Tag Archives: religion

Days of Praise – God Our Habitation

 

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“LORD, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations.” (Psalm 90:1)

These are the tremendous opening words of the oldest psalm in the book of Psalms called, in its superscript, the “prayer of Moses the man of God.” Moses must have written it shortly before his death as he looked out over the promised land and realized that he himself would never live there (Deuteronomy 34:4-5). It did not really matter though, for he had lived in many places and none of them were really his home. He lived for a brief while in a basket on the river as a baby, then in a queen’s palace, then 40 years in Midian, and 40 more years wandering in the wilderness.

Furthermore, he meditated on the men of God of previous generations (after all, he had compiled all their ancient records in the book of Genesis) and found that they, too, like the apostle Paul 1,500 years later, had “no certain dwellingplace” (1 Corinthians 4:11). Adam was expelled from the garden; Noah lived for a year in an Ark on a worldwide sea and lived the rest of his life in a devastated earth; Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob lived in tents in Canaan, and their descendants lived as slaves in Egypt.

Yet wherever they were, the Lord was with them. He was their dwelling place, and this was Moses’ first thought as he composed his great prayer. He also had written down “the blessing, wherewith Moses the man of God blessed the children of Israel before his death” (Deuteronomy 33:1). Its climax was this great assurance: “The eternal God is thy refuge, and underneath are the everlasting arms” (v. 27). The “refuge” of this promise is the same Hebrew word as “dwelling place” in our text.

We, like they, are “strangers and pilgrims on the earth” (Hebrews 11:13), but “underneath are the everlasting arms.” Where the Lord is—there home is! HMM

 

 

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

My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers – The Devotion of Listening

 

Then Samuel said, “Speak, for your servant is listening.” — 1 Samuel 3:10

Am I hearing what God is saying? Perhaps I’ve listened well to one of his commands, but I’ve turned a deaf ear to the rest. This is how I show God that I don’t love or respect him: I act like I can’t hear him, even though he is speaking to me clearly. Samuel deliberately turned his attention to God, and assured God that his ears were open.

Jesus said, “You are my friends if you do what I command” (John 15:14). Am I being a friend to the Lord, or am I disobeying his commands? If I’d been listening, I wouldn’t have consciously disobeyed. Most of us don’t care enough to listen. Our Lord might as well have said nothing at all.

The goal of my spiritual life is to be so closely identified with Jesus Christ that I always hear God and I know that he always hears me (John 17). When I am identified with the Lord like this, my ears are attuned to his voice at every moment and in every situation. A lily, a tree, the words of one of his servants: all may convey God’s message. If I haven’t cultivated this devotion of listening, his voice comes through to me only at certain times. Most of the time, caught up in serving or in my convictions, I pretend I’m too busy to listen. Serving is a good thing, but if it drowns out God’s voice, I know my devotion is running in the wrong direction.

Have I heard God’s voice today, or have I become deaf to him?

Leviticus 14; Matthew 26:51-75

 

 

 

Wisdom from Oswald

Crises reveal character. When we are put to the test the hidden resources of our character are revealed exactly. Disciples Indeed, 393 R

 

 

https://utmost.org/

Billy Graham – Chosen by God

 

. . . you have been chosen by God who has given you this new kind of life . . .

—Colossians 3:12 (TLB)

Modern writers depict the pessimism of our time and many of them throw up their hands in despair and say, “There is no answer to man’s dilemma.” Hemingway once said, “I live in a vacuum that is as lonely as a radio tube when the batteries are dead, and there is no current to plug into.” Eugene O’Neill in “Long Day’s Journey Into Night” typifies the philosophical attitude of our day. He says, “Life’s only meaning is death.” I say to Hemingway and to O’Neill, who have already gone on, “There is more to life than death.” There is more to life than a radio tube that needs a place to plug into. Jesus taught us the dignity and importance of being a person. God put us on this earth for a purpose, and our purpose is fellowship with God and to glorify God.

What is the meaning of life? Watch Billy Graham’s sermon to find out more.

Prayer for the day

Loving Father, Your love for me transcends the hopelessness of this life and gives me the purpose I so desperately need.

 

 

https://billygraham.org/

Guideposts – Devotions for Women – Release Your Control

 

Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight.—Proverbs 3:5–6 (NIV)

Do you try to control your circumstances, forgetting that it is God who shapes your journey? This verse is a reminder to put aside your own understanding and desires and completely trust in Him. When you follow His guidance, He promises to lead you on the right path, even if it differs from your original plan.

