Tag Archives: politics

Presidential Prayer Team; H.L.M. – A Greater Trust

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Three-year-old Zoe was listening to her preschool teacher discuss transportation. When her teacher said that boats go on water but people can’t, Zoe raised her hand. “No!” Zoe exclaimed. “Jesus can walk on water!”

We have our hope set on the living God, who is the Savior of all people.

I Timothy 4:10

The book of Matthew describes Jesus’ water-walking miracle as an example of faith to His disciples. Yet when Peter started walking on the water toward the Lord, he began to sink. While Peter wasn’t as successful, he was willing to take a risk at Jesus’ invitation. Peter just forgot to keep his eyes of faith on the One who would never let him drown.

Hebrews 10:23 says, “Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful.” What is God asking you to do that requires a greater trust in Him than you have ever demonstrated? Ask the Lord to give you the faith of a little child like Zoe as you remember His promise to never leave you. Pray also that America’s leaders would be willing to step out of the boat and make choices that honor God.

Recommended Reading: Matthew 14:22-33

 

Presidential Prayer Team; G.C. – Written by You

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What’s your favorite song these days? Do you know who wrote it? It can be surprising the moment you realize a current chart topper was actually written a generation ago by a Broadway composer. For many songwriters, creating a new work has less to do with a catchy tune than it does with finding just the right words to express someone or something that seems too elusive for language.

Oh sing to the Lord a new song, for he has done marvelous things!

Psalms 98:1

You try it: take a moment right now and identify two or three words that would exactly describe what God is doing in your life today. Say these words out loud, then close your eyes and offer the phrase back to the Lord as a testimony. You’ve just written a new song! Surprisingly, this kind of song has nothing to do with your singing ability…yet, to God, it is a wonderful melody.

People of faith, clear your throat, square your shoulders and share your song with America today. Tell anyone and everyone that you are witness to a magnificent God doing great things. Sing – sing YOUR song to all who will listen today.

Recommended Reading: Psalm 138

Presidential Prayer Team;  C.H. –  The Big Reveal

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A reality show where contestants compete to lose weight is so popular in the United States, 25 other countries decided to start versions of the show. Participants make dramatic lifestyle changes and lose large amounts of weight. At the final big reveal, final contestants show off their whole body makeovers with stylish clothes and hairstyles.

The new self, which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator.

Colossians 3:10

Today’s passage speaks of a similar makeover – one where you put away “anger, wrath, malice, slander, and obscene talk from your mouth.” (Colossian 3:8) Instead, you are encouraged to “set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth.” (Colossians 3:2) You are a new creation.

How easy it is to get mad and irritated just trying to get through traffic on the way to work. Then there are those people who rub you the wrong way. Before letting nasty words fly, stop and pray. Ask God to help you become more Christ-like in your thoughts, words and actions. Pray, too, for the others in your workplace as well as all who work in government offices, including our nation’s leaders. Ask God to have a “big reveal” in all of you.

Recommended Reading: Psalm 19:7-14

 

Ravi Zacharias Ministry – Beauty in the Subway?

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Dale Henderson gives cello concerts in New York City subway stations because he fears the day when classical music will be no more. He plays for free, focusing primarily on Bach Solo Cello Suites because their “power and beauty unfailingly inspire great appreciation, joy and deep emotion in those who hear them.”(1) Some commuters stop and stare, curious or captivated, many having never heard a cello or Bach concerto before. For Henderson, the music is an offering of something meaningful, seeds for future generations of classical music admirers who would not otherwise know it, beauty well worth lugging his heavy cello down into the subways to protect.

It is not always easy to talk about beauty without a minefield of objections or at best complicating list of qualifiers. Its modern place in the “eye of the beholder” gives it a tenuous feel at best. While Henderson describes a world without classical music as soul-less, others may not miss it so much. And yet it is hard not to talk about beauty in a broken and breaking world that makes its distinctive encounters increasingly stand out.

