Daily Devotional 3-22-21

Daily Devotional 3-22-21

God’s Will for Suffering

It seems that when times are tough, we grumble. When disease strikes, when there are hard economic times, or when there is turmoil at work, life does not seem fair. And we resent the suffering, the inconveniences and lack of joy. And we cry, “It’s not fair;” or, “Why me?”

We need a little lesson from the Bible. There was a time when life was all beauty and justice and peace. That was before Adam sinned. When Adam rebelled against God, sin entered the world, “and death through sin” (Romans 5:12). And God promised continual strife between good and evil as a result of sin. You see, if we did not live in a fallen world, there would be no sorrow because of disease, or death, or crime. And perfect justice would prevail!

But we do live in a fallen world! It is best to accept that. Because once you do, you get some perspective on life from God. And if you do suffer for doing good, you will recognize that God is still in control of this old world. And one day, all accounts will be set straight. It won’t be until after we die and Judgment Day comes. But then, God will settle all accounts. And “according to His promise we are looking for new heavens and a new earth, in which righteousness dwells” (2 Peter 3:13). Then “there shall no longer be any mourning, or crying, or pain” (Revelation 21:4). The creation will be restored and there will be perfect justice once again. We should therefore realize, “The sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared to the glory that is to be revealed to us” (Romans 8:18).

To help you understand this, listen to today’s podcast, “God’s Will for Suffering.”

From: http://dennyprutow.com/daily-devotions/

Daily Devotional 3-19-21

Daily Devotional 3-19-21

How to Obtain Blessings

Christian, take good care of your faith, for faith is the only way in which you can obtain blessings. If we want blessings from God, nothing can fetch them down but faith. Prayer cannot draw down answers from God’s throne unless it is the earnest prayer of the man who believes. Faith is the angelic messenger between the soul and the Lord Jesus in glory. Let that angel be withdrawn, we can neither send up prayer, nor receive the answers. Faith is the telegraphic wire that links earth and heaven—on which God’s messages of love fly so fast that before we call He answers, and while we are still speaking He hears us. But if that telegraphic wire of faith is snapped, how can we receive the promise? Am I in trouble? I can obtain help for trouble by faith. Am I beaten about by the enemy? My soul leans on God by faith. But take faith away—in vain I call to God.

There is no road between my soul and heaven. In the deepest wintertime faith is a road on which the horses of prayer may travel—ay, and all the better for the biting frost; but blockade the road and how can we communicate with the Great King? Faith links me with divinity. Faith clothes me with the power of God. Faith engages on my side the omnipotence of Jehovah. Faith ensures every attribute of God in my defense. It helps me defy the hosts of hell. It makes me march in triumph over my enemies. But without faith how can I receive anything from the Lord? The one who wavers—who is like a wave of the sea—should not expect to receive anything from God!

So, then, Christian, pay attention to your faith; for with it you can win all things, however poor you are, but without it you can obtain nothing. “If you can! All things are possible for one who believes.”1

1) Mark 9:23

From: https://www.truthforlife.org/resources/daily-devotionals/latest/?gclid=CjwKCAjwnK36BRBVEiwAsMT8WCR8UteIwaWlAyP4o9ZIuAWio8l7qmAM1nDcB3pFiYr-jOUNkgMsShoC68IQAvD_BwE

Daily Devotional 3-18-21

Daily Devotional 3-18-21

The Sixth Petition: Lead Us Not Into Temptation

The sixth and seventh petitions belong together, yet each one lifts up a specific request before our Father. Further, the petition “Lead us not into temptation” is the reason for the cry “Deliver us from evil!”

The petition not to be led into temptation is found in just the right place within the seven petitions. Having forgiven those who have offended us, our always deceitful heart wants to be worshipped, for it thinks it has done a great deed before God. It deceives us, for we fool ourselves into thinking that we have reached the summit of virtue and purity of heart. We think we can now stand before the holy God. The sixth petition knocks us off that pedestal made of sand, for it tells us who we really are. We are still sinners vulnerable to the most trivial temptations. Knowing our weakness, our Lord placed on our lips the plea, “Lead us not into temptation.”

This petition was born within the purity of Jesus’ heart, and he had it put into writing for our quick memory recall. It did not arise from a deceitful heart at the center of human sinful flesh. What our own heart wants, is to seek out temptation so that we may see how close we can get to it before a slip and a horrendous fall. The instinct of the human heart is to look for, see, smell, touch, imagine, talk about, and listen to see where sin and temptation are hanging out. For instance, even at the slightest nuance of criticism we turn on our neighbor, biting back with pious whispers at how mistaken he is. When this happens within the halls of our thought processes, we injure ourselves. We open the windows of our souls to a whole lot of evil in the shape of reprisals, backstabbing, no matter how subtly we frame them.