Dear Lord, I need Your divine wisdom to guide me. Make my paths straight and lead me toward Your purpose for my life.

 

 

https://guideposts.org/daily-devotions/devotions-for-women/devotions-for-faith-prayer-devotions-for-women/

Every Man Ministry – Kenny Luck – The Binary Fallacy

 

Let every man be quick to listen but slow to use his tongue, and slow to lose his temper. For man’s temper is never the means of achieving God’s true goodness.  ––James 1:19, esv

A binary fallacy is the idea or precept that there are only two options in any given argument or situation. For example, let’s say you’ve been going to a certain church for several years and have observed a solid track record of biblically sound preaching from your pastor. However, on one particular Sunday he kind of “misses it” on a couple of points. (Everyone has an off day, right?) As you are leaving church you overhear someone say, “This is my first time here, and I will never come back because that guy is a terrible preacher.” Well, he’s not a terrible preacher, and neither is he perfect. But those aren’t the only options.

Or, let’s say you are in a political discussion with a friend whose political views are the opposite of yours. And he says, “They (the party you belong to) only cares about retaining power, and will lie to keep it.”

Is it possible that every single politician in the party to which you do not belong is a dishonest, power-greedy person? Before you answer, think about this: some folks on the other side of the aisle think that about the politicians in your party. But both views can’t be wrong, can they? Yes, they can! That’s an example of a binary fallacy. Statistically speaking (and taking emotion out of the equation), what are the odds that 100% of all the elected officials from the opposite party are bad eggs? (Hint: zero.)

God’s men don’t buy into binary fallacies. Does it mean that when you hear falsehoods or unbiblical points of view, you shouldn’t challenge them? No, you should. But as our moms used to say, “It’s not what you say, it’s how you say it.” Disagreeing respectfully with someone is not “caving in” to their point of view. But we enter dangerous waters when we assume that everything coming out of a person’s mouth is false just because they aren’t part of our tribe (or party, or denomination, or region, etc.).

Man of God, we need to be both thoughtful and bold when confronting fallacies. We find that balance by studying the deeds and words of Jesus, and getting to know the Bible. And we need to keep in mind that only the Holy Spirit has a corner on the truth. Our challenge is to put on the mind of Christ before we type that response on Facebook (1 Corinthians 2:16), or (literally) count to 10 before responding to someone who says something that triggers us.

We can be confident in the fact that we worship a God of light—in Him there is no shifting shadow (James 1:17). How reassuring to know that when we ask for His wisdom, He is generous in giving it!

Father, help me always seek Your truth, especially when it comes to judging situations and circumstances.

 

 

Every Man Ministries

Our Daily Bread – Our Plans and God’s Plans

 

“Neither are your ways my ways,” declares the Lord. Isaiah 55:8

Today’s Scripture

Isaiah 55:8-12

Listen to Today’s Devotional

Apple LinkSpotify Link

Today’s Insights

The book of Isaiah is the first of the five books referred to as the Major Prophets, so named because of their length, not their importance. The other Major Prophets are Jeremiah, Lamentations, Ezekiel, and Daniel. Isaiah is the sixth longest book of the Bible, and two other prophetical books—Jeremiah and Ezekiel—are even longer. Isaiah contains many prophecies related to divine judgment and many others about the coming Messiah. J. A. Martin in The Bible Knowledge Commentary points out: “Isaiah had a lofty view of God. The Lord is seen as the Initiator of events in history. He is apart from and greater than His Creation; yet He is involved in the affairs of that Creation. Whether in his dealings with sin or his promise of redemption, Isaiah portrays God’s greatness as above all that he has created.”

Discover more from the book of Isaiah.

Today’s Devotional

Many years ago, my husband decided to take a trip to Africa with a group of people from his church. At the last minute, the group was prevented from going on its journey. Everyone was disappointed, but the money they’d collected for airfare, lodging, and food was donated to the people they’d tried to visit. The people used it to construct a building that would shelter victims of abuse.

Recently, at a prayer breakfast, my husband met someone who lived in the village he’d almost traveled to so many years ago. This person was a teacher who said he walked by the building every day. He confirmed that God had used it to provide for the most vulnerable people in the area.