One author describes the common, but individual, effect of our varied encounters of the beautiful this way: “‘Beauty’ seems suited to those experiences that stop us in our tracks. Whether it’s a painting called Broadway Boogie-Woogie or a scherzo by Paganini, the beautiful is conducive to stillness. It doesn’t excite us, or necessarily instill in us the desire to replicate it; it simply makes us exist as though we’re existing for that very experience.”(2) His words are rife with the power of beauty to create longing, a desire to somehow participate. Beauty indeed leaves us with the ache of longing for another taste, another glimpse. And for each of us, this longing can come at unique or unsuspecting times—at the spectacular sight of the giant sequoias or a tiny praying mantis, at a concert or watching a First Nation powwow and taking in the colors, the drums, the survival of a betrayed people.

But to suggest that beauty is simply a spectator’s preference, an individual’s pursuit of an abstracted and timeless ideal, is to miss something significant. What of those moments when beauty is neither pleasant nor pretty, but haunting? What of the communal ache of beauty? The well-known scene in Elie Wiesel’s account of the Holocaust when describes a young man named Juliek, an incredibly gifted violinist from Warsaw. Wiesel describes the night when Juliek, on the brink of death, played a Beethoven concerto in the dark for that group of dying, starving men. Wiesel remembers the intensely beautiful, sad and haunting music, noting that it was as if Juliek was playing his very life upon that violin, offering a lament for each of them. Their encounter with the beauty of the composition was humanizing, made all the more jarring in such a dark and dehumanizing setting. In the morning they woke to find Juliek dead, his violin crushed on the floor beside him.

The sometimes haunting interplay between the presence of beauty and its absence, the space between beauty and brokenness only contributes to beauty’s power to stop and still us. But how do we account for it? The severe absence of beauty can stir a common ache within us, a longing that is inexplicable if beauty is merely accidental or an abstraction divorced from reality. As musician and professor Jeremy Begbie writes, “Beauty… has all too often been abstracted from time and temporal movement, and been turned into a static, timeless quality. Suppose, however, we refuse to divorce it from the transformation of the disorder of creation in the history of Jesus Christ. Suppose we begin there? Does this not open up a more dynamic paradigm of beauty?”(3)

The Christian worldview offers a God who not only made the beautiful, whose glory offers glimpses, but the God who can take away brokenness, and transform a disordered creation in Jesus Christ. This is a God who takes all the glimpses and introduces the whole—not as an escape from reality but a deepening of it. For the beauty of God is one that can hold life as well as death.

I remember vividly one summer when I was working with a group of kids in an afterschool program and a young girl was stung by a bee. She had a severe reaction and the paramedics were unable to revive her. Sitting with one of her young friends at the funeral, somewhere in the middle of it she turned to me with tears in her eyes and said, “The cut on her face will never heal.” The young girl had a little cut on her forehead from some previous playground encounter, and her friend made this observation in the midst of her own shock and grief. I remember thinking how incredibly insightful her words really were. She was noticing something very simple, but there was something quite profound in her thought. She seemed to be saying instinctively that this wasn’t right, that wounds are meant to heal, that the broken parts of life are not okay: indeed, that wholeness is both our stubborn longing and profound calling.

Remarkably, in this little girl’s comment is something that every prophet in the Bible has said—the ones who were trying desperately to open the people’s eyes to the glory of God around them and the ones who were pointing out the absence of glory. Each of them looked around the world, and seeing its broken cuts and ugly blemishes, cried out instinctively, “This is not the way it’s supposed to be!” We were made for wholeness.

Perhaps beauty has an effect on us because it hints at this beauty of God, manifestations that come not intangibly but, like Jesus Christ, within time and community, and thus a beauty that transforms, a beauty that is able to embrace life as well as death.

Whether a fleeting glimpse in the subway or a quiet act of kindness, whether something that stirred a community or stood up to a culture, each of these dim glimpses suggests not an escape from reality but a calling further into it, such that when we see the face of God we shall know that we have always known it.

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

(1) Pia Catton, “A Musician for the Masses Improves His Station,” Wall Street Journal, December 31, 2010.

(2) Arthur Krystal, “Hello, Beautiful: What We Talk About When We Talk About Beauty,” Harpers, September 10th, 2010.

(3) Jeremy Begbie, Voicing Creation’s Praise: Towards a Theology of the Arts (New York: T&T Clark, 2006), 224.

