Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘dailyprompt-1885’

Written by Dale Kuehne, a contemporary professor and author.

Tocqueville looked at America and said “What is going to keep us from pursuing our own individual self-interests? He believed that people, no question, were self-interested, but for democracy to work, we had to get outside of ourselves, we had to get to know our neighbors, and we had to work together with our neighbors to make a good community. And Tocqueville said that Christianity was the faith that got us out of ourselves.

Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but each of you to the interests of the others. [Philippians 2:3-4]

Read Full Post »

Written by John Ortberg, a contemporary speaker, author, and pastor.

An untroubled heart isn’t something we have to fight for on our own. Jesus promised us help—a forever friend, the Holy Spirit. He’s also called the advocate, the comforter, the encourager. The Holy Spirit isn’t someone to condemn you or pile on guilt, but someone to help you as you go through life. Someone who is with you forever. And today, we’re invited to walk through life with that helper—the spirit of truth, who is always working to give you peace…You don’t have to generate peace, just simply receive it. Let the spirit of truth steady your heart, speak into your thoughts, and walk with you today. 

If you love me, keep my commands. And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate to help you and be with you forever—the Spirit of truth. [John 14:15-17]

Read Full Post »

Written by the Lead Like Jesus team, an organization founded by Ken Blanchard and Phil Hodges that promotes a transformational leadership model based on following Jesus.

A common temptation is to focus on the areas of our lives where we can achieve personal success and win approval from others. Leading from self-motivation, self-interest, or self-gratification are expressions of fear and pride. In the process, we lose sight of God as our audience, Jesus as our role model, and the transforming power of His Spirit. What motivates your leadership choices? A desire to succeed, a need for human applause, or a desire for God’s approval?

We remember before our God and Father your work produced by faith, your labor prompted by love, and your endurance inspired by hope in our Lord Jesus Christ [1 Thessalonians 1:3]

Read Full Post »

Written by Brian Morykon, a contemporary writer.

God has no interest in joining the world’s shouting contest to get our attention. God waits with a whisper. A whisper is intimate, a cupped hand against a trusted ear. It only works when the distance between speaker and listener collapses into contact. Maybe that’s why a whisper is God’s preferred tone of voice: because God wants us close. Perhaps “hearing the whisper of God” sounds abstract, vaporous, mystical. I suppose in some way it is. But I bet you’ve experienced it, some moment where you’ve sat in quiet and nothing has happened but something has shifted. Maybe you don’t even notice the shift until later, when your soul feels sturdier than usual under similar circumstances.  Or perhaps you’ve sensed in silence a thought that rings with the authority of truth—weighty and light and clear: the whisper of God. Hearing the Quiet Voice requires a time of quiet to hear it. The ability for silence and solitude depends largely on the season of life. Parents of young kids might have five minutes. Retirees might have five days. I trust that if you make the time appropriate to your season to sit with God in silence, to lean the ear of your heart close to God’s lips, that amidst all the noise of competing thoughts, whether you realize it in the moment or not, God’s whisper will restore your soul. 

And these are but the outer fringe of his works; how faint the whisper we hear of him! Who then can understand the thunder of his power? [Job 26:14]

Read Full Post »

Written by Pope Francis (1936-2025), from Rome’s Gemelli Hospital.

The walls of hospitals have heard more honest prayers than churches…They have witnessed far more sincere kisses than those in airports…It is in hospitals that you see a homophobe being saved by a gay doctor. A privileged doctor saving the life of a beggar…In intensive care, you see a Jew taking care of a racist…A police officer and a prisoner in the same room receiving the same care…A wealthy patient waiting for a liver transplant, ready to receive the organ from a poor donor…It is in these moments, when the hospital touches the wounds of people, that different worlds intersect according to a divine design. And in this communion of destinies, we realize that alone, we are nothing. The absolute truth of people, most of the time, only reveals itself in moments of pain or in the real threat of an irreversible loss. A hospital is a place where human beings remove their masks and show themselves as they truly are, in their purest essence. This life will pass quickly, so do not waste it fighting with people. Do not criticize your body too much. Do not complain excessively. Do not lose sleep over bills. Make sure to hug your loved ones. Do not worry too much about keeping the house spotless. Material goods must be earned by each person—do not dedicate yourself to accumulating an inheritance. You are waiting for too much: Christmas, Friday, next year, when you have money, when love arrives, when everything is perfect… Listen, perfection does not exist. A human being cannot attain it because we are simply not made to be fulfilled here. Here, we are given an opportunity to learn. So, make the most of this trial of life—and do it now. Respect yourself, respect others. Walk your own path, and let go of the path others have chosen for you. Respect: do not comment, do not judge, do not interfere. Love more, forgive more, embrace more, live more intensely! And leave the rest in the hands of the Creator.

