Tag Archives: politics

Presidential Prayer Team; J.K. – Joy Overflowing

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For most growing children, teen years are difficult; Mom and Dad don’t understand and only want control over them…or so they think. But aren’t people of any age who don’t know Jesus as Savior guilty of that same attitude toward God? They sense He is their judge and become hostile. Reconciliation seems impossible.

Rejoice in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now received reconciliation.

Romans 5:11

In most cases with parents, and always with God, it is love that governs their actions. Children may eventually appreciate the reasoning behind the rules. The believer, however, can actually experience a psychological and spiritual change as they come to know the Father’s saving grace. As one commentator wrote, “Only in Christian faith does God take the initiative to win, at terrible cost, the affection of those who have wounded him by their sins.” Believing means you are restored to a harmonious relationship with Him. Reconciled by Jesus’ death, but as Paul writes, “much more…[you are] saved by his life.” (Romans 5:10)

Rejoice in God, believer, for He is the One who provided the way through Christ. Let the joy in your heart be overflowing! Then boldly pray for the leaders of this nation that they may know the joy found only in the Lord.

Recommended Reading: Romans 5:1-11

Presidential Prayer Team; G.C. – Recycled Orchestra Project

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Worldwide, humanity generates about a billion tons of garbage a year. In Cateura, Paraguay, an entire region ekes out an existence off of a portion of the toxic mess. The local economy is largely driven by garbage pickers sifting through trash and finding items to resale. With little else to expect from life, local kids easily fall prey to gangs and crime.

Their abundance of joy and their extreme poverty have overflowed in a wealth of generosity.

II Corinthians 8:2

Enter music teacher and former garbage picker Favio Chavez. With a recycled saxophone made out of door keys, bottle caps and shirt buttons, Chavez started a music school. Rescuing one kid at a time, he gives each a salvaged trash instrument and lessons. Today, he and “The Recycled Orchestra” travel the world with their unique music, inspiring all who hear.

Paul’s letter to the Corinthians also tells of people suffering great poverty yet finding and an overcoming joy in Christ. Morally, times are tough in America; some even call it spiritual poverty. Others have given up altogether. But you shouldn’t give up; instead, remain faithful in your intercessions for the nation. As you do, you’ll play the song of joy that is in your heart. Share the real gladness you have in God. Soon others will be tapping along to the beat.

Recommended Reading: Isaiah 52:6-10

Ravi Zacharias Ministry – Transformed

Ravi Z

If we were to draw out in symbols and timelines the road maps of our lives, we could pencil in both single and crucial moments as well as entire years marked with particular themes of development. In any picture of a life laid out before us, there are abrupt moments of pivotal formation and gradual phases of transformation.  It is a paradox that insight seems to grow gradually and yet it also seems to arrive in overpowering moments of abruptness.

A dramatic example of this comes in the life of Jesus and his disciples. Peter, James, and John found themselves climbing a familiar mountain with Christ, an ordinary event in their lives together. But on this day, they were silenced by the entirely uncommon appearance of Elijah and Moses who started talking with Jesus. It must have seemed a moment of both honor and awe. Peter immediately responded to it. “Lord, it is good for us to be here. If you wish, I will put up three shelters—one for you, one for Moses and one for Elijah” (Matthew 17:4). But before he had finished speaking, a bright cloud enveloped them and a voice from the heavens thundered, “This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased. Listen to him!” The disciples were terrified. And then as suddenly as it all began, they looked up and saw no one but Jesus.

There are transforming moments in our lives that seem isolated in both time and vividness. We remember them as mountaintops or downfalls, points in life lifted above or plummeting below the majority of the map. But are they not also much more than this? Whether distinguished by joy or pain, a transforming moment is always more than a moment. Such moments are no more isolated in the pictures of our lives than they are isolated in the picture of reality. The disciples were never the same after their three years with Jesus, through ordinary meals and extraordinary miracles, distracted crowds and disruptive mountaintops.

Professor and theologian James Loder was on vacation with his family when they noticed a motorist off to the side of the road waving for help. In his book The Transforming Moment, he describes kneeling at the front fender of the broken-down car, his head bent to examine the flat tire, when he was abruptly alerted to the sound of screeching brakes. A motorist who had fallen asleep at the wheel was jarred awake seconds before his vehicle crashed into the disabled car alongside the road and the man who knelt beside it. Loder was left pinned between the car he was trying to repair and his own.

Years later, he was compelled to describe the impact of a moment marked by abrupt pain, and yet unarguably something much more. Writes Loder, “At the hospital, it was not the medical staff, grateful as I was for them, but the crucifixes—in the lobby and in the patients’ rooms—that provided a total account of my condition. In that cruciform image of Christ, the combination of physical pain and the assurance of a life greater than death gave objective expression and meaning to the sense of promise and transcendence that lived within the midst of my suffering.”(1)

This encounter with God, like the Transfiguration of Christ on the mountainside to a small group of frightened disciples, did not merely transform a moment; it was a moment that transformed reality and thus, the whole of life. Writes Loder, “Moments of transforming significance radically reopen the question of reality.”(2)

When the disciples came to the end of their mountaintop encounter and looked up, they saw only Jesus. Moses and Elijah were no longer there; the cloud that enveloped them disappeared and the heavens ceased to speak. But Jesus was fully and humanly present to them, the glimpse of God in that transforming moment on the mountain a radical reality that would shape all of life.