Our plans and desires don’t always match what God has in mind. For His “thoughts are not [our] thoughts, neither are [our] ways [His] ways” (Isaiah 55:8). God’s ways aren’t just different from ours; His ways are “higher” and better because what He does is consistent with who He is (v. 9). This truth gives us hope when our efforts to serve Him don’t turn out the way we’d planned.

It might be years before we’re able to look back and trace God’s influence through certain situations. For now, though, as we continue to reach out to the world in His name, we can remember that God is always powerfully at work (v. 11).

Reflect & Pray

When have you felt disappointed with an experience? How might God use this to teach you something about Himself?

 

Dear God, You’re the all-knowing one. When I don’t understand what’s happening, please help me to trust You.

We can trust God to nourish us better than anything else can. Discover more by reading Better than Money Can Buy.

 

http://www.odb.org

Joyce Meyer – The Why Question

 

He will not fear bad news; his heart is steadfast, trusting [confidently relying on and believing] in the Lord.

Psalm 112:7 (AMP)

When we find ourselves in the midst of a struggle or adversity, we often ask God, “Why? Why is this happening to me?”

Let’s imagine, for one moment, that God actually answered that question. Would His explanation change anything? The effects of the situation would still be with you. What would you have learned?

When we ask God that question, what we’re really asking is, “God, do You love me? Will You take care of me in my sorrow and pain? You won’t leave me alone, will You?” Is it possible that we ask for explanations because we’re afraid God doesn’t truly care about us?

Instead, we can learn to say, “Lord, I believe. I don’t understand, and I’ll probably never grasp all the reasons bad things happen, but I know for certain that You love me, You are good, and You are with me—always.”

Prayer of the Day: Lord, I trust in Your love and goodness. Even when I don’t understand, I know You are always with me. Strengthen my faith in You through every struggle. I love You, amen.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Denison Forum – A longtime Israeli friend’s perspective on the Gaza hostages

 

Three viewpoints and “the core truth of our existence”

Hamas stated Monday that it would postpone the release of three hostages scheduled to be freed this weekend to protest delays in deliveries of humanitarian goods. President Trump then warned Hamas to release all its Gaza hostages by Saturday or “all hell is going to break out.”

Yesterday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu joined Mr. Trump’s demand: “If Hamas does not return our hostages by Saturday noon, the cease-fire will end and the IDF will resume intense fighting until the final defeat of Hamas.”

Yesterday, I was privileged to meet one of my longtime Israeli friends for lunch. He and I have led more than thirty study tours in the Holy Land together over the years and have been together often in the States. He is currently in the US on a speaking tour. I asked him for his thoughts on the hostage crisis and, as usual, his perspective was both brilliant and enlightening.

What’s more, I found his thoughts relevant to an even larger context that touches us all. To make this point, let’s put my friend’s response into a larger cultural context.

How Hamas views the hostages

What we have learned about Hamas from the hostages that have been released thus far confirms US Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s assessment: “This is an evil organization. Hamas is evil. It’s pure evil. These are monsters. These are savages. That’s a group that needs to be eradicated.”

Making his point, last Saturday Hamas released what the Associated Press describes as “three gaunt, frail-looking Israeli hostages.” Gideon Saar, Israel’s foreign minister, said they “look like Holocaust survivors.” A doctor reported that one was returned “in a severe nutritional state.”

A mother whose son is still being held by Hamas learned from military sources that he is receiving very little food and no medical care for multiple injuries, including an eye injury that has left him partially blinded. He has been bound for much of the time and tortured.

“It was not easy to hear,” she said. “I must say that I even fainted.”

How Hamas views the Palestinians

Twelve days after Hamas’ October 7 invasion, their leader Khaled Mashal suggested that to achieve the dream of Israel’s destruction, millions of Palestinians might have to die. They use their schools to radicalize the people, turning them into terrorists against the Jewish state. They steal humanitarian aid, sell it to the population, then use the money to finance terrorist recruitment.

According to NATO, Hamas has been using the Palestinians in Gaza as human shields since 2007. They fire rockets, artillery, and mortars from civilian areas, locate military infrastructures in schools, hospitals, and mosques, and use civilians and hostages to protect themselves. The terrorists have built hundreds of miles of tunnels under civilian structures to hide, transport, and shield their soldiers and munitions while refusing to allow civilians to use them for protection.

