Our Daily Bread – Planning Prudently

 

The prudent give thought to their steps. Proverbs 14:15

Today’s Scripture

Proverbs 14:7-8, 14-15

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Today’s Devotional

Small-town physician Ezdan nurtured a grand dream for his young daughter Eleanor. She has Down syndrome, and he hoped to open a business to provide paid work for her future. Feeling “terrified” to pursue his dream, he took an online course on how to start a business. Then he and his wife launched a family bakery in their Wyoming town, and it’s thriving. “It has become a real business, with a staff,” Ezdan said. Eleanor, now grown, works the cash register and connects with online customers. “Everybody in town knows who she is,” says Ezdan. His leap of faith in planning for Eleanor’s future reflects his choice to be prudent.

It’s a classic biblical virtue. Prudence is an element of wisdom that God ordains for our current and future planning. “The wisdom of the prudent is to give thought to their ways,” says Proverbs 14:8, “but the folly of fools is deception.” Rather than worry about the future, or do nothing about it, prudent people look to God for wisdom to plan for it.

In fact, prudence comes directly from the Latin word prudentia, meaning “foresight.” “The simple believe anything, but the prudent give thought to their steps” (v. 15). Foreseeing what could happen, they work sensibly to build a safety net—a strong course of action for the wise!

With clear-eyed faith, may we live prudently, in step with God.

Reflect & Pray

What has God shown you about how to plan in a way that honors Him? By faith, how are you prudently planning for a wise future?

Thank You, Father, for inspiring me to plan prudently.

Today’s Insights

The word translated “prudent” (Proverbs 14:8, 15, 18) can also be translated as “crafty,” “sensible,” or “shrewd.” In Proverbs, the prudent are presented as the opposite of “fools” (14:8). Fools may think rejecting God’s wisdom and the instruction of others gives them power and security (v. 16), but in reality, their refusal to seek the truth is self-destructive (vv. 11-12). They lack knowledge (v. 7), and their advice can only mislead and deceive (v. 8). They’re driven by their whims and tempers (v. 17), while the prudent are guided by reliable knowledge (v. 18). The contrast between the lives of the foolish and the prudent illustrates that “the fear of the Lord is a fountain of life, turning a person from the snares of death” (v. 27).

Examine the book of Proverbs in its ancient Near Eastern context.

 

http://www.odb.org

Joyce Meyer – You Are Loved

 

…God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.

Romans 5:5 (ESV)

One of the most powerful verses in the Bible is 1 John 4:8 (ESV), which says, Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love. In other words, God’s very nature is love, and it is more powerful than anything else in the universe. All He has to offer us is love. Everything He does is rooted in love. And it is impossible for God to be anything but loving. Whenever you think about God, read about Him in His Word, or talk to Him, you can be certain that He loves you all the time.

The apostle Paul writes in Romans 5:5 that the love of God is poured out in our hearts through the Holy Spirit. When we choose Jesus as our Lord and Savior, the Holy Spirit comes to dwell in our hearts through faith as one of God’s gifts to us. He does many things for us and works in our lives in various ways, one of which is to bring God’s love to us and to remind us of it.

A person with a wounded soul may struggle to believe God loves her. She may feel she is not valuable enough to be loved by God or she may fear that God is like people who have said they loved her and then hurt her. But what God wants is for us to receive His love by faith, believing He is greater than our fears, our failures, our weaknesses, and the pain of our past.

When we are able to stand firm in the knowledge that God loves us, our hearts are filled with confidence, peace, joy, hope, concern for others, and positive attitudes toward our future.

I encourage you to ask the Holy Spirit to continue to reveal God’s love to you in personal ways and to look up Scriptures about God’s love. I also encourage you to memorize these Scriptures to help yourself become more firmly established in the fact that He loves you. Here are a few to get you started:

  • “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life” (John 3:16 ESV).
  • “I have loved you with an everlasting love; I have drawn you with unfailing kindness” (Jer. 31:3 NIV).
  • “But you, O Lord, are a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness” (Ps. 86:15 ESV).
  • “But God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Rom. 5:8 ESV).

As you meditate on these verses and others like them and ask the Holy Spirit to make them real and personal to you, you will grow in your confidence that God loves you.

Prayer of the Day: Lord, help me fully receive Your love and stand firm in it. Help me to completely trust that You are always with me, no matter what, amen.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Denison Forum – The Muslim Brotherhood is “coming for all of the West”

 

Israel has confirmed that a body extracted by their forces in a southern Gaza tunnel is that of Hamas leader Mohammed Sinwar. The brother of Oct. 7 mastermind Yahya Sinwar, he was killed in a May 13 airstrike as he hid under the European Hospital in Khan Younis.

“We found a military base under a hospital,” said the company commander who discovered the body. His statement forms a descriptive metaphor for my article this morning.

