Inspirational Quotes 5/06/2026

Animals

Out of the ground the LORD God formed every beast of the field and every bird of the air, and brought them to Adam to see what he would call them. And whatever Adam called each living creature, that was its name. So Adam gave names to all cattle, to the birds of the air, and to every beast of the field. But for Adam there was not found a helper comparable to him (Genesis 2:19-20).

You have made him to have dominion over the works of Your hands; You have put all things under his feet, All sheep and oxen— Even the beasts of the field, The birds of the air, And the fish of the sea That pass through the paths of the seas (Psalm 8:6-8).

Our thoughts ought instinctively to fly upwards from animals, men, and natural objects to their Creator. If things created are so full of loveliness, how resplendent with beauty must be he who made them! The wisdom of the Worker is apparent in His handiwork.
~ Antony of Padua

Animals are such agreeable friends—they ask no questions, they pass no criticisms.
~ George Eliot

Though I am far from denying that the counsels of Divine Goodness regarding dumb creatures are, for us, involved in deep obscurity, yet Scripture foretells for them a ‘glorious liberty’. And we are assured that the compassion of Heaven will not be wanting to them.
~ John Keble

Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Food For Thought 5/05/2026

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Men’s hearts failing them from fear and the expectation of those things which are coming on the earth, for the powers of the heavens will be shaken (Luke 21:26).

The Heart

The heart is a hard-working marvel. It can keep on beating automatically even if all other nerves were severed. And what a beat!

It beats an average of 75 times a minute, forty million times a year, or two-and-a-half billion times in a life of 70 years. At each beat, the average adult heart discharges about four ounces of blood. This amounts to three thousand gallons a day or 650,000 gallons a year—enough to fill more than 81 tank cars of 8,000 gallons each.

The heart does enough work in one hour to lift a 150-pound man to the top of a three-story building, enough energy in twelve hours to lift a 65-ton tank car one foot off the ground, or enough power in seventy years to lift the largest battleship afloat completely out of the water.

Heart Transplants

Since the heart-transplant era began about a decade ago, 308 patients worldwide have received transplants. Sixty-three were still surviving in 1977.

When transplants were first performed, patients had only a 22% chance of surviving one year. Of the one-year survivors, 90% return to normal work and lifestyles.

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Life In Focus 5/04/2026

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What’s in it for Me?

PETER and the other disciples wondered what they were going to get out of following Christ. “We have left all and followed You,” Peter told Jesus. “Therefore what shall we have?” (Matthew 19:27). In other words, “What’s the payoff? What’s in this for me?”

Paul describes some of the “payoff” for believers here in Ephesians 1:3-14. Because so much of it lies in the future, in another mode of existence, the language is strange and hard to understand. But in Ephesians 1:11 he mentions an inheritance that is coming to us. What is it that we are going to receive “in Christ”?

Simply this: all that God has prepared for Christ in “the fullness of the times” is going to be ours as well (Romans 8:15-17). This includes salvation from sin (Hebrews 1:14), everlasting life (Matthew 19:29), and the kingdom of God (Matthew 25:34). In fact, we will inherit God Himself.

Is this just wishful thinking? No, God is already giving us glimpses of that inconceivable future. The Holy Spirit lives inside us as a guarantee of things to come (Ephesians 1:14). He “seals” us, assuring that we remain in God’s family and do not lose our inheritance. And while we move toward that day, He works within our lives to make us more like Christ.

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Courtesy of Nelson’s New Illustrated Bible Commentary
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
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Bible Insights 5/03/2026

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Assembling Together in Purpose

Let us consider one another in order to stir up love and good works, not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as is the manner of some, but exhorting one another, and so much the more as you see the Day approaching (Hebrews 10:24-25).

