Tag Archives: politics

Presidential Prayer Team; J.K. – Purposely Follow

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The Founding Fathers of the United States understood the intense responsibility they had in establishing a government for a new nation. Faith in God and His leading determined their actions. Thomas Jefferson penned these words within the Declaration of Independence: “With a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor.”

By wisdom a house is built, and by understanding it is established.

Proverbs 24:3

Even before convening with the Continental Congress, Benjamin Franklin wrote an essay in 1757 in which he advised, “Do not depend too much upon your own industry and frugality…for they may all be blasted without the blessing of Heaven.” In his autobiography, Franklin wrote that his daily prayers began with these words: “Bountiful Father! Merciful Guide! Increase in me that wisdom.” For many of the Founders, Bible reading was a part of their daily lives. They stood in awe of the Lord. They purposefully followed His guidelines to establish the best government for a free people.

Be encouraged in these difficult times to study Scripture. Pray for wisdom and discernment. Intercede for government leaders that they might know the One who guides. Then they will understand what is God’s best for this country.

Recommended Reading: Ephesians 1:11-21

Presidential Prayer Team; J.R. – Debt Destruction

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If you owe someone money, it becomes more difficult to pay them back if you are incarcerated. This rather obvious truth was lost on judges in the early years of the United States, when citizens were routinely thrown into jail for unpaid bills. And once you were behind bars, the prisons – which offered truly wretched and cruel conditions – piled on the misery by charging for food and water. This was the fate of Founder James Wilson, coauthor and signer of the Declaration of Independence. He died a broken man at the age of 56 after a series of bad financial decisions which landed him in several debtor prisons. He once described to a friend how he was being “hunted like a wild beast” by creditors.

The rich rules over the poor, and the borrower is the slave of the lender.

Proverbs 22:7

Under modern law an unpaid bill won’t land you in jail or turn you into an indentured servant, but in a very real sense the borrower is still slave to the lender. Debt will steal your peace and may destroy your future. America’s national debt, if it continues to expand, will lead to financial catastrophe.

As you pray today, ask God to help you and your nation’s leaders to be responsible and wise stewards.

Recommended Reading: II Corinthians 9:6-15

Presidential Prayer Team; H.L.M. – God Reigns

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In Solomon’s day, kings possessed absolute authority and were often considered to be like gods. However, this verse in Proverbs 21 affirms that God, not earthy rulers, has ultimate authority over world politics. Although they may not have realized it, the Earth’s most powerful kings have always been under God’s control.

The king’s heart is a stream of water in the hand of the Lord; he turns it wherever he will.

Proverbs 21:1

David, himself a king, said, “Who is this King of glory? The Lord of hosts, he is the King of glory!” (Psalm 24:10) The throne of an earthly king, or the title of a political leader, cannot compare to the glories of God. The Lord’s purposes in government can be puzzling. However, you always can have the assurance that God is on His throne and all is working for His glory.

As you read His Word, thank God that His hand of authority reigns over all people and events. Remember your privilege and responsibility to pray for your local and national leaders each day. Ask your Heavenly Father to turn their hearts and their minds toward Him for every personal and professional decision.

Recommended Reading: Psalm 24

Presidential Prayer Team; G.C. – The Deepest Dump

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Where would you put nuclear waste? At one time the Marianas Trench, the deepest part of the world’s oceans, was the chosen site. Scientists believed nothing could live in that depth and darkness. However, before anything was dumped, two brave explorers figured out how to perform a manned expedition and went down to take a look. What they discovered surprised everybody…exotic marine life, and lots of it! Although very risky, deep water exploration saved an important part of the Earth’s ecosystem from becoming a toxic dump.

The purpose in a man’s heart is like deep water, but a man of understanding will draw it out.

Proverbs 20:5

Sadly, many people have chosen to bury life’s difficulties and disappointment’s in the deepest recesses of their heart. Dumping bitterness and anger into the place created for God’s presence only leaves one in pain and without hope.

If you want the best for America, start by taking a good look inside your own heart. Invite God’s healing into the deepest recesses of your soul. Honestly ask Him today to reveal sin and give you an understanding of His purposes for you. Also pray for America’s elected leaders to have the opportunity and courage to do the same.

