translated in this verse (yare) occurs therein frequently, usually being translated (some 30 times) as “terrible.” The first time it is applied to God was by Moses. “Thou shalt not be affrighted at them: for the LORD thy God is among you, a mighty God and terrible” (Deuteronomy 7:21). Note also Moses’ testimony in Deuteronomy 10:17: “For the LORD your God is God of gods, and Lord of lords, a great God, a mighty, and a terrible, which regardeth not persons, nor taketh reward.”

For those who would deny or oppose Him, “it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God” (Hebrews 10:31). But God is also uniquely a God of love. He is a merciful and forgiving God; He is “the God of all grace” (1 Peter 5:10) and of many other wonderful attributes.

“He looketh upon all the inhabitants of the earth” (God is thus omnipresent). “He fashioneth their hearts alike” (He is omnipotent). “He considereth all their works” (He is omniscient) (Psalm 33:14–15).

“In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth” (Genesis 1:1). If a person truly believes the first verse of the Bible, he should be able to believe all other verses in the Bible, no matter what men or devils can say to the contrary. Our God, who has also become our Redeemer and Savior, is “eternal, immortal, invisible, the only wise God” (1 Timothy 1:17).

He is indeed a God of many attributes. HMM

 

 

 

https://www.icr.org/articles/type/6

Joyce Meyer – Compassion in Action

 

Whoever stops his ears at the cry of the poor will cry out himself and not be heard.

Proverbs 21:13 (AMPC)

When you help the poor, you are giving to God, and He repays you (Proverbs 19:17). I often think about the people who are homeless and what it must be like to live on the streets in winter, perhaps covered with only a cardboard box. I think of hungry children and people who are always under financial strain. I not only pray for them, but I pray for God to send someone in need across my path so I can help them.

Make sure the church or ministry organizations you donate to financially use a portion of the money they receive to help the poor. Our religion is in vain if all we do is sit in church each week and then do nothing to help anyone. James 1:27 says that religion that is pure and undefiled is to visit, help, and care for orphans and widows in their affliction.

Simply feeling sorry for the poor is not enough. We need to be “moved with compassion,” as Jesus was (Matthew 14:14 NKJV). The more you help others, the happier you will be.

Prayer of the Day: God, help me see people the way You do. Show me how to love others with compassion, generosity, and kindness every day, amen.

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http://www.joycemeyer.org

Max Lucado – No Exemption for Anxiety 

 

Play

Anxiety is a meteor shower of what-ifs.  The sky is falling, and it’s falling disproportionately on you.  Anxiety ain’t fun!

One would think Christians would be exempt from anxiety.  But we are not.  It’s enough to make us wonder if the apostle Paul was out of touch with reality when he wrote in Philippians 4:6, “Be anxious for nothing.”  Is that what he meant?  Not exactly.  He wrote the phrase in the present active tense—implying an ongoing state.  As if to say, “Don’t let anything in life leave you perpetually breathless and in angst.”

The presence of anxiety is unavoidable, but the prison of anxiety is optional. Could you use some calm? Of course you could.  We all could.  We all could use a word of comfort. And God is ready to give it.

 

 

 

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Today in the Word – Moody Bible Institute – A Sermon from Jesus

 

Read Matthew 5:1–4

As told by Timothy R. Gaines in Walking the Theological Life, studying the Sermon on the Mount transformed the life of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Previously, Bonhoeffer had earned multiple degrees in theology, but he hadn’t yet become a Christian. Encountering the Sermon on the Mount, however, was “a revolutionary encounter that moved his faith from one of knowing about the kingdom Jesus was establishing to being caught up within it.”

As we study the Sermon on the Mount, we hope it will transform your life as well! Did Jesus preach from a podium? No. Unlike most pastors today, Jewish rabbis typically sat down to teach (vv. 1–2). Tradition says this discourse was given from a site overlooking the Sea of Galilee.

The Beatitudes with which Jesus begins are statements of blessing or happiness. These are not true for all people but are specifically referring to followers of Christ. These declarations are simple, profound, beautiful, and memorable. Collectively, they describe how we should live as we await His return.

