Our Daily Bread — Reflecting the Light of the Son

Bible in a Year:

You are the light of the world.

Matthew 5:14

Today’s Scripture & Insight:

Matthew 5:14–16

After I had a conflict with my mother, she finally agreed to meet with me more than an hour away from my home. But upon arriving, I discovered she’d left before I got there. In my anger, I wrote her a note. But I revised it after I felt God nudging me to respond in love. After my mother read my revised message, she called me. “You’ve changed,” she said. God used my note to lead my mom to ask about Jesus and, eventually, receive Him as her personal Savior.

In Matthew 5, Jesus affirms that His disciples are the light of the world (v. 14). He said, “let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven” (v. 16). As soon as we receive Christ as our Savior, we receive the power of the Holy Spirit. He transforms us so we can be radiant testimonies of God’s truth and love wherever we go.

Through the power of the Holy Spirit, we can be joyful lights of hope and peace who look more and more like Jesus every day. Every good thing we do then becomes an act of grateful worship, which looks attractive to others and can be perceived as vibrant faith. Surrendered to the Holy Spirit, we can give honor to the Father by reflecting the Light of the Son—Jesus.

By:  Xochitl Dixon

Reflect & Pray

When have you noticed the light of Jesus shining through another person? How has someone else’s good deeds prompted you to praise God?

Dear Jesus, please shine Your vibrant light of love in and through my life so I can give honor to the Father and encourage others to put their trust in You.

http://www.odb.org

Grace to You; John MacArthur – Having a Faith That Responds

“Faith is . . . the conviction of things not seen” (Heb. 11:1).

True faith goes beyond assurance to action.

When the writer said, “Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen”, he used two parallel and almost identical phrases to define faith.

We’ve seen that faith is the assurance that all God’s promises will come to pass in His time. “The conviction of things not seen” takes the same truth a step further by implying a response to what we believe and are assured of.

James addressed the issue this way: “Someone may well say, ‘You have faith, and I have works; show me your faith without the works, and I will show you my faith by my works.’. . . But are you willing to recognize . . . that faith without works is useless? . . . For just as the body without the spirit is dead, so also faith without works is dead” (James 2:1826). In other words, a non-responsive faith is no faith at all.

Noah had a responsive faith. He had never seen rain because rain didn’t exist prior to the Flood. Perhaps he knew nothing about building a ship. Still, he followed God’s instructions and endured 120 years of hard work and ridicule because he believed God was telling the truth. His work was a testimony to that belief.

Moses considered “the reproach of Christ [Messiah] greater riches than the treasures of Egypt; for he was looking to the reward” (Heb. 11:26). Messiah wouldn’t come to earth for another 1,400 years, but Moses forsook the wealth and benefits of Egypt to pursue the messianic hope.

Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, when faced with a life- threatening choice, chose to act on their faith in God, whom they couldn’t see, rather than bow to Nebuchadnezzar, whom they could see all too well (Dan. 3). Even if it meant physical death, they wouldn’t compromise their beliefs.

I pray that the choices you make today will show you are a person of strong faith and convictions.

Suggestions for Prayer

  • Ask God to increase and strengthen your faith through the events of this day.
  • Look for specific opportunities to trust Him more fully.

For Further Study

Read Daniel 3:1-20. How was the faith of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego tested?

From Drawing Near by John MacArthur 

http://www.gty.org/

Joyce Meyer – Our Helper

However, I am telling you nothing but the truth when I say it is profitable (good, expedient, advantageous) for you that I go away. Because if I do not go away, the Comforter (Counselor, Helper, Advocate, Intercessor, Strengthener, Standby) will not come to you….

— John 16:7 (AMPC)

Quite often, we feel that we are alone and have no one to help us, but Jesus promised that the Holy Spirit would be with us always and that He is our “Helper.” One of the most powerful prayers we can pray is, “Help me, Lord,” and we should pray it several times every day. It is a simple three-word prayer that declares that we are depending on the Holy Spirit and we know we cannot do anything without Him.

Don’t struggle along in life, trying to do things by yourself, when you have the greatest Helper in the world available to you. James said that …you do not have, because you do not ask (James 4:2 AMPC), so I encourage you to start asking more often and expect to get more help than ever before.

Prayer of the Day: Father, through Your Holy Spirit, help me today and every day with everything I do. I am totally dependent on You!

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Truth for Life; Alistair Begg – Should Christians Tithe?

The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof, the world and those who dwell therein.

Psalm 24:1

When the topic of biblical stewardship and finances comes up, what is one guiding principle that quickly comes to mind? The most common answer is almost certainly “tithing.” And yet, for a word that historically has been used so often in the language of church life, there’s a good deal of misunderstanding about what it actually means to tithe. So what does the Bible teach about tithing and the Christian’s relationship to it?