Recommended Reading: Psalm 95:1-7

Ravi Zacharias Ministry – The Way It Is

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Through winding, trash-strewn roads and poverty-lined streets we made our way to another world. Clotheslines hung from every imaginable protrusion, a symbol of the teeming life that fought to survive there, and a contrast to the empty, darkened world of night. The only light in otherwise pitch-black alleys came from the glow of cigarettes and drug pipes, which for split seconds illumined faces that lived here. It was late and I was sick, discovering after a long flight that I had not escaped the office stomach flu after all. Our van was full of tourists, their resort brochures a troubling, colorful contrast to the streets that would bring them there. Strangers who only moments before wore the expressions of anticipation of vacation now rode in expressionless silence. One man broke that silence, just as the taxi turned the corner seemingly into an entirely new realm and resort. With pain and poverty now literally behind him, he said quietly, “Well… It is what it is.”

These words rung in my ears all weekend, most of which was spent crumpled on the bathroom floor, unable to participate in the wedding we had come to “paradise” to enjoy. In the end, it seemed a metaphor for thoughts I wanted to remember physically and not in mere abstractions. You see, typically, when the drowsy, comfortable world I have come to expect is jarred awake by visions of the way the majority of the world actually lives, the upset that is caused is largely conceptual, immaterial, abstract. Sure, I am momentarily both deeply saddened and humbled by the wealth of resources and rights many of us take for granted in the West. I am aware again of the need to stay involved and vocal about relief efforts and global injustices that take place daily right under our noses. But for the most part, my angst, my theology, my reactions are all abstract, observed mentally, not physically. That is, they remain deeply-felt issues, but not concrete matters of life.

Of course, I am not suggesting that abstract, philosophical ideas are the problem—clearly my vocation is dedicated to the notion that ideas carry consequences, that reflection on questions of truth, beauty, hope, and love are indeed matters vital to the development of fulfilled and finite human beings. What I am suggesting is that the abstract is both hopeless and of no use without the concrete (inasmuch as the concrete is a desert without the infinite). Many of the most stirring theological pronouncements Jesus made were in fact not statements at all—but a life, a death, a meal shared, a daily, physical reality changed, a new possibility realized.

And this is precisely why those simple words “It is what it is” are a coping mechanism that should sicken us every bit as thoroughly as the scenes that make us want to utter them in the first place. Far from a mere collection of abstractions about another world, the Christian life is an active declaration that all is not as it appears. While other worldviews and religions offer an explanation for why and how this world “is what it is,” Christianity offers something different. With the prophets, with the Incarnate Christ, the God-Man among us, every story and parable and interaction declares: “This is not the way it’s supposed to be!”

Professor of theology William Cavanaugh notes that this vital difference in perspective takes form from the very beginning, starting with the way the book of Genesis tells the origins of the world. Instead of telling a creation story like the Babylonians, for instance, where the circumstances of creation are awry from the start, the Hebrews tell a story where all is inherently good from the beginning, but then something goes terribly wrong. What this tells every hearer of the story thereafter is that things are not the way they are supposed to be. As Cavanaugh notes, “There is a revolutionary principle right there in the Scriptures which allows us to unthink the inevitability of sin, to unthink the inevitability of violence, and so on.”(1) The very first story God tells provides a framework for walking through a world enslaved by poverty and violence, sin and deception—a framework that provides both profound meaning (this is not the way it’s supposed to be!) and a concrete call to live daily into other, redemptive possibilities—possibilities Christ himself embodied.

It is thus an inherently Christian task to actively work at unthinking the inevitability of the way things are and to labor accordingly at changing them. Any reflection of truth and beauty, however abstract, if truly lived out by those who believe them, will ultimately address the concrete matters of life as well. For the Christian, this is a world where nothing merely unfortunately is what it is. Imagining other possibilities, working to unthink the divisions, deceptions, and frameworks that keep us bound to creation’s fall and not its redemption, we join the work of Father and Spirit. We join the Son who takes the abstractions of truth and beauty and declares concretely, “I am the way, the truth, and the life.”

Jill Carattini is managing editor of A Slice of Infinity at Ravi Zacharias International Ministries in Atlanta, Georgia.

(1) William Cavanaugh with Ken Myers, Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 95, Jan/Feb 2009.

