Our Daily Bread – The Prayers of Jesus

 

I have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith may not fail. Luke 22:32

Today’s Scripture

Luke 22:28-34

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Today’s Devotional

Jesus, how are You praying for me? I’d never thought to ask that question until my friend Lou shared the experience of his heart-cry to Christ when he was faced with a situation that required more wisdom and strength than he was able to muster. Hearing him voice that noteworthy question in prayer has helped me add a fresh dimension to my understanding and practice of prayer.

In Luke 22, there was no mystery as to how Jesus was praying for Simon Peter: “Simon, Simon, Satan has asked to sift all of you as wheat. But I have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith may not fail” (vv. 31-32). When Peter was battered through trial, his faith flickered. But because of Christ’s grace, it didn’t fail.

The book of Acts tells us how Jesus’ prayers for Peter—His eager but weak disciple—were answered. God used him to preach the good news about Christ to Jews and gentiles alike. And Jesus’ prayer ministry hasn’t ended. Paul reminds us that “Christ Jesus who died—more than that, who was raised to life—is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us” (Romans 8:34). When you find yourself in the throes of trial or temptation, remember that Jesus, who prayed for His disciples, remains in prayer for those who have believed their message about Him (see John 17:13-20).

Reflect & Pray

How does remembering that Jesus is praying for you affect how you pray? In view of His prayer ministry, how might you live and serve differently?

 

Dear Jesus, thank You for Your prayers on my behalf. Please help me to pray and live with this awareness.

Not sure how to pray? Check out this piece from Discovery Series to learn more.

Today’s Insights

Satan had to ask Christ for permission to test Peter and was permitted to sift him “as wheat” (Luke 22:31). This would entail forceful shaking, but Satan wasn’t allowed to destroy Peter. On the contrary, this sifting would remove the chaff from his life. This is reminiscent of Satan asking for God’s permission to test Job (Job 1:9-12; 2:3-6) and Job affirming that “when [God] has tested me, I will come forth as gold” (23:10).

Jesus’ sovereignty is evident in His prayers that Peter’s faith wouldn’t fail (Luke 22:32). His courage failed, however, as he denied knowing Christ three times (vv. 54-62). But though he momentarily faltered, his faith didn’t fail. Jesus’ prayer that Peter would turn back to strengthen his brothers (v. 32) was fulfilled when he repented (v. 62). He was later restored and commissioned by Christ to pastoral ministry (John 21:15-17). We can be encouraged when we remember that Christ also prays for us.

 

http://www.odb.org

Joyce Meyer – God’s Word Has Self-Fulfilling Power

 

For as [surely as] the earth brings forth its shoots, and as a garden causes what is sown in it to spring forth, so [surely] the Lord God will cause rightness and justice and praise to spring forth before all the nations [through the self-fulfilling power of His word].

Isaiah 61:11 (AMPC)

When a farmer plants a seed in the ground, that seed contains everything needed to reproduce a plant just like the one the seed came from. The seed has self-fulfilling power. All the farmer needs to do is water the seed and keep the weeds from choking the life out of it, and the seed does the rest.

The Word of God functions the same way. It has self-fulfilling power. When it is planted in our hearts and we water it with our faith and keep the weeds (sin) out of our lives, we will see amazing things develop simply from believing God’s Word.

Faith is amazing. It is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen (Hebrews 11:1 NKJV). God created everything we see in the world from nothing, and He will do the same for us as we believe and trust in His Word.

When we put a tomato seed in the ground, we will get tomatoes, and likewise, when we put our faith in God’s Word, we will get what it promises.

Prayer of the Day: Lord, help me plant Your Word in my heart and water it with faith. I trust in Your promises and believe You will bring them to life in me. In the name of Jesus I pray, amen.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Denison Forum – Ghislaine Maxwell offers to testify before Congress about Epstein

 

The Jeffrey Epstein files saga is leading the news again.

To make a long story short, many people have believed for years that Epstein was at the heart of a child sex trafficking ring that involved blackmailing prominent people on a worldwide “client list.” Many also doubt the government’s statement that Epstein died by his own hand when he was jailed in 2019.

However, a memo by the Department of Justice and the FBI stated last week that such a client list does not exist and that no credible evidence that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals has been found. Reaction from longtime conservatives especially has been furious. Now comes news that Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s former girlfriend who is currently in prison on child sex trafficking offenses, is willing to tell Congress what she knows about Epstein.

Clearly, as many are warning, this story is not going away.

Why are people rewatching old TV shows?

Don’t you wish you could trust everyone who makes and reports the news?

