Turning Point; David Jeremiah – When Waters Rise

 

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There will be famines and earthquakes in various places.
Matthew 24:7, NIV

Recommended Reading: Psalm 29

Like many residents of western North Carolina, Benny and Keva Messer lost everything in the floods spawned by Hurricane Helene in 2024. Samaritan’s Purse sent more than fifty thousand volunteers to the area. One crew built a new house for the Messers in Waynesville and gave them the keys and a deed that was stamped, “Paid in Full.”

“I am so overwhelmed,” said Keva. “So blessed!”

Benny said, “They prayed with [us] when they came. They let their light shine. I appreciate every one of them.”1 Samaritan’s Purse isn’t alone. Thousands of Christian organizations of all sizes go about their work every day around the world.

Natural disasters are horrific events, but it’s important to look past the tragedies to see what God is doing. During such times, many draw closer to each other and to the Lord. Volunteers band together, and Christians demonstrate God’s love and help others through troubled times.

What can you do to be an example and help to others in difficult times?

We need to focus not on what can be torn down by the storms of life but on what stands for eternity.
Franklin Graham

  1. Kimberly King, “Samaritan’s Purse Gives Waynesville Couple a New Home After Helene’s Destruction,” ABC13 News, June 2, 2025.

 

 

https://www.davidjeremiah.org

Our Daily Bread – Hollow Willow

 

A gossip betrays a confidence, but a trustworthy person keeps a secret. Proverbs 11:13

Today’s Scripture

Proverbs 11:11-13

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Today’s Devotion

When explaining how valuable he found time with an older advisor who regularly listened to his concerns, Tomáš said, “He is my hollow willow.” When I looked at him blankly, Tomáš explained that the phrase is a Slovak expression signifying someone who keeps your secrets. In essence, the person is like a willow tree holding confidential information safely within its trunk.

It’s a treasure to have someone to whom we can confide our deepest fears and longings. Perhaps speaking from his own experience, in a section of Proverbs highlighting the power of our words, King Solomon commended the individual who displays discretion or can “[hold] their tongue” (Proverbs 11:12). He also contrasted two people: “A gossip betrays a confidence, but a trustworthy person keeps a secret” (v. 13). The comparison is a helpful reminder to carefully steward private conversations, though we shouldn’t remain silent if we’re genuinely concerned for someone’s safety.

In our digital world where we can quickly spread information, it can be tempting (and easy) to share juicy details that might generate reactions. But gossip not only hurts the individual who trusted you enough to share, it also causes significant damage to relationships when confidences are broken. We can all aspire to be “hollow willows,” people of integrity who can be trusted to keep a confidence.

Reflect & Pray

Who’s someone you know that embodies the ideal of a “hollow willow?” How might you hold others’ words well?

Dear God, please help me steward others’ words responsibly.

Today’s Insights

Along with today’s passage, the book of Proverbs has much to say about the trouble gossiping causes. Proverbs 16:28 states, “A perverse person stirs up conflict, and a gossip separates close friends.” Twice we read, “The words of a gossip are like choice morsels; they go down to the inmost parts” (18:8; 26:22). In the NLT Study Bible, a note on 18:8 says: “It’s as hard to refuse to listen to rumors or gossip as it is to turn down a delicious dessert. Taking just one morsel of either one creates a taste for more.” Verse 20:19 warns, “A gossip betrays a confidence; so avoid anyone who talks too much.” Listening to or spreading gossip destroys friendships and leads to a desire for more gossip. As believers in Jesus, God can help us be people of integrity who use speech that honors Him.

Listen and learn more about rediscovering friendship. 

 

http://www.odb.org

Denison Forum – The most moving two minutes of my life

 

Yom HaShoah and the solidarity of our souls

Next to my baptism and wedding vows, the most moving two minutes of my life came years ago when I stood next to a bus alongside a highway. I was leading a study tour in Israel, making our way toward Ben Gurion Airport for our flight home.

Suddenly, sirens sounded. My first thought was that the nation was under attack. But it was not, at least not in the sense I feared.

The date was April 14, otherwise known as Yom HaShoah, the day each year when Israelis remember the six million Jews who were murdered in the Holocaust. Across the country, everything stops. Vehicles on the road pull over, as ours did, and their occupants stand outside. Jobs, schools, and all other activities cease. For two minutes, the entire nation pauses in remembrance of those who perished in the worst atrocity in Jewish history.