Presidential Prayer Team;  P.G. – When Tragedy Strikes

 

ppt_seal01The story is told of a young man who went to college in London, became a teacher, met a young woman, fell in love and planned to settle down. Two days before the wedding, his fiancé drowned. Stricken with grief, he moved to Canada, began a new life and, once again, fell in love. Mere weeks before the wedding, his bride-to-be was suddenly sickened and died shortly thereafter. He took a vow of poverty and became a woodcutter, working only for the infirm and destitute. Some years later, he received word his mother was gravely ill; but having no means to go home, he instead wrote a short verse for her. “What a Friend We Have in Jesus” came from the pen of Joseph Scriven that day.

A man of many companions may come to ruin, but there is a friend who sticks closer than a brother.

Proverbs 18:24

Tragedies strike everyone sooner or later. What the Lord wants, even expects, is that you not wait until a tragedy comes. His desire is for you to have an abiding relationship with Him every day. Abide in my love, He says. Pray today for America’s leaders to discover anew God’s love for them, to accept that free gift of grace, and then learn what it is to be His intimate friend.

Recommended Reading: John 15:4-15

Presidential Prayer Team; J.K.- Down to the Marrow

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You’ve seen them…people with down-turned mouths, the furrowed brows and a distressed look in their eyes. Nothing puts a damper on a gathering more than a gloomy and melancholy person. Unfortunately, this description applies to many Christians – but it shouldn’t.

A joyful heart is good medicine, but a crushed spirit dries up the bones.

Proverbs 17:22

God wants you to have a joyful heart. It is a disposition of the mind which affects the health of the body. A joyful heart is at peace with God…having a right relationship with Him. Its peace can be passive – enjoying a sense of freedom from guilt. It is also active, never selfish, springing into action for the Lord by serving others. It is good medicine…lifting the spirits of the helped one as well as its own. Beware of a crushed spirit, burdened by trials or upset by guilt or anger. It exhausts one to the very marrow of his bones.

Put your focus on the Lord. Serve Him with gladness. See His grace in your life at every turn. Then pray for the leaders of this nation. The world offers emptiness; God waits to bestow the best upon those who will turn to Him. After all, He is the One who gives life to dry bones.

Recommended Reading: Ezekiel 37:1-14

Presidential Prayer Team; C.P. – Value the Invisible

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The average cost for a year of college, about $33,000, shows how much people value education. Yet they get degrees, earn money, and acquire possessions that eventually go to storage spaces, yard sales and trash heaps. America’s overrun with stuff.

How much better to get wisdom than gold! To get understanding is to be chosen rather than silver.

Proverbs 16:16

Knowledge doesn’t necessarily result in wisdom, but wisdom for wisdom’s sake is valuable. Wisdom lies in the invisible and the eternal, not in the physical and temporal. The Holy Spirit, love, joy, hope, peace, and faith are all eternal and invisible. Consider the following verses. “Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth. For you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God,” (Colossians 3:2-3) and “To the King of the ages, immortal, invisible, the only God, be honor and glory forever and ever. Amen.” (I Timothy 1:17)

Pray for the leaders and citizens of the United States of America to value the eternal and not be mesmerized by materialism. As missionary and poet C. T. Studd said, “Only one life, ’twill soon be past; only what’s done for Christ will last.”

Recommended Reading: Colossians 3:1-3, 12-17

Presidential Prayer Team; J.R. – Rage Regrets

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George S. Patton, perhaps America’s greatest World War II general, did not suffer his greatest disaster on the battlefield, but in a hospital tent. Visiting wounded soldiers on Sicily, he came upon Paul Bennett, an artilleryman suffering from “battle fatigue,” now most often called posttraumatic stress disorder. Enraged, Patton slapped the man, called him a coward and numerous other unprintable names, and then pulled his gun and threatened to shoot the man. Patton didn’t believe battle fatigue was a real illness, but he simply didn’t know what he didn’t know. When word reached his superiors of the outburst, Patton was sidelined.

A soft answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger.

Proverbs 15:1

Anger usually does more damage than good. When you unleash your wrath – on a spouse, a child, a colleague, or that lackadaisical government clerk who doesn’t seem to care – you may feel better for a moment, but the aftermath will be regrettable. Worst of all, you may not really know what’s going on inside of that person’s heart or head, and rage may destroy your opportunity to be the voice or hands of Christ.

Harsh words are abundant today in Washington, your workplace, perhaps even your home. Ask God to help you be a courier of “soft answers.”