To borrow from Emily Dickinson, there are times when truth must dazzle gradually, until it is given its proper place. Other times we seem to find ourselves moved nearly to blindness as we encounter more than we have eyes yet to see. Sometimes, like Peter, we interpret these moments of transcendence imperfectly at first, and it is in living with the moment that we learn to see it more. The Spirit is at work even in the deciphering, and in the final examination, the content of our transforming moments is Jesus alone, the transfigured one, the transforming one, the light of the knowledge of the glory of God.

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

(1) James E. Loder, The Transforming Moment (Colorado Springs: Helmers & Howard Publishing, 1989), 2.

(2) Ibid., back cover.

Presidential Prayer Team; C.H. – Well Done

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When a passerby snapped a photo of a man mowing the National Mall lawn in Washington D.C. during the government shutdown, the picture went viral on social media. The man, later identified as South Carolinian Chris Cox, insisted he wasn’t making a political statement; he just wanted the mall to look nice for the Million Vet March and saw a way to make his state proud and help out the government in its time of need.

Enter into the joy of your master.

Matthew 25:21

Cox didn’t just mow the grass one day. He stayed 16 days, emptying trashcans, cutting down limbs and raking leaves. He used the talents he was given and made America proud. Today’s passage is taken from the parable of the talents, which teaches how using your God-given gifts makes Him proud. Those who use their talents wisely will hear, “Well done, good and faithful servant.”

Are you using your talents for the Lord? What gifts could you utilize to do His will? Ask God to open your eyes for ways you can be used. Perhaps you need to mow the grass and rake some leaves – or maybe bake a cake or clean a house. Then pray for God to raise up more American citizens and national leaders like Chris Cox.

Recommended Reading: I Peter 4:7-11

Ravi Zacharias Ministry – Summer in My Heart

Ravi Z

All that is found in the promises of summer has long been a theme on the lips of poets and songwriters. Poet or otherwise, I imagine we have all agreed at some point with Shakespeare: “Summer’s lease hath all too short a date.”

It is the time of year when we savor the days of summer, and recall what it felt like to run home from the last day of school with three months in our back pocket. For me summer vacations call to mind the shores of Lake Michigan, a scenic reminder of the origin of the word “vacation” itself; the Latin word “vacatio” means freedom.

Even so, we are sadly aware it is a freedom that does not last. Even as children on summer break we knew that vacation would end and summer would fade away. It is, in fact, this quality that makes vacations all the more sought-after; it is time set aside, time that shouts particularly of meaning because of the time with which it so contrasts. Yet regardless of its short lease, there seems a promise within the freeing days of summer that captures our hearts and remains with us through the longest of winters.

A poem by C.S. Lewis suggests that the promise we look for is that the seasons of life will one day come to a grinding halt and death will be no more. It is the hopeful possibility that we were created to know a freedom that endures.  Writes Lewis:

I heard in Addison’s Walk a bird sing clear

‘This year the summer will come true. This year. This year.

‘Winds will not strip the blossom from the apple trees

This year, nor want of rain destroy the peas.

‘This year time’s nature will no more defeat you,

Nor all the promised moments in their passing cheat you.

‘This time they will not lead you round and back

To Autumn, one year older, by the well-worn track.

‘This year, this year, as all these flowers foretell,

We shall escape the circle and undo the spell.

‘Often deceived, yet open once again your heart,

Quick, quick, quick, quick!—the gates are drawn apart.’(1)

What if the changing seasons, the fading of flowers, and the rebirth of summer are all signposts of the eternal? In his wisdom, King Solomon saw that written upon the seasons of time is the signature of the one who made them. “There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under heaven: a time to be born and a time to die, a time to plant and a time to uproot… He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the hearts of men” (Ecclesiastes 3:1-2,11). Rising sun and emerging summer declare that the heavens will neither forget nor forsake. Upon each waking flower is written the promise of resurrection.

It is this weighted promise the Christian worldview carries through the seasons: Christ has stopped the cycle of death and is coming back to bring us where he is. The effect of such a promise on the life of a believer is well illustrated in hymnist Fanny Crosby. She wrote:

I know in whom my soul believes,

I know in whom I trust;

The Holy One, the merciful,

the only wise and just.

I know in whom my soul believes,

and all my fears depart;

For though the winter winds may blow,

’tis summer in my heart.

Crosby wrote of the Christian hope she saw written across her life. Though blinded as an infant by a doctor’s error, she spoke of the light of Christ and carrying the promise of summer with her. Every season presents a similar option of holding near the hope of Christ and the promise of resurrection, until a day when summer comes true.

