Our Daily Bread – Strong Support in Christ

 

Bible in a Year :

Two are better than one, because they have a good return for their labor.

Ecclesiastes 4:9

Today’s Scripture & Insight :

Ecclesiastes 4:9-12

A runner in the London Marathon experienced why it’s vital not to run the big race alone. After months of grueling preparation, the man wanted to finish strong. But as he stumbled toward the finish line, he found himself doubled over from exhaustion and on the verge of collapsing. Before he fell to the ground, two fellow marathoners grabbed his arms—one on his left and the other on his right—and helped the struggling runner complete the course.

Like that runner, the writer of Ecclesiastes reminds us of several important advantages that come from having others run the race of life with us. Solomon set forth the principle that “two are better than one” (Ecclesiastes 4:9). He shed a spotlight on the advantages of joint efforts and mutual toil. He also wrote that partnership can lead to “a good return for their labor” (v. 9). During times of difficulty, a companion is there to “help the other up” (v. 10). When nights are dark and cold, friends can huddle together to “keep warm” (v. 11). And, during danger, two “can defend themselves” against an assailant (v. 12). Those whose lives are woven together can possess great strength.

With all our weaknesses and frailties, we need the strong support and security of a community of believers in Jesus. Let’s press on together as He leads us!

By:  Marvin Williams

Reflect & Pray

Why is companionship with other believers in Jesus so important in life’s race? How can you improve the quality of your community in Him?

Dear God, please help me build a healthy community in Christ.

 

 

http://www.odb.org

Joyce Meyer – Seek the Gifts of the Spirit

 

Now there are distinctive varieties and distributions of endowments (gifts, extraordinary powers distinguishing certain Christians, due to the power divine grace operating in their souls by the Holy Spirit) and they vary but the [Holy] Spirit remains the same.

1 Corinthians 12:4 (AMPC)

The gifts of the Spirit can be difficult to explain because they operate in the spiritual realm. Over the past few days of devotions, I hope and pray I have done an adequate job of describing them and their basic operation. There is much more to be said on the subject of spiritual gifts and I encourage you to read good books that are dedicated to the topic of the gifts of the Holy Spirit. When we function in the supernatural realm, we do need to be careful, but not afraid. Satan offers many perversions of God’s true gifts, but we can stay on the right track through prayer and seeking truth from God’s Word. I also urge you to begin praying about the gifts of the Spirit. Ask God to use you in them and to allow them to flow through you as He sees fit. Don’t seek the gifts that seem most attractive or interesting to you but seek the gifts God has for you.

Allowing the gifts of the Spirit to work through us helps us in our everyday lives and demonstrates to unbelievers the power and goodness of Christ, Who dwells within us. When the gifts of the Holy Spirit are operating in our lives, we reflect the glory of God’s grace that is bestowed on us to others who desperately need to put their trust in Jesus. Seek to operate in the gifts of the Spirit for your own edification and for the good of others. As you seek the gifts, don’t forget to seek especially to walk in love because love is the greatest gift of all.

Prayer of the Day: Father God, help me understand and operate in the gifts of the Spirit. Use me to reflect Your glory and share Your love with others, amen.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Denison Forum – An airman’s letter that moved me deeply

 

The anniversary of the Gettysburg Address and “a country worth dying for”

Second Lieutenant Thomas V. Kelly Jr. was one of eleven crew members on the B-24 bomber nicknamed Heaven Can Wait. On March 11, 1944, Lt. Kelly’s plane was shot down by Japanese antiaircraft gunners off the coast of the Pacific island of New Guinea. All eleven crew members died.

Last spring, a team of elite Navy divers and archaeologists found the crash site and recovered the remains of three men. Last Friday, the Defense Department announced that Lt. Kelly’s remains had been positively identified through dental and anthropological analysis. Divers also found his Army Air Forces ring and two of his dog tags.

In one of his last letters home to his parents, Lt. Kelly wrote:

I don’t want you to feel sorry for me. I’m just telling you to appreciate what you have. Even if you don’t think it is much. It is so much. The men fighting here for everyone, they’re doing it for your freedom.

When I read the story over the weekend, it moved me deeply. I became emotional again typing these words just now.

“A dying empire led by bad people”

These days, Americans are disparaging each other more than at any time in my memory.

One woman is canceling Thanksgiving and Christmas at her home since her husband and his family voted for Donald Trump. A father is refusing to pay his Trump-supporting sons’ college tuition.

On the other side, rural areas in Illinois, a state with vast swaths of red counties and a few blue cities, are seeking to “leave Illinois without moving.” Their goal is to redraw state lines to constitute themselves as “New Illinois.” Conservatives in California, Idaho, and Oregon would like to do something similar.

According to a recent poll, young voters overwhelmingly believe that almost all politicians on both sides are corrupt and that the US will end up worse off than when they were born. The lead pollster said, “Young voters do not look at our politics and see good guys. They see a dying empire led by bad people.”