Recommended Reading: James 1:12-20

Presidential Prayer Team; A.W. – American “Nones”

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A survey conducted by the Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture at Trinity College revealed the number of Americans calling themselves Christians was down from 86 percent in 1990 to 75 percent in 2009. At the same time, American “Nones” – or people who identify with no religious group – increased from 8.1 percent of the population in 1990 to 15 percent in 2098, an increase of about 20 million people.

Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people.

Proverbs 14:34

Many believe America became one of the most powerful, influential nations in the world because of its founding on Christian beliefs. So what does it mean for America if its people are leaving Christianity and turning away from God? Today’s scripture gives insight. Reproach in this verse means public shame or disgrace. When a person or nation becomes unrighteous and begins to ignore where security and salvation come from, disgrace and punishment often follow. Just as Israel and Judah found themselves among the list of nations surrounding them that rejected the Lord and fell from greatness, America may be on the same path.

As you spend time with God today, ask Him to draw America back to Him. Pray righteousness and morality would once again be important to the nation’s citizens and leaders.

Recommended Reading: Amos 2:4-16

Charles Stanley – Escaping the Performance Trap

Charles Stanley

 

A treadmill is one of the most effective tools for burning calories, despite the fact that the person exercising stays in the same place. Similarly, many workers worry and grope through each day, without actually making headway. Isn’t it ironic that in both pursuits, people must give great effort without really going anywhere?

So it is with people who try to work their way to righteousness. Many Christians grow stagnant in their faith because they expend tremendous energy trying to attain some lofty ideal of the “Christian experience.” They usually understand that grace is what saved them but believe they must pay God back with good works in order to remain saved.

Have you become a modern-day Pharisee? Do you maintain a mental or psychological checklist to ensure that you do what you should and resist what you should not? Are you closer to living under the law than under God’s grace?

When you act outside of God’s will, your life runs on finite “fumes”: your own strength. The result can be exhaustion, withdrawal, and bitterness. The real Christian experience requires only that we have faith in Jesus Christ and abide in Him, the true Vine (John 15:5).

You can’t do anything to make God love you more. Nor can you do anything to make Him love you less. This is a liberating truth! Your heavenly Father isn’t keeping score—we can’t pay Him back for His grace. In fact, no amount of good works can pay the debt of love we owe. The apostle Paul wrote, “The Law has become our tutor to lead us to Christ, so that we may be justified by faith. But now that faith has come, we are no longer under a tutor” (Gal. 3:24-25). He explained that there is no way we can keep God’s moral code perfectly. We need a Savior.

Even after we become Christians, God doesn’t want us to add law to His grace. He wants obedience, of course. But obedience is the overflow of a heart full of love, not legalism.

When Jesus tells us to keep His commandments, He emphasizes that obedience shows others we love Him (John 14:31). The moral law shows us our need of a Savior. But we cannot obey the Lord Jesus without His help. We are children wanting to please the Father because we love Him. This delivers us from legalism and keeps us grounded in grace, not only for salvation, but also for living the Christian life.

Living by Grace

The Scriptures compare our relationship with God to a race. Paul calls us to run so that we may win (1 Cor. 9:24)—and the author of Hebrews adds that we are to do so with endurance (Heb. 12:1).

Only by running on the wings of grace can believers triumphantly finish the course God has assigned for each one of His children. The legs of performance eventually grow weak. The muscles of legalism and religion weigh us down and become rigid hindrances. Our main problem is that we can understand the need for grace in salvation, but we tend to rely on other means for process of sanctification.

How can you cease striving, get off the performance treadmill, and learn to walk in grace? Here is the key: the more you humble yourself before God, the more you will receive the fullness of His grace.

God “gives grace to the humble” (1 Peter 5:5). Not to the strong, but to the weak. Not to the self-sufficient, but to the dependent. Grace belongs to the poor in spirit—in other words, those who humble themselves by recognizing God’s majesty and worshipping Him. The more you adore and praise the Savior, the more highly you’ll think of Him.

Humbling yourself won’t reduce your self-esteem or diminish your worth to God. Rather, it positions you to receive your sustenance from the source of all good things, Jesus Christ. As a humble believer, cast yourself on the grace of God, leaning on Him with your full weight. Draw all your strength, peace, joy, and security from the sufficiency of the Holy Spirit living within you.

Be strong in grace. Throw off the chains of works and “religion,” and receive the remarkable power of God’s merciful lovingkindness.