The regular gathering of the church is designed to lovingly confront us with the fact that the most valuable thing in life can’t be earned. The most valuable thing in life cannot be humanly achieved. The most valuable thing is life can’t be purchased or owned. The most valuable thing in life is not an experience you will have. The most valuable thing in life is not something you will get from people in your life. The most valuable thing in life is an eternal gift of divine grace. It is my eternal forgiveness, my eternal acceptance into the family of God, and the guaranteed destiny that is mine as a child of God, all secured for me by the righteous life, substitutionary death, and life-giving resurrection of Jesus. The most valuable thing in all of life is my union with Christ. By grace, he is in me and I am in him. This union means I don’t have to be spiritually and emotionally imprisoned by past regrets, I don’t have to live fearfully and powerlessly in the present, and I don’t have to be crippled by anxiety in the future. Gospel values allow me to live at the intersection of humility and hope. They allow me to live with a radical honesty about my own weaknesses while living with courage as well. They lead me to live for a glory greater than my own, to be generous as God has been generous to me, to forgive as I have been forgiven, and to pursue growth in spiritual maturity more than I pursue any other kind of success in my life. No, I don’t mean that I quit doing all the things that every other human being must do (job, relationships, finances, physical health, entertainment and leisure). Rather, these domains of my life take on new meaning and purpose because they are no longer the places where I look for life, but are now the places where I joyfully live out the life that I have been given by redeeming grace alone.

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Prayer & Praise 5/03/2026

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Robert Hawker: Piercing Heaven – Puritan’s Prayers

Precious Jesus! I do remember my faults this day. So grant me from now on to live wholly to you, gracious Lord, to keep you always in view, walking with you, cleaving to you, hanging upon you. Help me always to remember you and your love more than anything else.

You, my dearest Redeemer! I pray for grace to set you always before me, to record in my heart your mercies, and to set you in my heart. To follow you wherever you go, and to watch the steps of Jesus. To pursue you in all your paths, at your table, at your ordinances, in your words, in your house of prayer, in your providence, in your promises.

Everywhere, and in all things, where Jesus is, I pray that there may my soul be. Though I have no way to pay you back for this bounty, Lord, still in your grace may I follow you, to bless you, and to live out the truth that all I am and all I have is yours.

Grant me in this sweet sense to know you, precious Jesus, and to enjoy you in everything, for riches and honor come from you.

Yes, Lord, the work is yours, salvation is yours, glory is yours—everything is yours. All that remains for me is to be forever giving you the praise that is due your most holy name, content to be nothing—even less than nothing—that the power of Jesus may rest on me. Because when I am most weak in myself, then am I most strong in you, Lord, and in your power,

Amen.

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Where is God’s Love? – 3

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Scripture Reference: Malachi 1:2-5

From Last Lesson: Have you noticed how quick we are to blame God for things He has nothing to do with?

But what about the crack addict himself? Can’t we blame him? Some will be quick to say that he isn’t to blame for his actions, after all, he has a disease. His addiction is a medical problem, not a moral one. But wasn’t the first time he took crack a moral choice, not as a result of an addiction?

What about Satan? Shouldn’t he deserve some of the blame? The Word tells us, “You used to live in sin, just like the rest of the world, obeying the devil—the commander of the powers in the unseen world. He is the spirit at work in the hearts of those who refuse to obey God” (Ephesians 2:2 NLT).

Satan is active, working in the hearts of those who are disobedient to God. His intent is evil and destructive.

God has chosen to allow evil and good to grow next to one another. People choose which path they take, either they follow God, or they follow Satan. In the Gospel of Matthew Jesus tells the parable of the “wheat and the tares,” in which He told the disciples, “but while men slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among the wheat and went his way. But when the grain had sprouted and produced a crop, then the tares also appeared. So the servants of the owner came and said to him, ‘Sir, did you not sow good seed in your field? How then does it have tares?’ He said to them, ‘An enemy has done this.’ The servants said to him, ‘Do you want us then to go and gather them up?’ But he said, ‘No, lest while you gather up the tares you also uproot the wheat with them. Let both grow together until the harvest, and at the time of harvest I will say to the reapers, “First gather together the tares and bind them in bundles to burn them, but gather the wheat into my barn” ’ ” (Matthew 13:25-30). In this world, good and evil will co-exist.

So where was God’s love in the examples I gave?