I can think of nothing analogous to this in American experience. Even with regard to Pearl Harbor and 9/11, we do not all stop on a single day at a single moment to remember those who perished.

Nothing else happens with Yom HaShoah except what I have described. No actions are taken; no laws are passed; nothing substantive occurs in these moments to deter future holocausts. Many Israelis are highly secular and do not even pray during these two minutes.

Why, then, was remembering people who have been dead for more than eighty years so moving for me? Why did the Israelis on our bus have tears in their eyes? Why does an entire nation stop like this every year, without fail?

And why, after Yom HaShoah is over for another year, am I still remembering it as if it were yesterday?

As if their loved ones had perished

In The Great Shadow: A History of How Sickness Shapes What We Do, Think, Believe, and Buy, historian Susan Wise Bauer brilliantly illustrates one way the past shapes the present and predicts the future. We remember pandemics of earlier times so as to prevent them from recurring and to prepare if they do. The collective history of human sickness is a primer on avoiding and coping with sickness today.

In this sense, remembering Holocaust victims is an exercise in present-tense self-preservation, a way for Jewish people to call to mind the historic reality of antisemitism and find renewed stimulus to combat it.

But I sensed that there was something more in the hearts of the Israelis as they stopped that day. They genuinely felt themselves to be in solidarity with those who were murdered and those who grieve those who died. It was as if their own loved ones had perished, and they were pausing to internalize such suffering and make it their own.

For many of them, this is true. Given the fact that the Holocaust killed approximately one-third of the global Jewish population at the time, a large percentage of Jews today had ancestors who perished at the hands of the Nazis.

But there was even more going on as the sirens sounded. A sense of collective grief, resolve, and pride in their people and nation was tangible.

The historic and global solidarity of the Jews as a people, on clear display that day, goes a long way toward explaining their survival and flourishing across four millennia.

“All the families of the earth shall be blessed”

No race has been so persecuted as the Jews, from slavery in Egypt to crematoriums at Auschwitz to October 7 and the antisemitic reaction it illogically spurred. And yet no race has contributed so much to humanity.

For example, while the Jews comprise only 0.2 percent of the global population, they have been awarded 22 percent of all Nobel Prizes.

God’s promise to Abraham and his descendants continues to be kept every day: “In you all the families of the earth shall be blessed” (Genesis 12:3). We are not required to agree with everything the leaders of modern-day Israel do, but we can marvel at the perseverance and contributions of their people.

Such solidarity starts early. A Jewish father is his children’s first rabbi; the home is their first synagogue. The Shabbat (the Sabbath) and other Jewish rules and traditions permeate every day and area of their lives, not just their religious activities. And their shared connection with Jews of all nations and languages who keep the same rules and follow the same traditions infuses them with a sense of community that transcends their present challenges, no matter how difficult.

Such solidarity is one of the many lessons I treasure from more than thirty pilgrimages to the Holy Land over these many years. And one I encourage you to embrace with me today.

Taking a coal from the fire

In contrast with the communal worldview of historic Judaism, the individualism and existentialism of the West permeates our culture and thinking. America was founded on the principle of individual liberty; even the colonies that united to win independence from England struggled to stay united as a collective nation.

Here is where Christianity can bring unity amid diversity, transcending our divisions and transforming our future.

Regarding the individual: As Jesus stated, we must each be “born again” (John 3:7). No one can trust in Christ for us. Faith cannot be transmitted genetically or handed down generationally. We will each stand individually before Jesus one day (2 Corinthians 5:10). We each experience a personal relationship with God that is uniquely ours.

Regarding the collective: We are “a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for [God’s] own possession” (1 Peter 2:9). We are members of a collective body (1 Corinthians 12:27), branches of a single vine (John 15:1–8), children of a single Father (John 1:12) who will spend eternity as part of a “great multitude” in the presence of the Almighty (Revelation 7:9).

Here’s the problem: American evangelicalism is typically weighted far more toward the former than the latter. We emphasize the urgency of personal salvation (as we should) so fully that we do less to engage saved souls in the larger family and story of faith.

But if you take a coal from the fire, it goes out. If you sever a branch from the vine, the branch dies.

“So that the world may know”

Just as humans were created for community (Genesis 2:18), Christians are intended to do life together. We are instructed to pray for each other (James 5:16), to forgive each other (Colossians 3:13), to “serve one another” (1 Peter 4:10), and to “bear one another’s burdens” (Galatians 6:2).

To these ends:

  • For whom are you praying today? Who is praying for you?
  • Whom are you forgiving today? Who is forgiving you?
  • Whom are you serving today? Who is serving you?
  • Whose burdens are you bearing today? Who is bearing yours?

Yom HaShoah is a powerful reminder to pray daily for the “peace of Jerusalem” (Psalm 122:6) in these war-torn days. It is a powerful encouragement to love the Jewish people as God does and to pray and work for them to know their Messiah as their Lord.

And it is an invitation to imitate their solidarity by modeling Christian unity for a divided and divisive culture.

Dwight Moody observed, “I have never yet known the Spirit of God to work where the Lord’s people were divided.” Conversely, Jesus prayed that his followers “may become perfectly one, so that the world may know that you sent me and loved them even as you loved me” (John 17:23).

I believe Jesus is praying for our unity even now (Romans 8:34Hebrews 7:25).

How will you answer his prayer today?

 

Denison Forum

Harvest Ministries; Greg Laurie – No More Tears

 

 He will wipe every tear from their eyes, and there will be no more death or sorrow or crying or pain. All these things are gone forever. 

—Revelation 21:4

Scripture:

Revelation 21:4 

One of the most unpredictable headwinds we face in this life is grief. Grief can be expected in the aftermath of a loss. But it isn’t confined to a specific period of mourning. There’s no way to anticipate how long it will last or when it will come roaring back without warning.

Though we may not fully understand grief, we have a Savior who does. Isaiah 53:3–4 says, “He was despised and rejected—a man of sorrows, acquainted with deepest grief. We turned our backs on him and looked the other way. He was despised, and we did not care. Yet it was our weaknesses he carried; it was our sorrows that weighed him down. And we thought his troubles were a punishment from God, a punishment for his own sins!” (NLT).

Not only did He carry our sin, but He also carried our sorrows. He was acquainted with our grief. He has a deep and abiding concern for our emotional well-being. The psalmist wrote, “You keep track of all my sorrows. You have collected all my tears in your bottle. You have recorded each one in your book” (Psalm 56:8 NLT).

On a tour of Israel several years ago, I was exploring the old city of Jerusalem with my sons, Christopher and Jonathan. At one point in our ramblings, we stopped at an antiquities store, and I noticed a number of little bottles in various sizes and shapes. I asked the shopkeeper, “Sir, what are these bottles for?”

“Oh,” he said, “those are Roman tear bottles.”

“What were they used for?” I asked.

“Well,” he replied, “the Romans believed that when a loved one dies, you need to keep your tears in a bottle. So, they would store their tears in these little containers.”

I have a tear bottle now. But it isn’t on earth; it’s in Heaven. And I’m not the one who has to collect my tears because God said He would do that.

Why does God keep our tears in a bottle? Because He sees and cares about every one of them. He takes note of our every tear. He hears our every sigh.

Revelation 21:4 says, “He will wipe every tear from their eyes, and there will be no more death or sorrow or crying or pain. All these things are gone forever” (NLT). We can look forward to that day, knowing that grief will have no place in our eternal life with God.

In the meantime, we can take our feelings of sorrow and loss to the One who designed us, who understands us, and who knows how to comfort and heal us. Psalm 147:3 says, “He heals the brokenhearted and bandages their wounds” (NLT).

But it doesn’t stop there. The apostle Paul wrote, “He comforts us in all our troubles so that we can comfort others. When they are troubled, we will be able to give them the same comfort God has given us” (2 Corinthians 1:4 NLT).

No one is better equipped to help someone through their grief journey than someone who has traveled the road themselves.

Reflection Question: What has been your experience with grief? Discuss this with believers like you on Harvest Discipleship!

 

 

Harvest.org | Greg Laurie

Days of Praise – Happy Suffering

 

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“But and if ye suffer for righteousness’ sake, happy are ye: and be not afraid of their terror, neither be troubled” (1 Peter 3:14).

Few Christians in the modern world, especially in our own country, have actually suffered physical persecution or martyrdom for the cause of Christ. Nevertheless, the Scriptures emphasize that “all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution” of some kind, particularly in “the last days” (2 Timothy 3:1,12). We need, therefore, not to seek persecution but to at least understand it and react appropriately when it comes. As the world descends deeper into humanism and occultism, we may even face physical persecution as many Christians in communist, Muslim, and pagan lands already have.