According to a new report profiled by journalist Simone Rodan-Benzaquen in the Free Press, the Muslim Brotherhood is building an extensive infrastructure in Europe. This radical movement seeks to impose Islamic law through schools, charities, and religious networks, creating “ideological bases under hospitals,” as it were. It claims to reject violence, but it has extremist offshoots such as Hamas and often blurs the line between nonviolence and radicalization.

Founded in 1928, the Brotherhood views Islam as a total system. And, as Rodan-Benzaquen warns, “It is coming for all of the West.”

 “Reaching far beyond the mosque”

Rodan-Benzaquen’s article tells us how:

The Brotherhood has methodically expanded its presence across [Europe]—embedding itself in local communities through a network of mosques, charities, educational institutions, and civic associations, all designed to promote its vision of political Islam under the cover of religious outreach.

In France alone, the Brotherhood’s network comprises 280 mosques. Every Friday, some ninety-one thousand people worship in these spaces. The movement also controls or influences twenty-one private schools and 815 Quranic schools. According to Rodan-Benzaquen, over sixty-six thousand minors in these schools are “taught to see themselves as part of a global Muslim community in moral and cultural opposition to Western secularism.”

For example, they have distributed texts that praise Sharia law as superior to man-made law (such as democracy), denounce interfaith marriage, and vilify Jews. The Brotherhood has also established stores, youth centers, job training programs, matchmaking services, Islamic microfinance initiatives, and charities that collectively form parallel structures of authority for Muslims to utilize. Their larger purpose is to elevate religious law over that of the country and impose social pressure on Muslims to comply.

Their new frontier is digital, with waves of online influencers trained in Brotherhood institutions and fluent in grievance politics who are focusing on younger audiences. Rodan-Benzaquen warns that they are “reaching far beyond the mosque, preaching on screens in palms and in sitting rooms all across the globe.”

Qatar and Turkey have been funding and supporting the movement and its affiliated networks. Its larger purpose is global cultural and political domination for Islam.

Fertile soil for immorality

One reason the Brotherhood’s ideological strategy is so effective is that it encounters so little cultural resistance. Not only has public discourse been accommodating under the banner of multiculturalism, but the West has long abandoned any cohesive worldview to oppose it.

When secularized society has no way to separate truth from falsehood, labeling both as subjective fictions, how are we to counter the truth claims of the Muslim Brotherhood or any other worldview? Our ideological “soil” is fertile ground for any agenda organized and incentivized enough to take advantage of the opportunity.

The “sexual revolution” that has normalized pornography and premarital and extramarital sex while redefining and trivializing marriage has been possible only in a world where biblical morality was first marginalized. Continued public support for abortion and the growing embrace of euthanasia across the country are possible only because the sanctity of all life is ignored or rejected.

In each case, what seems attractive at first to a post-Christian culture is destructive to our souls and our collective future. “Military bases under hospitals” is an apt metaphor for our day.

Imparting “the very life of God”

The good news is that we’ve been here before. The first-century Roman Empire was at least as hedonistic as American society today. Unwanted children were abandoned; unwanted elderly people were euthanized; every kind of sexual immorality was normalized and practiced. Like the Muslim Brotherhood infiltrating Europe and the West, foreign powers and movements threatened the Empire from within.

Then came Pentecost, and the God who created the universe began living inside humans by his indwelling Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 3:16).

He not only forgave fallen people for their sins, he set them “free in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and death” (Romans 8:2) and made them his “new creation” (2 Corinthians 5:17). They became a new and different kind of people (1 Peter 2:5), demonstrating a character so different from the fallen culture (Galatians 5:22–23) that others could tell “they had been with Jesus” (Acts 4:13). And over time they built the mightiest spiritual movement in history and transformed the Western world.

Billy Graham wrote:

When we give our lives to Jesus and trust him as our Savior and Lord, the Spirit renews our souls and brings the life of God into us. We have joy and peace, and we have a new direction to our lives because the Spirit of God has imparted to us the very life of God (my emphasis).

When “we have all that is needed”

Now it falls to us, as with our first-century sisters and brothers, to live out “the very life of God” in every way we can. First, by submitting every day to the Spirit and giving our lives to his leading and purpose (Ephesians 5:18). Second, by leading everyone we influence to join us in the abundant life found only in Christ (John 10:10). And third, by declaring and defending biblical truth and morality in a culture desperate for light in its darkness (1 Peter 3:15–16).

I remember touring Carlsbad Caverns years ago. After our group descended into the heart of the cave system, our guide had us sit on a rock ledge and then extinguish our flashlights. The darkness was so absolute as to be tangible. I could not see the hand in front of my face. Then he turned on his flashlight, and my eyes were drawn instinctively to its light.

So it is with the light of the Spirit—the darker the room, the more powerful, tangible, and attractive he becomes. A. W. Tozer reminded us:

“When we have the Holy Spirit, we have all that is needed to be all that God desires us to be.”

