Sunday, February 24, 2019

ABOVE YOUR PROBLEMS

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

ABOVE YOUR PROBLEMS

READ:  Isaiah 40:15-31

Those who wait on the Lord…shall mount up
with wings like eagles.  Isaiah 40:31

One of the pitfalls of living in our troublesome world is that we can become problem-centered rather than God-centered.  When this happens, we lose the proper perspective.  Gradually, all our problems began to look huge and the strength of almighty God seems small.  Instead of moving mountains by faith, we become constant worriers, creating mountains of needless pressure for ourselves and others.

Isaiah 40 is an effective prescription for those of us whose God seems small.  God reminds us that He is much bigger than the world He created.  He points out that compared to Him, “the nations are as a drop in a bucket” (v. 15) and the inhabitants of earth “are like grasshoppers” (v. 22).  His words aren’t meant to belittle us, but rather to encourage us to look to Him and gain His perspective of life.

Yet, God offers us more than a new perspective.  He offers us something that will enable us to live by that view.  If we will depend on Him instead of brooding over our problems, He will renew our strength, and wings of faith will lift our hearts above our difficulties.  Some of them may be huge, but we can see them as smaller than our great God.  And that makes all the difference.  JY

Lord, give us wings to soar above
Our problems great and small,
With strengthened faith and confidence
To trust You with them all. -Sper

Worry ends where faith begins. 



LIVING IN GOD'S STORY

Living in God’s Story

The night is nearly over; the day is almost here.
Romans 13:12


Ernest Hemingway was asked if he could write a compelling story in six words. His response: “For sale: Baby shoes. Never worn.” Hemingway’s story is powerful because it inspires us to fill in the details. Were the shoes simply not needed by a healthy child? Or was there a tragic loss—something requiring God’s deep love and comfort?

The best stories pique our imagination, so it’s no surprise that the greatest story ever told stokes the fires of our creativity. God’s story has a central plot: He created all things; we (the human race) fell into sin; Jesus came to Earth and died and rose again to save us from our sins; and we now await His return and the restoration of all things.

Knowing what has come before and what lies ahead, how should we now live? If Jesus is restoring His entire creation from the clutches of evil, we must “put aside the deeds of darkness and put on the armor of light” (Romans 13:12). This includes turning from sin by God’s power and choosing to love Him and others well (vv. 8-10).

The specific ways we fight with Jesus against evil will depend on what gifts we have and what needs we see. Let’s use our imagination and look around us. Let’s seek out the wounded and weeping, and extend God’s justice, love, and comfort as He guides us.
By Mike Wittmer

REFLECT & PRAY
Live out your role in God’s story as He leads you.

Father, may Your kingdom come and may it come in me.

Your gift changes lives. Help us share God’s love with millions every day.


INSIGHT
In Romans 13, Paul describes the type of response Christians should have toward governing authorities, which includes submitting to them and paying taxes. Why? Because God has established these authorities (vv. 1-7). He then goes on to stress that we are to “let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another” (v. 8). By loving one another we fulfill the law summed up in the command, “Love your neighbor as yourself” (vv. 9-10).
Paul provides an additional reason why we are to love and why we are to strive to follow the principles for godly living described in chapters 12-13. “Because our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed” (13:11). The time of Christ’s second coming, His return to earth, is nearer every day. Thus, we’re to “behave decently” and “clothe ourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ” (vv. 13-14). Alyson Kieda


WORRIER OR WARRIOR?

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

WORRIER OR WARRIOR?

READ:  Ephesians 3:14-21

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

A missionary wrote a newsletter to thank his supporters for being “prayer warriors.”  Because of a typing error, though, he called them “prayer worriers.”  For some of us, that might be a good descriptions.

In his book Growing Your Soul, Neil Wiseman writes, “Prayer must be more than a kind of restatement of fretting worries or a mulling over of problems.  Our petitions must move beyond gloomy desperation, which deals mostly with calamity and despair.”

During an anxious time in my life, I became a “prayer worrier.”  I would beg, “Lord, please keep my neighbor from causing me problems tomorrow.”  or, “Father, don’t let that ornery person spread gossip about me.”

But then the Lord taught me to pray for people, rather than against them.  I began to say, “Lord, bless and encourage my neighbor, and help him to sense Your Love,”  Then I watched to see what God would do.  The Lord’s amazing answers not only helped others but also helped to cure my own anxiety!