For this is the message you heard from the beginning: We should love one another. [1 John 3:11]

Read Full Post »

Written by Dallas Willard (1935-2013), an American philosopher, speaker  and writer on spiritual formation.

My prayer for you is that you would have a rich life of joy and power, abundant in supernatural results, with a constant, clear vision of never-ending life in God’s world before you, and of the everlasting significance of your work day by day. A radiant life and death. Amen.

Then you will look and be radiant, your heart will throb and swell with joy; the wealth on the seas will be brought to you, to you the riches of the nations will come. [Isaiah 60:5]

Read Full Post »

Written by Tim Bias, a contemporary pastor.

You don’t have to travel to a faraway place to encounter Jesus. He is already walking beside you—in your ordinary, everyday life. In Luke 24, two followers on the road to Emmaus were so focused on their sorrow that they didn’t recognize Jesus right next to them. It wasn’t until they invited him in and broke bread together that their eyes were opened. The same is true for you. Jesus is alive and moving in your world today. He may come disguised in the stranger who needs compassion, the friend who offers encouragement, or the small, holy moments that fill your heart with hope. The question is: Are you expecting to see him? Keep your heart open. Invite him into your everyday moments. The risen Christ is closer than you think—often right where you least expect him.

 As they talked and discussed these things with each other, Jesus himself came up and walked along with them; but they were kept from recognizing him. [Luke 24:15-16]

Read Full Post »

Written by Brandon Gilliam, a contemporary writer.

Urgency is currency. The busier you are the more valuable you seem. From push notifications to packed calendars, many people move through their day at a pace that leaves little room for reflection, rest, or renewal. Yet, busyness has never been able to satisfy a soul. Life doesn’t get more meaningful the busier we become. Often, the busiest people wake up one day with one simple questions, “what is this all for?” and tragically they don’t have an answer. Because the answers to life’s most important questions don’t come from rushing, but they can be found when we start to slow down and walk at God’s pace. Jesus wasn’t in a rush. Even when surrounded by needs and expectations, he modeled a rhythm of work, rest, and retreat. His example offers an alternative to the restless striving that leaves so many of us feeling burned out, questioning, and unsatisfied. In the noise of modern life, slowing down is more than a luxury, it’s a spiritual practice. Finding Peace in All Circumstance

Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:28-30]

Read Full Post »

Written by John Ortberg, a contemporary author, speaker, and pastor.

Dallas Willard once defined peace as “the rest of will that comes from the assurance of how things will turn out.” That’s the kind of peace Jesus gives. Jesus’ peace is not rooted in the illusion of control, but in the reality of a trustworthy God. Turns out that peace doesn’t come from getting what you want. Jesus invites you to want something else entirely. He calls you not to eliminate fear, but to walk through it. To want what you don’t want. To enter the outskirts, because that’s where he is. In the storm. In the uncertainty. In the cross. There is no escaping hardship. But, through Jesus, there is hope to become someone who carries peace into hardship. Jesus doesn’t promise us a peaceful place. He promises to make us peaceful people. People who are so deeply grounded in God’s love, so assured of His rule, that even persecution, uncertainty, or loss can’t shake us. He gives his peace. And that changes everything.

Now may the Lord of peace himself give  you peace at all times in every way. The Lord be with you all.  [2 Thessalonians 3:16]

Read Full Post »

Written by Henri Nouwen (1932-1996), a Dutch priest, professor, writer, and theologian.  This is an excerpt from his book “Making All Things New.”

Once we have committed ourselves to spending time in solitude, we develop an attentiveness to God’s voice in us. In the beginning, during the first days, weeks, or even months, we may have the feeling that we are simply wasting our time. Time in solitude may at first seem little more than a time in which we are bombarded by thousands of thoughts and feelings that emerge from hidden areas of our minds. One of the early Christian writers describes the first stage of solitary prayer as the experience of a man who, after years of living with open doors, suddenly decides to shut them. The visitors who used to come and enter his home start pounding on his doors, wondering why they are not allowed to enter. Only when they realize that they are not welcome do they gradually stop coming. This is the experience of anyone who decides to enter into solitude after a life without much spiritual discipline. At first, the many distractions keep presenting themselves. Later, as they receive less and less attention, they slowly withdraw.

Be still and know that I am God. [Psalm 46:10]

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »