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Matthew 9:27-31

27 After Jesus left the girl’s home, two blind men followed along behind him, shouting, “Son of David, have mercy on us!”

28 They went right into the house where he was staying, and Jesus asked them, “Do you believe I can make you see?”

“Yes, Lord,” they told him, “we do.”

29 Then he touched their eyes and said, “Because of your faith, it will happen.” 30 Then their eyes were opened, and they could see! Jesus sternly warned them, “Don’t tell anyone about this.” 31 But instead, they went out and spread his fame all over the region.

Matthew 9:27-31

Dear God, I normally read the story of Jairus’s daughter out of Mark 5 and not Matthew 9. Mark kind of skips over this story of the two blind men after Jesus raises Jairus’s daughter from the dead, but Matthew gives it to us. So this is part of a string of pretty incredible healings. In Matthew 9, he healed a paralyzed man, the woman who was “bleeding,” Jairus’s daughter, these two blind men, and then after this he casts out a demon. Yes, the fame of Jesus was growing a lot.

Here’s the part that always hard for me: “Do you believe?” Do I believe? I have so much love for you and yet so little faith. If I had more faith, well, I don’t know what my life would be like or how it would change me. Would I be more focused on intercessory prayer if I had more faith? I kind of believe in amazing healings–I’ve seen them–but if I really believed, would I pray that much more? My prayers tend to be more about changing my heart and the hearts of others than they are about praying over physical maladies. I even pray more for provision for needs than I pray for healings.

I have a friend who I talk to every Friday morning, and this morning we were talking about health insurance, healthcare, and faith in healing. He doesn’t have health insurance and is of the mind that if sickness comes then sickness comes. That’s a little too fringe for me. But I get it. I think it’s also easy to say about yourself, but when it comes to your wife or children, is that really the level of faith I’m prepared to live at? Luke was a doctor (although I have no idea what made someone a doctor as opposed to anyone else 2,000 years ago). How did he feel about it? I do know in the story of the woman bleeding, he took a more sympathetic tone towards doctors of the time.

Father, the only thing I really know to pray in this moment is for you to increase my faith, but I am terrified at the thought of what kind of trial would come my way that would grow my faith. But I will pray this. Give me whatever you need me to have so that I will continue to grow into the man you want me to be. Be glorified. Be worshipped. Be loved. Help me to be your ambassador in every situation I find myself in today. Help me to decrease so that you might increase in my life.

I pray this in Jesus and with your Holy Spirit,

Amen

 
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Posted by on December 5, 2025 in Matthew

 

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Matthew 7:21-27

21 “Not everyone who calls out to me, ‘Lord! Lord!’ will enter the Kingdom of Heaven. Only those who actually do the will of my Father in heaven will enter. 22 On judgment day many will say to me, ‘Lord! Lord! We prophesied in your name and cast out demons in your name and performed many miracles in your name.’ 23 But I will reply, ‘I never knew you. Get away from me, you who break God’s laws.’

24 “Anyone who listens to my teaching and follows it is wise, like a person who builds a house on solid rock. 25 Though the rain comes in torrents and the floodwaters rise and the winds beat against that house, it won’t collapse because it is built on bedrock. 26 But anyone who hears my teaching and doesn’t obey it is foolish, like a person who builds a house on sand. 27 When the rains and floods come and the winds beat against that house, it will collapse with a mighty crash.”

Matthew 7:21-27

Dear God, I was just talking to my wife about how overwhelmed I am right now. Part of it is seasonal with work, but there are about three or four layers that are put on top of the seasonal things that are making me feel under pressure. Even saying these words to you feels a little foolish and helps me to start to put things into perspective a little. To start, my problems are first-world problems. No one is persecuting me. I have food and shelter. I have much more than just food and shelter. I have a good woman as my wife. No, in the grand scheme of things, I’m doing just fine. It’s in the minutia that I’m feeling the pressure, I suppose.

My wife talked about me turning each thing over to you, which is how I got here from this passage from the end of the Sermon on the Mount today. It’s interesting that Jesus ended the sermon this way. Basically saying, “I just gave you a lot of stuff. If you do it, you’ll be good to go. But if you try to do all the stuff you grew up hearing you should do to show you’re tight with me (casting out demons, prophesying, etc.) and ignore what I just said about holding yourself to a higher ethical standard and loving God and your neighbors then, well, we won’t know each other.”