As I have written, Hamas exists not to serve Palestinians in Gaza but to eradicate Israel. In its view, the deaths of Palestinian civilians are a means to this end. They view Muslim casualties as “martyrs” who will be rewarded in heaven and use their plight to marshal Arab nations and the larger world against Israel.

How Israelis view the hostages

By contrast, as my friend explained yesterday, Israelis view the hostages as vital to their nation and its future for three reasons.

First, many of them know some of the hostages or someone in their extended families. Israel is a tiny country. In my many visits over the years, I have been consistently surprised at how interconnected their society is. For many, the hostages’ plight is deeply personal.

Second, some of the hostages are Israeli military personnel. For Israel to abandon them would say to the entire IDF, “If you fight for us and you are captured, we won’t come for you.” As my friend noted, this would undermine the viability of the army. For a small nation surrounded by enemies that seek its destruction, the IDF is vital to its survival and its future.

Third, many of the hostages are Israeli civilians. For Israel to abandon them would say to the rest of the population, “If terrorists take you hostage in the future, we won’t try to get you back.” Such a threat would understandably cause many to abandon the nation.

This is why Israel has historically been willing to trade huge numbers of Palestinian prisoners for a few hostages, and why they are doing the same again now. And it is why the IDF has been so careful to protect the hostages while trying to eradicate the terrorists who hide behind them.

Such an approach to the hostages severely restricts Israel’s military and its governmental leaders. But it is foundational to the nation’s ethos and future.

How God views you

Here’s why I found my friend’s explanation to be relevant even beyond Israel: Our Father loves us even more passionately than Israel loves its hostages (1 John 4:8). In fact, he loves us even though we treat Jesus as Hamas treats the Jews. Our sins tortured and murdered God’s Son (Isaiah 53:6Romans 5:8). Even when we trust him as our Savior, our sins grieve his Spirit deeply (Ephesians 4:30).

And yet, as St. Augustine famously observed, God loves each of us as if there were only one of us.

If you were the only person who had ever sinned, the only soul held hostage by Satan, Jesus would have died just to liberate you. His Father loves you right now as much as he loved you when he sent his Son to die in your place (John 17:232 Corinthians 5:21). As Timothy Keller observed, “The gospel is that Jesus Christ came to earth, lived the life we should have lived, and died the death we should have died.”

Henri Nouwen therefore claimed:

“Being the Beloved constitutes the core truth of our existence.”

Do you agree?

Our latest website articles:

Quote for the day:

“Come and see the victories of the cross. Christ’s wounds are your healings, his agonies your repose, his conflicts your conquests, his groans your songs, his pains your ease, his shame your glory, his death your life, his sufferings your salvation.” —Matthew Henry

 

Denison Forum

Days of Praise – Lessons from the Rich Fool

 

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“But God said unto him, Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee: then whose shall those things be, which thou hast provided?” (Luke 12:20)

This sobering verse gives in a nutshell God’s evaluation of people whose dominating concern is the accumulation of material possessions. Such a person is, by the Lord’s own testimony, a fool.

But before the man in this parable became a covetous fool, he first became a self-centered clod, interested only in his own desires. In the verses comprising his monologue (Luke 12:17-19), he used the personal pronouns “I” and “my” no less than 11 times and then even addressed himself using the pronoun “thou” or “thine” twice more.

Satan was the first to be covetous and proud: “I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God:…I will be like the most High” (Isaiah 14:13-14). Lucifer’s primeval, self-seeking covetousness brought rebellion and sin into the angelic host and then into the human family. Ever since his fall, he has used this deadly sin of self-centeredness to keep men away from God and to lead them into all kinds of other overpowering sins.

In the case of the rich man, his pampering of self had led him into a life of such greed and covetousness that he was still concerned only with his own personal comfort (“eating and drinking”) right up to the day of his death. He “thought within himself” (Luke 12:17), giving no thought whatever to God’s will or the fact that all his possessions really belonged to God. Multitudes over the ages have been overtaken by this same sin of self-centered covetousness, perhaps never more pervasively than in modern America, even among American Christians. To anyone of such covetous spirit, the day may soon come when the Lord will say, “Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee.” HMM

 

 

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

My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers – Must I Listen?

 

They stayed at a distance and said to Moses, “Speak to us yourself and we will listen. But do not have God speak to us or we will die.” — Exodus 20:18-19

There are times when we’re not consciously disobeying God; we’re just not paying attention. God has given us his commandments: there they are, set down in Scripture, along with a clear directive that we should follow them. “If you love me, keep my commands” (John 14:15). And still, we look the other way. We don’t do this out of willful disobedience. We do it because we don’t love and respect God.