The first group of people who are named as blessed or happy are the “poor in spirit,” that is, those who are humble (v. 3; see Phil. 2:5–8). As opposed to the proud, they know they need God’s help. Unexpectedly—because they are not rich, powerful, or important in worldly terms—they will be given the kingdom of heaven. This highlights the fact that the kingdom is a gift, not earned or deserved.

The second group who are named as blessed or happy are “those who mourn” or are “brokenhearted” (v. 4). This description covers people who are grieving or troubled. Thankfully, “they will be comforted,” ultimately by God (Rev. 21:4). After all, Jesus Himself was “a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief” (Isa. 53:3 ESV).

Go Deeper

What is the “kingdom of heaven” or “kingdom of God” in Scripture? What does it look like in the present? What will it look like in the future?

Pray with Us

Dear Father, please reveal Yourself to us in a new way as we study the Sermon on the Mount. Please transform our lives as we await Your return, and convict us where needed. We love Your Word!

He began to teach them.Matthew 5:2

 

 

 

https://www.moodybible.org/

Turning Point; David Jeremiah – Speech Lessons

 

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Let your speech always be with grace, seasoned with salt, that you may know how you ought to answer each one.
Colossians 4:6

Recommended Reading: Ephesians 4:29-30

It has been said that people don’t care how much we know until they know how much we care. Whether we are talking to fellow believers or to non-believers, the way we speak has a lot to do with how others hear us.

First, our speech must be courteous—or in Paul’s words, “always be with grace.” Graceful speech is kind, gentle, helpful, and edifying. Think of God’s grace toward you and let your speech be the same. Second, our speech must be compelling—that is, “seasoned with salt.” We salt our food because it makes the taste appealing; the right amount of salt makes us want to eat more. Our speech should make our listener want to hear more. Third, our speech must be compassionate—we should “know how to answer each one.” That is, we must be able to read the room, to know what another person needs to hear. The Holy Spirit will enable us to meet others’ needs if we follow His lead.

We must know what to say (1 Peter 3:15); equally important is knowing how to say it.

We have all felt the brazenness of words without emotion, the hollowness, the unaccountable unpersuasiveness, of eloquence behind which lies no love. 
Henry Drummond

 

 

 

https://www.davidjeremiah.org

Our Daily Bread – Praying to Grow

 

Neither the one who plants nor the one who waters is anything, but only God. 1 Corinthians 3:7

Today’s Scripture

1 Corinthians 3:1-9

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Today’s Devotion

After Lam Wai Chan moved from his native Singapore to pastor a church in Japan, he panicked. The church had barely twenty members. In a nation known as a “missionary graveyard,” where about one percent of the nation’s people are Christian and many churches sit empty, Lam felt “like I was taking over a sinking ship.” Crying out to God, he sensed the answer: Offer the church back to Me.

Rather than “update” worship or music, Wai Chan asked members to pray—for their needs, family members, and friends who didn’t know Jesus. Slowly, the church doubled in size.

Their faithful praying is a living, biblical model of how to build a community in Jesus. First, pray. “In every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving,” Paul wrote, “present your requests to God,” and do all of this without worry about anything (Philippians 4:6). In this way, we offer our ministries, churches, and programs back to God. We may plant seeds and water them, but as the apostle said, “Neither the one who plants nor the one who waters is anything, but only God, who makes things grow” (1 Corinthians 3:7). He was imploring believers at Corinth to stop quarrelling about which church leader they followed (vv. 3-6).

As Paul said, “No one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ” (v. 11). Let’s prayerfully give our churches back to Him. Then, watch them grow.

Reflect & Pray

What tests your work to build a community in Christ? How can you give the effort back to God?

Dear God, as I stay faithful, please build Your community.