God’s love was in the prayers and the presence of the Chaplain. His love was in the arms of the nurse. His love is in the girl’s ability to forgive and to heal. God’s love is in the likelihood that this little girl will one day be a “wounded healer” and help others.

According to the story, this wasn’t the first wounded child Jeannie, the nurse supervisor had taken in her arms. A year before this incident it was her own son. Chaplain Burkes said, “She placed her arms around that child in much the same way I’d seen her place her arms around her own son who was paralyzed in an auto accident the year before.”

You can ask, you have a right to ask, where is God’s love? However, the answer is no, He doesn’t keep evil from happening, but He makes sure that evil doesn’t stand alone, it doesn’t get the final say. He sends His people, and His Spirit to comfort the afflicted and heal the wounded.

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
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Where is God’s Love? – 2

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Scripture Reference: Malachi 1:2-5

Where was God’s love for the little girl from yesterday’s story?

Shouldn’t His love have stopped this man from ravaging her family? Shouldn’t His love have stopped this man from becoming addicted to crack? Shouldn’t His love have stopped the drug pushers from selling drugs to this man?

But you see, that’s the rub. When we analyze what we expect of God’s love, have you noticed that it always goes back to limiting man’s choice or to negating the consequences for choices? Because of man’s free will, the man had a choice to kill or not to kill, to buy drugs or not buy drugs, to use drugs or not use drugs. Is it God’s fault that he chose to sin? Is it God’s fault that the man’s sin carried consequences?

Can a just God negate the consequences for man’s choices? Do you think God is obligated by love to give you the answers at a test that you didn’t study for? Is God constrained by His love to keep a person healthy and strong that never exercises? If God loves you, will He place an umbrella of protection over you and keep bad things from happening to you, but not everyone else? Does it word tell us that Jesus Himself said, “He makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust” (Matthew 5:45).

To describe God as a loving God and stop at that description is a great injustice to our understanding of who He is. Not only is He loving, but His love causes Him to also be just. He must punish sin and He must allow society to suffer the consequences of sin.

Your personal sin doesn’t just affect you, it affects the people all around you also. Robin Reid, the father of Richard Reid, the alleged “shoe bomber” admitted his personal culpability in his son’s crime in a 2002, Newsweek magazine article. He said:

“Look at the terrible childhood he had . . . Look at the father he had. I have spent 18 years in total behind bars. That can’t have helped him, can it? Every time he needed me I was nowhere to be found.”

Think of the domino effect of Robin Reid’s sin and the impact it could have had on the American psyche if his son had been successful in blowing up that plane.

Here is another question we need to consider: would God be a loving God if He didn’t allow us to exercise our free will? Wouldn’t that make Him a tyrant-controlling, overbearing God, in essence, a dictator, instead of a loving God?

Besides, it wasn’t God that got the man hooked on crack and it wasn’t God that stabbed the family members in the story above. Have you noticed how quick we are to blame God for things He has nothing to do with?

Some will blame God. Some will blame the knife maker, and others will blame society as a whole.

To Be Continued

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
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Where is God’s Love? – 1

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Scripture Reference: Malachi 1:2-5

It is remarkable, in view of Israel’s sin, that God’s first message to them in this book is that He loves them. His love is a historical love that goes back to their ancestor Jacob, who received his father’s and God’s blessing rather than his older brother Esau.

They may have felt unloved because of the suffering of the captivity, the shape of Jerusalem when they returned, the drought and economic instability, but God reminds them that they will recover. If He was against them, they wouldn’t be able to bounce back. Edom may rebuild, God said, but He will destroy what they rebuild. His activity will cause all who see to say, “Great is the Lord!”

Israel’s situation is far different from Edom’s, for Israel will bounce back. They will rebuild. God didn’t stop bad things from happening to them, but He did give them the opportunity to improve their lives.

The objection of Israel in this text causes us to ask a universal question: How can a loving God allow bad things to happen? Since He is all powerful, can’t He stop evil’s reign?