According to Gallup, fifty years ago, 70 percent of Americans said they trusted the mass media. Today, less than half that number agree, an all-time low. Only 22 percent of US adults say they trust the federal government to do the right thing just about always or most of the time.

Office workers are feeling paranoid about job security, with fears of layoffs and being replaced by AI. Conversely, some are turning to AI therapy bots even though, as a Stanford study found, they fuel delusions and give dangerous advice.

As a sign of the times, The New York Times reports that many people are rewatching television shows made in the early twenty-first century. The article cites the shows’ quality and the nostalgia of watching them again. I also think they are popular in an unpredictable world because we like stories that we already know we like and know we like the way they turn out.

Numerous studies show that people value their earthly lives more today than ever before: we are willing to spend far more on healthcare, cutting back on teenage driving and motorcycles, reducing participation in extreme sports, and taking fewer social risks than ever. One explanation is especially foundational:

For most of human history, death wasn’t the end—it was a transition. Whether you believed in heaven, reincarnation, or joining our ancestors, mortality had an escape clause.

But as traditional religious belief declines, this life becomes all there is. The stakes of mortality go from high to infinite (their italics).

Putting gasoline in a diesel engine

When our boys were young, they found my father’s old manual typewriter in a closet. They pulled it out, tried to make it work, then gave up and asked me, “What is it?” If you’ve never seen one before, you might have the same question. It could function as a doorstop, a large paperweight, or a bookend. But it was designed to do what people of a certain age understand its function to be.

Why did our Maker make us? For what purpose are our lives intended?

God creates humans “in his own image” (Genesis 1:27). Like children who inherit their father’s DNA, we are made to be like our Father as members of his family.

Accordingly, he intends us to be “conformed to the image of his Son, in order that he might be the firstborn among many brothers” (Romans 8:29). Our Father wants us to have such an intimate, personal relationship with Jesus that we become like him. He forgives our sins and saves us from hell not just so we can spend eternity with him in heaven but so we can extend his family as his Christlike children. As Jesus’ best friend said of his Lord, “Whoever says he abides in him ought to walk in the same way in which he walked” (1 John 2:6).

To be like Christ is why we exist. Nothing less will give our lives purpose and joy, because this is the joyful purpose for which we were designed.

If we live for any other purpose than this, our lives fall into brokenness and grief. Like a diesel truck fueled with gasoline, our engine fails and the truck stalls. We can push it ourselves, use it as a storage closet, or park it in front of our house as a decoration, but it doesn’t do what it was made to do.

Thus the distrust and anxiety in our secularized culture.

If we want what God wants

If you and I want what God wants for us, we want to know Christ so fully that we become like him and thus make him known to the world.

We may want far less. We want God to forgive our sins and save us from hell for heaven. We want him to answer our prayers and meet our needs. We may even want him to use our lives in significant ways in the world.

But how many of us get up every morning with the goal to be more like Christ today than ever before?

Imagine a world in which every government official and every reporter covering them acted with the integrity and servant heart of Jesus. Imagine a world in which the rest of us did the same. There would be no Jeffrey Epstein scandals, no sexual immorality or crime or wars to report.

Before you dismiss such a possibility as hopelessly naïve, remember that the Holy Spirit indwells every Christian for just this purpose. As Oswald Chambers noted, “The Holy Spirit is determined that we will manifest Christ . . . in every domain of life.”

Are you saying the Spirit is incapable of doing what the Father intends him to do?

Here’s my point:

The Spirit will see to it that we become as much like Jesus as we want to be like Jesus.

He will manifest the “fruit” or character of Christ in every life that is fully yielded to him (Galatians 5:22–23Ephesians 5:18John 15:5). He will empower us to resist temptation (1 Corinthians 10:13) and live as “more than conquerors through him who loved us” (Romans 8:37).

And as with his first followers, the world will know that we have “been with Jesus” (Acts 4:13).

John MacArthur on “true discipleship”

Rev. John MacArthur, one of the best-known evangelical preachers and pastors of our generation, died last night at the age of eighty-six.

In his 1981 sermon, “Christlikeness: The Goal of Discipleship,” he quoted Jesus’ statement, “Everyone when he is fully trained will be like his teacher” (Luke 6:40). Then he defined “true discipleship” very simply: “You are a learner growing toward Christlikeness.”

Will you be a “true” disciple today?

