Tagged: verse for the day

A HARD STRENGTH

“With the strength which comes from God bear your share of the hardship which the gospel entails.” —2 Timothy 1:8 We Christians do not run from hardship; we bear it and embrace it. We walk toward the Cross, not away from it. We do not shrink from trials in fear. Thus, the Lord commands in today’s Gospel reading: “Get up! Do not be afraid” (Mt 17:7). We bear hardship for the sake of the gospel (2 Tm 1:8) in order to spread the Good News. Our Lenten hardships, indeed all our hardships, are for the upbuilding of the Kingdom of...

ABBA

“This will prove that you are sons of your heavenly Father.” —Matthew 5:45 In this time of Lent, the Church emphasizes more than ever the command: “In a word, you must be made perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Mt 5:48). Like our Father, we must show love practically even to our persecutors and enemies (Mt 5:44-45). Lent is traditionally a time of God the Father confirming His love for us as His sons and daughters. Before Jesus was led into the desert by the Holy Spirit (Mt 4:1), He heard His Father say: “This is My beloved Son....

TODAYLIGHT SAVINGS TIME

“Lose no time.” —Matthew 5:25 “All’s well that ends well.” “If the wicked man turns away from all the sins he committed, if he keeps all My statutes and does what is right and just, he shall surely live, he shall not die” (Ez 18:21). The “good thief” lived a miserable life, but ended well and is in paradise with Jesus (Lk 23:43). Because our ending is all-important, some people wait until the end to convert to Jesus. This is a serious mistake. “Delay not your conversion to the Lord, put it not off from day to day; for suddenly...

FORMING AN ASK-FORCE

“Ask, and you will receive. Seek, and you will find. Knock, and it will be opened to you. For the one who asks, receives.” —Matthew 7:7-8 Some ingenuous Bible preachers and teachers have tried to expound on the differences between asking, seeking, and knocking. However, all three commands probably mean the same thing. Jesus is simply and repeatedly commanding us to ask, ask, and ask. Are we getting the message? If so, then why does Jesus keep repeating Himself? Most of us ask God for a thing or two. Yet it may be that He wants us to ask Him...

CONNECT THE DOTS

“Every man shall turn from his evil way.” —Jonah 3:8 The people of Nineveh, wicked as they were, made the connection between their sins and the destruction to come (Jon 3:8-9). These people frequently brutalized and killed large numbers of people. They were pagans, spiritually dead, the least likely to repent. Yet the prophetic word pierced their hearts, and they repented (Jon 3:5). Jesus commended them for this (Lk 11:32). We fancy ourselves more sophisticated than the ancient Ninevites. We specialize in knowing connections, such as the connection between cholesterol and heart disease, drinking alcohol and liver disease, sanitation and...