First, the tithe (the word simply means “a tenth”) was the basic principle of giving in the Old Testament. From the beginning, the Jewish people were to bring tithes of their crops and livestock to the Lord (Leviticus 27:30). These tithes were brought to the Levites (temple workers), who would then give a tenth of the tithe to the priests. This pattern was established firmly and fairly in the law of Moses, but as spiritual indifference set in among the people, the practice fell into disuse. For example, we read of Nehemiah’s dismay when he “found out that the portions of the Levites had not been given to them … So I confronted the officials and said, ‘Why is the house of God forsaken?’” (Nehemiah 13:10-11).

Second, while tithing is the pattern of giving in the Old Testament, it is not stated as an obligation in the New Testament. There we are confronted by an eloquent silence on this subject. This must be significant. We would expect that someone like Paul, with his intimate knowledge of the law, would have affirmed the Old Testament pattern, or at least alluded to it as a principle to be applied in the church. But he does not.

How, then, is a Christian to respond to these two observations? Should we tithe in the way the Israelites were commanded to do, or do we ignore that principle in the way the New Testament seems to? Well, it is true that the tithe is not explicitly commanded in the New Testament—but neither is it explicitly rejected. So while we are not to offer tithes as a matter of obedience to the Old Testament law, neither should we simply ignore the principle. The idea of giving ten percent could be a good starting point for Christians, but it is a starting point and no more. For if we are not careful, the principle of the tithe can be used to alleviate our conscience as we give the bare minimum and try to keep God out of our business. The problem with that kind of approach is that, as the psalmist writes, the earth and all its fullness is the Lord’s—including every last cent and possession we claim as ours! We think of ourselves as “giving” to God, but, in truth, He owns it all.

The relationship of the Christian to the principle of tithing, then, is not a neat and clean one. Ten percent may be far too much for you at the moment—or it may be far too comfortable! So perhaps the best way forward is to use that number as your starting point and then to ask God for wisdom and integrity as you look at your finances and at your heart. Let Him reveal how you can most faithfully use your finances—which, in truth, are His finances—for His glory.

Questions for Thought

How is God calling me to think differently?

How is God reordering my heart’s affections — what I love?

What is God calling me to do as I go about my day today?

Further Reading

2 Corinthians 8:8-15

Topics: Christian Living Money

Devotional material is taken from the Truth For Life daily devotionals by Alistair Begg

http://www.truthforlife.org

Kids4Truth Clubs Daily Devotional – God Is Fair

“Gracious is the Lord, and righteous; yea, our God is merciful.” (Psalm 116:5)

When God flooded the whole wide world, He was being fair.

When God told Abraham to sacrifice his one and only son Isaac, He was being fair.

When God sent Jesus Christ to die on the cross, He was being fair.

In the Hebrew language, another word for “fair” is righteous – a word used often to describe God. Psalm 11:7 begins, “For the righteous Lord loveth righteousness.”

Truth is, God is fair. God is always fair.

When your life is good, God is fair. When you feel sad, God is fair. When you make your parents happy, God is fair. When you fail a test, God is still fair. He knows about your problems even before you pray. God allows you to face your hard times, as well as your good times – not because God is unfair or unloving – but because He is righteous. Everything God does is right, because it is God Who does it.

Eight years ago, a man named Steve was killed in a car accident. The accident happened on Steve’s first wedding anniversary. Steve had a wife. He had parents. He had a little sister. When he was killed so unexpectedly, Steve left behind many family and friends who were very sad and wondering if God was really being fair!

Why does God allow bad things to happen? Why does it often seem like God Himself causes tragic things to happen? Isn’t God a loving God? Isn’t God an all-powerful God? Couldn’t He make it so only happy things happen? Couldn’t He take away all the bad things? Maybe you have asked that same question about something hard in your life.

The answer is simple, even if it is not simple to understand or simple to get used to. The answer is this: God allows bad things to happen for the same reason He allows good things to happen to us – for His great glory and for our greatest good. We do not deserve good and wonderful lives, but God in His lovingkindness can look ahead and see what is ultimately best for us, and He works those things out, for His own glory and for our own good. He never makes mistakes, because He is God. God wants what is best for our lives – and that is fair.

God cannot be unfair because God cannot be wrong.

My Response:
» Am I having a hard time accepting something that God is doing in my life right now?
» How can I change my heart responses and my words and actions to show that I am trusting a perfect God Who never makes mistakes?

Denison Forum – Texas Rangers win the World Series: A reflection on faith in fearful times

I am writing this morning’s Daily Article in a sleep-deprived state yet again. For the last three nights, I have stayed up to watch the Texas Rangers play in the World Series. I am happy to report that they rewarded my support by winning the world championship last night.