Paul was no “prayer worrier.”  He prayed for God’s people that they might know the strength, love, and fullness of God, who is able to do far more than we can ask or even think (Ephesians 3:14-21).  Such confidence made Paul a true “prayer warrior.”  Are your prayers like that?   JY

As we resolve to live for Christ
In actions, words, and deeds,
We’ll yield our anxious hearts to Him
And pray for others’ needs. -Branon

Fervent prayer dispels anxious care.




HE HOLDS OUR HANDS

He Holds Our Hand

I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.
Isaiah 41:10


The little girl who navigated the stairway one Sunday at church was cute, spunky, and independent. One by one the child—who appeared to be not much older than two years—took the steps down to the lower level. Descending the stairs was her mission and she accomplished it. I smiled to myself as I pondered the daring independence of this courageous toddler. The child wasn’t afraid because she knew her caring mother’s watchful eye was always on her and her loving hand was extended to help her. This aptly pictures the Lord’s readiness to help His children as they make their way through life with its varied uncertainties.

Today’s Scripture includes two “hand” references. After cautioning His ancient people not to fear or be dismayed, the Lord told them, “I will uphold you with my righteous right hand” (Isaiah 41:10). Many anxious and fearful children have been steadied by the strength of a parent. Here God’s power comes into view. In the second “hand” reference, once again it’s the Lord who acted to secure the safety of His own. “For I am the Lord your God who takes hold of your right hand” (v. 13). While life situations and times have changed, the Lord hasn’t. We need not despair (v. 10) because the Lord still assures us with the promise of His support and with the words we desperately need to hear: “Do not fear” (vv. 10, 13).
By Arthur Jackson

REFLECT & PRAY
With God’s hand holding my hand, I am safe!

Father, thank You for always watching over me.
For help, read Navigating the Storms of Life at discoveryseries.org/hp061.

Your gift changes lives. Help us share God’s love with millions every day.


INSIGHT
God assures the Israelites they are “the apple of his eye” (Deuteronomy 32:10). Privileged to be “chosen . . . to be his people, his treasured possession” (7:6), He gave them the title of honor—“my servant”—just as He did their revered lawgiver, Moses (Malachi 4:4) and their beloved king, David (1 Chronicles 17:7). By physical offspring, they were the “descendants of Abraham my friend” (Isaiah 41:8). Abraham was one of only two people called God’s friend in the Old Testament; the other person is Moses, for God spoke to him “as one speaks to a friend” (Exodus 33:11). The patriarch Job wished he had an advocate and intercessor who would plead with God “as one pleads for a friend” (Job 16:21). Today we have such a Friend—our Lord Jesus (John 15:13-15). We have a “new relationship with God because our Lord Jesus Christ has made us friends of God” (Romans 5:11 nlt). K. T. Sim


LIVING WATER

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

LIVING WATER

READ:  Jeremiah 2:4-13

Jesus stood and cried out, saying, “If anyone thirsts,
let him come to Me and drink.”  John 7:37

Lee Atwater was a well-known figure in U.S. politics.  He engineered the successful 1988 presidential campaign of George H. W. Bush and was the head of the Republican National Committee (1988-1991).  But in the midst of all his activities he developed an inoperable brain tumor and died at the age of forty.

During his illness, Atwater came to realize that wealth, honor, and power are not life’s supreme values.  Admitting to a deep emptiness within himself, he urged people to work at filling up the “spiritual vacuum in American society.”  In an insightful comment, he confessed, “My illness helped me to see that what was missing in society is what is missing in me-a little heart, a lot of brotherhood.”

In his day, Jeremiah perceived that same kind of vacuum in many of his fellow Israelites.  He warned them against the danger of personal and national emptiness.  They were digging cisterns, he said, “broken cisterns that can hold no water” (Jeremiah 2:13).

What about your own life?  Is it spiritually dried up?  Ask Jesus, the fountain of living water (John 7:37), to fill you with His presence.  Then joy and peace will begin to bubble up and even overflow.   VCG

I heard the voice of Jesus say,
“Behold, I freely give the living water,
Thirsty one, stoop down
And drink and live.” -Bonar  

The only real thirst quencher is Jesus -the living water.


LIVING SACRIFICE

Living Sacrifice

I urge you . . . in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice.
Romans 12:1


My great aunt had an exciting job in advertising and traveled between Chicago and New York City. But she chose to give up that career out of love for her parents. They lived in Minnesota and needed to be cared for. Both of her brothers had died young in tragic circumstances and she was her mom and dad’s only remaining child. For her, serving her parents was an expression of her faith.

