Joyce Meyer – Well-Laid Plans

 

For we are not wrestling with flesh and blood [contending only with physical opponents], but against the despotisms, against the powers, against [the master spirits who are] the world rulers of this present darkness, against the spirit forces of wickedness in the heavenly (supernatural) sphere.

Ephesians 6:12 (AMPC)

“How could you?” Helen screamed. “How could you ever do such a thing?”

Tom stared helplessly at his wife. He had committed adultery, faced his sinful actions, and asked his wife to forgive him.

“But you knew it was wrong,” she said. “You knew that was the ultimate betrayal of our marriage.”

“I never planned for an affair to happen,” Tom said with tears in his eyes.

Tom wasn’t lying. He knew he was making a few bad choices, but he hadn’t looked ahead at the consequences of his actions. After almost an hour of pleading, he said something that helped Helen begin to understand and eventually to forgive.

“I was unfaithful to you in hundreds of ways before I ever committed adultery.” He spoke of their being too busy to spend quality time together, his critical attitude, her occasional lack of emotional response, her not listening to him when he talked about problems at the office. “Just little things, always little things,” he said. “At least in the beginning they seemed that way.”

That’s exactly how Satan works in human lives. He begins by bombarding our minds with cleverly devised patterns of irritation, dissatisfaction, nagging thoughts, doubts, fears, and reasonings. He moves slowly and cautiously (after all, well-laid plans take time).

Tom said he began to doubt that Helen truly loved him. She didn’t listen, and she didn’t always respond to his amorous moods. He dwelt on those thoughts. Whenever she did anything he didn’t like, he kept track. He kept track by remembering and adding that to his list of dissatisfactions.

One of his coworkers listened, and she offered him sympathy. One time she said, “Helen doesn’t deserve a warm, caring man like you.” (Satan also worked in her.) Each time Tom took a tiny step off the right path, he justified his actions in his mind: If Helen won’t listen to me, there are people who will. Although he said the word people to himself, he really meant the woman in the next cubicle.

The coworker listened. Weeks later, he hugged her and as he did so, he wished he could feel that caring response from his wife. It was a harmless embrace—or so it seemed. Tom didn’t grasp that Satan is never in a hurry. He takes time to work out his plans. He doesn’t immediately overwhelm people with powerful desires. Instead, the enemy of our minds starts with little things—little dissatisfactions, small desires—and builds from there.

Tom’s story sounds much like that of a 42-year-old bookkeeper who was indicted for stealing nearly three million dollars from her organization. She said, “The first time I took only 12 dollars. I needed that much to pay the minimum amount on my credit card. I planned to pay it back.” No one caught her, and two months later, she “borrowed” again.

By the time they caught her, the company teetered on the brink of bankruptcy. “I never meant to hurt anybody or do anything wrong,” she said. She never intended to do anything big—just to take small amounts. The prosecutor said she had been stealing from the company for almost 20 years.

That’s how Satan works—slowly, diligently, and in small ways. Rarely does he approach us through direct assault or frontal attacks. All Satan needs is an opening—an opportunity to inject unholy, self-centered thoughts into our heads. If we don’t kick them back out, they stay inside. And he can continue his evil, destructive plan.

We don’t have to allow those wrong thoughts to take up residence in our heads. The apostle Paul wrote, For the weapons of our warfare are . . . mighty before God. . . . [We] refute arguments and theories and reasonings and every proud and lofty thing that sets itself up against the [true] knowledge of God; and we lead every thought and purpose away captive into the obedience of Christ . . . (2 Corinthians 10:4–5).

Prayer of the Day: Lord Jesus, in Your name, I cry out for victory. Enable me to bring every thought into obedience. Help me not to allow Satan’s words to stay in my mind and steal my victory, amen.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Denison Forum – “This is the price for all who criticize Hamas”

Palestinian murdered for protesting terrorists in Gaza

On March 29, Hamas murdered twenty-two-year-old Uday Nassar Saadi al-Rabbay, according to his family. They tortured him and mutilated his body, then threw his body off a tall building.

His crime? He took part in recent protests against the terrorists who rule Gaza.

As a result, according to his mother, “They caught him, tortured him, slashed his arms with knives, stabbed him with screwdrivers. They stabbed him 170 times. His whole body was stabbed and pierced.” A note was pinned to his body: “This is the price for all who criticize Hamas.”