Presidential Prayer Team; A.W. – Bloom Where You’re Planted

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A little girl playing in a garden noticed a beautiful flower planted in a rough soil patch. “A flower this pretty shouldn’t be in such messy dirt,” she thought. She pulled the flower up by its roots and washed it, but the flower wilted and died. The gardener, upset by what happened, asked her why. She replied she didn’t like the flower in the dirt, to which the gardener explained it needed to be in that “dirty” soil so it could grow into one of his finest flowers.

In whatever condition each was called, there let him remain with God.

I Corinthians 7:24

In today’s verse, Paul was addressing the church at Corinth. Because Christianity seemed revolutionary at the time, some were ready to change or abandon their current situations. Paul reminded them to remain where God had placed them and to live for Jesus there.

Today, Christians are called to do the same. Happiness and success don’t depend on who you are in the world, but on who you are in Christ. Don’t imagine if you were in a different situation it would be easier to follow God. Instead, seek to exhibit your faith in your everyday calling. Pray, too, for America’s leaders who know Christ as Lord to remain firm in their faith in God.

Recommended Reading: I Timothy 6:3-12

Presidential Prayer Team; J.K. – Eternal Verities

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Establishing common ground using mutual interests, such as sports or literature, can spark conversations. The Apostle Paul brought new ideas to Athens. Though he was called a “babbler,” the philosophers of the day still wanted to hear about the strange things he was teaching (Acts 17:19-20).

May we know what this new teaching is that you are presenting?

Acts 17:19

It could have proven difficult for Paul. Myriads of idols covered the city, more than in the whole of Greece. But among them all, one stood out with the inscription, “To the unknown god.” (Acts 17:23) It was at that point that Paul began to explain who the true Creator God is – and Jesus His Son who had died and rose again. Sadly, Scripture states that only a few believed. As Paul Kretzmann wrote in his commentary, “The world of letters in our days has changed in appearance, but not in kind. The eternal verities of the Bible are despised…but every new theory of true and false science is…all too often set up as an irrefutable law.”

Share the Good News. It may be a new beginning for one who struggles to know the truth. Then pray for those who lead the nation – that they may open their hearts to the teaching of God’s Word.

Recommended Reading: II Timothy 1:6-14

Presidential Prayer Team; J.K. – Hope with Authority

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Where would you be without hope? There would be no purpose for living, no word of comfort in time of death. That is why Jesus’ words in today’s verse have so much meaning. “I am the resurrection and the life.” They’re words spoken by the giver of truth; words to be believed!

I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live.

John 11:25

They’re also words given with authority and power, exemplified three times by His raising the dead to life – the young man from Nain, Jairus’ daughter and Lazarus (Luke 7:11-15, Luke 8:49-56, John 11:1-44). More convincing still was His own resurrection, the historical proof of which cannot be overturned. This is the truth upon which His church has been founded. Because you believe, though you will die, yet you shall live…because He lives!

On this Palm Sunday as you enter Holy Week, remember the gravity of your sin and the intense suffering of your Lord. Remember also that Jesus’ resurrection gives you hope for your life.

Intercede now for those who know not this joy and purpose for living – leaders of this nation, neighbors and friends. Then give thanks for the life you have in Him.

Recommended Reading: Romans 15:4-13

Presidential Prayer Team; J.R. – Priority Transformation

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President Ronald Reagan’s diary entries during the week of March 23, 1981 contain some rather pedestrian entries recording typical duties of a Chief Executive. Reagan held meetings to discuss a grain embargo, the political situation in Namibia, the possible resignation of a key aide, and he hosted representatives of the March of Dimes. But on the following Monday, March 30, the President was on the receiving end of an assassin’s bullet. In his diary entry for that day – presumably penned a few days later – Reagan writes about how fortunate he was to be alive, closing with this: “Whatever happens now I owe my life to God and will try to serve Him in every way I can.”

For you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God.

Colossians 3:3

In your life as a follower of Christ, there must be a moment when you realize that your purpose on Earth is not to be self-serving. Perhaps it came in one shattering moment, as it did with Reagan. Maybe it came with the quiet prompting of the Holy Spirit. Or perhaps it will be today that you begin living with the knowledge that you owe your life to God.

As you intercede for America’s leaders, pray that serving the Lord will be their highest priority.

Recommended Reading: Proverbs 3:1-8

Presidential Prayer Team; H.L.M. – Belieeeeve

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How big is your God? It’s difficult for people on Earth to grasp the width, depth, complexity or immensity of any part of God’s nature. But four-year-old Colton Burpo is an exception.