“Speak to us yourself,” the Israelites told Moses. “But do not have God speak to us.” We show God how little we love him when we prefer to listen only to his servants. We’ll listen to personal testimonies, but we won’t listen to God himself. Why are we so terrified of him speaking directly to us? Because we know that if he does, we’ll have a choice to make: obey or disobey. If it’s only a servant’s voice we hear, we feel free to disregard it. “Well, that’s just your own idea,” we say. “Even though I don’t deny it’s probably God’s truth.”

Am I putting God in the humiliating position of having treated me as his child, while I’ve been ignoring him? When I do finally listen, the humiliation I’ve been putting on him comes back on me, and my delight at hearing him is tempered by the shame of having shut him out for so long.

Leviticus 13; Matthew 26:26-50

Wisdom from Oswald

We are not to preach the doing of good things; good deeds are not to be preached, they are to be performed.So Send I You, 1330 L

https://utmost.org/

Billy Graham – Feeling the Hurts of Others

 

He that loveth his brother abideth in the light . . .

—1 John 2:10

This age in which we live could hardly be described as conducive to a sensitiveness of the needs of others. We have developed a veneer of sophistication and hardness. Abraham Lincoln once said, characteristically, “I am sorry for the man who can’t feel the whip when it is laid on the other man’s back.” Much of the world is calloused and indifferent toward mankind’s poverty and distress. This is due largely to the fact that for many people there has never been a rebirth. The love of God has never been shed abroad in their hearts. Many people speak of the social gospel as though it were separate and apart from the redemptive Gospel. The truth is: there is only one Gospel. We must be redeemed, we must be made right with God before we can become sensitive to the needs of others. Divine love, like a reflected sunbeam, shines down before it radiates out. Unless our hearts are conditioned by the Holy Spirit to receive and reflect the warmth of God’s compassion, we cannot love our fellowmen as we ought.

The Billy Graham Rapid Response Team shares God’s compassion with people in crisis. Find out more.

Prayer for the day

Help me to feel another person’s hurt and be concerned, Father, so that I may shed the light of Your love in an uncaring world.

 

 

https://billygraham.org/

Guideposts – Devotions for Women – The Unchanging Nature of God

 

I the Lord do not change. So you, the descendents of Jacob, are not destroyed.—Malachi 3:6 (NIV)

When you feel worried about an upcoming change, seek comfort in the unwavering nature of God. Know that His promises remain steadfast and His love for you never falters. Let this truth inspire and uplift you.

Dear God, as I navigate life’s unpredictable twists and turns, may I find solace in knowing that You are my anchor, steadfast and unchanging.

 

 

https://guideposts.org/daily-devotions/devotions-for-women/devotions-for-faith-prayer-devotions-for-women/

Every Man Ministry – Kenny Luck -One God, One Story

 

And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he [Jesus] explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures concerning himself.  Luke 24:27 (brackets mine)

I admit it. I get sucked into my wife’s Hallmark movies. The ones with titles like Labradoodle Love Story or Rocky Mountain Romance. First I walk by and make fun of it. Then I kind of linger and pretty soon I’m sitting on the edge of the couch going, “Wait, why did she yell at that guy? Who’s that old woman?” My wife pauses the film and quietly gives me the look. I.e., “Don’t make fun of my movie and then expect me to explain the plot.”

We don’t flip a book and start reading half way through, or fast-forward a film and start watching 50 minutes in. So why do we do that with the Bible?

I encourage every God’s man to read the Bible cover-to-cover at least once in his lifetime—if not several times. That’s because it’s fully God’s story, from Genesis to Revelation. A single story. God didn’t chop His story in two—our early church leaders did that. Sure, if you only read the New Testament you get to know the main characters and see how the Hero—Jesus—defeats the villain. But you miss the origin story.

Psalm 22 predicts events on the Cross: “A pack of villains encircles me;
they pierce my hands and my feet. They divide my clothes among them
and cast lots for my garment” (Psalm 22:16, 18). The Old Testament is full of prophetic pictures of Jesus. And Jesus often quotes the Torah—the OT—to relate to His audience: Jews well-versed in the Word. His last words on the cross weren’t just a cry of anguish—they were a direct quote from Psalm 22:1: “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” He was letting the Jews know who He was. With His last breath He was preaching to His people.