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

(1) C.S. Lewis, “What the Bird Said Early in the Year,” Poems, (Harcourt: San Diego, 1992), 71.

Presidential Prayer Team; H.L.M. – Overflowing with Joy

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When Jesus met the Samaritan woman at the well, she did not expect Him to speak to her – much less ask for a cup of water. The Lord spoke frankly about her past and present living situation and showed her that water from the well would never be a source of satisfaction. Then Jesus poured His living water over her as He offered salvation, reconciliation and fulfillment. The Samaritan woman’s immediate response was to run and tell others about her spiritual freedom. As a result of the joy flowing from her, many people became Christ-followers.

Come, see a man who told me all that I ever did. Can this be the Christ?

John 4:29

“The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law.” (Galatians 5:22-23) When you allow the Holy Spirit to direct your life, God’s character will flow out through your words and actions. As a result, others will notice this fruit.

Continually drink deeply from the wellsprings of God’s love through prayer and reading the Bible. As you are refreshed with that living water, pour some onto dry, thirsty people around you. Pray also that God will bring Christ-followers into the paths of our nation’s leaders who will do the same.

Recommended Reading: II Corinthians 5:14-21

Presidential Prayer Team; J.R. – Madison’s Mercy

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William Hull is the only American general ever sentenced to death. Hull surrendered Fort Detroit during the War of 1812 without a fight and was charged with treason, cowardice, and neglect of duty. One can only imagine General Hull’s reaction as he read the judgment: “The Court, in consequence of their determination respecting the second and third charges, and specification under those charges, exhibited against the said Brig. General Wm. Hull, and after due consideration, do sentence him to be shot to death.”

Your words became to me a joy and the delight of my heart.

Jeremiah 15:16

But the words of the next sentence offered surprising hope: “The court in consideration of brigadier general Hull’s revolutionary services, and his advanced age, earnestly recommend him to the mercy of the president of the U.S.” President James Madison signed the pardon, sparing General Hull’s life.

The words of joy found in Scripture, and spoken of by the Prophet Jeremiah, are much the same. You were guilty and condemned…but recommended to the mercy of God by your Savior, Jesus Christ. How will you express your gratitude today for your pardon and new lease on life? As you pray for your nation and its leaders today, ask God to make you an example of His love and surprising mercy.

Recommended Reading: Psalm 103:1-10

Presidential Prayer Team; C.P. – Hurrah for Trouble

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In the United States, fire costs billion of dollars. Firefighting takes its toll in lives, about 4,400 each year, 100 being firefighters. But to professional firefighters, fires are mixed blessings. They depend on them for their livelihood.

Count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various kinds.

James 1:2

Likewise, fiery trials have advantages as well as disadvantages. No one likes to suffer trouble, distress or significant loss, but the two verses after today’s verse affirm, “The testing of your faith produces steadfastness. And let steadfastness have its full effect, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.” And the Apostle Paul declares, “For those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose.” (Romans 8:28)

Thank the Father for the good He’s producing out of the problems in your life. Remember that it’s your faith being tested, not God’s love, goodness or faithfulness. By faith, claim the promise of being “perfect and complete, lacking in nothing” as you patiently wait on His provision. Then pray that the nation’s citizens and leaders will focus on what would truly please the Lord.

Recommended Reading: Colossians 1:3-14

Our Daily Bread — Teaching By Example

Our Daily Bread

Ephesians 6:1-11

Bring [your children] up in the training and admonition of the Lord. —Ephesians 6:4

While waiting for an eye examination, I was struck by a statement I saw in the optometrist’s office: “Eighty percent of everything children learn in their first 12 years is through their eyes.” I began thinking of all that children visually process through reading, television, film, events, surroundings, and observing the behavior of others, especially their families. On this Father’s Day, we often think about the powerful influence of a dad.

Paul urged fathers not to frustrate their children to the point of anger, but to “bring them up in the training and admonition of the Lord” (Eph. 6:4). Think of the powerful example of a dad whose behavior and consistency inspire admiration from his children. He’s not perfect, but he’s moving in the right direction. A great power for good is at work when our actions reflect the character of God, rather than distort it.

That’s challenging for any parent, so it’s no coincidence that Paul urges us to “be strong in the Lord and in the power of His might” (v.10). Only through His strength can we reflect the love and patience of our heavenly Father.

We teach our children far more from how we live than by what we say. —David McCasland

Heavenly Father, I need to know Your love

in order to love others. I want to experience

and share Your patience and kindness with

those I care about. Fill me and use me.

We honor fathers who not only gave us life, but who also show us how to live.

Bible in a year: Nehemiah 1-3; Acts 2:1-21

Insight

In today’s reading, Paul writes of two of the most basic human relationships: parent-child (6:1-4) and employer-employee (6:5-9). The parent-child relationship is particularly sacred. The fifth commandment to honor parents is the only one of the Ten Commandments with a special blessing attached for those who observe it (Ex. 20:12; Eph. 6:2-3). On the other hand, ancient Israelites who physically or verbally abused their parents were put to death (Ex. 21:15,17; Lev. 20:9).