“The most appalling act of racism”

The most detailed Western investigation into the atrocities of October 7 has now been released. The UK’s October 7 Parliamentary Commission Report runs to 318 pages. Chaired by Lord Andrew Roberts, one of Britain’s leading historians, it documents the deaths of 1,182 people in a forty-eight-hour period. The report describes the assault as “a meticulously planned operation designed not only to kill but to terrorize through extreme brutality, looting, and humiliation.”

Some examples in the report:

  • A baby was murdered just fourteen hours after it was born.
  • A Holocaust survivor was killed at the age of ninety-one.
  • Infants were shot in strollers or burned alive.
  • Women and girls were gang raped.
  • Sexual violence was committed against corpses.
  • Terrorists used victims’ phones to send images to their families, booby-trapped corpses with grenades, and dragged bodies through Gaza.

When asked how democracies should respond, Roberts answered: “The first is properly to memorialize the victims. The second . . . is to see this appalling act of barbarism for what it is, which is a complete denial of democracy, a blow struck deliberately against civilization, and . . . the most appalling act of racism.”

(For more on this “appalling act of racism,” please see my friend Reuben Nevo’s firsthand account of growing up where Hamas invaded and the path forward for Israel.)

The immorality of “moral equivalence”

I reference Uday al-Rabbay’s murder and the UK report to counter the “moral equivalence” claims that have tragically dominated much of Western response to October 7. From college campuses to media outlets to halls of government, we continually hear the assertion that “both sides are wrong” and that Israel is as complicit in this tragedy as Hamas.

Some go even further, caricaturing Israel as a “colonialist” whose “oppression” of Gaza forced Hamas to respond as it did and blaming Jews for the massacre of Jews. As Israel continues its efforts to keep Hamas from mounting another such invasion (something the terrorist group repeatedly claims it wants to do), much of the world blames the IDF for all civilian casualties despite the fact that Hamas hides behind Palestinian human shields, mosques, hospitals, and schools.

If Israel’s critics want the Jewish state to defend itself at all, they want it to do so while engaging a highly challenging urban environment in ways that do not harm the very civilians Hamas hides behind and whose subsequent deaths Hamas uses to bolster itself in the court of world opinion.

I do not mean to suggest that Israel is by any means a perfect nation or that the IDF has responded flawlessly to October 7 in Gaza. Like America, they are a nation made of fallen sinners who sometimes fail their values just as we do.

The difference between Israel and Hamas is that the former has values the latter does not.

If Israel laid down its arms

As I have explained repeatedly since Oct. 7, Hamas’ atrocities express their founding charter and commitment to the annihilation of Israel. This is why Israel must not allow Hamas to rearm itself, or it will stage another October 7.

Dennis Prager, a cultural commentator who studied at the Middle East Institute at Columbia University’s School of International Affairs, explains the conflict this way:

Israel wants to exist as a Jewish state and to live in peace. Israel also recognizes the right of Palestinians to have their own state and to live in peace. The problem, however, is that most Palestinians and many other Muslims and Arabs do not recognize the right of the Jewish state of Israel to exist. . . .

Think about these two questions: If, tomorrow, Israel laid down its arms and announced, “We will fight no more,” what would happen? And if the Arab countries around Israel laid down their arms and announced, “We will fight no more,” what would happen?

In the first case, there would be an immediate destruction of the state of Israel and the mass murder of its Jewish population. In the second case, there would be peace the next day.

October 7 made Prager’s point brutally clear.

“We fall down, and we get up”

Let’s close by making the issue of moral relativism personal.

We live in a postmodern culture where such relativism reigns supreme. Many illogically believe it to be absolutely true that there are no absolute truths. Add Critical Theory’s Marxist division of the entire human race into oppressors and oppressed, and you have a recipe for immorality in the name of morality.

This issue is as real for you and me as it is for Hamas’s most virulent supporters. Like you, I am tempted to view uncomfortable truths through the prism of personal preferences, making Jesus my Lord only in those places where his lordship does not demand changes I do not want to make.

Here’s the good news: God will help anyone to be holy who wants his help.

Solomon noted: “The way of the wicked is an abomination to the Lᴏʀᴅ, but he loves him who pursues righteousness” (Proverbs 15:9, my emphasis). Since we are finite and fallen people, the “pursuit” of righteousness is what God seeks.

Our secularized culture measures success by the destination, since its destinations are within human reach. God measures success by the journey, since the destination is not achievable in this life.

Someone once asked a monk living in a mountain monastery high above the village below, “What do you do up there so close to God?” He smiled and replied, “We fall down, and we get up. We fall down, and we get up. We fall down, and we get up.”

Let’s do the same today, to the glory of God.

Quote for the day:

“Because truth is unpopular does not mean that it should not be proclaimed.” —Billy Graham

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Denison Forum

Days of Praise – Son of God

 

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“…concerning his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, which was made of the seed of David according to the flesh; and declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead.” (Romans 1:3-4)
It is noteworthy that the identification of Jesus Christ as the Son of God is directly associated with His resurrection from the dead. “The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death” (1 Corinthians 15:26), and since only God Himself can conquer death, Christ’s bodily resurrection is the conclusive affirmation of His unique deity: “Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Matthew 16:16). Many others have claimed divine sonship, but all are dead—only Christ validated that claim by defeating death. “God…hath raised up Jesus again; as it is also written in the second psalm, Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee” (Acts 13:33). “Death is swallowed up in victory….through our Lord Jesus Christ” (1 Corinthians 15:54, 57).

Jesus is explicitly called “the Son of God” about 44 times in the New Testament, only half as often as He is called “Son of man.” Nevertheless, this great truth is clearly taught in numerous other ways than by the use of the title itself. It’s so important that there is no salvation for the one who denies it. Jesus said plainly, “He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God” (John 3:18).

Because He lives, we who believe on His name will also live forever! “Who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God?…He that hath the Son hath life; and he that hath not the Son of God hath not life. These things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God; that ye may know that ye have eternal life” (1 John 5:5, 12-13). HMM

 

 

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

My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers – Spiritual Insight

 

The Lord . . . has sent me so that you may see again. — Acts 9:17

When Paul’s vision was restored after three days of blindness, he also received something spiritual: insight into the person of Jesus Christ. At once Paul “began to preach in the synagogues that Jesus is the Son of God” (Acts 9:20). For the rest of Paul’s days, Jesus Christ was the whole of his life and the whole of his preaching. No other attraction was allowed to hold his mind and soul.

When we receive a vision of Jesus Christ, when the Spirit grants us insight into the character of our Lord, we must immediately begin to live up to the standard of what we’ve seen. The abiding characteristic of spiritual people is an ability to apply what they’ve seen of Jesus Christ to themselves and to share his purposes with others. Whenever we see people steadfastly applying Jesus Christ in this way, we know that they have been remade after God’s own heart. We know that the ruling passion of their life is Jesus Christ.

Never allow anything to distract you from insight into Jesus. It is the test of whether or not you are spiritual. To be unspiritual means that other things still hold fascination for you. The only thing fascinating to a disciple is the Lord. “I resolved to know nothing while I was with you except Jesus Christ and him crucified” (1 Corinthians 2:2).

Judges 16-18; Luke 7:1-30

Wisdom from Oswald

The main characteristic which is the proof of the indwelling Spirit is an amazing tenderness in personal dealing, and a blazing truthfulness with regard to God’s Word.Disciples Indeed, 386 R

 

 

https://utmost.org/

Billy Graham – Use Your Mind

 

And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind . . .

—Mark 12:30

Christ touches every area of our lives. He touches our minds and we are transformed by the renewing of our minds. God invites people to use their minds, “Come now, and let us reason together, saith the Lord” (Isaiah 1:18). We are told in Scripture not to be like the horse or mule, “which have no understanding” (Psalm 32:9). Christ declared that we are to love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, strength, and mind. We are told to fear God, to love Christ, and to hate sin. Fear, love, and hate are emotions. Dr. Leslie Weatherhead, preaching at the City Temple in London, said, “What is wrong with emotion? Christianity is falling in love with Christ. Has anyone ever fallen in love without emotion?”

Read Billy Graham’s answer on keeping bad thoughts from taking over your mind.

Prayer for the day

May my love for You embrace my whole being, Lord Jesus. Teach me true love.

Apr

 

 

https://billygraham.org/

Guideposts – Devotions for Women – Loved Beyond Measure

 

For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well.—Psalm 139:13–14 (NIV)

While others may define your worth by what you do for a living or how much money you have in the bank, God reminds you that your value comes from Him. You are intricately designed by the Creator of the Universe, fearfully and wonderfully made. Embrace your uniqueness, knowing that you are loved beyond measure.

Heavenly Father, fill me with confidence and self-esteem rooted in Your love, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made.