If Jesus is your Savior, you have all of the Spirit.

Does he have all of you?

Quote for the day:

“The Holy Spirit transforms and renews us, creates harmony and unity, and gives us courage and joy for mission.” —Pope Francis

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Denison Forum

Days of Praise – God’s Rest Day

 

by Henry M. Morris III, D.Min.

“Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy.” (Exodus 20:8)

The Hebrew word shabbat is found 108 times in the Old Testament. The basic meaning is “intermission” or “break.” The term never means “Saturday” or “seven.”

The pattern of resting every seventh day–night cycle was established by God at creation (Genesis 2:1-3Exodus 20:11). God “made” (performed activity) for six days and rested and ended His work on the seventh day.

Therefore, God blessed and “hallowed” the resting day to commemorate His initial work and rest cycle. There is no other basis for this pattern. There is no relationship for the seven-day week in any astronomical clock reference: solar, stellar, or lunar. In fact, the Lord Jesus clearly told us that He made the sabbath for humanity (Mark 2:27). Apart from God’s specific design, we would have no reason to observe the seven-day week, which is common to all cultures.

All humanity observes the seven-day cycle from a practical and physiological need. Christians, however, should acknowledge that the sabbath was dedicated by God at creation to be a day of “sanctification.”

God’s people should follow the pattern He set (Genesis 2:1-3) and recognize the wonder and majesty of the creation (Exodus 20:11). We should cease from our own profitable employment (Exodus 20:9-10) and, more importantly, concentrate on the worship of our Creator (Psalm 92).

This commandment is the only command listed with a specific reason, and the precise wording should forever settle the argument about a “day age” interpretation of creation. In Exodus 20:11, the wording can only mean a “regular” day. There is no linguistic excuse for long ages anywhere. HMM III

 

 

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

My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers – Seek If You Have Not Found

 

Seek and you will find. — Luke 11:9

When you ask, you do not receive, because you ask with wrong motives” (James 4:3). What motivates you when you ask? If you are asking to receive things from life rather than from God, you are motivated by a desire for self-realization. Watch out if this is the case. The more you realize yourself, the less will you seek God.

“Seek and you will find.” Have you ever sought God with your whole heart? Or do you merely give a half-hearted cry in his direction in moments of doubt? Get to work. Narrow your interests until they are centered on God. Seek, concentrate, and you will find.

“Come, all you who are thirsty, come to the waters” (Isaiah 55:1). Are you thirsty, or are you so satisfied with your experience that you want nothing more from God? Experience is a gateway, not a destination. Beware of building your faith on experience. If you do, you run the risk of becoming so smug that you wind up driving others away from God. You can never give other people what you’ve found, but you can make them homesick for what you’ve got.

“Knock and the door will be opened to you” (Matthew 7:7). The door is closed; your heart is pounding. “Wash your hands, you sinners.” Knock a bit louder; you notice that you are dirty. “Purify your hearts.” This is even more personal; you are filled with sincerity now. “Grieve, mourn and wail.” Have you ever gone before God full of grief about the state of your inner life? Have you gone without an ounce of selfpity remaining inside you, only a heartbreaking amazement that you are what you are? “Humble yourselves” (James 4:8–10). It is deeply humbling to knock at God’s door; you knock with the crucified thief. “To the one who knocks, the door will be opened” (Matthew 7:8).

2 Chronicles 34-36; John 19:1-22

Wisdom from Oswald

The vital relationship which the Christian has to the Bible is not that he worships the letter, but that the Holy Spirit makes the words of the Bible spirit and life to him. The Psychology of Redemption, 1066 L

 

 

https://utmost.org/

Billy Graham – His Love Is Obvious

 

. . . the love of God toward us . . .

—1 John 4:9

Notice God’s love. The Bible teaches that God is love. You and I were sinners. We were aliens from God. We were enemies of God. We had rebelled against God. We deserved hell, but in spite of the fact that we resisted God, we rebelled against God, we sinned against God, we were enemies of God—the Bible says God loved us anyway with an everlasting love so that He was willing to give His Son to die on the cross for our sins. There is not a person who has the ability to love that way unless he comes to Christ. You don’t have the power to love.

From Day by Day with Billy Graham, © 1976 BGEA

Prayer for the day

Your love encompasses me, Lord Jesus, wherever I may be. There are so many who need the healing of Your love in their lives. Fill me to overflowing with “agapé” love for them.

 

 

https://billygraham.org/

Guideposts – Devotions for Women – Your Divine Compass

 

Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight.—Proverb s 3:5–6 (NIV)

Trusting your heart can sometimes feel like finding your way in the dark. But remember, within you is a divine compass guided by God, leading you toward decisions that align with His plan. Turn to Him in prayer, trust your inner compass, and bravely follow where your heart leads, knowing He will guide your journey.

Divine Navigator, guide my way and keep me on the right path.

 

 

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