The apostle Paul’s letter to the church at Rome urged Christian believers to be “a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God” (Romans 12:1). He hoped they would extend Christ’s sacrificial love to each other. And he asked them not to think of themselves more highly than they should (v. 3). When they fell into disagreements and division, he called them to lay down their pride, because “in Christ we, though many, form one body, and each member belongs to all the others” (v. 5). He yearned that they would show each other sacrificial love.

Each day we have the opportunity to serve others. For instance, we might let someone go ahead of us in a line or we might, like my great aunt, care for someone who is ill. Or maybe we share from our experience as we give another advice and direction. When we offer ourselves as living sacrifices, we honor God.
By Amy Boucher Pye

REFLECT & PRAY
When we serve others in His name, we please God.

Lord Jesus Christ, You humbled Yourself and lay down Your life that I might live. May I never forget this most precious gift of grace and love.

Your gift changes lives. Help us share God’s love with millions every day.


INSIGHT
Paul tells us not to “conform to the pattern of this world, but to be transformed by the renewing of [our] mind” (Romans 12:2). What is the pattern of this world? Paul doesn’t define it for us, but we gain a hint when he immediately addresses the problem of pride. In verse 3 he says, “Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought.” Then he emphasizes the need for us to use our God-given gifts to live in unity and community. “We, though many, form one body, and each member belongs to all the others” (v. 5). God gifts us not so we may glorify ourselves but so that we might serve each other in love. Tim Gustafson



HE'S NEVER GRUMPY

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

HE’S NEVER GRUMPY

READ:  Luke 11:5-10

Ask, and it will be given to you.  Luke 11:9

While driving my car the other day, I saw a sign that said, “Sometimes I wake up grumpy-but usually I let him sleep.”  It reminded me of the night my pregnant wife awakened me saying we had to get to the hospital because the baby was on the way.  Half-awake, I replied, “Let’s go back to sleep and take care of things in the morning. “  Then suddenly I realized what she had said, and I was up in a flash.

In Luke 11, a man who needed food for a guest went to a friend’s house at midnight and asked for three loaves of bread.  The awakened friend may have replied somewhat as I did.  After all, it was the middle of the night.  Yet he got up and provided the requested food (v.8).  I don’t think the man gave his friend what he wanted just because he wouldn’t go away.  Rather, he got up because he realized that this friend would not have had the boldness to wake him if he hadn’t been desperate.

The point is this:  If an earthly friend will overcome his reluctance to meet your need, will not your heavenly Father, who is never reluctant, do far more than that?  He never sleeps, He is never grumpy, and He wants the very best for you.  Therefore, do not hesitate to ask, seek, and knock (v.9).  He will always be there for you.     HVL

Pray on, then, child of God, pray on;
This is your duty and your task.
To God the answering belongs;
Yours is the simpler part-to ask. -Chisholm

God is never inconvenienced by our prayers.



SEND IT IN A LETTER

Send It in a Letter

Since the day we heard about you, we have not stopped praying for you.
Colossians 1:9


Like most four-year-olds, Ruby loved to run, sing, dance, and play. But she started complaining about pain in her knees. Ruby’s parents took her in for tests. The results were shocking—a diagnosis of cancer, stage 4 neuroblastoma. Ruby was in trouble. She was quickly admitted to the hospital.

Ruby’s hospital stay lingered on, spilling over into the Christmas season, a hard time to be away from home. One of Ruby’s nurses came up with the idea to place a mailbox outside her room so family could send letters full of prayers and encouragement to her. Then the plea went out on Facebook, and that’s when the volume of mail coming in from friends and complete strangers surprised everyone, most of all Ruby. With each letter received (more than 100,000 total), Ruby grew a little more encouraged, and she finally got to go home.

Paul’s letter to the people at Colossae was exactly that—a letter (Colossians 1:2). Words penned on a page that carried hopes for continued fruitfulness and knowledge and strength and endurance and patience (vv. 10-11). Can you imagine what a dose of good medicine such words were to the faithful at Colossae? Just knowing that someone was praying nonstop for them strengthened them to stay steady in their faith in Christ Jesus.

Our words of encouragement can dramatically help others in need.
By John Blase

REFLECT & PRAY
God, bring someone to my mind that needs encouragement. Then help me act on Your prompting.

How have others’ words encouraged me? What opportunities do I have to give someone else the “letter” of encouragement they need?

Your gift changes lives. Help us share God’s love with millions every day.