Father, I want to know you. I want to know you through holding myself to the spirit of the law that goes beyond the letter of the law (“You have heard it said…, but I say…”). I want to lead with love. I want to lead with compassion for others. That might include hard words for people that they don’t want to hear but are for their own good. And maybe you have hard words for me that I don’t want to hear but are for my own good. Whatever it is today, Father, one step at a time, help me to be exactly who you need me to be for your glory’s sake. Help me to decrease as you increase. I don’t care if anyone sees me. I only want them to see you.

I pray this in Jesus and with your Holy Spirit,

Amen

 
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Posted by on December 4, 2025 in Matthew

 

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Matthew 15:29-37

29 Jesus returned to the Sea of Galilee and climbed a hill and sat down. 30 A vast crowd brought to him people who were lame, blind, crippled, those who couldn’t speak, and many others. They laid them before Jesus, and he healed them all. 31 The crowd was amazed! Those who hadn’t been able to speak were talking, the crippled were made well, the lame were walking, and the blind could see again! And they praised the God of Israel.

32 Then Jesus called his disciples and told them, “I feel sorry for these people. They have been here with me for three days, and they have nothing left to eat. I don’t want to send them away hungry, or they will faint along the way.”

33 The disciples replied, “Where would we get enough food here in the wilderness for such a huge crowd?”

34 Jesus asked, “How much bread do you have?”

They replied, “Seven loaves, and a few small fish.”

35 So Jesus told all the people to sit down on the ground. 36 Then he took the seven loaves and the fish, thanked God for them, and broke them into pieces. He gave them to the disciples, who distributed the food to the crowd.

37 They all ate as much as they wanted. Afterward, the disciples picked up seven large baskets of leftover food. 

Matthew 15:29-37

Dear God, I just want to sit with lack of faith this morning. Sit with the idea that I don’t bring my cares to you enough. Sit with just how far I have to do in my walk with you.

I was listening to N.T. Wright talk about Ephesians yesterday with Russell Moore, and he was talking about “the armor of God” (your armor) and how it occurred to him recently that the armor Paul calls us to put on is armor that you reference to yourself in different parts of the Old Testament. It is truly your armor that we are to wear. Do I really put that on.

I woke up a few times last night and also this morning with a gnawing in my gut. There’s something in my life that is causing me angst. So what am I doing with that angst? Am I running from it and trying to distract myself from it? Am I trying to figure it out on my own and force my will upon it? Or am I bringing it to you and asking you to guide me and the others involved? Am I putting on my armor? Am I bringing you my fish and loaves, admitting it’s not enough, and asking you for a miracle–or at least a blessing?

Father, I do want to bring my little bit to you, sacrifice it before you, and then have you do something amazing with it. Be glorified in all of this. Be powerful. Be amazing. And don’t do it for me. Do it for your kingdom. Do it for everyone involved. Do it for their personal lives. Do it for your life to shine through them. Do it so that we might all be a reflection of you and your power might come into the earth.

I pray this in Jesus and with your Holy Spirit,

Amen

 
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Posted by on December 3, 2025 in Matthew

 

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Hebrews 1:1-4

Long ago God spoke many times and in many ways to our ancestors through the prophets. And now in these final days, he has spoken to us through his Son. God promised everything to the Son as an inheritance, and through the Son he created the universe. The Son radiates God’s own glory and expresses the very character of God, and he sustains everything by the mighty power of his command. When he had cleansed us from our sins, he sat down in the place of honor at the right hand of the majestic God in heaven. This shows that the Son is far greater than the angels, just as the name God gave him is greater than their names.

Hebrews 1:1-4

Dear God, I was listening to some Christian Christmas music this morning while I was getting ready for the day and the thought occurred to me that I might be taking you for granted. I’m just listening to songs like “What Child is This?” but am I really worshiping you through them? I’m thinking about you, but am I revering you? Have I become too comfortable and familiar with you?

So I just want to take a moment to appreciate and marinade in what the author of Hebrews is saying here to open his book: Jesus is the son of the Father, and the Son and the Father are both to be greatly revered. You “[sustain] everything by the might power of [your] command.” Jesus “cleansed us from our sins [and then] sat down in the place of honor at the right hand of the majestic God in heaven.” You are awesome. You are more than I can imagine. I am humbled to be here this morning, even daring to approach your throne in prayer.