Adapted from Charles F. Stanley’s “Into His Presence” (2000) and “Handbook for Christian Living (1996).

 

Resources About Your Salvation

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Have you ever wondered what happens after you accept Jesus Christ as your Savior? Or, do you ever wonder what really happens to a person once they are saved? In this message, Dr. Stanley shares with us what really happens when a person invites Christ into their hearts. (Watch I Am Saved—Now What?)

Presidential Prayer Team; G.C. – Bad Listening

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A scoffer is a bad listener – one that will not open his or her ears to wisdom. An unfortunate condition, you might agree; however, there’s a bit more to it. The original word translates as “one who mocks and scorns the belief of another” and also “acts as an ambassador.” More accurately, a scoffer is a person who disagrees and attempts to sway others to adopt his disagreement.

A wise son hears his father’s instruction, but a scoffer does not listen to rebuke.

Proverbs 13:1

In your attempts to bring about God’s best plan for America, remember you will inevitably attract devoted scoffers. Jesus’ disciples had to deal with a loud opposition wherever they worked. Gospel messengers have been thrown out of town and sometimes even into jail since the start.

Jesus said, “A servant is not greater than his master. If they persecuted me, they will also persecute you.” (John 15:10) Ultimately, every knee will bow and God’s plans will be accomplished on Earth; in the meantime, continue in your prayer and good work for others and for America. Offer a reasonable explanation for the hope you have in Christ and for the nation. And when you encounter scoffers, take a cue from their example…refuse to listen!

Recommended Reading: John 15:9-21

Presidential Prayer Team; C.H. – Don’t Worry, Be Inspiring

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Over four million people will receive treatment for anxiety this year. Statistics also show that 43 percent of all North Americans take mood-altering drugs. Anxiety, by definition, is fear or nervousness about what might happen. Turn on the news and you’ll hear about the energy crisis, unrest in the Middle East, and how many people were robbed in your neck of the woods. No wonder so many people suffer from worry and apprehension.

Anxiety in a man’s heart weighs him down, but a good word makes him glad.

Proverbs 12:25

While medicine may be required in many cases, how else can you battle unwarranted concern? Today’s passage offers a suggestion – a good word. Sometimes a word of encouragement can lift even the darkest of moods. The Apostle Paul wrote inspirational letters to the churches he helped launch. Many of those uplifting letters became part of the New Testament. Never underestimate the power of a good word.

“A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in a setting of silver.” (Proverbs 25:11) Take the time to write a note of encouragement today to one of your political leaders. Then pray for God to use those words to bring His inspiration to those who receive it.

Recommended Reading: II Corinthians 4:7-18

Presidential Prayer Team; J.K. – What Legacy?

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Winston Churchill and Adolf Hitler, Abraham Lincoln and John Wilkes Booth, Jesus and Judas…names conjure up remembrances of either good or bad. Today’s verse stresses that how you live has a great deal – maybe all – to do with how you will be remembered. Churchill encouraged England to stand under Hitler’s attacks born from a desire for power over an “inferior” people. The good man is referenced with respect while the wicked is mentioned with abhorrence.

The memory of the righteous is a blessing, but the name of the wicked will rot.

Proverbs 10:7

Recall the Apostle Paul and his unstoppable pursuit to share the gospel of Jesus with all people. Demas, on the other hand, though not wicked, will forever be considered as the one who left Paul’s side because of his love for the world (II Timothy 4:10). As a believer, contrast your feelings regarding the emperors of Rome and the fishermen of Galilee. The righteous can be remembered for their example, for their strength of character and nobleness, or for their acts of faith. They are a blessing in life and death.

What will be your legacy? Seek to live God’s fullest desires for your life. Then pray for the nation’s leaders that they will show forth righteousness…giving their best for America.

Recommended Reading: I Peter 3:8-17

Presidential Prayer Team; C.P. – The Three Sillies

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In the old story of The Three Sillies, a man goes on a journey to find three people who are sillier than his fiancé, who worried that an ax hanging on the wall would someday fall and hit their future child on the head. After finding three people who were indeed more foolish than her, he married her.

Leave your simple ways, and live, and walk in the way of insight.