It seems appropriate that our team won its first title on the anniversary of the night the Chicago Cubs snapped their “curse” in 2016 by winning their first title since 1908. It hasn’t been that long for the Texas Rangers to win a World Series—it just seemed that way. But our team’s fans are overjoyed, though weary, this morning.

We are not alone in our fandom: nearly 70 percent of Americans watch live sports. Twenty-two of the thirty most popular TV shows of all time are Super Bowls.

Why is this?

And how is this conversation relevant to our war-torn, conflicted culture?

FBI director warns of threats against Americans

When we watch sports on television, we can trust what we see with our own eyes. We don’t need anyone to tell us who won and lost since we experience the event in real time.

There was a day when many could say the same about their daily lives as they intersected the world at large. When most of us lived on farms or in small towns, most of what affected us directly was around us, from the weather to our families, schools, customers, employers, and employees. We were never truly exempt from world events: after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor, my father went from a small town in Kansas to fighting the Japanese in World War II. But most of what happened to us on a daily basis resulted from a much smaller world, one we could understand and had a hand in controlling.

Now it seems the world at large affects us in ways we did not choose, cannot control, and struggle to understand. For example, the FBI director testified this week that the Israel-Hamas war has raised the potential for an attack against Americans at home. The agency is concerned about violent extremists or lone actors inspired by hateful messages and calls for violence.

Our trust in governmentuniversities, and the media continues to decline, while an increasing number of parents are choosing to homeschool their children. These trends reflect my point: we are losing confidence in what we do not control. And we feel that we can control less and less each day.

“A single journey of liberation and improvement”

These facts were crystalized for me in reading a recent Foreign Affairs essay by Charles King, a Georgetown University professor of international affairs and government. He profiles Walt Rostow, a longtime presidential advisor, author, and economist who popularized the “modernization theory” that countries follow predictable stages as they embrace or reject democracy and capitalism.

Rostow assured Americans that history, common sense, and human nature are inevitably on our side as consumerism enables social transformations that lead other nations to align with our values. King describes this view: “The grand sweep of social and economic change was a single journey of liberation and improvement, one that any country or culture might choose to join.” Rostow consequently predicted a world filled with “mature powers” like the US.

According to King, the strategies of our political leaders across recent generations were informed by Rostow’s worldview. Iraq and Afghanistan are just two examples of many where we sought to enable nations to embrace democracy and capitalism, confident that they would then join us in forging a global community of peace and prosperity.

While few of us have heard of Rostow, our society is imbued with this optimistic expectation that history’s arc is bending in our direction. But history is proving uncooperative. Russia has reverted from democracy to Putin’s tsarist autocracy; China has regressed from open markets to Xi’s oppressive communism; the Taliban are back in charge in Afghanistan; Hamas and its jihadist partners openly repudiate secular democracy and seek to build an Islamic theocracy.

Meanwhile, we watch as college students celebrate Hamas’s invasion of Israel and politicians champion socialism while castigating America as a racist project. In a culture that increasingly rejects traditional ethics and condemns biblical morality as dangerous, we grieve for our nation and worry about the future for our children and grandchildren.

It’s unsurprising that diversions like Halloween, televised sports, social media, and binge-watching TV shows are so popular.

“Your way is the best way for me”

Here’s where Rostow’s influential worldview fell short: it didn’t ask, in famed psychologist Karl Menninger’s iconic words, “Whatever became of sin?” God answered his question long ago: “The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick” (Jeremiah 17:9).

Our heart problem is the heart of the problem.

This is why, to be at peace with ourselves, others, and God, we must be at peace with “the Lord of peace” who alone can “give you peace at all times in every way” (2 Thessalonians 3:16). Isaiah’s prayer is our invitation: “You keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on you, because he trusts in you” (Isaiah 26:3). This is why the prophet called us to “trust in the Lᴏʀᴅ forever, for the Lᴏʀᴅ Gᴏᴅ is an everlasting rock” (v. 4).

If the Lord were more your “rock” today than yesterday, what would you need to change?

To that end, I invite you to pray these words from Henri Nouwen with me today:

Dear God,

 I am full of wishes,
full of desires,
full of expectations.
Some of them may be realized, many may not,
but in the midst of all my satisfactions
and disappointments,
I hope in you.
I know that you will never leave me alone
and will fulfill your divine promises.
Even when it seems that things are not going my way,
I know that they are going your way
and that, in the end, your way is the
best way for me.
O Lord, strengthen my hope,
especially when my many wishes are not fulfilled.
Let me never forget that your name is Love.

Amen.

Denison Forum

Hagee Ministries; John Hagee –  Daily Devotion

Romans 11:33

Oh, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments and His ways past finding out!

The wisdom and ways of God are simply over our heads. Impossible to figure out and beyond the realm of our ability!