Father, help me to completely submit everything to you today. All of the decisions. All of the challenges. All of the victories. Everything. I give everything to you, Father. Show me how to love you and be glorified through the life I live today. Help me to not worry, but to turn any worrying into worship and seeking you and your direction.

I pray this in Jesus and with your Holy Spirit,

Amen

 
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Posted by on December 2, 2025 in Hebrews

 

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Matthew 8:5-13

When Jesus returned to Capernaum, a Roman officer came and pleaded with him, “Lord, my young servant lies in bed, paralyzed and in terrible pain.”

Jesus said, “I will come and heal him.”

But the officer said, “Lord, I am not worthy to have you come into my home. Just say the word from where you are, and my servant will be healed. I know this because I am under the authority of my superior officers, and I have authority over my soldiers. I only need to say, ‘Go,’ and they go, or ‘Come,’ and they come. And if I say to my slaves, ‘Do this,’ they do it.”

10 When Jesus heard this, he was amazed. Turning to those who were following him, he said, “I tell you the truth, I haven’t seen faith like this in all Israel! 11 And I tell you this, that many Gentiles will come from all over the world—from east and west—and sit down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob at the feast in the Kingdom of Heaven. 12 But many Israelites—those for whom the Kingdom was prepared—will be thrown into outer darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.”

13 Then Jesus said to the Roman officer, “Go back home. Because you believed, it has happened.” And the young servant was healed that same hour.

Matthew 8:5-13

Dear God, there are obviously all kinds of things to like about this story. First, a centurion who recognizes Jesus as a man of authority and power. Not presumptuous, but honoring of Jesus. It’s lovely to see.

Next, Jesus being impressed with his faith. Oh, that you will be that impressed with my faith! Better said, oh, that I might have a faith you would be impressed with!

Finally, the thing that really caught my eye this morning was the idea of this centurion being a model for Gentiles coming into the Kingdom. People like me. People with no birthright. No preferential treatment beyond just receiving your love.

Father, help me to be a man of faith. Help me to be a Gentile who leads other Gentiles to you. Help me to be exactly who you need me to be today. I have friends who are sick. I have things that need to be accomplished. I have people around me who need love. Help me to be exactly who you need me to be in all of this.

I pray this in Jesus and with your Holy Spirit,

Amen

 
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Posted by on December 1, 2025 in Matthew

 

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1 John 4:9-10

God showed how much he loved us by sending his one and only Son into the world so that we might have eternal life through him. 10 This is real love—not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as a sacrifice to take away our sins.

1 John 4:9-10

Dear God, I was reading something by Charles Stanley this morning on how this decision on your part to have Jesus come and do what he did was a turning point in our timed history. I think he’s right. I mean, it literally reset how the world counted years, after all. What you did in the incarnation is amazing. What you did through the incarnation is amazing. What you continue to do through the incarnation is amazing.

I’ve had a surprisingly hectic couple of days since I got back from vacation. One thing I’ve done is committed myself to doing the Advent thing with Parents of the Bible that I hadn’t really planned to do, but it made sense to do it. The number of journals and the days until Christmas just added up too well. But it is going to take a lot of focused time on my part. Help me to work that in with everything else I have going on this time of year (especially at work).

I also want to take a moment to pray for those I love during this Advent. My children. My nieces, nephews, and siblings. My parents. The boy I’m mentoring. My friends and coworkers. Those I don’t even know. I pray for all of them that you would be with us as we walk through this time of year. Let it be a time when we can all lay down our pride and fear and accept and give love from and to you, and then from and to each other. I pray for mercy. I pray for healing of souls as well as bodies. I pray that the world will go according to your plan.

Father, I am here because Jesus came 2,000 years ago. You entered the world and showed us your true nature. The Old Testament was a bit convoluted with a lot of weird commands and decisions you were having to make to try to protect your promise to us. But Jesus removed the veil and showed us how you think. How you love. How you correct. How you teach. How you see the laws you gave us. Help me to embrace all of this and live it out so that others might find healing in you as well.