 

 

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

Our Daily Bread – Triumph of Kindness in Christ

 

When the kindness and love of God our Savior appeared, he saved us. Titus 3:4-5

Today’s Scripture

1 Peter 3:8-12

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Today’s Insights

In 1 Peter 3:10-12, Peter strengthens his point on how to respond to suffering by quoting from Psalm 34:12-16, a psalm that came out of one of David’s frightening experiences. Having escaped King Saul’s murderous pursuit, David ended up in Gath—the home of his former Philistine opponent, Goliath. When David’s identity is exposed, he pretends to be insane (1 Samuel 21:10-15) and escapes from Gath. The account in 1 Samuel focuses on David’s apparent ingenuity in cleverly escaping danger, but in Psalm 34, as he reflects on the event, he sees that his rescue came from God, not his own scheme (v. 17). Peter’s use of this psalm captures the hopeful optimism of David, whose trust in God’s kind protection and care had been rewarded in his escape from Gath.

Today’s Devotional

When Jackie Robinson, the first Black player in modern-day Major League Baseball, played at Shibe Park in Philadelphia on May 9, 1947, ten-year-old Doris was in the upper-deck stands with her father. When an elderly Black man made his way down the aisle to a seat next to them, her father led the way in getting acquainted. Doris said their conversation about scorekeeping made her feel “grown up.” She later reflected, “I’ve never forgotten that man and his smiling face.” The delightful interaction between Doris, a young White girl, and the kind, elderly man, who was the son of slaves, was a bright spot that day.

This was in stark contrast, however, to the hateful conduct Robinson had experienced at another game that season. He recounted that “in terms of race, they yelled everything at me; it was quite vicious.”

Vicious conduct isn’t limited to sports fields. Homes, neighborhoods, workspaces, and even our churches can be places where ugliness wins. Those who believe in the God who displayed kindness through His Son (see Titus 3:4), however, are called to do the same. Peter writes: “Be like-minded, be sympathetic, love one another, be compassionate and humble. Do not repay evil with evil or insult with insult” (1 Peter 3:8-9). Kindness triumphs when those who’ve received it from God share it generously with others as the Spirit helps them.

Reflect & Pray

When are you tempted to be unkind? How have you been the recipient of kindness?

 

Dear Father, I’m grateful for the kindness You’ve given through Jesus.

 

http://www.odb.org

Joyce Meyer – Operate in Wisdom

 

Oh, the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God! How unfathomable (inscrutable, unsearchable) are His judgments (His decisions)! And how untraceable (mysterious, undiscoverable) are His ways (His methods, His paths)!

Romans 11:33 (AMPC)

Without wisdom we can make poor decisions and later wonder why we didn’t pray first. It is wise to seek God early each day before we start making decisions in order to know ahead of time what we ought to do, and then to receive the grace to do it. Wisdom keeps us from a life of regret.

Jesus operated in wisdom. When others went home to rest, Jesus went to the Mount of Olives to spend time with God. And early in the morning (at dawn), He came back into the temple and taught people (John 7:53–8:2). Jesus always spent time with the Father before facing the crowds. If Jesus needed time with God, we need even more time with Him. Walk in wisdom today.

Prayer of the Day: Lord, help me seek Your wisdom daily. Guide me to make decisions that line up with Your will and protect me from having and possibly living with regrets.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Denison Forum – Five ways President Trump might serve a third term

 

President Trump recently told NBC News that he does not rule out seeking a third term in the White House, saying there are methods for doing so and that he is “not joking.”

“A lot of people want me to do it,” he said. “But, I mean, I basically tell them we have a long way to go, it’s very early in the administration.” When asked whether he had been presented with plans to allow him to seek a third term, he said, “There are methods by which you could do it.”

What are such methods?

Why this question is complicated

At issue is the 22nd Amendment to the US Constitution, which states:

No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President more than once.

Since Mr. Trump has been “elected to the office of the President” twice, it would seem that the question is a moot point. Some might argue that since his terms were nonconsecutive, the amendment doesn’t apply to him. However, it makes no distinction between consecutive and nonconsecutive terms in office.

Here’s where the story gets complicated: The amendment only prohibits a person from being “elected” to office more than twice but says nothing about a person becoming president in other ways.

Here’s one possibility: Someone could run for president in 2028 with Mr. Trump as their running mate, be elected, and then resign from office, returning Mr. Trump to the White House.

