Turning Point; David Jeremiah – Your Truest Friend

 

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For it is not an enemy who reproaches me; then I could bear it. Nor is it one who hates me who has exalted himself against me; then I could hide from him. But it was you, a man my equal, my companion and my acquaintance.
Psalm 55:12-13

Recommended Reading: Matthew 24:9-10

We wonder what Jesus must have felt when He was betrayed by Judas and then denied by Peter. In His teaching on the End Times Jesus said that many will turn away from the faith and will betray their friends who choose to remain faithful (Matthew 24:10-11).

There are many examples of betrayal by friends in the Bible. Cain betrayed his brother Abel; Joseph was betrayed by his own brothers; Jacob betrayed his brother Esau. And David recounted numerous instances of his friends turning against him (Psalm 31:11; 38:11; 41:9; 55:12-13). It pays to choose friends wisely, though even a wise choice doesn’t guarantee loyalty. True friends are made for adversity (Proverbs 17:17), and there are friends who can be more loyal than family (Proverbs 18:24). One way to cultivate true friendships is by being the kind of friend you desire to have (Proverbs 18:24).

Give thanks today that Jesus is your truest friend (John 15:14-15).

What a friend we have in Jesus, all our sins and griefs to bear!
Joseph M. Scriven

 

 

https://www.davidjeremiah.org

Our Daily Bread – Lost but Now Found

 

Rejoice with me; I have found my lost coin. Luke 15:9

Today’s Scripture

Luke 15:8-10

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Today’s Devotion

When I visited Ecuador’s Amazon region with my father many years ago, we took a fun speedboat ride to a small village to take in the sights and learn about the local tribes. My dear dad bought me handmade jewelry, including a set of earrings. I only wore those earrings on special occasions, including when I went to visit my sister for my birthday. When I came back from my trip, I was horrified to discover I’d lost one of my earrings. I looked everywhere.

It was just an earring, but I’d have to travel all the way back to the Amazon jungle to replace it. Amazingly, when my sister returned to the restaurant we had visited for my birthday, she spotted my missing earring in their lost and found. I was overjoyed!

Jesus told a parable about a woman who’d lost her silver coin. She wouldn’t rest while her valuable coin was missing. “Doesn’t she light a lamp, sweep the house and search carefully until she finds it?” Jesus asked (Luke 15:8). And when she found her coin, she greatly rejoiced (v. 9).

Jesus told this story to demonstrate how precious we are to God. He “came to seek and to save” those who are lost (19:10). Although we were once lost, heaven rejoiced when we were found.

Reflect & Pray

How does it feel to know you’re precious to God? How does it feel to know heaven rejoices when we’re found?

Dear God, thank You for searching for me.

Learn more about having a personal relationship with God.

Today’s Insights

God’s love for us is described throughout the Bible. John 3:16-17 declares, “God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” He “did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.” God “lavished” great love on us by “[sending] his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins” (1 John 3:1; 4:10). We were deserving of death, but because of God’s merciful love, He “made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions” (Ephesians 2:5; see Romans 5:8). When we turn away from our sins and place our faith in Jesus, heaven rejoices (Luke 15:10).

 

 

http://www.odb.org

Denison Forum – The birth rate crisis is looming: Where do we go from here?

 

New data confirms the continuation of a nearly 20-year decline in births

According to CDC data from earlier this month, the birth rate in the United States continued its historic decline, with a 1 percent decrease in births in 2025, a trend that began in 2007. Last year’s rate of 53.1 births per 1000 women in the 15-44 age bracket fell from 53.8 in 2024. The total fertility rate is now 1.57 births per woman, well below the replacement level of 2.1.

Financial insecurity is the most consistent factor in historical birth rate trends. With continued economic concerns and instability, it is no surprise that 2025 did not produce a baby boom.

Another clear explanation for the continued decline is a sharp reduction in teen births. Sociologists attribute this to decades of educational initiatives aimed at the topic. The birth rate for women between the ages of 15 and 19 was just 11.7 last year, an all-time low and 72 percent lower than in 2007.

Continue reading Denison Forum – The birth rate crisis is looming: Where do we go from here?

Harvest Ministries; Greg Laurie – No Compromise

 

 For a time is coming when people will no longer listen to sound and wholesome teaching. They will follow their own desires and will look for teachers who will tell them whatever their itching ears want to hear. 