Proverbs 9:6

Believers aren’t doomed to walk about as “the three sillies.” It is the human condition to regret stupid mistakes, but the good news is that God offers His wisdom like a hostess lays out a rich banquet and calls, “Come and eat!” James invites you to this feast: “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him.” (James 1:5)

Today, ask God for wisdom concerning the issues you face right now. Read the Bible and receive His guidance. Know that wisdom that God gives will be in line with both His Word and the fruit of the Holy Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23). Trust that He answered and act with confidence. Then pray that the nation and its leaders will seek God’s wisdom and follow it wholly.

Recommended Reading: James 3:13-18

Presidential Prayer Team; J.R. – Brainpower Not Obligatory

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Who was America’s most intelligent president? That’s a matter of conjecture and involves a good deal of personal opinion, but whenever the question is debated, rarely does anyone ever mention Harry Truman. He didn’t attend college, in marked contrast to his predecessor Franklin Delano Roosevelt, a Harvard and Columbia prodigy with vast brainpower. Truman was often called “the little man from Missouri,” which was meant to denigrate more than his physical stature. Biographer David McCullough writes that Truman “knew he had no exceptional intellectual prowess,” and recounts him telling a colleague, “I am not a deep thinker as you are.”

O simple ones, learn prudence; O fools, learn sense.

Proverbs 8:5

But Truman, historians now recognize, was tremendously effective. He rose at five a.m. every morning, he didn’t pass the buck, he made the difficult decisions, and never pretended to be someone he wasn’t.

It doesn’t require a genius to follow the guidance of the Proverbs. Prudence, good sense, caution, honesty, and hard work are traits available to anyone, including you. The Lord will effectively use whatever you have. On Truman’s first day in office, he started by asking Americans to pray for him. As you lift up your modern-day leaders, pray they, too, will recognize what – and Who – is essential to success.

Recommended Reading: I Peter 4:7-11

Ravi Zacharias Ministry – Changing Tunes

Ravi Z

A popular U.S. comic strip once held the attention of millions as it chronicled the misadventures of a boy and his stuffed tiger. The infamous pair was inseparable, lingering energetically in topics both adult and childlike. One day on a walk in the woods, six-year-old boy Calvin announces to Hobbes the tiger that he has decided he doesn’t believe in ethics anymore, because, as far as he’s concerned, “The ends justify the means.” “Get what you can while the getting is good,” Calvin reasons, “Might makes right.”

At this, Hobbes, who is a stuffed tiger in the eyes of all but Calvin, promptly pushes his human friend into a mud hole.

“Why’d you do that?” Calvin objects.

“You were in my way,” Hobbes replies, “and now you’re not.  The ends justify the means.”

Finding himself in the mud, Calvin sees clearly that he cannot live with the outworking of his lauded theory. He seems to reach a brief and annoyed moment of enlightenment, until he uncovers a way to reconcile the conflict with self-interest: “I didn’t mean for everyone, you dolt. Just me.”

One of the more striking things to confront in each of the four gospel accounts, besides the human Jesus himself, is the reactions people had to him. When in his presence, some like Mary and the man with leprosy fell instantaneously at his feet, others like the young rich ruler or the people of Nazareth turned away. In his presence some cried for mercy and others who needed a doctor were confronted with the question of whether or not they wanted to be well. In the presence of Jesus of Nazareth, choices were made, theories adjusted, realities were challenged, affections transformed.

Ironically, those deemed unrighteous and dishonorable by the social standards of the day were often the most responsive to the demands of Jesus. I have often wondered if this was because they were the ones most willing to see themselves without pretense, those most willing to respond to their own inconsistencies with fear and trembling. In the presence of Christ, the paralytic at the pool of Bethesda came to see the contradictions he lived with, his broken refrain, and his need for a new song. The Samaritan woman at the well saw not only that Jesus was speaking truth, but that he was truth, and that his way of life was full of life, while her own had been forced to the sidelines. Called into the presence of Christ, Zacchaeus saw his ravenous, isolating ways and the great hunger of his life for a different sort of communion. Conversely, the rich young ruler walked away from Jesus’s instruction because it was a request and reality that he just could not face.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer coined the phrase “polyphony of life” as a metaphor for the various melodies of life that captivate or consume our affections. The invitation of Christ, he observed, does not come in such a way as to injure or weaken other loves, but always to provide a kind of cantus firmus to other melodies lest they run us adrift or out of tune. The cantus firmus, which means “fixed song,” is a pre-existing melody that forms the basis of a polyphonic composition. Though the song introduces twists in pitch and style, counterpoint and refrain, the cantus firmus is the enduring melody not always in the forefront, but always playing somewhere within the composition. Love of God was the cantus firmus for Bonhoeffer, the soul of the concerto and the clarifying essence for a life of various sounds and directions. “Where the cantus firmus is clear and plain, the counterpoint can be developed to its limits… Life isn’t pushed back into a single dimension, but is kept multi-dimensional and ployphonous.”(1)