I will always remember meeting a veteran whose face and hands were scarred by fire and other wounds sustained in battle. When I thanked him for his sacrifice, he said, “Just make America a country worth dying for.”

How can we be the nation Lt. Kelly was fighting to defend?

The “greatest speech in American history”

When my wife and I visited Gettysburg National Military Park, we could feel the ominous and historic weight of the fields surrounding us. We could imagine the cannons as they roared and the soldiers as they fought and died in the Civil War’s deadliest battle.

On this day in 1863, President Abraham Lincoln spoke at a ceremony to dedicate the Soldiers’ National Cemetery on this sacred ground. His brief address has been called the “greatest speech in American history.”

In honoring “those who here gave their lives that [our] nation might live,” he called Americans to “take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion” so that “government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”

More than seven thousand men were killed at Gettysburg. More than 1.1 million men and women have died in the service of our country across our history. Now it falls to us, in Mr. Lincoln’s words, to “highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain.”

Mark Twain’s definition of patriotism

Yesterday I noted that if Americans cannot get along, America cannot get along. In a democracy where we vote for each other, hold each other accountable through our elections and legal systems, do commerce with each other, and live in community with each other, divisiveness and divisions threaten our collective future and common good.

But disparaging America and Americans does even more: It threatens the cause for which so many Americans have sacrificed so much.

Mark Twain observed, “Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.” The bitterness of our political environment transcends appropriate criticism of the government—many claim that the American project itself is racist and discriminatory to its core. And many see the “other side,” whoever they are, as evil and dangerous to democracy.

This is one place where Christians can—and must—take the lead.

“Whatever disunites man from God”

Agape is the Greek word for unconditional love that enables us to love those who hate us and to forgive those who harm us. It is the only kind of love that can heal divisions such as those we face today.

And it is uniquely the “fruit” of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22). When we make Christ our Lord and his Spirit comes to dwell in us (1 Corinthians 3:16), he can then manifest this fruit in our relationship with our Lord, our neighbors, and ourselves (Matthew 22:37–39). And when we love others as sacrificially and fully as we are loved (Romans 8:35–39), hearts are healed, families are mended, and societies are transformed.

Edmund Burke was right:

“Whatever disunites man from God also disunites man from man.”

However, the converse is also true: Whatever unites man to God unites man to man.

Imagine a room whose walls are lined with people. Put a chair in the middle of the room. The closer those in the room draw to the chair, the closer you draw to each other.

And when that chair is a throne, and when the King of kings is reigning there, all of creation will bow and “every tongue [will] confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father” (Philippians 2:10–11).

How will you hasten that day, today?

Tuesday news to know:

*Denison Forum does not necessarily endorse the views expressed in these stories.

Quote for the day:

“In the twilight of our life, God will not judge us on our earthly possessions and human successes, but on how well we have loved.” —St. John of the Cross

 

Denison Forum

Days of Praise – Problems, Problems, Problems

 

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“And I said, Oh that I had wings like a dove! for then would I fly away, and be at rest.” (Psalm 55:6)

The 55th Psalm is a psalm of “complaint” (v. 2) by David and gives an insight into his thought process as he tried to deal with the great problems and burdens that were overwhelming him. His first instinct was to run away from them, flying like a dove far off into the wilderness.

The prophet Jonah (whose name means “dove”) tried that strategy years later, only to encounter even worse problems (Jonah 1:3, 15). One does not solve problems by fleeing from them.

Then David decided to berate those who were causing him trouble and to complain about them to the Lord. “Evening, and morning, and at noon, will I pray, and cry aloud: and he shall hear my voice” (Psalm 55:17). The words “pray, and cry aloud” here actually mean “complain and mourn.” “Destroy, O Lord, and divide their tongues” (v. 9). “Let death seize upon them, and let them go down quick into hell” (v. 15). His burdens were all the heavier because those he had trusted as friends and colleagues were now using deceit and guile against him (vv. 11-14), and the injustice of it all was almost more than he could endure. But complaints and imprecations were also unsatisfying: “Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord” (Romans 12:19).

Finally, the Lord gave him an answer, and David found the rest for which he had been so fretfully searching. Here it is: “Cast thy burden upon the LORD, and he shall sustain thee: he shall never suffer the righteous to be moved” (Psalm 55:22). The last phrase of the psalm is “but I will trust in thee” (v. 23).

The way to deal with burdens and problems is not to flee from them or to fret about them but to turn them over to the Lord: “Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you” (1 Peter 5:7). HMM

 

 

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

My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers – Conviction of Sin

When he comes, he will prove the world to be in the wrong about sin. —John 16:8

Very few of us know anything about the conviction of sin. We know what it feels like to be disturbed at having done something wrong, but we don’t know conviction. To be convicted of sin by the Holy Spirit is to have every earthly relationship blotted out and to stand alone with the heavenly Father, knowing fully whom we have wronged: “Against you, you only, have I sinned” (Psalm 51:4).