—2 Timothy 4:3

Scripture:

2 Timothy 4:3 

There was a time when we were bombarded by a one-sided view of God as an angry deity, ready to throw people into the open fires of Hell. People complained about too much hellfire-and-brimstone preaching.

But when was the last time anyone has heard a hellfire-and-brimstone message? Sadly, the sermon “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” that Jonathan Edwards preached in 1741 would not be allowed in many churches today.

Many people have gone too far in the other direction, teaching that God is an all-loving, benign, supreme being that doesn’t seem to have any opinions about the way we live. The assumption is that as long as we’re true to ourselves, then it’s okay with Him. He accepts us the way we are.

We like the qualities of God such as love, forgiveness, and compassion and the incredible fringe benefit of eternal life in Heaven. On the other hand, we’re appalled by a God of holiness who desperately loves us yet requires repentance as well as trust, a God who promises to judge those who refuse to come to Him on His terms.

Others look at God as some kind of pagan deity who simply needs to be appeased. They think that if they go through religious rituals, they’ve done their part and they can build up credit for sinning that week. People can follow that god as much as they want. But that is not the God of the Bible.

When we start picking and choosing the things about God that appeal or do not appeal to us, we are not only diminishing our view of who God is but also believing and teaching a false gospel.

Some preachers today offer weak, watered-down proclamations in the name of the gospel. They tell you to believe, but they don’t tell you to repent. They tell you there’s a Heaven, but they don’t tell you there’s a Hell. And they tell you there’s forgiveness, but they don’t tell you there’s repentance.

If we don’t include those things, then it isn’t the gospel. We cannot edit the gospel according to what we like or don’t like. It’s for us to share it as God gave it. Otherwise, we strip the gospel of its power and effectiveness.

We cannot control what happens in the world. But at the same time, we cannot allow the belief system of a secular society to influence the way we believe. The idea is not to conform ourselves to the world’s way of thinking. It is not to bend the Bible to the culture.

When we desperately want to please everyone and not offend anyone, we will fail to make an impact on our culture.

When we start tampering with the essentials of our faith such as the Bible, the gospel, and the nature of God Himself, we are making God into a different image.

The God of the Bible does love us and accept us as we are. But the God of the Bible also wants to change us. He wants to conform us into the image of Jesus Christ.

Reflection Question: What does it practically look like to share the full gospel—both grace and repentance—without compromising truth? Discuss this with believers like you on Harvest Discipleship!

 

 

Harvest.org | Greg Laurie

Days of Praise – Opening the Ear

 

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“Sacrifice and offering thou didst not desire; mine ears hast thou opened: burnt offering and sin offering hast thou not required.” (Psalm 40:6)

That Psalm 40 is primarily a Messianic psalm speaking mainly about the work of Christ is evident from its quotation as such in Hebrews 10:5–10. The psalm prophesies particularly of His incarnation, for He says, “Lo, I come: in the volume of the book it is written of me” (Psalm 40:7).

Burnt offerings and sin offerings had indeed been required from God’s people under the law, but these were not an end in themselves. These sacrifices were meaningless unless they were offered out of a willing heart as obedient expressions of submission to their forgiving God.

That was the implication of the “opened ear,” a symbolic expression indicating one’s willingness thenceforth to hear only the voice of his master and to submit to his will in all things. If a freed bondservant “shall plainly say, I love my master . . . I will not go out free: then his master shall . . . bore his ear through with an aul; and he shall serve him for ever” (Exodus 21:5–6). This was the testimony of the coming Messiah, as reported in our text.

Then note its application as recorded in Hebrews 10:5: “Wherefore when he cometh into the world, he saith, Sacrifice and offering thou wouldest not, but a body hast thou prepared me.” That is, the phrase “mine ears hath thou opened” is translated by the Holy Spirit as “a body hast thou prepared me.” The perfect submission of the Son to the Father required that He become a man, with a very special human body prepared by His Father. Then Psalm 40:7 becomes (in Hebrews 10:7): “Lo, I come to do thy will, O God . . . . By the which will we are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all” (Hebrews 10:9–10). HMM

 

 

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

Joyce Meyer – We Wait, God Speaks

 

For from of old no one has heard nor perceived by the ear, nor Samuel has the eye seen a God besides You, Who works and shows Himself active on Samuel behalf of him who [earnestly] waits for Him.