The 12th Amendment states that “no person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States,” but it does not specify that such a person is “ineligible to be elected Vice-President.” Perhaps this simply imposes the Constitution’s stated criteria for presidential eligibility: that they be a natural-born citizen of the US, at least thirty-five years of age, and have lived in the US for at least fourteen years. The US Supreme Court would have to decide this issue.

A second option would be for Mr. Trump to be elected vice president in 2028, then the elected president to be declared “unable to discharge the powers and duties of the office,” in which case Mr. Trump would become Acting President via the 25th Amendment.

A third option would be for a person to be elected vice president in 2028 and then resign. The newly elected president could then nominate Mr. Trump for the position and Congress could approve the nomination (as occurred via the 25th Amendment with Gerald Ford in 1973), the president could resign, and Mr. Trump could take his place.

A fourth option would be for the Constitution to be amended to allow a person to serve three non-consecutive terms as president. A member of Congress proposed such an amendment in January, but it is highly unlikely in our era of intense political polarization.

A fifth approach would be for Mr. Trump to be appointed by the next president as an unofficial adviser, allowing him to continue to exercise the power of the presidency without the actual title.

“What I have written I have written”

In these weeks leading to Easter, I am continuing on occasion to spotlight aspects of the story that are often overlooked. Here’s another: when the Romans crucified our Lord,

Pilate also wrote an inscription and put it on the cross. It read, “Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews.” . . . So the chief priests of the Jews said to Pilate, “Do not write, ‘The King of the Jews,’ but rather, ‘This man said, I am King of the Jews.’” Pilate answered, “What I have written I have written” (John 19:1921–22).

Pontius Pilate was much more right than he knew.

Jesus was born a king, as the Magi acknowledged by their words (Matthew 2:2) and worship (v. 11). He lived as a king (Isaiah 9:6–7John 18:36), died as a king (as Pilate acknowledged), was raised as a king (Ephesians 1:20a), ascended to heaven as a king (vv. 20b–21), rules there now as a king (v. 22; Hebrews 1:3–4Revelation 1:5–6), and will return as “King of kings and Lord of lords” (Revelation 19:16; cf. Daniel 7:13–14).

Here’s the problem: Americans like our leaders to be elected by us and thus responsible to us.

President Trump’s comments about a third term have been widely reported in part because some are concerned he might return to office in ways they believe the Constitution does not intend and voters did not choose. The current controversy over unelected “activist judges” who have issued orders blocking parts of the president’s agenda illustrates this concern from the other side of the aisle.

Americans view our leaders as extensions of ourselves who are accountable to us as they serve “we the people.”

It is therefore natural, though tragic, that many of us view Christ in the same way.

“Able to do far more abundantly”

Even though Jesus is the king of the universe who rules beyond our election or opinions, he limits his omnipotence to our free will. He knocks at the door of our hearts, waiting for admission into our lives (cf. Revelation 3:20). He forces neither his salvation nor his abundant life on us. Only when we elect him our “president” and king can we fully experience the best his omniscient, omnibenevolent omnipotence can do in and through our lives.

We often blame God for the suffering in our world, but how much of our pain would be alleviated if we lived by his word and will? If, for instance, we refused lust (Matthew 5:28–30), what would become of the plague of pornography, adultery, and sex trafficking in our society? If we reserved sex for marriage (Genesis 2:24–25Hebrews 13:4), what would become of abortion, adultery, and divorce? If we venerated life as sacred as does our Lord (cf. Genesis 1:27), what would happen to crime, abortion, and euthanasia?

Clearly, “Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people” (Proverbs 14:34).

Unfortunately, as fallen people, our default position is to rule on the throne of our own lives. Unless we consciously dethrone ourselves each day, enthrone Jesus as our king, and then keep him there through our worship and obedience, we are our own kings.

By this measure, who is your king right now?

“Now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever” (Ephesians 3:20–21).

Amen?

Quote for the day:

“No single piece of our mental world is to be hermetically sealed off from the rest, and there is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry: ‘Mine!’” —Abraham Kuyper

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Denison Forum

Days of Praise – Power of Forgiveness

 

by Henry M. Morris III, D.Min.

“…to open their eyes, and to turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins.” (Acts 26:18)

All too often we consider forgiveness a mysterious and spiritual transaction that, once accomplished, is a past event that has little to do with our subsequent lives.

It is certainly true that there is a historical point in our earthly lives where the forgiveness of Christ was granted— even though He was “slain from the foundation of the world” (Revelation 13:8).