Presidential Prayer Team; J.K. – Wailing to Song

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No believer in Christ is exempt from trials and correction. “For the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and chastises every son whom he receives.” (Hebrews 12:6) As one commentator expressed it, you undergo “home training” so you may have a personal, intimate relationship with God.

I have trusted in your steadfast love; my heart shall rejoice in your salvation.

Psalm 13:5

The Psalmist David was often in distress. Psalm 13 begins as he boldly comes before the Lord asking, “How long…how long?” David was sorrowful, enemies pursued him, and he felt distant from what he determined was an unresponsive God. But the wailing turned to song when he realized that he could not save himself. His deliverer was Almighty God! The apostle Paul struggled as well. “For I have the desire to do what is right, but not the ability to carry it out.” (Romans 7:18) His joy became full when he knew his deliverer was Jesus Christ (Romans 7:25-8:1).

Believer, know that your “Woe is me!” pleases the devil, but your songs of praise grieve him sorely (Martin Luther). Lift your eyes heavenward, trust in God’s steadfast love and rejoice that God is the deliverer of body and soul. Then pray for the people of this nation that they may do the same.

Recommended Reading: Psalm 16

Presidential Prayer Team; A.W. – Now and Later

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In Across the Plains, Robert Louis Stevenson’s travel memoir about his journey as an immigrant from New York to San Francisco, he says, “Find out where joy resides, and give it a voice far beyond singing. For to miss the joy is to miss all.” Stevenson was a stranger traveling in a foreign land. The conditions were not always ideal, but he knew not to miss the joy.

Everlasting joy shall be upon their heads.

Isaiah 35:10

God’s followers have always been on a journey in a foreign land. Because of sin, the conditions are not always perfect, but the Lord promises joy along the way and eternally (John 16:22). In today’s verse, the prophet Isaiah was calling God’s people back to faithfulness. He reminded them they would face judgment, but would also receive restoration. Christians today share this promise through the hope of Christ’s return.

Are you missing the joy? Don’t let your struggles rob you of the joy you are promised in this life or the next. As you pray today, ask for peace and joy (Romans 15:13) and for America and its leaders to return to faithfulness so they might also experience restoration and hope.

Recommended Reading: I Peter 1:3-9

Our Daily Bread — We’re Safe

Our Daily Bread

1 Peter 1:3-5

[God] has begotten us . . . to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that does not fade away, reserved in heaven for you. —1 Peter 1:3-4

The United States Bullion Depository in Fort Knox, Kentucky, is a fortified building that stores 5,000 tons of gold bullion and other precious items entrusted to the federal government. Fort Knox is protected by a 22-ton door and layers of physical security: alarms, video cameras, minefields, barbed razor wire, electric fences, armed guards, and unmarked Apache helicopters. Based on the level of security, Fort Knox is considered one of the safest places on earth.

As safe as Fort Knox is, there’s another place that’s safer, and it’s filled with something more precious than gold: Heaven holds our gift of eternal life. The apostle Peter encouraged believers in Christ to praise God because we have “a living hope”—a confident expectation that grows and gains strength the more we learn about Jesus (1 Peter 1:3). And our hope is based on the resurrected Christ. His gift of eternal life will never come to ruin as a result of hostile forces. It will never lose its glory or freshness, because God has been keeping and will continue to keep it safe in heaven. No matter what harm may come to us in our life on earth, God is guarding our souls. Our inheritance is safe.

Like a safe within a safe, our salvation is protected by God and we’re secure. —Marvin Williams

For Further Thought

What about your salvation brings you the greatest joy?

How does it make you feel knowing that

your salvation is kept safe with God?

An inheritance in heaven is the safest possible place.

Bible in a year: Ezra 6-8; John 21

Insight

Peter begins his first letter with a complex greeting. After addressing God’s “elect” who are strangers in the world and scattered throughout different areas (v.1), Peter uses the struggles of this life to highlight the glory and security of heaven. He speaks of the permanence of their home and inheritance in heaven—it is “kept” (v.5) and can never spoil or “fade” (v.4). Peter reminds them that they are shielded by God’s own power. He reiterates the confidence Jesus gave His followers in John 10:27-29: Those who belong to God, the elect, are held safe and secure in His hand.

Ravi Zacharias Ministry – The Face of Victory

Ravi Z

On March 1, 1999, Bertrand Piccard and Brian Jones stepped into the gondola of a hot air balloon and lifted off from the Swiss alpine village of Chateau d’Oex. Nineteen days, 21 hours, and 55 minutes later, traveling 28,431 miles, they landed in the Egyptian desert. Their journey successfully marked the first nonstop flight around the world in a balloon, earning them the distinction of a world record, a book deal, and a million dollars from the sponsoring corporation. Their victory photograph now rests in the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum beside the “Breitling Orbiter III” itself.