Though you do not now see him, you believe in him.

I Peter 1:8

Colton was rushed into emergency surgery due to a ruptured appendix. The infection still raged, requiring another surgery. Four days after the second surgery, the Burpos’ church gathered to pray for Colton. The doctor was speechless. Within 12 hours, Colton was skipping down the hall of the hospital. One nurse said, “There has to be a God because this is a miracle!”

Soon Colton revealed that during the surgery he went to Heaven and sat in Jesus’ lap. In Heaven, Colton said he met his miscarried sister whom he was never told about, and his great-grandfather who died 30 years before he was born. One day, Colton told his dad, “God is the biggest one there is. And He really, really loves us, Dad, you can’t belieeeeve how much He loves us!”

The Creator of the Universe wants you to know Him intimately. Spend time daily reading God’s Word and meditating on His incredible love for you. Pray also for the nation’s leaders to discover God’s limitless love for them.

Recommended Reading: Psalm 145:1-12

Presidential Prayer Team; G.C. – Easy Questions

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Do you ever feel sorry for game show contestants when they are asked a super easy question and just can’t come up with the right answer? Everybody feels bad when they walk away disappointed and with no prizes.

Everyone who believes that Jesus is the Christ has been born of God.

I John 5:1

Jesus, in His life on Earth, was a master at asking easy questions that were hard to answer. In fact, the world is still trying to answer the question He asked 2,000 years ago when He looked at His disciples and asked, “Who do you say that I am?” Unlike in the game show, there is much more at stake with that question than a few dollars and a trip to Hawaii. The consequences are so high that Jesus not only asked the question, He also answered it! “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” (John 14:6)

Today, pray for men and women at every level of public service in America. Pray they will carefully consider Jesus of Nazareth and many will come to know Him as the Christ, the Messiah, and the Good News from God. They’ll not be disappointed.

Recommended Reading: Matthew 16:13-19

Presidential Prayer Team; C.H. – Best Sandwich Ever

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Have you ever missed a meal? After a while, your stomach aches with hunger. Pangs of emptiness are all you can think about. Your mouth waters in anticipation of something good to eat. And when you finally taste that first bite of food, you think, “This is the best sandwich I’ve ever had.”

He put a new song in my mouth, a song of praise to our God.

Psalms 40:3

Waiting for things we desire often makes getting them seem even better. In the verses leading up to today’s passage, David cried out to the Lord in his despair, then “waited patiently” (Psalm 40:1). God pulled him out of a pit and onto solid ground, which filled David with a song of praise. One could say it was David’s “best sandwich” moment.

America is in need of rescue. While many Christians have become discouraged, this psalm brings a message of hope. God didn’t leave David in the pit. He didn’t leave Jesus in the grave, and He won’t leave America in despair. Call to Him for help. Pray for Him to come to the aid of your national leaders, as well as all Americans. The Creator of all things will put a new song in your mouth – the best one ever.

Recommended Reading: Ezekiel 34:11-16

Presidential Prayer Team; J.K. – Not Just Covered

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There are products on the market today that promise to bring new life to your leather upholstery or the faded condition of your car. Just wipe it on and dullness will disappear and scratches will no longer be visible. Everything will look like new. In the long run, though, the imperfections may reappear…they are merely covered for a time.

Alive together with Christ – by grace you have been saved.

Ephesians 2:5

Now look at yourself. Are there any flaws or failings? The condition of man – of you – falls way short of God’s measure. No one is sinless or righteous, not one (Romans 3:10). But God tells of the love He has for you. Once dead spiritually, when you believe in Jesus, you become “alive together” with Him. By His grace – undeserved, unmerited favor to you – your sins aren’t just covered, they are taken away, never to return. Dead to your sin, He made you alive and gave you new life (II Timothy 1:10).

God has reshaped you from within, and given you a new beginning. Don’t take this relationship lightly. Trust in Christ and be daily transformed into His likeness. Then intercede for those who lead this country…that they may see where they fall short and need God’s forgiveness and guidance.