It is both brave and essential to listen to the various melodies that hold our lives and shape our affections, and to ask what is the guiding song behind it all. The invitation of Christ is one that will engage all of life. The fully human Incarnate Son could make no lesser request. His invitation is that of fullness of life, a diversity of loves and desires shaped and flourishing around a firm cantus firmus. In this love, all things their find their coherence; the broken fragments of lesser songs are remade, re-tuned, and restored.

Jill Carattini is managing editor of A Slice of Infinity at Ravi Zacharias International Ministries in Atlanta, Georgia.

Presidential Prayer Team; H.L.M. – America’s Treasure

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A Northern California couple was walking their dog when they stumbled across some rare gold coins buried in the shadow of a tree. Nearly all of the 1,427 coins, dating from 1847 to 1894, were in uncirculated, mint condition. Coin experts estimated their worth at ten million dollars. “I don’t like to say once-in-a-lifetime for anything, but you don’t get an opportunity to handle this kind of material, a treasure like this, ever,” said a veteran coin dealer who is representing the finders. “It’s like they found the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.”

Treasure up my commandments with you.

Proverbs 7:1

Isaiah 33:6 says, “And he will be the stability of your times, abundance of salvation, wisdom, and knowledge; the fear of the Lord is Zion’s treasure.” A nation’s wealth is not in gold, silver, real estate or weapons. Its treasure is in the people who fear the Lord. People who are Christ followers. People who read God’s Word. People who pray for their family, friends, neighbors and leaders.

Ask God to keep you accountable as one of those people. Remember, it’s your once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to make a significant difference in America.

Recommended Reading: Matthew 19:23-30

Presidential Prayer Team; G.C. – Next and Best

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Next time you’re enjoying a picnic at the local park, silently count the little kiddo’s zooming around in the play area. According to current research, 2.7 million children in the United States have an incarcerated parent. In other words, one-in-28 American children have a parent convicted of a crime and serving time. Just 25 years ago, the number was one-in-125…not a particularly encouraging trend.

My son, keep your father’s commandment, and forsake not your mother’s teaching.

Proverbs 6:20

Only Jesus had a perfect father: everyone else has human Moms and Dads that struggle with brokenness and failure. Likewise, most of you that have become parents are painfully aware of your own faults and foibles, yet the Bible is clear: you are to train your children to follow your example. It may sound like a hopeless cycle of inadequacy, but it’s not. Jesus’ power over death bought you power over the chains of generational calamity.

What can you do? First, be careful to model a compassionate devotion in faith. Then pray that God will stop the succession of sin and intervene in this nation’s future: understand that tomorrow’s leaders are charting their course today. Most importantly, believe that, with God’s blessing, it is possible for America’s next generation to become America’s best generation.

Recommended Reading: Philippians 3:13-17

Presidential Prayer Team; C.H. – Make it Golden

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“To have and hold from this day forward as long as we both shall live.” Most people can quote this vow by heart. But knowing it and living it are two different things. Marriages in America are under attack. One statistic says only five percent of couples will actually reach their fiftieth wedding anniversary. Perhaps you’re one of the many people who have been hurt by the pain of divorce.

Let your fountain be blessed, and rejoice in the wife of your youth.

Proverbs 5:18

Why do marriages fail? Financial problems, lack of communication and infidelity are just a few of the reasons. Marriage is hard work. But anything worth having is worth the effort. Today’s proverb is a reminder to wedded couples to rejoice in their spouse – to let husband or wife know how much they are appreciated, to take time to enjoy each other’s company…even when doing nothing else but being together.

Marriage is the foundation of families and a holy union. If you’re single, pray for your married friends. If you are married, invest in yours. Write your spouse a love note and deliver it with a kiss. Thank God today for your spouse and ask Him to strengthen your marriage and the marriages of both the president and the vice-president.

Recommended Reading: I Corinthians 13:4-13