As with all successes in life, the accomplishment of Jones and Piccard’s journey is memorable. Like the trophies on our shelves or the moments we remember as crowning, the successful passage of the Breitling Orbiter III is the story we celebrate—a story that seems to begin at Chateau d’Oex and ends in Egypt. But this trip, like most memorable achievements, was not quite the linear move from start to finish we imagine it to be. In fact, the journey that would end with a world record actually had three hopeful starting points and two frustrated finishes.

The often miry course of personal growth and human development is similar. There is a reason Jesus seems to insult the paralytic with the basic question of desire. We indeed must first want to be well; I have long understood this concept personally. But thinking of this call for help as being inherently present within the human developmental process has only recently entered my perspective. What if every pang of trust or mistrust, every cry for autonomy or cry of shame, was the call of the human spirit to that which is beyond it? What if our cries over mistrust or longings for trust exist explicitly because there is one who is trustworthy? Psychology and theology professor James Loder offers this perspective explicitly: “It is evident that human development is not the answer to anything of ultimate significance. Every answer it does provide only pushes the issue deeper, back to the ultimate question, ‘What is a lifetime?’ and ‘Why do I live it?’”(1)

Such are the questions we wrestle with in the twists and turns, stops and failures through the journey called life.  How incredibly helpful to suspect there is a reason we ask all along. What if God is not merely the God who comes near in the midst of the pain of adolescence or the cries of an adult for understanding, but is the very creator of the spirit that leads us to crisis and guides us through certain pains? What if it is not merely, as one developmental psychologist writes, the “capacities of the human psyche” that “make spirituality possible,” but it is the Spirit of God who makes the human psyche capable of knowing God?(2) “You did not choose me,” said Jesus, “but I chose you” (John 15:16).

As its name suggests, the success of the Breitling Orbiter III was built upon two previous attempts. The original Breitling Orbiter launched in January of 1997. Only a few hours after take off, the balloon was forced to land when the crew was overcome by kerosene fumes from a leaking valve. One year later, the Breitling Orbiter II stayed in the air 9 days longer than its counterpart, managing to navigate from Switzerland to Burma. To the dismay of all, their flight was cut short when they were refused permission to use the airspace over China. Yet from the finish line of 1999, there is little doubt that these early set backs contributed to the development of the system and strategy that would allow Piccard and Jones to finally pilot their balloon across the Pacific.

Whether our days are marked by victory or by crisis, by progress or the call to turn around and try again, the Spirit goes with us, reinforcing that God has been there all along. To discover that there is a face inherently present behind many of the failures we long to forget, a Spirit within the crushed and wounded scenes we try our best to put behind us, and a voice that speaks over and above the cries that have indelibly marked our journey, is to experience the restorative hope of the creator who intended us to discover him all along. The words of the psalmist describe waking to this knowledge:  ”It was not by their sword that they won the land, nor did their arm bring them victory; it was your right hand, your arm, and the light of your face, for you loved them” (Psalm 44:3). What if our days are really marked with the intention of one who loves us? Our winding journeys are a means to the face of God.

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

(1) James Loder, The Logic of the Spirit (San Francisco: Jossey Bass, Inc, 1998), 106.

(2) Ben Campbell Johnson, Pastoral Spirituality (Philadelphia: Westminster Press: 1988), 26.

Presidential Prayer Team; C.H. – Prepare the Way

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Many people stood for hours surrounding Buckingham Palace, while news crews streamed a live feed outside the hospital. When a town crier finally announced the arrival of the newest member of the royal family, Prince George, the people went wild – and kept their vigil, hoping for just a glimpse of the royal family. The birth announcement quickly made world headlines. Everybody celebrated the tiny would-be king.

You will have joy and gladness, and many will rejoice at his birth.

Luke 1:14

Today’s verse also talks about rejoicing at the birth of a child – but this one wasn’t the king. This passage refers to the one who was to “prepare a way” for the King – John the Baptist (Isaiah 40:3). While Prince George is not the king, he still has an important role in the royal family. John the Baptist wasn’t the Messiah, but his mother was told “he will be great before the Lord…and he will be filled with the Holy Spirit.” (Luke 1:15)

You may not be the one in the limelight, but you do have an important role for God. Ask the Lord to give you joy in preparing the way for others to know Him. Then pray for your nation’s leaders to do the will of God.

Recommended Reading: Deuteronomy 28:1-14

Presidential Prayer Team; H.L.M. – Knowing His Love

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The Earth Institute released the World Happiness Report two years ago in time for the United Nation’s Conference on Happiness. According to this report, the world’s happiest countries are all in northern Europe – Denmark, Finland, Norway and the Netherlands took up the top four spots, in that order. The United States ranked eleventh. The report stated that happier countries tend to be richer countries. Yet more important for happiness than income are social factors like the strength of social support, the absence of corruption and the degree of personal freedom.

The joy of Jerusalem was heard far away.

Nehemiah 12:43

Everyone wants to be happy. However, happiness is often a temporary condition based on circumstances. Joy, on the other hand, comes only from knowing the love of your Heavenly Father. Jesus said, “I came that they may have life and have it abundantly.” (John 10:10)

As you talk to your Lord and read His Word, thank God for the gift of true joy. Read His love letter, the Bible, every day as you grow in your relationship with Him. Intercede for those local and national leaders who don’t personally know Jesus Christ. Pray they would experience the true joy that only comes from a relationship with their Creator.