Recommended Reading: Colossians 2:6-15

Presidential Prayer Team; P.G. – Wanted: Dead AND Alive

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The worn sepia-toned handbill nailed to fence posts and trees in Western movies sought the return of the pictured fugitive – dead or alive. In Romans 6, God has posted a new notice. He wants believers dead AND alive. On its face, this is a vexing problem! But as with many aspects of the Christian life, dying and living require choice.

For the death he died he died to sin, once for all, but the life he lives he lives to God.

Romans 6:10

People don’t talk much about sin these days. It’s much too uncomfortable. But its power within you has influenced your entire life. When you accepted the death of Christ as sin’s payment, that power was replaced with new life.

Does that mean you’ll never sin again? No. That capacity remains. But you are to live as dead to sin but alive to God. You can check how alive you are by taking your spiritual pulse. Are you immersed in His Word…reading, studying, applying? Are you praising and praying…improving your communication with God? Do you keep a record of His faithfulness?

As you focus on drawing closer to Him, intercede for the men and women of America’s government to find their own new life in Christ.

Recommended Reading: Romans 6:5-14

Presidential Prayer Team; C.P. – Faith Perspective

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A new creation. That sounds good—a chance to start all over. But sometimes, where the Lord leads seems like the wrong direction: like Joseph in slavery, the Israelites in the wilderness, Daniel in the lion den, Mary in pre-marital pregnancy, Paul in prison. And as soon as Jesus was baptized, the Holy Spirit led Him to the wilderness to be tempted.

Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation.

II Corinthians 5:17

God loves you and wants you to be successful in your Christian life, walk in His power, and carry His presence and glory. He graces you to overcome and be victorious, express Him in all you do and help others do the same. He is your greatest fan cheering you on. He wants you to walk as a new creation.

When you see the Heavenly Father as good and loving, your source, no matter what you’re going through; when you are yielded to Jesus in a loving relationship and your comfort is secondary; when you walk in faith and not by sight – you are behaving as a new creation. Today, pray God will strengthen your faith. And pray He will perform His purpose in this nation, no matter how it appears to the natural eye.

Recommended Reading: Romans 8:26-39

Presidential Prayer Team; J.R. – Handel’s Renaissance

 

ppt_seal01Imagine you are a musician of such immense talent and fame that the President of the United States regularly invites you to perform concerts in the East Room of the White House. Then imagine that your music goes stale, your popularity wanes, and your wealth evaporates. The president still mentions your name…but only to describe you as washed up. Something very much like that happened to George Frederic Handel. He composed the greatest music of his age and performed before royalty throughout Europe. Then he hit a creative wall. Frederick the Great, King of Prussia, said that “Handel’s great days are over…his inspiration is exhausted.”

Sing to him a new song; play skillfully on the strings, with loud shouts.

Psalms 33:3

Only it wasn’t. Bankrupt, in poor health, and all but forgotten, Handel ensconced himself in a small room for three to four weeks, writing from morning to night. The result was Messiah – a musical masterpiece that even Mozart said could never be improved.

Despite how you might feel about the course of your life or the discouraging trajectory of America, never doubt that God is ready to give you a new song! As you pray today, do so with expectancy that great days…for you and your nation’s leaders…are not behind, but just ahead!

Recommended Reading: Psalm 95:1-6

 

Presidential Prayer Team; A.W. – Reminder Calls

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A little boy walked to his friend’s house to play. His dad instructed him to call home when he arrived, but the boy got distracted and forgot to call. The father knew punishment might be necessary to teach his son a lesson, but first he decided to call the friend’s home, let the phone ring once, and then hang up. Moments later, his son called. “What took so long?” the father asked. “I started playing and forgot to call,” replied the boy. “But when I heard the ring, I remembered.”

Those whom I love, I reprove and discipline, so be zealous and repent.

Revelation 3:19

How often does God, not wanting to punish His children, send reminder calls? In today’s verse, John was “calling” the church at Laodicea, warning discipline would come if they didn’t change their behavior and repent. Jesus, in His love for them, wasn’t willing to overlook their sin. He would chastise so they’d see their mistakes and correct ungodly behavior.

Are you listening for reminders from God – warnings you may need to correct some behaviors? Know it’s because of His great love for you that the Lord disciplines you. Pray today, too, for God to send reminders to America’s leaders to see their errors, repent and become zealous for God.