When we skip the Old Testament, we are skipping God’s origin story. Read the entire story—look for Jesus in each book. He’s there—pointing us forward to His coming glory and victory.

Father, thank You for giving us Your entire story in Your Word. Give me eyes to see Jesus throughout it.

 

 

Every Man Ministries

Our Daily Bread – Fishing for Friends

 

[Jesus said], “I will send you out to fish for people.” Matthew 4:19

Today’s Scripture

Matthew 4:18-22

Listen to Today’s Devotional

Apple LinkSpotify Link

Today’s Insights

Christ’s calling of His disciples to follow Him was strategic. He started His public ministry when He “was about thirty years old” (Luke 3:23) and many scholars believe He ministered for approximately three years before He was crucified. During this time, He called and taught His disciples. In addition to His invitation to two sets of brothers from Galilee to join Him—Simon Peter and Andrew; James and John (Matthew 4:18-22)—He called Matthew (Levi), a tax collector: “Jesus went out and saw a tax collector by the name of Levi sitting at his tax booth. ‘Follow me,’ Jesus said to him, and Levi got up, left everything and followed him. Then Levi held a great banquet for Jesus at his house, and a large crowd of tax collectors and others were eating with them” (Luke 5:27-29). Matthew’s example of friends reaching friends is worth emulating today.

Today’s Devotional

Patty spent the afternoon on the banks of a local river, using her fishing pole to cast bait into the water. Having only recently moved to the area, she wasn’t hoping to catch fish; she was angling for some new friends. Her line wasn’t baited with worms or any other traditional lure. Instead, she used her heavy-duty sturgeon rod to extend packets of cookies to people who were floating down the river in rafts on a hot summer day. She used this creative way to meet her new neighbors, who all seemed to enjoy the sweet treat!

Patty went “fishing for friends” in a much more literal way than Jesus intended when He invited Peter and Andrew to walk with Him through life. The two brothers were hardworking fishermen, casting their nets into the Sea of Galilee. Jesus interrupted their labors with a call to follow Him, saying He would send them out to “fish for people” instead of fish (Matthew 4:19). He made the same invitation to two other fishermen, James and John, shortly thereafter. They all left their nets and boats immediately to journey with Jesus.

Like the fishermen who became His first disciples, Christ invites us to follow Him and focus our attention on eternal matters: the spiritual lives of those with whom we interact. We can offer those around us what really satisfies—the enduring hope of life with Jesus (John 4:13-14).

Reflect & Pray

Who first shared with you about Jesus? How might you offer others the hope He provides?

 

Dear Jesus, please help me to become a fisher of people so that others will know You better.

 

Learn more about discipleship from the early followers of Jesus.

 

http://www.odb.org

Joyce Meyer – A Happy Heart Is Good Medicine

A happy heart is good medicine and a cheerful mind works healing, but a broken spirit dries up the bones.

Proverbs 17:22 (AMPC)

The more I ponder it, the more amazed I am that I can immediately increase or decrease my joy and the joy of others by simply choosing to say good things.

Joy is vital! Nehemiah 8:10 tells us joy is our strength. No wonder the devil works overtime trying to do anything he can to diminish our joy. Don’t sit by and let it happen to you. Fight the good fight with faith-filled words, releasing joy into the very atmosphere you are in.

Jesus came to bring good news and glad tidings of great joy, to overcome evil with good. He wants you to be as committed as He is to finding and magnifying the good in everything. Do yourself a favor and say something good!

Prayer of the Day: Lord, help me choose joy and speak words that release Your strength. I trust that through Your grace, I can magnify the good and bring joy to others, amen.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Denison Forum – “Daddy, did I save my sister?”

A reflection on Super Bowl LIX and life’s ultimate purpose

Trey Howard, age ten, shielded his toddler sister when a medical jet crashed in northeast Philadelphia on January 31, killing seven and injuring twenty-four others. His bravery landed him in the hospital with a severe head injury.

When he woke up after emergency brain surgery, the die-hard Eagles fan’s first words were, “We didn’t play yesterday, did we?” When he was assured that he had not missed the Super Bowl, he then asked, “Daddy, did I save my sister?”