Recommended Reading: John 16:20-28

Ravi Zacharias Ministry – The Dead Don’t Bleed

Ravi Z

For one family in Venezuela, the space between death and life was filled with more shock than usual. After a serious car accident, Carlos Camejo was pronounced dead at the scene. Officials released the body to the morgue and a routine autopsy was ordered. But as soon as examiners began the autopsy, they realized something was gravely amiss: the body was bleeding. They quickly stitched up the wounds to stop the bleeding, a procedure without anesthesia which, in turn, jarred the man to consciousness. “I woke up because the pain was unbearable,” said Camejo.(1) Equally jarred awake was Camejo’s wife, who came to the morgue to identify her husband’s body and instead found him in the hallway—alive.

Enlivened with images from countless forensic television shows, the scene comes vividly to life. Equally vivid is the scientific principle utilized by the doctors in the morgue. Sure, blood is ubiquitous with work in a morgue; but the dead do not bleed. This is a sign of the living.

Thought and practice in Old Testament times revolved around a similar understanding—namely, the life is in the blood. It is this notion that informs the expression that “blood is  on one’s hands” when life has wrongfully been taken. When Cain killed his brother Abel, God confronted him in the field, “Listen! Your brother’s blood cries out to me from the ground.” For the ancient Hebrew, there was a general understanding that blood is the very substance of our createdness, that in our blood is the essence of what it means to be alive. There is life in the blood; there is energy and power.

This notion of blood and its power can also be seen in the language of sacrifice and offering found throughout Near Eastern culture. “And you shall provide a lamb a year old without blemish for a burnt offering to the LORD daily; morning by morning you shall provide it” (Ezekiel 46:13). Just as it was understood that the force of life exists in the blood, there was a general understanding of human need for the power of perfect blood, a need in our lives for atoning and cleansing. But the blood of Israel’s sacrifices was different in this sense than the blood shed by those attempting to appease and approach the gods they feared and followed. The prophets sent throughout Israel’s history were forever insisting that the God of Israel wanted more than the empty performance of sacrifice. God desired these offerings to exemplify the heart of a worshiper, one who yearns to be fully alive in the presence of the creator. The blood of a living sacrifice made this possible temporarily, but God would provide a better way.

When Christianity speaks of Christ as the Lamb of God, it is meant to be a description that moves well beyond symbol or metaphor. Christ is the Lamb whose blood cries out with enough life and power to reach every sin, every shortfall, every tear, every evil. He is the Lamb who comes to the slaughter alive and aware, on his own accord, and with his blood covers us with life, moving us forever into the presence of God by the Spirit. There is life in the blood of Christ, whose entire life is self-giving love; there is power, and he has freely sacrificed all to bring it near. “I tell you the truth,” Jesus said to a crowd that would understand the concept, “unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you” (John 6:53).

Mr. Camejo bled because he was living. His pain was equally a sign of life. The many ways in which we have bled, fragile and mortal, are signs of life, something shared with one who suffered as a human in every way. “When they hurled their insults at him,” writes Peter, “he did not retaliate; when he suffered, he made no threats. Instead, he…bore our sins in his body on the tree, so that we might die to sins and live for righteousness.” The Christian story tells of a time when we will bow before the slain Lamb who stands very much alive, though bearing the scars of his own death. He is not dead and buried, but beckoning a broken world to his wounded side, offering love and life and power in blood:

Love is that liquor sweet and most divine

Which my God feels as blood; but I, as wine.(2)

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

(1) “‘Dead’ man wakes up under autopsy knife”, Reuters, 14 September 2007.

(2) George Herbert, “The Agony.”

 

Ravi Zacharias Ministry – Mortal Thoughts

Ravi Z

“Being unable to cure death, wretchedness, and ignorance men have decided, in order to be happy, not to think about such things.”(1)

It is a rare gift, in this age of distractions, to have five minutes to rest and reflect. Recently, I had the opportunity to take an entire afternoon and do nothing. I was in the desert Southwest of the United States surrounded by brown, barren mountains, desert scrub and cacti, and a variety of small birds. As I looked out over the contrasting horizon of azure sky and brown earth, I was struck by my own insignificance—something I rarely allow myself to think about as I routinely fill my days with busyness. That topography of sky and soil, bird and flower had been there long before I arrived and would surely remain long after I had departed—both from my visit and upon my departure from this world.

Despite this more sobering thought, the gift of undistracted space nourished me. I could revel in the symphony of songbirds all around me, marvel at the cataclysmic forces of nature that formed the mountains and valleys around me. I could wonder at my place in the vastness of the creation and feel my smallness and my transience. Having this kind of time to sit and to reflect is a rarity, and is just as fleeting as the birds that flew around me.