INSIGHT
In Colossians 1:9-12, Paul strings together a beautiful chain of cause and effect ideas where one thing leads to another, which leads to another. The clue that this is what Paul is doing is in the words “so that.” Twice he uses this phrase to connect what he is saying to his previous statement (vv. 10, 11). His progression of thought goes like this: Knowing God’s will through the Spirit (v. 9) leads to making decisions and acting in ways that honor God; knowing Him more (v. 10) leads to endurance, patience, and thanksgiving (vv. 11-12). In this progression we can see how God plans for our growth—one thing builds on another. But it seems significant that this list ends with thanksgiving. The ultimate result of this progression is joyful thanks to God. J.R. Hudberg




"JOY STEALERS"

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

“JOY STEALERS”

READ:  Philippians 1:1-11

He who has begun a good work in you
will complete it.  Philippians 1:6

Why do many Christians fail to experience real joy, which is listed as a fruit of the Holy Spirit in Galatians 5:22?

In his book Laugh Again Charles Swindoll suggests three common “Joy stealers” -worry, stress, and fear.  He defines worry as “an inordinate anxiety about something that may or may not occurs.”  (And it usually doesn’t.)  Stress, says the author, is “intense strain over a situation we can’t change or control.”  (But God can).  And fear, according to Swindoll, is a “dreadful uneasiness over danger, evil, or pain.”  (And it magnifies our problems.).

Swindoll says that to resist these “joy stealers” we must embrace the same confidence that Paul expressed in his letter to the Philippians.  After giving thanks for the Philippian believers (1:3-5), the apostle assured them “that He who has begun a good work in you will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ” (v.6).

Whatever causes us worry, stress, and fear cannot ultimately keep God from continuing His work in us.  With this confidence we can begin each day knowing that He is in control.  We can leave everything in His hands.

Resist those “joy stealers” by renewing your confidence in God each morning.  Then relax and rejoice.       JY

Although our joy will wane at times
From worry, stress, and fear,
God keeps on working in our heart
And tells us He is near. -DJD

Happiness depends on happenings; joy depends on Jesus. 


SHELVE THEM AND MOVE ON

Shelve Them and Move On
Whoever heeds life-giving correction will be at home among the wise.
Proverbs 15:31



I’m reminded of some wise advice a radio broadcaster friend once gave me. Early on in his career, as my friend struggled to know how to deal with both criticism and praise, he felt that God was encouraging him to shelve both. What’s the essence of what he took to heart? Learn what you can from criticism and accept praise. Then shelve both and humbly move on in God’s grace and power.

Criticism and praise stir in us powerful emotions that, if left unchecked, can lead to either self-loathing or an overinflated ego. In Proverbs we read of the benefits of encouragement and wise counsel: “Good news gives health to the bones. . . .Those who disregard discipline despise themselves, but the one who heeds correction gains understanding” (15:30, 32).

If we’re on the receiving end of a rebuke, may we choose to be sharpened by it. Proverbs states, “Whoever heeds life-giving correction will be at home among the wise” (v. 31). And if we’re blessed with words of praise, may we be refreshed and filled with gratitude. As we walk humbly with God, He can help us learn from both criticism and praise, shelve them, and then move on in Him (v. 33).
By Ruth O’Reilly-Smith

REFLECT & PRAY
Learn from praise and criticism, then shelve them and move on.

Father God, thank You for the gift of praise and criticism. As I humbly surrender to You, may I grow and be sharpened by both.

Your gift changes lives. Help us share God’s love with millions every day.


INSIGHT
In Proverbs, the righteous are the wise, and the foolish are the wicked (for example, see 10:1-3). A wise person is one who obeys God and His Word, thus avoiding moral pitfalls and failures. In contrast, a fool is one who says, “There is no God” (Psalm 14:1). Solomon contrasts the wise and the foolish (Proverbs 10-15), comparing their attitudes, actions, and speech. Proverbs 15 describes the wise person as one who is discerning (v. 21), seeks godly counsel (v. 22), speaks graciously (v. 23), lives cautiously (v. 24), is humble (v. 25), pure (v. 26), honest (v. 27), self-controlled (v. 28), prayerful (v. 29), teachable (vv. 31-32), and fears God (v. 33). The foundation for such a godly life is stated at the beginning of Proverbs in 1:7, repeated in 9:10, and reiterated again in 15:33: The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge and wisdom. K. T. Sim


LIVING LIFE TO THE MAXIMUM

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

LIVING LIFE TO THE MAXIMUM

READ:  John 10:7-11

I have come that they may have life, and that they
may have it more abundantly.  John 10:10

A veteran mountain climber was sharing his experiences with a group of novices preparing for their first major climb.  He had conquered man of the world’s most difficult peaks, so he was qualified to give them some advice.  “Remember this,” he said, “your goal is to experience to exhilaration of the climb and the joy of reaching…the peak.  Each step draws you closer to the top.  If your purpose for climbing is just to avoid death,your experience will be minimal.”