When we are convicted of sin in this way, we know with every power of our conscience that God dare not forgive us—not without a price being paid. If he did, it would mean that we have a stronger sense of justice than God. God’s forgiveness is the great miracle of his grace, but it cost him the breaking of his heart in the death of Christ. Only through this death is the divine nature able to forgive while remaining true to itself. It’s shallow nonsense to say that the reason God forgives us is that God is love. Once we’ve been convicted of sin, we’ll never say this again. The love of God means Calvary and nothing less. The love of God is written on the cross and nowhere else. Only on the cross is God’s conscience satisfied.

Forgiveness doesn’t mean only that I am saved from hell and made right for heaven. It means that I am forgiven into a new relationship; I am re-created and identified with God in Christ. The miracle of redemption is that God turns me, an unholy being, into the standard of himself, the Holy One. He does this by giving me a new disposition, the disposition of his Son, Jesus Christ.

Ezekiel 11-13; James 1

Wisdom from Oswald

The Bible does not thrill; the Bible nourishes. Give time to the reading of the Bible and the recreating effect is as real as that of fresh air physically. Disciples Indeed, 387 R

 

 

https://utmost.org/

Billy Graham – Bridge the Gap

 

Keep a close watch on all you do and think.
Stay true to what is right . . .
—1 Timothy 4:16 (TLB)

In searching for ways to bridge the generation gap, there is no doubt that we, as parents, will have to practice what we preach, by striving more and more to bring our conduct into line with our code of beliefs.

No mother can demand that her daughter abstain from sleeping around when she herself is flirting and on occasion compromising her own moral conduct. No father, who wavers between heavy social drinking and occasional binges to the edge of alcoholism, and who can’t speak a pleasant word in the morning until he has had a cigarette, can yell incessantly at his son to get off marijuana, the route that often leads to hard drugs.

Consistency, constancy, and undeviating diligence to maintain Christian character are a must if the older generation is to command respect, or even a hearing, from the young.

Why is it so hard to be a good parent? Billy Graham answers.

Lea este devocional en español en es.billygraham.org.

Prayer for the day

Younger eyes see my errant behavior, Lord. Help me to be the right example—one which will draw them to You.

 

Home

Guideposts – Devotions for Women – Straight to Heaven

 

Enoch walked faithfully with God; then he was no more, because God took him away.—Genesis 5:24 (NIV)

Enoch’s life is a testimony to the power of a faithful and intimate relationship with God. He lived in a time when most people were turning away from God and toward sin, but Enoch chose to walk with God and be faithful to Him. When you follow Him with all your heart, you can experience the joy and peace that come from living in His presence.

Heavenly Father, give me the strength and courage to turn away from sin and to follow you with all my heart.

 

 

https://guideposts.org/daily-devotions/devotions-for-women/devotions-for-faith-prayer-devotions-for-women/

Every Man Ministry – Kenny Luck – He Loved the Ragamuffins

 

But you are not to be called “Rabbi,” for you have one Teacher, and you are all brothers. And do not call anyone on earth “father,” for you have one Father, and he is in heaven. Nor are you to be called instructors, for you have one Instructor, the Messiah. The greatest among you will be your servant. For those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.  ––Matthew 23:8-12

Lepers, prostitutes, Samaritans, tax collectors, gluttons, children, women, the diseased, crippled, mentally unstable, and all garden-variety sinners were at home with Jesus because of the Spirit of the Lord that was upon Him.

In fact, the knock on Jesus was that His standards were very low when it came to His associations and locations of ministry. But by working seamlessly with the Holy Spirit, Jesus fully expressed the heart of God toward these aliens in his own culture, challenging the disciples at many levels and, on more than one occasion, causing reactions among them.

The men of Pentecost followed suit in the Spirit. Fresh from the upper room, they ran headlong into cultural and religious discrimination against certain widows who were falling through the cracks in the system. It could have easily been glossed over in the chaos of the moment, but the Holy Spirit would not allow it. Instead, men full of the Holy Spirit mobilized to make those who felt forgotten feel secure.

When you look at the ministry of Jesus and the men of Pentecost, you see walls falling down: ethnic walls, cultural walls, economic walls, and even religious walls. You can’t miss this! The Holy Spirit was at work, transcending the established culture to make the most vulnerable among them feel secure. In the process, everyone present was witness to the authority of the kingdom of God over the cultures of men. A higher allegiance was seen. A witness started building, male culture started acting out of character, and stuff started happening. That is the story of the men of Pentecost.

All of us have felt rejected. The Holy Spirit hates that feeling as much as we do, and in God’s family there are no cousins or in-laws—only sons and daughters. The opportunity to go from a creation of God to a child of God is available to all.

Father, thank You that You accept me unconditionally, sins and all.

 

 

Every Man Ministries