Eagles star wide receiver A. J. Brown, when he heard about Trey’s bravery, responded: “Speedy recovery! You are a Hero young man! I’m going to come see you when I get back. Hopefully with some hardware. Playing for you on Sunday my man.” Two Philadelphia Eagles cheerleaders also visited him in his hospital room to bring him team paraphernalia for the big game.

Trey must be a happy young man this morning after Brown and his teammates scored a decisive victory in last night’s Super Bowl. His love for the Eagles and their support for him will hopefully expedite his quick and full recovery.

Watching the game with fifty friends

More than 119 million people were expected to watch last night’s contest. In a listing of the one hundred most-watched primetime television shows in 2024, the top eleven are all NFL games. By a wide margin, Americans say football is “America’s sport.”

Cognitive psychologists at Cornell University would not be surprised. They explain the continuing popularity of the league by noting that professional football is engrained in popular culture, the league’s parity keeps things interesting, and fantasy football and betting on games make the outcomes highly personal for fans.

Their explanation that most resonated with me, however, was the fact that “relationships are built through the love of the NFL.” Families and friends gather to watch games; fans rejoice or grieve together with their teams as they win or lose.

My wife and I witnessed this personally last night as we watched the game along with fifty friends from our Sunday school class. I cannot think of another event that would have brought so many of us together.

Eating what our friends are eating

There’s another aspect to the popularity of the Super Bowl that the Cornell psychologists did not note. For this, we turn to one of history’s most influential philosophers.

In Thus Spoke Zarathustra, Friedrich Nietzsche identified the “will to power” as an innate drive in all humans. He was right: from Satan’s appeal to the first humans to “be like God” (Genesis 3:5) to today, each temptation and decision we face is a variation on the same theme (cf. James 1:14–15).

Even now, I am tempted to exercise my “will to power” by impressing you with what I am writing. You are perhaps hoping that what I write will somehow empower you as you go about your day.

In Nietzsche’s view, this is as things should be. He wanted us to strive to be an Ũbermensch, an “overcomer” in life. But he lamented that most choose to be what he called the “last man”—passive nihilists who are tired of life, take no risks, and seek only security and comfort. Such a way of life brings humanity’s progress to a grinding halt, making us the “last” of the race.

Imagining Nietzsche watching last night’s game, I think he would identify the players on the field as “overcomers” and the fans in the stands and on their couches at home as the “last men.” We express our innate “will to power” vicariously by watching athletes do what we cannot do, but this brings us no closer to being an Übermensch in reality. Nietzsche would add that the community by which we experienced the game together only adds to our largesse as it endorses and encourages conformity to the collective.

For example, studies show that we consume more food when we eat with overweight people as we conform to the dietary norms around us. You can try this for yourself: If you watched the Super Bowl with friends, did you tend to eat and drink what they ate and drank, even if you wouldn’t do so on your own?

Is there a third option?

Where does this leave us?

It would seem we have a binary choice between being a self-driven “overcomer” and a passive “last man.” There were only two kinds of people in the New Orleans Superdome last night: the world-class athletes who played in the game and those who watched them.

But perhaps there’s a third option.

Perhaps there’s a larger purpose behind our existence, a cause so great that no human, not even an “overcomer,” can achieve it. This higher calling would necessarily require an Übermensch greater than humans who calls us to submit our lives to him (Romans 12:1) and then to “toil . . . with all his energy that he powerfully works within [us]” (Colossians 1:29).

Perhaps this “energy” is given to us in community with others as we labor collectively to accomplish a larger purpose than any individual can fulfill (cf. 1 Corinthians 12:27). Perhaps this larger purpose is so eternally significant that it is worth all temporal sacrifice.

If we commit ourselves to this purpose by loving our Lord and our neighbor unconditionally (Matthew 22:37–39), we will serve others as sacrificially as Trey Howard protected his little sister. And long after the Eagles’ historic win last night, our lives will make an impact that changes souls and echoes in eternity.

Rick Warren observed,

“You were made by God and for God, and until you understand that, life will never make sense.”

Will your life “make sense” today?

Our latest website articles:

Quote for the day:

“There is no one insignificant in the purposes of God.” —Alistair Begg

 

Denison Forum

Days of Praise – The Spirits in Prison

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“For Christ also hath once suffered for sins, the just for the unjust, that he might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh, but quickened by the Spirit: by which also he went and preached unto the spirits in prison.” (1 Peter 3:18-19)

Just who were these imprisoned spirits to whom Christ preached when He had been “put to death in the flesh”? This has been a controversial verse, so one should not be dogmatic in discussing it. However, the idea that these were souls in purgatory to whom Christ was offering a second chance is clearly wrong, for Hebrews 9:27 declares plainly that “it is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment.”