The following is a story I once read and kept:

Hospital Chaplain Norris Burkes went on full alert when he heard that a family of stab victims would arrive at the emergency room in a few minutes. Chaplains deal with tragedy and death on a daily basis, but it never becomes routine. They are a special breed of minister who prefer to spend their time immersed in the suffering of others, and representing God and His people to hurting traumatized people. They extend grace & hope in hopeless situations every day of their life-this was one of those occasions.

The family was entertaining a friend in their home who had a dark secret-he was a crack addict. The tranquil visit turned into a nightmare when he ran out of crack and lost his sanity. He demanded money from his hosts, and when they wouldn’t comply with his request, he began stabbing them.

It was horrible. Blood was everywhere.

The father died. The baby was critical. Mom was stable.

Big sister was in the best shape physically, but emotionally she’d entered the twilight zone. As the doctors worked with those needing medical attention, Chaplain Burkes took the ten year old girl into the chapel to pray.

Her prayers began very innocent, like you’d expect to hear from a little girl. She asked God to help her family recover and that everything would be OK. Then her prayers lost their innocence, as she had that night, and became brutally honest. “She demanded to know why God let her father die,” Chaplain Burkes said, and “she had a few choice words for her houseguest as well.”

Rage got the best of her, she swept the candles off of the altar and began overturning chairs in the chapel. The Chaplain called for Jeannie, the nurse supervisor, who held the child in her arms and took her back into the ER to give her a sedative.

Where was God’s love for this little girl?

To Be Continued

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Essential Insights on Faith 4/29/2026

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So I take pleasure in weaknesses, insults, catastrophes,
persecutions, and in pressures, because of Christ.
For when I am weak, then I am strong.

2 CORINTHIANS 12:10

Billy Graham

As I look back over my life, I also
have many regrets. I have failed
many times, and I would do many
things differently. For one thing,
I would SPEAK LESS and STUDY
MORE, and I would spend MORE
TIME with my FAMILY. When I look
back over the schedule I kept thirty
or forty years ago, I am staggered
by all the things we did and the
engagements we kept.

Billy Graham, 150 Essential Insights on Faith: Legacy Inspirational Series
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from The Holy Bible, Holman Christian Standard Bible®, HCSB © 2009
by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Anecdotal Story 4/28/2026

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With All That Wealth

Scripture References: 1 Samuel 25:2-3; 1 Timothy 6:19

When Edgar Degas was in his seventies and nearly blind, he spent his days pacing the boulevards of Paris, following funeral processions. Financially secure, he lived as if burdened with debt and dressed so shabbily that a tobacconist offered him free cigarettes. His friend Mary Cassatt despaired. He exasperated her continually, ignoring her advice and spurning her care. “What a state he is in!” she wrote a friend. “He scarcely knows you, he neglects his clothes, he takes no interest in himself. It is dreadful! With millions of francs still in his studio, they can do him no good; he is consumed with old age.”

He had painted brilliantly but had no future. He had become famous but couldn’t enjoy it. He could buy whatever he pleased but desired nothing. While still living he had lost the capacity to appreciate life! There are others like him—those who make the best of their careers, professions, or businesses, but leave undeveloped the best in themselves.

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Courtesy of Speaker’s Sourcebook of New Illustrations by Virgil Hurley © 1995 by Word, Incorporated.
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
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Spiritual Nuggets 4/27/2026

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Scripture for Study and Encouragement: Isaiah 40:1-11

Today you’ll encounter things that will confuse you, but rest assured
the one who rules all those things is not confused.

We really don’t know much. Every day we are all greeted with mysteries. None of us can predict for sure where our personal stories are going. We are all confused about what happens to us, to those close to us, and in the world in which we live. As much as we try to make sense of our lives, there are things that we simply aren’t able to understand. Here’s what all of this means—you and I will never find inner peace and rest by trying to figure it all out. Peace is found in resting in the wisdom and grace of the one who has it all figured out and rules it all for his glory and our good.

When our children were very young, when I would refuse to let them do something, they didn’t understand why, so they would begin to protest. I would then get down on my knees so we could be face to face, and then I would talk with them. The conversation would go like this:

“Do you know that your daddy loves you?”