I see an application to the Christian’s experience.  Jesus did not call us to live the Christian life just to escape hell.  It’s not to be a life of minimum joy and fulfillment, but a life that is full and overflowing.  Our purpose in following Christ should not be merely to avoid eternal punishment.  If that’s our primary motivation, we are missing the wonders and joys and victories of climbing higher and higher with Jesus.

The Lord promised us “life…more abundantly” (John 10:10).  We cannot experience a full and abundant life if we are living in fear.  When we walk by faith, we will see each day of the Christian life as a challenge to be met, and as one more upward step to glory!


Do not live minimally.  Live life to the maximum!  Climb that mountain with confidence!   DCE

God has given life abundant-
Live it fully every day;
Though our time on earth is fleeting,
He goes with us all the way. -Hess

We get the most out of life when we live for Christ.



ADVANCEMENT AND CHRISTIANITY

ADVANCEMENT AND CHRISTIANITY

For more great blogs as this one go to Daniel’s blog site at:  www.Mannsword.blogspot.com


In “How the West Won: The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity,” historian Rodney Stark shows that the success of the West can be summed up by one Word - Christianity. It was in the Christian West that modern science was born, and for good reason, according to Stark:

       Christianity was essential to the rise of science, which is why science was a purely Western phenomenon.

Stark challenges the idea that the Greeks had been scientists:

       Aristotle was not a scientist because he based his “theories” on logic without any concern for testing them through appropriate observations. Consequently, as James Hannam wrote in “The Genesis of Science,” “not even Aristotle’s powers of reason could prevent blunders in his arguments.”

Stark also argues against the notion that Islam had produced an advanced society of learning, and that Moorish Spain had been “a shining example of civilized enlightenment.” After lengthy descriptions of the horrors that Jews and Christians had experienced at the hands of Muslims, Stark concludes:

       By the end of the fourteenth century only tiny remnants of Christianity and Judaism remained scattered in the Middle East and North Africa, having been almost completely destroyed by Muslim persecution. And as the dhimmis disappeared, they took the “advanced” Muslim culture with them. What they left behind was a culture so backward that it couldn’t even copy Western technology but had to buy it and often even had to hire Westerners to use it. So much, then, for the “mystery” of how Muslim culture was somehow lost or left behind. The notion that in the medieval era Islamic culture was advanced well beyond Europe is as much an illusion as recent ones about an “Arab Spring.” The Islamic world was backward then, and so it remains.

Stark exposes the Enlightenment myth:

       ...that science could arise only during the “Enlightenment” because by that point the churches, sufficiently weakened, could no longer suppress science...[And] that most of the great scientific stars of this time had freed themselves from the confines of supernaturalism and faith.

Instead, it seems that the biblical revelation of a God, who rules through universal laws and who wants to be known, had uniquely inspired the devout to pursue an understanding of these laws. Stark quotes the late renowned mathematician, Alfred North Whitehead, in support:

       “The greatest contribution of medievalism to the formation of the scientific movement [was] the inexpugnable belief … that there was a secret, a secret which can be unveiled. How has this conviction been so vividly implanted in the European mind? … It must come from the medieval insistence on the rationality of God, conceived as with the personal energy of Jehovah and with the rationality of a Greek philosopher. Every detail was supervised and ordered: the search into nature could only result in the vindication of faith in rationality.“

According to Stark, scientific and technological advancement are largely to be credited to the Christian faith:
 
       advances in both science and technology occurred not in spite of Christianity but because of it. Contrary to the conventional narrative, science did not suddenly flourish once Europe cast aside religious “superstitions” during the so-called Enlightenment. Science arose in the West—and only in the West—precisely because the Judeo-Christian conception of God encouraged and even demanded this pursuit.