One point often overlooked is that the word “spirits” can apply to angels as well as human beings. In fact, when it occurs in the plural, as it does here, it refers specifically to angels in at least 26 of its 30 occurrences.

This strongly suggests that these were evil spirits to whom Christ was (literally) “proclaiming” the victory He had won over Satan when He had “once suffered for sins” on the cross (the same word is translated “proclaimed” in Luke 12:3—“proclaimed upon the housetops”). These fallen angels had tried to corrupt all flesh “in the days of Noah” (1 Peter 3:20; see Genesis 6:1-4, 12) and therefore had been cast “down to hell” and “delivered them into chains of darkness, to be reserved unto judgment” (2 Peter 2:4).

But as Peter had preached on the day of Pentecost: “His soul was not left in hell….This Jesus hath God raised up” and “hath made that same Jesus, whom ye have crucified, both Lord and Christ” (Acts 2:31-32, 36). Thus, He is now our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom some day soon “every knee should bow,…in heaven, and…in earth, and…under the earth” (Philippians 2:10). HMM

 

 

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

My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers – Is Your Imagination of God Starved?

 

Lift up your eyes and look to the heavens: Who created all these? He who brings out the starry host one by one and calls forth each of them by name. — Isaiah 40:26

In Isaiah’s day, God’s people had starved their imaginations by looking on the faces of idols. Isaiah told them to look to God, to the author of everything created and imagined. He made them lift their eyes to the heavens, so that they might begin to use their imaginations aright.

Nature to a child of God is sacramental. In every wind that blows, in every night and every day, in every sign of the sky, in every blossoming and withering of the earth, there is a real coming of God to us, if we will only use our starved imaginations to realize it. If we learn to associate ideas worthy of God with all that happens in nature—with the sunrises and the sunsets, with the moon and the stars, with the changing seasons—our imaginations will never be at the mercy of our impulses but will always be at his service.

Is your imagination looking on the face of an idol? Is the idol yourself? Your work? Your experiences of salvation and sanctification? If your imagination is God-starved, you will have no power when difficulties arise. When you need strength, don’t look to your own experience or understanding; it is God you need. Go out of yourself—away from your idols, away from everything that has been starving your imagination. Take Isaiah’s words to heart: lift your eyes to the heavens and deliberately turn your mind to God.

Leviticus 8-10; Matthew 25:31-46

Wisdom from Oswald

When a man’s heart is right with God the mysterious utterances of the Bible are spirit and life to him. Spiritual truth is discernible only to a pure heart, not to a keen intellect. It is not a question of profundity of intellect, but of purity of heart.Bringing Sons Unto Glory, 231 L

 

 

https://utmost.org/

Billy Graham – God Made You

Our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ.

—1 John 1:3

God made you! You were fashioned in His own image! You were made in the image and likeness of the Creator. God had a purpose in making you. His primary purpose is that you would have fellowship with Him. If man does not have fellowship with God, he is lost, confused, and bewildered. Since he does not find his place, he has a sense of not fitting. There are thousands of people who admit and confess that they are unhappy. Economic security, recreation, pleasure, and a good community in which to live have not brought about the peace and happiness that they expected. The reason is that man was created in the image of God and cannot find complete rest, happiness, joy, and peace until he comes back to God.

Go Deeper: Read “5 Things Jesus Wants Women to Know”

Read about how to walk daily with God.

Prayer for the day

Help me this day, Father, to tell others of the fellowship that can be theirs. Your love will enable me.

 

https://billygraham.org/

Guideposts – Devotions for Women – The Comfort of God’s Love in Winter

 

Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for his compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.—Lamentations 3:22–23 (NIV)

Winter can often feel long and harsh, but even in the coldest seasons, God’s love provides warmth and comfort. His compassion is unending, and His love, unfailing. Even when the world around you seems frozen and lifeless, His love remains steadfast and renewing.

Lord, thank You for Your comforting love that warms even the coldest winter.

 

 

https://guideposts.org/daily-devotions/devotions-for-women/devotions-for-faith-prayer-devotions-for-women/