Though writing hundreds of years ago, Blaise Pascal spoke prophetically about the spirit of our age. With the transience of life and the specter of death facing all, most seek lives of distraction. Whether or not we recognize that the fear of death is an underlying, albeit unconscious motivation, we nevertheless recognize how often we fill our lives in order to obscure these realities. Whether it is in the juggling endless priorities, the relentless busyness of our age, or perpetual media noise, our lives are so full that we rarely find the space or time to reflect honestly about anything. Particularly in Western societies, mindless consumption numbs us to the eventuality of our mortal condition and our finitude. The advertising industry is not unaware of our propensity to consumptive distraction.  Marketers spent over 295 billion dollars in total media advertising in 2007.(2) Perhaps they know that humans mistakenly equate vitality with the ability to consume.

It is easy to understand how the fear of death and suffering would compel human beings to live lives of distraction. Yet, the cost of that distraction is a pervasive and deadening apathy—apathy not simply as the inability to care about anything deeply, but the diminishment for engagement that comes from caring about the wrong things. Kathleen Norris laments:

“It is indeed apathy’s world when we have so many choices that we grow indifferent to them even as we hunger for still more novelty. We discard real relationships in favor of virtual ones and scarcely notice that being overly concerned with the thread count of cotton sheets and the exotic ingredients of gourmet meals can render us less able to care about those who scrounge for food and have no bed but the streets.”(3)

The ancient Hebrew poets, while meditating on the brevity of life, prayed, “So teach us to number our days that we may present to you a heart of wisdom” (Psalm 90:12). It was the inevitability of death that motivated this prayer for wisdom. This was a wisdom that didn’t try to hide from the realities of life—be they joys or sorrows—but rather sought to keep finitude ever before it. Indeed the poem ends with a cry for God to “confirm the work of our hands.” Numbering life’s days led to meaningful engagement in the world and in human work—and this was the mark of wisdom.

As I pondered the landscape around me, I thought of dear loved ones, both family and friends, who will not look on this earthly horizon any more. I was gripped by the pain of their loss and shaken by the fact that one day my own eyes will cease to behold earthly beauty. Yet rather than disengaging or distracting myself from the pain of these thoughts, I desire to number my own days. In dealing with significant loss and pain it is certainly understandable how one would long for escape, but facing the pain and attending to it is the way to develop a heart of wisdom and a life full of meaning and confirmation.

Sadly, the reminders of our own mortality lead some to distraction. Yet it can lead others to wise engagement.  Jesus, himself, faced his own death with intention and purpose. “I am the Good Shepherd…and I lay down my life for the sheep… No one has taken it away from me, but I lay it down on my own initiative” (John 10:14a-18). The way of wisdom demonstrated in the life of Jesus gives flesh to the ancient psalmist’s exhortation. As he numbered his days, he calls those who would follow to engage mortality as a catalyst for purposeful living. While following Jesus insists on our laying down our lives in his service, it can be done in the hope that abundant life is truly possible even in the darkest of places. For the one who laid his life down is the one who was raised. He is the one who declared, “I am the resurrection and the life; the one who believes in me will live even though he dies.”

 

Margaret Manning is a member of the writing and speaking team at Ravi Zacharias International Ministries in Seattle, Washington.

(1) Blaise Pascal, Pensees, (Penguin Books: New York, 1966), 37.

(2) As referenced by Allan Sloan in “Fuzzy Bush Math” CNN Money, September 4, 2007.

(3) Kathleen Norris, Acedia and Me: A Marriage, Monks, and A Writer’s Life, (Riverhead Books: New York, 2008), 125.

Presidential Prayer Team; C.P. – Him Alone

ppt_seal01

When Zechariah prophetically praises the Lord later in Luke 1, he speaks of God’s plan of salvation, which includes his son John preparing the way for the Savior. But when Mary is filled with the Holy Spirit and gives praise, the Magnificat, she focuses on God’s character and the fact that He chooses the weak to humble the exalted and provides for the poor to the chagrin of the rich.

My spirit rejoices in God my Savior.

Luke 1:47

Mary emphasizes that a person’s trust should be in God alone; possessions, prestige and personal power are undependable. Psalm 37:4 puts it this way, “Delight yourself in the Lord, and he will give you the desires of your heart.” And Jesus said, “But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.” (Matthew 6:33)

If you are poor, look to God to provide. If you are rich, give to the poor. If you are in a place of leadership, help those who are in a weaker position. If you feel you have little power or influence, seek God to turn others to His glory through you. And remember to pray for all in authority, locally to nationally, that you may live a peaceful life (I Timothy 2:1-4).

Recommended Reading: James 4:1-10

Our Daily Bread — Generous God

Our Daily Bread

Ephesians 3:14-21

[God] is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think. —Ephesians 3:20

When our family lived in Chicago several years ago, we enjoyed many benefits. Near the top of my list were the amazing restaurants that seemed to try to outdo each other, not only in great cuisine but also in portion sizes. At one Italian eatery, my wife and I would order a half portion of our favorite pasta dish and still have enough to bring home for dinner the next night! The generous portions made us feel like we were at Grandma’s house when she poured on the love through her cooking.