Stark entirely rejects the Christianity-against-science narrative concocted by “enlightenment” thinkers. To do this, he identified the 52 most significant scientists starting in 1543 and including all born before 1680. He subsequently found that 60% were devout Christians, 38% were less ostensibly devout about their faith, and only one could be considered a skeptic. One of the devout, Johannes Kepler, who had exemplified thinking of many Christians, stated that:

       “The chief aim of all investigations of the external world should be to discover the rational order and harmony imposed on it by God and which he revealed to us in the language of mathematics.”

They were convinced that God was a God of order and to learn about His creation was to learn about Him. Although Albert Einstein resisted the belief in a personal God, his observations irresistibly pointed to an intelligent Creator, closely resembling the God of the Bible:

       “A priori one should expect a chaotic world which cannot be grasped by the mind in any way.… That is the ‘miracle’ which is constantly being reinforced as our knowledge expands.”

It was this kind of observation that had motivated Christian thinkers to believe that the pursuit of knowledge was the pursuit of God, leading them to build schools and universities:
       The university is generally regarded as a formal institution that has its origin in the Medieval Christian setting. Prior to the establishment of universities, European higher education took place for hundreds of years in Christian cathedral schools or monastic schools (scholae monasticae), in which monks and nuns taught classes. Evidence of these immediate forerunners of the later university at many places dates back to the 6th century AD. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_university

The story of the origin of the Universities in American is no different. The vast majority of colleges founded in the USA were founded by Christians for Christian purposes:

       Of our 119 first colleges and universities, 104 were founded to teach biblical values…Even public universities commonly had Christian roots. (Michael Hickerson, Hickerson.com)

This demonstrates that truth and learning had been recognized as servants of the Christian faith. Consequently, an honest search for truth was a search for God.

Today, such an equation is unacceptable to the vast number of Western thinkers who associate Christianity with the closure of the mind. However, for the knowledgeable Christian, this association is obvious. To believe in Christ is to believe in truth-based evidence. To nurture a child’s mind is to liberate it from the shackles of ignorance.

As secularism has advanced, the university has become increasingly shackled by political correctness. This raises the question, “Can secularism nurture the quest for truth or is it becoming too mired in its politically correct agenda?” After Allan Bloom wrote about “The Closing of the American Mind” (1987), writer and professor, Roger Kimball, picked up the baton in 1990 to show how the universities were being converted from educational institutions into institutions of political indoctrination:

       Demands for ideological conformity have begun to encroach on basic intellectual freedoms. At an increasing number of campuses across the country, university administrations have enacted anti-harassment rules that provide severe penalties for speech or action deemed offensive to any of a wide range of officially designated victims. Ostensibly designed to prevent sexual, ethnic, and racial harassment, these rules actually represent an effort to enforce politically correct attitudes by curtailing free speech…What this alarming development portends is nothing less than a new form of thought control based on a variety of pious new-Left slogans and attitudes. (“Tenured Radicals: How Politics has Corrupted Our Higher Education,” xv-xvi)

Increasingly, secular thought control is killing the mind. Without God, there is no higher authority to correct our narrow political aspirations.



PRAYING AND GROWING

Praying and Growing

Whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God.
Colossians 3:17



When my friend David’s wife developed Alzheimer’s disease, the changes it brought to his life made him bitter. He needed to retire early to care for her; and as the disease progressed, she required increasingly more care.

“I was so angry at God,” he told me. “But the more I prayed about it, the more He showed me my heart and how I had been selfish for most of our marriage.” Tears welled in his eyes as he confessed, “She’s been sick ten years, but God has helped me see things differently. Now, everything I do out of love for her, I also do for Jesus. Caring for her has become the greatest privilege of my life.”

Sometimes God answers our prayers not by giving us what we want but by challenging us to change.
 When the prophet Jonah was angry because God spared the wicked city of Nineveh from destruction, God caused a plant to shade him from the hot sun (Jonah 4:6). Then He made it wither. When Jonah complained, God answered, “Is it right for you to be angry about the plant?” (vv. 7-9). Jonah, focused only on himself, insisted it was. But God challenged him to think about others and have compassion.

God sometimes uses our prayers in unexpected ways to help us learn and grow. It’s a change we can welcome with open hearts because He wants to transform us with His love.
By James Banks

REFLECT & PRAY
God grows us as we spend time with Him.

Lord Jesus, thank You for helping me grow when I pray. Help me to be sensitive to what You want for my life today.

Your gift changes lives. Help us share God’s love with millions every day.


INSIGHT
Jonah’s reluctance to forgive his enemies is a reminder that the heart of God is bigger than our own.

For more about the story of Jonah, read The Failure of Success at discoveryseries.org/q0720.