“Yes, I know my daddy loves me.”

“Is your daddy mean and bad to you?”

“No, you don’t like to be mean.”

“Is your daddy a horrible, bad daddy?”

“No.”

“Then listen to what daddy is going to say. I would like to tell you why I had to say ‘no’ to what you wanted to do, but I can’t. If I explained it to you, you wouldn’t understand anyway, so here’s what you need to do. You need to walk down the hallway and say to yourself, ‘I don’t know why daddy said no to me, but I know my daddy loves me and I’m going to trust my daddy.’ I really do love you.”

“I love you too.”

There is so much that we don’t understand. There is so much that we are incapable of understanding. So rest is found in trusting the Father. He is not confused, and he surely does have your best interest in mind. Yes, he will ask you to do hard things and he will bring difficult things your way, but he is worthy of your trust and he loves you dearly. Today your heavenly Father reaches down to you and says: “I know you don’t understand all that you face, but remember, I love you. Trust me and you will find peace that can be found no other way.”

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Adapted and modified excerpts from Paul David Tripp, 40 Days of Faith
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
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Reflecting With God 4/26/2026

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Thinking, praying, reading, studying the Bible – when we do these things, we are reflecting on the Word of God. To reflect is to contemplate and/or consider, and God wants us to deeply reflect on His Word so that we can better understand Him.

Kept by the power of God through faith for salvation ready to be revealed in the last time (1 Peter 1:5).

A kite soaring on high is in a situation quite foreign to its nature; as much as the soul of man is, when raised above this lower world to high and heavenly pursuits. A person at a distance sees not how it is kept in its exalted situation; he sees not the wind that blows it, nor the hand that holds it, nor the string by whose instrumentality it is held. But all of these powers are necessary to its preservation in that preternatural state. If the wind were to sink, it would fall. It has nothing whatever in itself to uphold itself: it has the same tendency to gravitate to the earth that it ever had, and, if left for a moment to itself, it would fall. Thus it is with the soul of every true believer. It has been raised by the Spirit of God to a new, a preternatural, a heavenly state; and in that state it is upheld by an invisible and almighty hand, through the medium of faith. And upheld it shall be, but not by any power in itself. If left for a moment, it would fall as much as ever. The whole strength is in God alone; and its whole security is in the unchangeableness of His nature, and in the efficacy of His grace. In a word, “it is kept by the power of God, through faith, unto salvation.”
~ SALTER

The genuineness of your faith, being much more precious than gold that perishes, though it is tested by fire, may be found to praise, honor, and glory at the revelation of Jesus Christ (1 Peter 1:7).

When the devil tries our faith it is that he may crush it or diminish it; but when God tries our faith it is to establish and increase it.
~ MARCUS RAINSFORD

God has settled in heaven certain trials of our faith, which will as surely befall us as the crown of glory be given us at Christ’s appearing. God’s purposes of grace are a golden chain; not a link must be missing.

Unfaithfulness will be to our souls as the deluge to the world,—a flood to drown us in perdition. Persecution will be to us as the deluge to the ark,—a flood to lift us toward heaven.
~ PUNSHON

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
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Prayer & Praise 4/26/2026

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Richard Alleine: Piercing Heaven – Puritan’s Prayers

My Lord, give me your rod and staff. If my disease overtakes me, give me a stronger cure. If my reckless heart will not be tamed, put more restraints on me—load upon load, weight upon weight.

Let me never be sick of your remedy until I am cured of my disease. Let me rather suffer by the hand of a demon than perish from lust.

Do not spare me, Lord. Do not hold back from disciplining your servant, until by doing so you have struck down all my enemies.

Peace, plenty, leisure . . . to spend on my lusts, to rebel against my God? I do not want that kind of peace. I would rather have pain and trouble or be in need—anything rather than peace on those terms.

Correct me, God, but only in your judgment, not in your fury. Otherwise I would be consumed and brought to nothing.

Amen.

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Daily Devotional 4/25/2026

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WATERS TO SWIM IN

Ezekiel 47:5
Water in which one must swim . . .