At God’s word, Noah went to work for 100 years. He had no concept of rain because it had never fallen before. When he drove the final nail, animals arrived two-by-two to climb aboard until God shut the door behind Noah and his family. Unexplainable!

So many things are beyond our understanding. How did a holy God look into an abyss of blackness and say, “Let there be light,” and it came to be?

Why did He plan for His only begotten Son to be the sacrifice for sin from the foundations of the earth?

How did that Son come through the womb of a virgin to be crucified in our place?

We certainly cannot explain how, after three days in the grave, He burst forth to ascend to the right hand of God where He now rules.

How incomprehensible that, in the name of Jesus, we have access to bring our petitions to the Father!

We have no reason for “exceedingly abundantly above all that we could ever ask or imagine” or “pressed down, shaken together, and running over.”

Unsearchable and past finding out! He is the God of the impossible.

Blessing:

May the Lord bless you and keep you. May the Lord make His face to shine upon you and be gracious unto you and give you His peace. All things are from God, through Him, and to Him. May your impossible become possible through the unmatchable name of Jesus!

Today’s Bible Reading: 

Old Testament 

Ezekiel 7:1-9:11

New Testament 

Hebrews 5:1-14

Psalms & Proverbs

Psalm 105:1-15

Proverbs 26:28

https://www.jhm.org

Turning Point; David Jeremiah – Angelic Power

And it came to pass on a certain night that the angel of the Lord went out, and killed in the camp of the Assyrians one hundred and eighty-five thousand; and when people arose early in the morning, there were the corpses—all dead.
2 Kings 19:35

 Recommended Reading: Matthew 28:1-4

In the age of fantasy and fiction brought to life on movie screens, we have become used to seeing the powers of malevolent beings—think of Darth Vader in Star Wars or Sauron in The Lord of the Rings. They are powerful enough to dispatch individuals or armies.

Such powerful beings are not the stuff of modern fiction alone. When Sennacherib, king of Assyria, brought his massive army against Jerusalem during the reign of King Hezekiah, an angel of the Lord delivered the city by destroying 185,000 Assyrian soldiers in one night (2 Kings 19:35-37). How? We are not told; we are only told that the power of one angel was sufficient to destroy an entire army. If angels have that kind of power, they certainly are able to intervene on your behalf when you are in a spiritual battle.

When powers of darkness are arrayed against you, trust that God is able to deliver you. An angel of the Lord may be the means He uses.

God sends his angels to protect us and his Word as a star to guide us.
Max Lucado

https://www.davidjeremiah.org

Harvest Ministries; Greg Laurie – In Search of God’s Will

The LORD is a friend to those who fear him. He teaches them his covenant. 

—Psalm 25:14

Scripture:

Psalm 25:14 

Does God still speak to people today? Is He interested in what happens to us as individuals? And does He indeed have a master plan for our lives?

As Christians, we are not victims of chance, hoping that our luck holds up. God has a plan for our lives. He has a will that He wants to reveal to us. He wants to speak to us, and He does speak to us. The reason we don’t hear Him is that we haven’t yet learned to tune in.

God does not play hide-and-seek. In fact, He is more interested in revealing His will to us than we might be in knowing it. Far too often we make hearing God’s voice and knowing His will overly mystical.

Following the will of God is not an itinerary as much as it is an attitude. It is saying, “Lord, guide my steps. I’m available to walk in the way that You want me to walk.”

And the Bible gives us this promise: “The Lord is a friend to those who fear him. He teaches them his covenant” (Psalm 25:14 NLT).

Friends like to talk. When something good happens to you, you want to tell your friends. Or when something bad happens, you call them as well.

Jesus said to His disciples, “I no longer call you slaves, because a master doesn’t confide in his slaves. Now you are my friends, since I have told you everything the Father told me” (John 15:15 NLT).

When you put your faith in Jesus Christ, you begin a special friendship with God. God has given us a user’s manual in life called the Bible, which helps us to understand the will of God.

So, before we get into the specifics of trying to discover His plan and purpose for our lives as individuals, we need to ask ourselves this question: Am I already doing what God has clearly told me to do?

For example, it is the will of God that you believe in Jesus Christ. The Bible says that God “does not want anyone to be destroyed, but wants everyone to repent” (2 Peter 3:9 NLT). There must come a moment in your life when you’ve acknowledged that you’re a sinner and are separated from God. There must come a moment when you turn from that sin and put your faith in Jesus.

The Bible says, “And so, dear brothers and sisters, I plead with you to give your bodies to God because of all he has done for you. Let them be a living and holy sacrifice—the kind he will find acceptable. This is truly the way to worship him” (Romans 12:1 NLT).

God is essentially saying, “Give Me your life, and I will show you My will.” The condition of an enlightened mind is a surrendered heart. God has a plan and a purpose for your life. But to know the will of God, you must willingly present yourself to Him without reservation.