Isaiah 64:4(AMPC)

The Holy Spirit will lead us into amazing exploits in prayer if we simply ask Him what to pray, wait for Him to answer, and then obey. We are unwise if we say we don’t have time to wait on God and allow Him to speak to us and lead us as we pray. We will wait 45 minutes for a table at a restaurant but say we do not have time to wait on God. When we wait on God, turning our hearts toward Him for direction, we honor Him. By our willingness to wait He knows that we want His will and that we are dependent upon Him for guidance. We save a lot of time by turning our hearts toward God and waiting on Him.

As the verse for today says, God shows Himself active on behalf of those who wait on Him. Start your prayers by simply saying, “I love you Lord and I wait on you for direction in my prayers today.” Then begin to pray what is in your heart rather than what is in your own mind or will. I was recently praying for someone to do a certain thing that I knew they needed to do, but God showed me that I needed to pray for them to develop discipline because the lack of it was affecting many areas of their life. I would have prayed for the one area I saw, but God saw much more deeply than I did. Another time I was praying for someone concerning some problem behavior that I saw, but God showed me that the root of their problem was self-rejection and that I needed to pray for them to know how much God loved them. You can see that we often pray for what we see, but God will lead us deeper if we will wait on Him.

Prayer of the Day: Holy Spirit, teach me to wait on You and pray according to Your will. Quiet my heart, guide my words, and help me trust Your wisdom beyond what I see, amen.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Max Lucado – Where Grace Abounds 

 

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If hurts were hairs, we’d all look like grizzlies! So many hurts. When teachers ignore your work, their neglect hurts. When your girlfriend drops you, when your husband abandons you, when the company fires you, it hurts. Rejection always hurts. People bring pain. Sometimes deliberately, sometimes randomly. So where do you turn? Hitman.com? Jim Beam and friends? Pity Party Catering Service? Retaliation has its appeal, but Jesus has a better idea.

Grace is not blind. It sees the hurt full well. But grace chooses to see God’s forgiveness even more. Hebrews 12:15 (NIV) urges us to, “See to it that no one misses the grace of God and that no bitter root grows up to cause trouble and defile many.” You see, where grace is lacking, bitterness abounds. But where grace abounds, forgiveness grows. Forgiveness may not happen all at once. But it can happen with you.

 

 

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Today in the Word – Moody Bible Institute – Naomi’s Evaluation

 

Read Ruth 3:16–18

Elisabeth Elliot once wrote: “Waiting on God requires the willingness to bear uncertainty, to carry within oneself the unanswered question, lifting the heart to God about it.” At its core, waiting isn’t about passing time. It’s about exercising trust.

Today’s scene takes place at Naomi’s house, just after dawn. Boaz had left for the city (v. 15), and Ruth returned home with his bountiful gift. Naomi greeted Ruth as “daughter” and asked about her visit (v. 16). She was eager to hear the story; so much depended on the outcome. The narrator doesn’t recount the complete conversation. He simply sums up Ruth’s account: “Then she told her everything Boaz had done for her” (v. 16).

We learn about Boaz’s gift and his parting words: “Don’t go back to your mother-in-law empty-handed” (v. 17). Interestingly, this remark from Boaz was not included in the actual account (vv. 6–14). The author adds it here because of its particular importance for Naomi. The word “empty” references Naomi’s declaration of emptiness in chapter 1: “I went away full, but the LORD has brought me back empty” (v. 21). Ruth had been present when Naomi made that initial despairing statement, so it is fitting for Ruth to articulate Boaz’s care for Naomi—his hesed desire to fill both her stomach and her heart.

Naomi now understood the depth of Boaz’s commitment. She was confident in his character, his purpose, and his ability. So, with this assurance, Naomi counseled Ruth to “wait” (v. 18). To sit still and trust—in both Boaz and the Lord. Once again, we are left in suspense. We wait with Ruth to learn the outcome of Boaz’s trip to the city. This is also the last time that Ruth and Naomi speak. They step aside as Boaz takes the lead.

Go Deeper

We don’t always get answers as quickly as we would like. When have you waited on God for answers? Were you able to trust Him in those circumstances?

Pray with Us

Lord, thank You for the wonderful lessons You are teaching us this month. Today, together with Ruth, we’re learning how to wait patiently on You to act. Instill in us this trust and patience, we pray!

Whoever drinks the water I give them will never thirst.John 4:14

 

 

https://www.moodybible.org/