The text does not speak about waters to float in, though this is essential. Many people never get beyond that floating period, and they conclude that they are safe and all is well because they fancy their heads are above water; whereas the man who is really taught of God goes on from the floating to the swimming. Now swimming is an active exercise. The man progresses as he strikes out. He makes headway. He dives and rises: he turns to the right, he swims to the left, he pursues his course, he goes whithersoever he wills. Now, the holy word of God and the gospel are ‘waters to swim in’. Many of you only know what it is to float. You are resting in the truth of God for your salvation, but making no advance in heavenly things. Beloved, let us learn to swim in those waters; I mean, let us learn to trust God in active exertions for the promotion of his kingdom, to trust him in endeavors to do good. How blessedly our friend George Muller of Bristol swims! What a master swimmer he is! He has had his feet off the bottom many years, and as he swims he draws along behind him some 2,500 orphan children, whom, by God’s grace, he is saving from the floods of sin and bringing, we trust, safe to shore. Dear brother, dear sister, could you not swim too? ‘Oh, but I have no money.’ You want to walk, I see. ‘But I have very slender gifts compared with what I need.’ Cannot the Lord give you gifts and graces? Will you not trust him? Dear brother, are you called to serve God in a very difficult sphere of labor? Cannot you go on? ‘I have nobody to help me.’ Oh, I see you are all for walking on the bottom. Brethren, it is ‘waters to swim in’. Cannot you swim without any help except the help of the All in all?

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C. H. Spurgeon and Terence Peter Crosby, 365 Days with Spurgeon (Volume 1) (Day One Publications, 1998)
Scripture for opening text taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
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Inspirational Quotes 4/24/2026

Anger

He who is slow to wrath has great understanding, But he who is impulsive exalts folly (Proverbs 14:29).

“Be angry, and do not sin”: do not let the sun go down on your wrath (Ephesians 4:26).

The wrath of man does not produce the righteousness of God (James 1:20).

Speak when you are angry and you will make the best speech you will ever regret.
~ Ambrose Bierce

Anger is quieted by a gentle word just as fire is quenched by water.
~ Bishop Jean Pierre Camus

There is no sin nor wrong that gives a man such a foretaste of hell in this life as anger and impatience.
~ St Catherine of Siena

The sun must not set upon anger, much less will I let the sun set upon the anger of God toward me.
~ John Donne

To builds one’s activity on love and non-violence demands the greatest inner purification; one must constantly rid one’s heart of inordinate desires, fears, and anxieties, but above all, one must cleanse oneself of anger.
~ William Johnston

He that would be angry and sin not must not be angry with anything but sin.
~ Thomas Secker

There is a holy anger, excited by zeal, which moves us to reprove with warmth those whom our mildness failed to correct.
~ Jean Baptiste de la Salle, St

Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Food For Thought 4/23/2026

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And you will be hated by all for My name’s sake. But he who endures to the end shall be saved (Mark 13:13).

Church of Reconciliation Splits

In a northern section of Berlin lies a Protestant church whose front yard now straddles the Communist wall. Its ironic name: the Church of the Reconciliation.

The Church of the Reconciliation appears to have been abandoned. The building itself, with a statue of Christ at the entrance, is in East Berlin, while the front sidewalk is in the West. A 10-foot brick wall stands between.
~ Christianity Today

Epigram on Hatred

Booker T. Washington once said, “I am determined to permit no man to narrow or degrade my soul by making me hate him.”

An old French Proverb states: Who punishes one threatens a hundred.

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Life In Focus 4/22/2026

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Rights

WE live in a time when it seems that everyone is concerned about exercising their “rights.” Indeed, society has become somewhat polarized as various groups form around their perceptions of rights that they feel they are being denied. The more intense the struggle to achieve those rights, the more social conflict seems to escalate.

Paul indicated to the Galatians that before God, no one has any rights; whatever rights humanity once had have been forfeited as a result of sin. To bring this situation home to his readers, Paul used the metaphor of a slave (Galatians 4:1-3), an image that the Galatians probably knew well, as the Roman Empire depended heavily on slave labor (Romans 6:16).