Quote for the day:

“There are many who preach Christ, but not so many who live Christ. My great aim will be to live Christ.” —Robert Chapman (1803–1902)

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Denison Forum

Days of Praise – Learning by Example

 

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“But continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been assured of, knowing of whom thou hast learned them.” (2 Timothy 3:14)

When Paul wrote these words to Timothy, they were in the midst of his foreboding prophecy of coming apostasy and persecution. Furthermore, he knew that he himself would soon be executed and that these might well be his final teachings to his young disciple and to others through him. It is remarkable that in such a setting the Spirit of God impelled him to use the example of his own life as the best and most fitting climax to his great ministry. “Just keep on believing and doing what I have been teaching you—that which you have seen put into practice in your own life.” These teachings and practices had just been recounted in verses 10-11, and what a remarkable summary they provide of a genuine Christian life!

Doctrine—my teachings, sound and true to God’s Word
Manner of life—my Christ-like behavior and habits
Purpose—my sole aim, to honor God and do His will
Faith—my faithfulness to His Word and its demands
Longsuffering—my patient forbearance
Charity—my showing true Christian love
Patience—my cheerful endurance in hard times
Persecutions—the unjust opposition heaped upon me
Afflictions—sufferings and tortures that I endured

The apostle Paul had maintained this strong and consistent Christian testimony for over 30 years following his conversion and could, in all good conscience and true humility, cite his own example as a true teaching aid for others to study and follow.

May Paul’s example be ours, and may our lives likewise become true examples of Christianity for any who are watching us today. HMM

 

 

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

My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers – Spiritual Honor

 

I am obligated both to Greeks and non-Greeks, both to the wise and the foolish. That is why I am so eager to preach the gospel also to you who are in Rome. —Romans 1:14-15

Paul’s obligation to others came from an overwhelming sense of his indebtedness to Jesus Christ, and he spent himself to express it. The great inspiration in Paul’s life was his view of Jesus Christ as his spiritual creditor. Do I feel this same sense of obligation to Christ, so that I preach the gospel to “Greeks and non-Greeks . . . the wise and the foolish”—to every unsaved soul? The spiritual honor of my life is to pay my debt to Jesus Christ in relation to them.

Every bit of my life that is of value I owe to the redemption of Jesus Christ. Am I doing anything to help him manifest his redemption in others’ lives? Only when the Spirit forges inside me a sense of obligation to Christ will I be able to spend myself for him.

“You are not your own; you were bought at a price” (1 Corinthians 6:19–20). If I have a sense of indebtedness, I know that I am not a superior person but a slave of Jesus Christ. Paul sold himself to Jesus Christ and became the debtor of all. “I owe something to everyone on the face of the earth because of the gospel of Jesus,” Paul is saying in Romans 1:14. “I owe it to the world to preach his word.” Paul’s sense of spiritual honor meant that he was free to be an absolute slave only. Quit worrying about yourself and be spent for others as the slave of Jesus. That is the meaning of being made broken bread and poured-out wine for him.

Psalms 13-15; Acts 19:21-41

Wisdom from Oswald

Jesus Christ reveals, not an embarrassed God, not a confused God, not a God who stands apart from the problems, but One who stands in the thick of the whole thing with man. Disciples Indeed, 388 L

 

 

https://utmost.org/

Billy Graham – Disappointment Becomes Joy

 

They shall see his face . . .

—Revelation 22:4 (TLB)

One of the great bonuses of being a Christian is the great hope that extends beyond the grave into the glory of God’s tomorrow. A little girl was running toward a cemetery as the darkness of evening began to fall. She passed a friend who asked her if she was not afraid to go through the graveyard at night. “Oh, no,” she said, “I’m not afraid. My home is just on the other side!” We Christians are not afraid of the night of death because our heavenly home is “just on the other side.” The resurrection of Christ changed the midnight of bereavement into a sunrise of reunion; it changed the midnight of disappointment into a sunrise of joy; it changed the midnight of fear to a sunrise of peace. Today faith and confidence in the resurrected Christ can change your fear to hope and your disappointment to joy.

Prayer for the day

Whatever I fear the most, Lord Jesus, I put into Your loving hands, knowing You will give me peace and courage.

 

 

https://billygraham.org/

Guideposts – Devotions for Women – The Light of Compassion

 

Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them.—Matthew 5:17 (NIV)

Just as the sun rises each day, God calls us to illuminate the world with compassion. The Law and the Prophets teach us about justice, but Jesus reminds us that the true fulfillment of these teachings lies in compassion for others. Like a gentle dawn breaking the darkness, your compassion can bring hope and healing into the lives of those around you.

Lord, may my actions reflect Your teachings and bring hope to those in need.

 

 

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

The Marne Was Just the Beginning: How July 15, 1918 Marked America’s Rise on the World Stage

The River Where America Arrived

It was July 15, 1918. In the heat of a brutal French summer, German artillery opened up on Allied lines at the Marne River. A barrage unlike all others, it was Berlin’s final gamble to break the Western Front. What they didn’t count on was that a new player had arrived, and he wasn’t bluffing.