Peter, who once himself was so fearful that he denied Christ, warns us not to fall into the same reaction. “Be not afraid, or troubled,” he says. Instead, “be happy!” This is seemingly strange but genuinely good advice. “Rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ’s sufferings; that, when His glory shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy. If ye be reproached for the name of Christ, happy are ye; for the spirit of glory and of God resteth upon you” (1 Peter 4:13–14).

Christ Himself said, “Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake. Rejoice, and be exceeding glad: for great is your reward in heaven” (Matthew 5:11–12). The apostle Paul, who also suffered great persecution and eventual martyrdom, cautioned that we should be “in nothing terrified by your adversaries . . . . For unto you it is given in the behalf of Christ, not only to believe on him, but also to suffer for his sake” (Philippians 1:28–29). HMM

 

 

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

Joyce Meyer – Confidence in Christ

 

Do not, therefore, fling away your fearless confidence, for it carries a great and glorious compensation of reward. For you have need of steadfast patience and endurance, so that you may perform and fully accomplish the will of God, and thus receive and carry away [and enjoy to the full] what is promised.

Hebrews 10:35-36 (AMPC)

What is confidence? It has been defined as the quality of assurance that leads one to undertake something; the belief that one is able and acceptable; the certainty that causes one to be bold, open, and plain.

The devil begins his assault on personal confidence wherever he can find an opening, especially during the vulnerable years of childhood. His goal is to undermine the person because an individual without confidence will never fulfill the plan of God for his life.

Christ is in you, ready to help with everything you do for Him. Jesus can restore your confidence and give you the strength, power, and boldness to do what you could never do on your own. Be confident—it is part of your spiritual inheritance!

Prayer of the Day: Jesus, restore my confidence and heal past wounds. Remind me that You live in me, strengthening and equipping me to fulfill Your purpose with boldness and peace, amen.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Max Lucado – Grace is Personal 

 

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Christ took away your sins. He endured not just the nails of the Romans, the mockery of the crowd, and the spear of the soldier, but he endured the anger of God.

God didn’t just overlook your sins, lest he endorse them. He didn’t punish you, lest he destroy you. Instead he found a way to punish the sin and preserve the sinner. Jesus took your punishment, and God gave you credit for Jesus’ perfection.

As long as the cross is God’s gift to the world, it will touch you but it will not change you. Precious as it is to proclaim, “Christ died for the world,” even sweeter it is to whisper, “Christ died for me.” For my sins he died. He took my place on the cross. He felt my shame, he spoke my name. Thank God for the day Jesus took your place, for the day grace happened to you.

 

 

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Today in the Word – Moody Bible Institute – God’s Way of Redemption

 

Read Leviticus 25:18–28, 47–54

When Americans were asked—Who has the greatest responsibility for helping people in need?—the top three answers were the government, nonprofit organizations, and religious institutions. Even so, seventy-two percent of respondents also said it is “extremely” important for them to help their own friends and family members in need.

It is helpful, in our study of Ruth, to reflect on Leviticus 25 which is part of the “Holiness Code.” This section of the Law outlined how Israel’s holiness and purity were to be maintained. The Lord declared, “The land must not be sold permanently, because the land is mine and you reside in my land as foreigners and strangers” (v. 23).

Within this context, the role of the go’el—the guardian-redeemer—is introduced as both a practical and a theological practice. If an Israelite fell into economic hardship and was forced to sell family land (v. 25) or even sell themselves into indentured servitude to a foreigner (vv. 47–54), a close relative (go’el) was expected to intervene and redeem the person and the property. This was not seen as an act of charity. Rather, it was an act of covenantal compassion that was instituted by the Lord and woven into Israel’s culture. Naomi and Boaz would both have understood this.

The Hebrew word go’el means “to redeem” or “to reclaim.” It’s a legal term that carries relational weight. Unlike the impersonal government or an institution, this redeemer was a family member—someone bound by blood and loyalty and covenant responsibility. The go’el’s act of redemption was done with honor. It did not shame or embarrass the recipient. Instead, this redemption was restorative. It was intended to return the redeemed to their rightful place in the community and to preserve the family inheritance given by God.

Go Deeper

How does the law of the guardian- redeemer challenge our responsibility to care for our family, friends, and others?

Pray with Us

Dear Lord, thank You for showing us the way of redemption and restoration. We pray that Your hesed love and care for us will shape the way we care for the people You have placed in our lives.

Follow my decrees and be careful to obey my laws, and you will live safely in the land.Leviticus 25:18

 

 

https://www.moodybible.org/