Today’s Insights

The Corinthian church was plagued by a partisan spirit that threatened to divide it. Each group exalted their favorite teacher over the other teachers (1 Corinthians 1:10-17). Paul warned that leaders like himself were merely God’s servants whom God had assigned specific tasks to help build up the community (3:5). He stressed that it’s God who makes the church grow (vv. 6-7). It doesn’t matter which tasks we’ve been assigned—“what’s important is that God makes the seed grow” (v. 7 nlt). Those entrusted to build up God’s people are “servants of Christ,” and all servants “must prove faithful” (4:1-2). As “co-workers in God’s service” (3:9), God will help us be faithful in building up each other. As we persevere through prayer, He’ll grow His church and reward His faithful servants “for their own hard work” (v. 8 nlt).

What comes to mind when you think about church? Watch this video to learn more about the world’s perception of church.

 

 

http://www.odb.org

Denison Forum – Ranch dressing, the World Cup, and America250

 

What makes America unique, and what Americans need most

I find in this surprising story a parable about what makes America unique and what Americans need most.

The “multicultural miracle” that is America

America’s original thirteen colonies were like countries settled by ethnicities from the Old World. There were English Puritans in New England, the Dutch, Germans, and Scots-Irish in the Middle Colonies, and English planters in the South. Scots-Irish and German immigrants populated the Appalachian and frontier regions.

As Dr. Ryan Denison and I note in our latest America250 article, settlers came to our country with very different motives, from evangelistic missions to secular economic advancement to Christian community.

This diversity is a strength worth celebrating. As Andrew Sullivan reports, World Cup visitors have discovered that “America is itself a stupendous achievement of multicultural energy and fun.” He responds: “We forget too easily the multicultural miracle we have already achieved in this quarter of a millennium, and the loving, generous, bountiful culture that is still America at its core.”

Continue reading Denison Forum – Ranch dressing, the World Cup, and America250

Harvest Ministries; Greg Laurie – One Way

 

 There is one God and one Mediator who can reconcile God and humanity—the man Christ Jesus. He gave his life to purchase freedom for everyone. 

—1 Timothy 2:5–6

Scripture:

One of the costs of following Christ is not being able to join in the feel-good consensus that claims, “All paths lead to God.” Believers don’t have the option of nodding in agreement when people say, “It doesn’t matter what you believe as long as you’re sincere in your beliefs.”

We don’t have the option because the Bible doesn’t offer it. Jesus Himself said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one can come to the Father except through me” (John 14:6 NLT). And the apostle Paul wrote, “There is one God and one Mediator who can reconcile God and humanity—the man Christ Jesus. He gave his life to purchase freedom for everyone” (1 Timothy 2:5–6 NLT). These passages leave exactly no room for other spiritual claims or belief systems, no matter how prevalent the idea of religious inclusiveness becomes.

The teaching that Jesus Christ is the only way to God has never been popular. But it’s probably safe to say that it’s never been more controversial than it is today. If you want to get someone’s blood boiling, then quote Jesus’ words in John 14:6 or Paul’s words in 1 Timothy 2:5–6. The “Coexist” bumper sticker on the person’s car will spontaneously catch fire.

The idea that you would have the audacity to say that Jesus is the only way is, in effect, saying that other religions aren’t true. That’s the way the logic works itself out, and people don’t like it. It’s acceptable to say that Jesus is a way to God. But when you dare say that He is the only way, then you can be certain that you’ll get some pushback. You might even be accused of being narrow-minded or worse.

But here’s what it comes down to: As believers, we must say what the Bible says, whether it’s popular or not. We have no authority to edit the message of the Bible. We’re called simply to deliver it, without watering it down or sugarcoating the words to fit what the audience wants to hear.

To do otherwise would be like a doctor discovering a very serious problem with a patient’s health but then being unwilling to say what that problem is—because it might make that patient uncomfortable.

We must tell people the truth about their real spiritual condition, which happens to be sinful, and then seek to save them, which is to point them to Jesus Christ as the only solution. If this means we are falsely accused of exclusivity or some other social media no-no, then so be it. God’s truth is too important to be edited for content.

 

Reflection question: How can you help people get past their desire to be inclusive and understand that Jesus is the only way to God and eternal life? Discuss this with believers like you on Harvest Discipleship!

 

 

 

Harvest.org | Greg Laurie

Scriptures, Lessons, News and Links to help you survive.