The Galatians had become children of God, but before that they were in bondage to sin, to the “elements of the world” (Galatians 4:3; compare Colossians 2:8, 20). As slaves to sin, they had no rights before God. He owed them nothing. They belonged to sin, which they were forced to serve. Emancipation from that position had to come from a source other than their own power, ingenuity, or morality.

Such is the plight of all sinners before God—helpless and hopeless (Romans 3:23, John 3:19-20). But just as God gave life, resources, and responsibility to humanity in the beginning (Genesis 1:26-2:4), so now He has given Christ His Son to rescue or “redeem” people from sin and grant them all the privileges of adoption into the family of God (Galatians 4:4-7). No one deserves that, which is why receiving Christ’s new life and the rights therein is truly a gift.

If as believers we have received these treasures from God, then we ought to let others know that the same opportunity is available to them.

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Courtesy of Nelson’s New Illustrated Bible Commentary
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Bible Insights 4/21/2026

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Jesus Taught

Then He went out again by the sea; and all the multitude came to Him, and He taught them (Mark 2:13).

How did Jesus teach? Did He lecture or prefer dialogue? Did He pronounce truth in categorical terms, or paint pictures of truth like an artist working on a canvas?

Surely Jesus used stories to teach (the Bible calls them parables), and He also used places to best advantage. While Jesus often spoke in synagogues or homes, He also taught groups of people on hillsides (Matthew 5:1) or on the shore of the Sea of Galilee. The hillsides and sloping shoreline of the Sea of Galilee provided a convenient place for large crowds to gather, sit comfortably, and listen to the teacher standing at the foot of the hill, on the shore, or sometimes on a boat moored in the water (as in Luke 5:3). While the crowds followed, Jesus always taught.

He wasn’t afraid to teach concepts that would only be understood much later (concerning His death and resurrection, for example), and He kept his focus. We have no record that He lectured on questions such as “What language did Adam and Eve speak?” Or, “Where did Cain’s wife come from?” We have every reason to believe (based on the Bible’s record) that Jesus treated His listeners as intelligent, responsible human beings.

Parents who use these teaching methods with children are apt to get a more attentive audience, as are pastors with congregations and Sunday school expositors with their freshly washed cherubs. Teaching is hard work. Following Jesus’ example will not necessarily make it easy, just more successful.

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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How God Reveals Himself – 2

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Scripture Reference: Psalm 19

From Last Lesson: Creation reveals the glory of God; God’s Word reveals the way to God. How?

The “testimony of the Lord,” all of what God has told his people, is trustworthy, giving wisdom to the one who needs it (verse 7). It reveals the danger of being out of God’s will even when one is unaware of it. God’s “statutes” are entirely right, not a burden but a source of joy for those who obey them. The “commandment of the Lord,” the entirety of His revealed Word, cleanses one’s eyes, giving one a clear perspective of life. It lights up the eyes revealing the inner joy God’s Word brings (verse 8).

The “fear of the Lord” gives instruction on what it means to reverence Yahweh in awe. It is pure and eternal. The “judgements,” God’s decrees, His commands, on matters, inform us of what is appropriate conduct. Therefore, they are “true and righteous altogether” (verse 9). Nothing compares to the value of God’s Word. The wise will desire it more than anything else in life. True satisfaction and delight comes from the sweetness of knowing God’s Word and faithfully living in accordance to it. Moreover, God’s Word both warns one of dangers that would ruin one’s life and rewards one for listening to it and obeying (verses 10-11).