Christ has subdued, cleansed, and forgotten our sins. “Who is a God like unto thee, that pardoneth iniquity?…he will subdue our iniquities; and thou wilt cast all their sins into the depths of the sea” (Micah 7:18-19). “I, even I, am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake, and will not remember thy sins” (Isaiah 43:25). “I have blotted out, as a thick cloud, thy transgressions, and, as a cloud, thy sins” (Isaiah 44:22).

Christ has replaced our sins with His holiness. “Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new….For he hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in him” (2 Corinthians 5:17, 21).

Christ has given us victory over sin. Since all of the above (and more) is true and active in the lives of all believers, there should be an obvious exhilaration that enables us to confidently stand against whatever “fiery darts” the enemy may throw at us. We are clearly told that “sin shall not have dominion over [us]” (Romans 6:14). And since Jesus already dealt with the “offence” of sin on the cross, we can “reign in life” by Him (Romans 5:17). HMM III

 

 

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

My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers – Heartlessness versus Heartiness

 

The Spirit intercedes for God’s people. . . . Christ Jesus . . . is also interceding for us. — Romans 8:34,27

Do we need anything beyond these verses to convince us that we, too, should intercede? Are we living in a vital relationship to others, doing the work of interceding for them in prayer as Spirit-taught children of God?

Consider your present circumstances—your home, your business, and your country. Consider the crises that are touching you and those around you. Are your burdens crushing you? Are they crowding out the presence of God, leaving you no time to worship and no time to pray for others? If so, call a time-out. Get yourself into such a living relationship with God that your relationship to others may be maintained through the intercession in prayer by which God works his marvels.

Often we become so overwhelmed by difficulties and by the needs of the people around us that we forget to worship and to intercede. God continually introduces us to people for whom we have no affinity, and if we aren’t in the habit of worshipping and interceding, the most natural thing to do is to treat these people heartlessly—to jab a bit of Scripture at them, or make some trite, impersonal quip about God, and get away as fast as we can.

We have to beware of outpacing God in our very longing to do his will. We run ahead of him in a thousand and one activities, attempting to tackle burdens and pressures on our own, instead of bringing them directly to him. If difficulties arise and we aren’t in the worshipping frame of mind, the result will be hardness toward God, heartlessness toward others, and despair in our souls.
A heartless Christian must be a terrible grief to our Lord. Bring yourself into alignment with Christ Jesus and the Holy Spirit, and begin to intercede as they do, “in accordance with the will of God” (Romans 8:27).

Judges 13-15; Luke 6:27-49

Wisdom from Oswald

We are only what we are in the dark; all the rest is reputation. What God looks at is what we are in the dark—the imaginations of our minds; the thoughts of our heart; the habits of our bodies; these are the things that mark us in God’s sight. The Love of God—The Ministry of the Unnoticed, 669 L

 

 

https://utmost.org/

Billy Graham – Glory in the Cross

As for me, God forbid that I should boast about anything except the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.

—Galatians 6:14 (TLB)

What glory is there in the cross? It was an instrument of torture and shame. Why did Paul glory in it? He gloried in it because the most selfless act ever performed by men or angels took place upon it. He saw-emanating from that rough, unartistic beam upon which the Son of God had been crucified—the radiant hope of the world, the end of the believer’s bondage to sin, and the love of God shed abroad in the hearts of men. A lone man dying on a cross did more to restore man’s lost harmony with God, his fellowman, and himself, than the combined genius and power of earth’s mighty. With my finite limitations, I cannot fully comprehend the mystery of Christ’s atonement. I only know that all who come to the cross in simple, trusting faith lose all their guilty stains and find peace with God.

Discover Jesus and the power of the cross for yourself.

Prayer for the day

Like the Apostle Paul, Father, help me to glory in the cross of Jesus and more fully understand the tremendous meaning it has for me as a believer and for all who would come to its foot and kneel.

 

 

https://billygraham.org/

Guideposts – Devotions for Women – Seek God’s Truth

 

For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well.—Psalm 139:13–14 (NIV)

Today, on April Fools’ Day, focus on the importance of wisdom and discernment. Are there areas where you have allowed foolishness to take root, denying or neglecting God’s presence and guidance? Examine your heart and ask God to lead you to choices that align with His will.

Heavenly Father, grant me the wisdom to recognize and seek Your truth. Help me to walk in Your ways and bring glory to Your name.

 

 

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