Thus, the petition arises within Jesus’ own heart, already accustomed to that plea, for the sake of his own soul, and ours. When we repeat the plea, we hear something very different from what our own heart wants. Sometimes temptation’s pull is so strong we feel it tugging from head to toe. Our prayer is then inclined to whisper, “Come on, Lord, just this once… or twice, or thrice.” The petition grants us much needed self-knowledge, and teaches us that we need to plead: “Lead us not into temptation.”

For the believer, already justified, sanctified, and citizen of the heavenly kingdom, the petition is also a guideline on how to live in this earthly kingdom. The plea is like a much-needed cry for oxygen since living in the reality of the flesh we are still prone to temptation and sin and their suffocating power.

There’s more to the petition. It is the only one of the seven petitions that is not in the imperative. It is certainly a heart-felt cry, but here the Lord teaches us that he would not be placed in a box as to how he guides us. The Greek word here for temptation may also be translated as “trial, or affliction.” God is sovereign as to how he relates to us and shapes our lives. We plead with him, we present our case to him, but God’s map is different from ours.

Beloved, do not be surprised at the fiery ordeal which comes upon you to prove you, as though something strange were happening to you. But rejoice in so far as you share Christ’s sufferings, that you may also rejoice and be glad when his glory is revealed (1 Peter 4:12).

In other words, we could lift up the petition: “When we’re surprised with fiery ordeals, deliver us into rejoicing.”

Whether it’s fiery trials or temptations, or both – for oftentimes trials turn into temptations – in the end, withstanding either, has to do with God’s faithfulness, and not our own. In pleading “Lead us not into temptation” we are appealing to God’s steadfast love.

No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your strength, but with the temptation will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it (1 Cor 10:13).

That faithfulness was proven to us in Jesus Christ’s victory over our own trials and temptations. His victory is the answer to the seventh petition, “deliver us from evil!” That is God’s way of escape for us. And it is the way of faith; faith in Christ alone. It is not even faith in ourselves to be able to repeat the petition, or to seek out the correct Scriptures during critical moments. Resisting temptation is not a white knuckle, teeth grinding, grin and bear it operation. It is a quiet and confident trust in the faithfulness of God already proven at the cross. There he provided the escape through the finished and victorious work of Jesus Christ, alone, and it is ours by faith alone.

And yet, it was at the cross where he was most severely tempted.

In the same way the chief priests, the teachers of the law and the elders mocked him. “He saved others,” they said, “but he can’t save himself! He’s the king of Israel! Let him come down now from the cross, and we will believe in him. He trusts in God. Let God rescue him now if he wants him, for he said, ‘I am the Son of God.’” In the same way the rebels who were crucified with him also heaped insults on him (Matt 27:41-44).

Perhaps, in the midst of temptation, the following thoughts ran through Christ’s head on the cross:

Could I be so wrong in this? The chief priests, those who should recognize me as the Lamb of God, absolutely reject me! Could I have been so wrong all along? The teachers of the law, those who are the interpreters of the meaning of the law, see me as lawfully condemned! Could I be wrong? Is there something I am missing here? Perhaps pride has inadvertently seeped in and blinded me to what they’ve been saying? Maybe my mission is to show a little humility here and that’s how I should save humanity, by giving a perfect example. Perhaps I should publicly retract here from the cross and make everybody feel good about themselves?

But get thee behind me, Satan. For it is written, ‘without the shedding of blood there is no remission of sin;’ “the lamb must be taken to the slaughter;” and it is indeed ‘better for one man to die than for the whole nation to perish.’”

Thus, the hands and feet remained nailed to the wooden beams. And in his plea, “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit,” he was delivered both from temptation and evil, for our sake and for the Father’s glory. It is only in him and through his prayer, that we can confidently plead, “Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.”

From: https://www.1517.org/articles/the-sixth-petition-lead-us-not-into-temptation

Daily Devotional 3-17-21

Daily Devotional 3-17-21

God So Loved the World…

In today’s world, God is not so much dead. He is cancelled. He is not to be spoken about. If he is, there’s nothing good to say about him: ‘he is uncaring and grim’.

How different this is from what the Bible actually says about God. Consider the most well- known words in the Bible: For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life (John 3:16).

For God so loved the world… God… Yes, he does exist.

At the recent Anglican Connection Online Conference, Dr. Henry F. (Fritz) Schaefer, one of the world’s leading quantum chemists, commented:

“The laws of nature look just as if they have been selected as the most simple and elegant principles of understandable change by a wise creator. Belief in the decipherability of nature strongly suggests the existence of a cosmic mind, who can construct nature in accordance with rational laws.”

Dr. Schaefer also drew attention to the words of Francis Collins, Scientific director of the (US) government’s Human Genome Project, on the discovery of the human genome: “It is humbling for me and awe-inspiring to realize that we have caught the first glimpse of our own instruction book, previously known only to God.”