David displays the proper response to having witnessed God’s revelation of Himself in both His creation and His Word, a prayer for cleansing and purity. David’s concern is not only for the willful sin he is aware of in his life, but he is also troubled by the unknown sin in his life. Our sin nature has such a grip on us that we often sin unintentionally and unknowingly. The Law of Moses recognizes this truth and provides the Sin Offering as a means of atonement for unintentional sins and the sins one commits unknowingly (Leviticus 4:1-5:13). David’s desire is to live completely devoted to Yahweh in every way. He wants the Lord, not his sin, to rule his life. He realizes he cannot keep from ever sinning, but he is asking the Lord to help him be godly and blameless (verse 13). His prayer is for everything he says and thinks to be acceptable to Yahweh. He is offering himself as a living sacrifice to the Lord, His rock, His strength and foundation in life, His Redeemer, His protector, provider, and Savior (verse 14).

Psalm 19 demonstrates that God wants us to know Him, intimately, not just know about Him. He has demonstrated this in creation, by His Word, and ultimately through His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ (Hebrews 1:1-4). Like David, we should praise God as we witness the splendor of God’s handiwork. However, as wonderful as God’s creation is, even more magnificent is His written Word. For it is God’s Word, His Logos, that shows us how to know our Creator. We need to be in God’s Word because it is what revives us, guides us, and sustains us. It is also what leads us to Jesus Christ, the living Word, the living Logos, who became flesh according to the apostle John in his epistle (John 1:14). It is because of the person and work of Jesus Christ that we can be cleansed of our sin and made right with God. Therefore, let us seek to know our Lord who graciously invites us to know Him intimately, as a true and glorious Father.

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
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How God Reveals Himself – 1

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Scripture Reference: Psalm 19

In Psalm 19, David contemplates how creation proclaims the glory of God and then considers the riches of the Lord’s instruction in the Scriptures. He recognizes that, unlike the gods of the nations who are aloof and silent, Yahweh is a God who graciously makes Himself known through the revelation of creation (verses 1-6) and the revelation of His Word (verses 7-11). David understands that just as all of physical life is dependent on the sun, one’s spiritual life is dependent on the Word of God. David uses the beautiful parallelism of Hebrew poetry to convey these truths. David also realizes such wonderful revelation and communication from God necessitates a response. So, his request is for the cleansing of his sin so that what he does, says, and thinks will be pleasing to God (verses 12-14).

In verses 1-6, David looks to the heavenly host in wonder at how they declare the glory and knowledge of God. First, he focuses on the heavens in general, and then he narrows his focus to the sun. Verse 1 uses synonymous parallelism with three words in the second line matching the three words in the first. The pairs are “heavens” and the “firmament,” “declare” and “shows [proclaims],” and “the glory of God” and “His handiwork [work of His Hands].” The “heavens” and “firmament” both refer to the skies and everything in space beyond. The words “declare” and “shows” are participles in Hebrew, meaning the heavens and firmament are continually declaring and showing as verse 2 also asserts. By recognizing the first two pairs as synonyms, it reveals that the third pair are synonyms too.

So, David is saying that “His handiwork” witnesses to “the glory of God.” “His handiwork” means all of the skies and space above are God’s creation. The word glory” in the original language means heaviness or weightiness. So, David is saying God’s creation of the heavens gives weight to who God is. He is transcendent, above the highest reaches of space. He is of ultimate importance; there is none like Him, anywhere. Without words, the heavens pour out this knowledge of God’s omnipotence, His wisdom, and splendor for everyone to see.

Most notable of all the heavenly hosts is the sun. David uses similes to describe its splendor. The heavens stand over it like a tent. Like a bridegroom and an athlete, the sun is brilliant and strong. It provides warmth and sustenance for the entire Earth (verses 4-6). The sun is central to life on the earth. It affects the oceans and the weather, providing energy for the plants to grow which in turn provide oxygen and nourishment for life on Earth. Without the sun, we could not survive. The sun not only reveals the power and beauty of God but also the wisdom and goodness of God to provide for all of physical life on Earth.

Likewise, God has provided for our spiritual lives by the revelation of His Word. Once again, employing the beauty of Hebrew parallelism, David expounds the blessing and centrality of God’s Word to all of life. Without God’s Word, we could not survive. Creation reveals the glory of God; God’s Word reveals the way to God. How? The “law [meaning instruction]” of God restores vitality to the spiritually infirmed and life to the spiritually dead (verse 7).

To Be Continued

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
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