Recommended Reading: Hebrews 12:4-11

 

Presidential Prayer Team; C.P. – The Next Step

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Now that it’s March, you may notice your New Year’s resolutions falling by the wayside. Remember that January 1 is just one day after December 31. The beginning of the year is not the time to completely overhaul your life, but an opportunity for a readjustment to know your next steps are the right ones.

A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another.

John 13:34

For three years, Jesus taught His disciples about the kingdom of God, how to love one another and how to meet needs. The night before His crucifixion, He washed their feet and told them to serve each other. He then told them of the “new commandment” to love one another, and it wasn’t the first time He told them to love others…but loving and serving in such a way that people around them would take notice was the next step.

When it comes down to specifics, sometimes knowing what God wants is confusing. During those times, ask yourself, “What is the best way to love God and others, especially in the body of Christ?” Pray that Christians will love and serve each other in such a way that unbelievers in this country will be drawn to the Lord.

Recommended Reading: Philippians 2:1-11

 

Presidential Prayer Team; J.R. – Disciplined and Decent

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George Washington’s father died before the future president was a teenager, and because many of the family responsibilities fell upon young George, there was little time or money for a formal education. Washington learned social graces from a guidebook entitled The Rules of Civility and Decent Behavior in Company and Conversation, and some of its maxims sound almost comical to the modern ear. “Put not another bit into your mouth till the former be swallowed. Let not your morsels be too big for the jowls,” says one directive. Another says “Bedew no man’s face with your spittle by approaching too near him when you speak.”

It yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it.

Hebrews 12:11

Even without a father, Washington learned the importance of discipline – from his mother, from mentors and, yes, from books. And the greatest guidebook, the Bible, notes that Godly discipline “yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness.” Today’s society, from Hollywood to the District of Columbia, is characterized by a lack of restraint…and the fruit of permissiveness will be bitter.

As you pray for the restoration of American and her leaders today, ask God to make you a shining example of a spiritually disciplined and decent follower of Christ.

Recommended Reading: I Corinthians 9:19-27

 

Presidential Prayer Team; P.G. – Not Automatic

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Cardiologists in London have ascertained that the human body begins its deterioration process at roughly age 20. The 100 billion nerve cells begin to die off, and by age 40 you could be losing up to 10,000 per day. Everything is impacted – memory, coordination, and the many functions controlled by the autonomic nervous system. The Apostle Paul was right: the outer nature is wasting away.

Though our outer nature is wasting away, our inner nature is being renewed day by day.

II Corinthians 4:16

Diet and exercise fight decay’s ravages. Lifelong-learning centers strive to decelerate cognitive impairment with all manner of academic and experiential opportunities. But the nourishment of body and mind is ultimately a losing battle.

Decay of your inner nature, though, does not need to be automatic with the passage of time. It’s necessary to jettison anger, worry and pride, filling those newly-emptied spaces with the joy of the Lord, allowing Him to heal your hurts. Be renewed in your spirit with humble service in His name, and by passing on the love He has so freely bestowed on you. Dive deeply into the Scriptures and pray with gratitude. Let your intercessions include President Obama, members of Congress, the nation’s judiciary, and the men and women of the military.

Recommended Reading: II Corinthians 4:7-18

 

Presidential Prayer Team; C.P. – Power and Influence

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Just about anything can be posted on the Internet – and with programs like Photoshop, a picture’s worth a thousand lies. Many websites such as Snopes are dedicated to pointing out the fakes. In the days of Christ, Scribes and Pharisees talked the talk, but didn’t walk the walk. They thought they had power and authority, but did they?

What is this? A new teaching with authority!

Mark 1:27

Jesus said the Scribes and Pharisees lay burdens on others that they themselves wouldn’t lift a finger to move (Matthew 23:4). Jesus healed the sick. The Pharisees and Scribes accused Him of healing by Satanic power (Matthew 12:24). Today’s verse shows the common people recognized the difference between Jesus’ teaching and that of the Scribes and Pharisees…which had no real power and authority.

If you want power in your life, pray. If you want God’s authority, read the Bible, receive God’s grace and yield to His Holy Spirit. If you want to do God’s will and make a difference in the world, walk in love. Back up what you believe with loving action. Pray that leaders and citizens of this nation will know Christians by their love (John 13:35) and turn to Jesus for salvation.

Recommended Reading: James 1:19-27