The Bible tells us that God’s essential nature is love. In Psalm 145:8-9 we read: The Lord is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love. The Lord is good to all, and his compassion is over all that he has made.

The theme of the love of God permeates both the Old and New Testaments. What is more, we find that his love is not sparked by something attractive about us. God loves because love is at the very heart of his being.

Now it’s important to note that our English word ‘love’ translates four Greek words (the language in which the New Testament was written). One word is eros, from which we get our word erotic. It’s a word associated with intense emotional feeling. It’s a word that pagan religions have long used in part as a reference to the mystical experience of the supernatural. One form of yoga in Hinduism exploits sexual intercourse as a technique for achieving spiritual enlightenment.

But nowhere does the New Testament use the word eros. It uses a rare word in the original Greek: agape. There are no rapturous, mystical experiences associated with agape. Rather, agape is committed to serve the best interests of the ones who are loved – self-centered us.

Furthermore, John tells us, God so loved the world that he reaches out to all men and women. This is breath-taking. God could have shut humanity down at the moment of their rebellion. We deserved nothing less. But God in his love, had a bigger and very costly plan in mind that would benefit a world that rejected him.

God gave the world a gift. He gave us his Son…

John is not saying that God loved world enough to give his Son. Rather, it was out of God’s love for the world that he gave his Son.

In the first instance this means the Son personally reveals what God is like to us. As Jesus says later, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness but will have the light of life” (John 8:12). More than ever we need to hear and respond to him.

But God did not only give his Son to shine his light of revelation into a dark world. The gift was to reach its climax and fulfillment with the Son’s crucifixion. God’s love is seen not so much in the coming of his Son, but in the death of the Son, the Word of God incarnate, Jesus Christ.

This was the action of a holy and just God whose love found a way to forgive, rescue and restore men and women who had shown no love for him. Extraordinarily, God in and through his Son, was willing to make great sacrifices for undeserving people. We needed a Saviour because we are sinners. And God himself was willing to take the initiative to do it at great cost to himself. It is here we see the immeasurable depth of God’s love.

And John tells us of the offer that God holds out – So that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.

Eternal life is contrasted with perishing. John doesn’t tell us what perishing is, but it does tell us that it will be a most unwelcome experience. Elsewhere we learn, mainly through Jesus’ own teaching, that it is a very serious thing to refuse God’s gift. The perishing won’t be perpetually partying on with friends. They will lose everything that is good, beautiful and true. T.S. Elliot put it this way, Hell is oneself. Hell is alone…

Life eternal, on the other hand, is the experience and joy of a life that is appropriate in the coming age. It will be a life of perfection and beauty, where there will be no more pain or suffering, self-interest or injustice; rather it will be the fullness of joy in the glory of the Lord.

And John tells us who will benefit: Whoever believes in the Son… We can’t achieve eternal life by our own efforts or merits. We are totally dependent on God’s generous gift. To turn to Jesus, the Son of God and to trust him, is the key to our benefiting from God’s precious gift.

Have you turned to Christ? Are you aware that at least one-in-five people around us are open to an invitation to explore Christianity? Pray. The fields are white unto harvest. God can’t be cancelled.

From: https://anglicanconnection.com/god-so-loved-the-world/

Woman Claims to be a Demonic Christian

Watch this three minute video of a woman who claims to be a demonic Christian. This video was taken at the Kettering, Ohio kill mill.

We did share the gospel with her. And offer her adoption alternatives. But she went into the kill mill and kept her appointment.

According to the word of God, there is no such thing as a demonic Christian. Please join us in praying that she would repent and trust in Christ alone. 

Interview with a Woman Identifying as a Demonic Christian

Evangelize Cincinnati

Join us as we Evangelize Cincinnati: Evangelism Outreach Schedule . We do one-to-one evangelism and gospel proclamation at local sports events, university campuses, concert venues and the abortion mill.

For more abortion ministry videos from Evangelize Cincinnati, check out:

For more gospel driven abortion ministry videos, please visit:

Philippians 3:7-8



The post Woman Claims to be a Demonic Christian appeared first on Evangelize Cincinnati.

Daily Devotional 3-16-21

Daily Devotional 3-16-21

Interpreting the Logos

In Greek philosophy, the logos remains an impersonal force, a lifeless and abstract philosophical concept that is a necessary postulate for the cause of order and purpose in the universe. In Hebrew thought, the Logos is personal. He indeed has the power of unity, coherence, and purpose, but the distinctive point is that the biblical Logos is a He, not an it.

All attempts to translate the word Logos have suffered from some degree of inadequacy. No English word is able to capture the fullness of John’s Logos when he declared that the Word became flesh and dwelt among us. Attempts have been made by philosophers to translate Logos as logic, act, or deed—all of which are inadequate definitions.