I also feel an outpouring of love when I read that my heavenly Father has lavished on us the riches of His grace (Eph. 1:7-8) and that He is able to do “exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think” (3:20). I’m so grateful that our God is not a stingy God who begrudgingly dishes out His blessings in small portions. Rather, He is the God who pours out forgiveness for the prodigal (Luke 15), and He daily crowns us “with lovingkindness and tender mercies” (Ps. 103:4).

At times we think God hasn’t provided for us as we would like. But if He never did anything more than forgive our sins and guarantee heaven for us, He has already been abundantly generous! So today, let’s rejoice in our generous God. —Joe Stowell

Lord, remind me often that You have been exceedingly

generous to me. Help me to extend that generosity

of spirit toward those around me, so that they

may know who You are and rejoice in You.

Praise God from whom all blessings flow!

Bible in a year: 2 Chronicles 32-33; John 18:19-40

Insight

Today’s reading addresses the wellspring of spiritual power in the Christian life. Certainly, human willpower or adopting a positive mental attitude is not the source of this spiritual power. Instead, the apostle Paul points us to the reality of the indwelling Christ. But the indwelling of the Spirit of Christ alone does not change the believer’s life. Choosing to yield to the Spirit’s promptings and meditating on God’s Word give the believer power for living. An attitude of faith and expectation in prayer access vast resources available in God, “who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that works in us” (Eph. 3:20).

 

Ravi Zacharias Ministry – Where Do You Live?

Ravi Z

Like many Generation Xers, I have spent a great deal of my life asking questions. In retrospect, it seems that more than a few of my plaguing inquires were probably the wrong inquiries. In fact, more than a few of my questions were probably even unanswerable. But it took me a while to be able to admit there existed such distinctions. When you are a child and inquiry is your way of gaining a handle on the world around you, you come to believe that every question is right, and every inquiry deserves an answer that satisfies. And there is some truth to that comforting thought: questions are valid and answers should satisfy. Later, when social pressure begins to stress conformity and asking questions carries the risk of embarrassment, we learn to repress our inquisitiveness, even as those who still see the value in inquiring minds offer the ready assurance, “There are no wrong questions!” And this may be true as well, particularly in a classroom. But it does not mean that one cannot ask an unanswerable question or inquire in such a way that simply fails to cohere with reality. Is your idea blue or purple? How much time is in the sky? I imagine a great number of the questions we ask along the way are in fact quite similar.

When it comes to faith, we are actually instructed in the Christian religion to carry into our discipleship some of the qualities we held as children. I suspect a child’s passion for inquiry is one of the traits Jesus intended in his directive: “I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.” But the childlike expectation that every inquiry is capable of being answered to our satisfaction, that every question is capable of being answered now (or even answered at all) is likely not the quality he was encouraging us to keep.

Regardless, Jesus readily received the questions of those around him, whether they were asked with ulterior motive or childlike abandon; no inquiry was turned away. Of course, this is not to say that he always answered, or that he always satisfied the questioner. Actually, more often than not, he replied with a question of his own. “Who gave you the authority to do what you are doing?” the scribes asked. Jesus replied, “I will ask you one question; answer me and I will answer you. Did the baptism of John come from heaven or human origin?” Knowing they were stuck between conceding to Jesus’s authority and risking the wrath of the crowd, they refused to answer. So Jesus refused as well.

Hopefully, beyond learning that questions, like words, can be used as ammunition, we also learn as we grow from inquiring children to questioning adults that questions are not deserving of satisfactory answers simply because they are asked. Most of us can now admit that there are some questions that simply can’t be satisfied. And yet, we scarcely take this wisdom with us into the realms of faith and belief. Standing before a God whose wisdom is said to be many-sided, we somehow feel that God can and must answer our every inquiry. But questioning an all-knowing God does not presuppose that the question itself was even rational. In fact, Jesus’s reactions to the questions around him seem to verify the strong possibility that many of our questions miss the point entirely.

So what does it mean if many of our great questions of ultimate reality and theological inquiry are as unanswerable as the child who wants to know God’s home address? First, the question isn’t wrong in the sense that it has no meaning for the inquirer. Nor does a question’s unanswerability mean we must walk away from the inquiry entirely disheartened. On the contrary, even in questions that cannot be answered there rings the promise of an answerer who satisfies. “No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived, what God has prepared for those who love him.”(1) God may not have a physical address, but the fleshly dwelling of the Incarnate Son of God is nearer and greater than we imagine.

The desire to know, the curiosity that formed the question, and the assumption that someone indeed holds the answer, are all forces that compel a child to ask in the first place. This compulsion to know Jesus encouraged in every questioner, however he chose to answer them. Perhaps he knew that in becoming like children who long to see we would be moved further up and farther into the self-disclosing presence and communion of Father, Son, and Spirit. Inquiry is not in opposition to faith; it is faith’s road to the good answerer.

Interestingly, one of the first questions the disciples asked Jesus was, “Where do you live?” He simply answered, “Come and see.”

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

(1) 1 Corinthians 2:9.