America wasn’t just sending weapons anymore. We were sending boys who would soon become men by force of fire, and in doing so, the United States proved, once and for all, that it was no longer a mere spectator on the global stage.

Modern Parallels: From the Marne to Ukraine

When Germany launched its last offensive at the Marne, they were gambling on exhaustion. They believed the Allies were too fatigued, too fractured, and too under‑resourced to withstand one final blow. But then American boots hit the dirt. More than 250,000 Americans stood in defiance—not just a token few—by the time the counterattack surged forward.

Today, in Ukraine, we see echoes of that gamble again. A significant power pushes forward under the illusion that the West has grown soft and wouldn’t respond, thinking that American strength is nothing but a bluff.

Although late to the game, the world learned in 1918 that the United States alone had the strength to alter the course of the war. Lessons learned echo in chambers deep inside the Kremlin, Beijing, and Tehran. The entire world knew then that when America commits, we don’t simply turn the tide; we bring a tsunami.

This isn’t arrogance talking. It’s the memory shared by each nation that watched the Marne become the moment the war turned.

The Grit of American Industry: Mobilization Without Hesitation

Americans were underestimated before even firing a shot. European leaders believed that a republic founded by farmers and shopkeepers was unable to manufacture the tools of war quickly enough to make a difference. They were convinced that timelines and logistics would be barriers that couldn’t be breached.

Boy, were they wrong.

Midway through 1918, the United States transformed itself from a standing army of less than 130,000 to a wartime machine capable of shipping hundreds of thousands across the ocean and, most importantly, resupplying them every week.

Everything, from munitions to uniforms, trucks, and artillery, was manufactured with fantastic efficiency.

This wasn’t just hyperbole; it was real production. The American Expeditionary Forces were fed, armed, and clothed by an industrial base without precedent in history.

Modern wars require advanced technology, including AI integration, waves of drones, and cyber dominance. The Marne reminds us of what made nations fear our industry. America didn’t need perfect conditions to succeed; it builds, adapts, and overwhelms.

It’s hard to imagine that same Marne-era mindset driving today’s society, where engineers, welders, coders, and designers are just as vital to our liberty as those who wear the uniform.

Where Blood Met Soil: Belleau Wood and Château‑Thierry

It’s one thing to read about America’s efforts in WWI, but nothing compares to listening to the veterans who were there, telling their stories.

At Château‑Thierry, U.S. troops held bridges while forcing back the Germans using bayonets. The U.S. 3rd Division earned the moniker “Rock of the Marne” for a specific reason. Even when they were outgunned, they refused to retreat.

U.S. Marines didn’t stop the German offensive at Belleau Wood. They smashed it. The men fighting weren’t just veterans; they were Kansas farm boys and Pittsburgh steelworkers. Many of our boys were working through their first combat just days after arriving. They fought through poison gas, machine gun nests, and terrains from Hell.

There was one legendary man who yelled something that grew larger than he did. Gunny Sergeant Dan Daly rallied his men when he yelled, “Come on, you sons of bitches, do you want to live forever?”

What those men fought for wasn’t an empire; they fought for the men alongside them, and because liberty isn’t something inherited, it’s something that is defended.

From Isolation to Respect

It’s true that after World War I, the United States recoiled. We rejected the League of Nations. We withdrew into the comfort of distance. But the world didn’t forget what happened at the Marne.

They didn’t forget the speed of our arrival, the depth of our sacrifice, the rhythm of our industry—and they didn’t forget that the war ended in November, not years later, because America finally showed up and meant it.

We may have pulled back from international entanglements in the 1920s and ’30s, but global powers never again ignored the capabilities of the American people.

The Marne didn’t make us an empire; it made us respected.

Final Thoughts: Why We Share the Marne

Some anniversaries fill the calendar, some drift by, and others ought to be shouted from rooftops. July 15 deserves the latter.

We don’t just remember it because Americans fought. We remember it because they proved we belonged.

During an age where America’s influence is questioned, especially from within, we must remember the blood that carved our seat at the table. That seat wasn’t bought or inherited. It was earned at Château‑Thierry, Belleau Wood, and the banks of the Marne.

At some point, they’ll learn for good that the American spirit is still alive, and it’s not just something read about in our history.

Until then, let them question our wherewithal.

And then let them fear our answer.

 

Source: The Marne Was Just the Beginning: How July 15 Marked America’s Rise on the World Stage – PJ Media

 

David Manney

David Manney is a writer and thinker passionate about truth, clarity, and challenging systems that fail those they claim to serve. He brings a sharp eye, a steady voice, and a deep sense of purpose to everything he creates.

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