God’s Logos does include action. The Logos is the eternal Word in action. But it is no irrational action or sheer expression of feeling. It is the divine Actor, acting in creation and redemption in a coherent way, who is announced in John’s Gospel.

That the Word became flesh and dwelt among us is the startling conclusion of John’s prologue. The cosmic Christ enters our humanity. It is the supreme moment of visitation of the eternal with the temporal, the infinite with the finite, the unconditioned with the conditioned.

Coram Deo

Reflect on this truth: God became flesh to accomplish your redemption. Have you accepted His gift of salvation?

Passages for Further Study

John 1:1–2

John 1:15

From: https://www.ligonier.org/learn/devotionals/interpreting-logos/

Get in the Game: NHL Outreach March 14th

NHL Outreach Weekly Report – March 14th

Praise report! 97 people responded to tracts, sign, and our preaching at the Bluejackets outreach in Columbus, OH. Joshua read from the 1662 Book of Common Prayer, Roger held his sign and sang, and Christ was preached. Great to have Barnabas and his friend John with us as well.

See videos here:

Mark Seward – open Air Wrap Report: https://www.facebook.com/mark.seward.169/videos/1362117467520991

Joshua leading the Evening Office from the book of Common Prayer in Columbus, OH

Roger McKinley singing at the Bluejackets outreach in Columbus, OH

Barnabas preaching at the Bluejackets outreach plus an invitation for you to join us!  https://www.facebook.com/therichardsfamily/videos/275154574177574

Daily Devotional 3-15-21

Daily Devotional 3-15-21

The God of Second Chances

So you have problems. Your nerves are frayed. Mole hills seem like mountains to climb. You look for a means of escape, but there doesn’t seem to be one. And so you turn to alcohol. At least you can drown your problems for a few hours. Or you turn to drugs, perhaps with a doctor’s prescription, just a little something to calm your nerves. But your problems don’t go away. The morning after reveals the same hurdles to cross.

Let me suggest a different approach. This approach involves turning to God. It involves coming to Christ. It involves saying with David of old, “But as for me, I trust in Thee, O Lord, I say, ‘Thou art my god’” (Psalm 31:14).

Believe me, David had problems. When he was a youth, King Saul attempted to kill David, more than once. Then when David became King, he committed adultery and had the woman’s husband murdered. David had to live under a burden of guilt until God forgave him and restored him. Then David’s first son, the child of the adultery, died in infancy. Later, another son gathered an army in an effort to overthrow his father.

But David always turned to God and confessed, “I trust in Thee, O Lord.” David knew that God always leads His children through their problems. David trusted God and learned this lesson first hand. Is this a lesson you also need to learn? Then you need to turn to the living God. You need to commit your life to Christ.

And to help you, click here and you can listen to a sermon that answers the question, “Does God Change Lives?

From: http://dennyprutow.com/daily-devotions/

Daily Devotional 3-12-21

Daily Devotional 3-12-21

Love Your Neighbor

“Love your neighbor.” Perhaps he rolls in riches, and you are poor and living in your humble dwelling next-door to his mansion. Every day you see his estates, his fine clothes, and his extravagant parties. God has given him these gifts; covet not his wealth, and think no hard thoughts concerning him. Be content with what you have, if you cannot better it, but do not look upon your neighbor and wish that he was like you. Love him, and then you will not envy him.

Perhaps, on the other hand, you are rich, and the poor live nearby. Do not scorn to call them neighbors. Admit that you are bound to love them. The world calls them your inferiors. In what way are they inferior? They are far more your equals than your inferiors, for “He made from one man every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth.”1 Your clothes are better than theirs, but you are in no way better than them. They are men, and what are you more than that? Pay attention that you love your neighbor even though he be in rags or sunken in the depths of poverty.

But perhaps you say, “I cannot love my neighbors because no matter what I do for them they respond with ingratitude and contempt.” All the more reason for the heroism of love. Would you be a featherbed warrior instead of bearing the rough fight of love? He who dares the most shall win the most; and if the path of love is rough, tread it boldly, still loving your neighbors through thick and thin. Heap coals of fire on their heads, and if they are hard to please, do not seek to please them, but to please your Master; and remember if they spurn your love, your Master has not spurned it, and your deed is as acceptable to Him as if it had been acceptable to them.

Love your neighbor, for in so doing you are following the footsteps of Christ.

1) Acts 17:26

From: https://www.truthforlife.org/resources/daily-devotionals/latest/?gclid=CjwKCAjwnK36BRBVEiwAsMT8WCR8UteIwaWlAyP4o9ZIuAWio8l7qmAM1nDcB3pFiYr-jOUNkgMsShoC68IQAvD_BwE

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started