I pray this in Jesus and with your Holy Spirit,

Amen

 
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Posted by on November 30, 2025 in 1 John

 

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Luke 21:34-36

34 “Watch out! Don’t let your hearts be dulled by carousing and drunkenness, and by the worries of this life. Don’t let that day catch you unaware, 35 like a trap. For that day will come upon everyone living on the earth. 36 Keep alert at all times. And pray that you might be strong enough to escape these coming horrors and stand before the Son of Man.”

Luke 21:34-36

Dear God, if my wife weren’t Catholic I would have no idea that this is the last day of the liturgical year, but now I know that we are about to start over with the beginning of Advent tomorrow. So before I get into worshipping you for your incarnation, life, death, and resurrection for the next month, I want to spend one last day in this liturgical year. I want to think about how my 2025 lines up with being aware and not allowing my heart to be dulled.

The interesting thing about this year is that it saw some of my best successes and, simultaneously, what I perceive to be my biggest failures at work. We (you) really helped us advance the work we provide now through the addition of a critical service and you helped us lay the groundwork for more expansion and impacting people’s lives in the future. And it all kind of fell into my lap. There was no great and amazing work on my part. I prayed. I followed some prompts. I asked you and others for help. And it all came together. I’m still amazed by it.

I also saw strife at a level I’ve never seen it before. I’ve seen coworkers go through very difficult things in their personal lives and then allow that to seep into the workplace. I’ve seen intolerance. I’ve seen resentment. Even as I type these words (and I’ve had this thought before, but I don’t think I’ve really prayed enough about it), it feels like spiritual attack. Attack on my friends and their personal lives. Attack on our unity as a team. Attack. Oh, Jesus, protect us from these attacks. Use our unity to bind us to you and to each other as we experience life. Be glorified in our work and enter the world through us.

Then I have a boy I’ve been mentoring who has had a really difficult year. I can’t enumerate his struggles in such a public forum, but you know what they are. You know his pain, and the pain his family is experiencing. As a mentor, I feel completely inadequate to love him through this. I don’t know what to do or what he needs from me. But I know he could really use a fresh start. Maybe the Christmas season and Advent can be a fresh start for him. Oh, my Jesus, please make it so for him and his entire family. Don’t let this pain be wasted, but draw them all to you.

I have family struggles. Again, I can’t be too public about it here, but you know what they are. You know it better than I do. You know the pain. You know the pain that has been inflicted upon all of us, uninvited, and you know the pain we’ve caused through our actions (and inactions). Oh, Father, let this be a season of healing. Let this be the end to this season of family pain. Show me my role in helping it to end. Holy Spirit, speak to our hearts.

There is pain in our community. Immigrants are hiding and living with anxiety. American Christians are afraid people are coming for their faith and a woke, liberal wave is coming for their children, and non-Christians are afraid that a red, MAGA wave is coming for their freedom. We all distrust each other. And of course we do. We are all grabbing at power at someone else’s expense. That’s not what Jesus did at all, but it’s our temptation to do that now. Fear drives us either to you in humble prayer, accepting whatever fate you might lead us to for the sake of your world, or it drives us into taking matters into our own hands and using whatever earthly power I can muster to provide for myself. For this Advent, help us to remember what Jesus taught us.

Father, I’m going back to the passage that started this all for me this morning: 34 “Watch out! Don’t let your hearts be dulled by carousing and drunkenness, and by the worries of this life. Don’t let that day catch you unaware, 35 like a trap. For that day will come upon everyone living on the earth. 36 Keep alert at all times. And pray that you might be strong enough to escape these coming horrors and stand before the Son of Man.” Help me to be alert at all times. Help me to be strong enough to deal with the coming horrors the way Jesus did. Give me the strength to correctly stand before you, humble and offering all my love to you and to my neighbors.

I pray this in Jesus and with your Holy Spirit,

Amen

 
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Posted by on November 29, 2025 in Luke

 

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Luke 21:29-33

29 Then he gave them this illustration: “Notice the fig tree, or any other tree. 30 When the leaves come out, you know without being told that summer is near. 31 In the same way, when you see all these things taking place, you can know that the Kingdom of God is near. 32 I tell you the truth, this generation will not pass from the scene until all these things have taken place. 33 Heaven and earth will disappear, but my words will never disappear.

Luke 21:29-33

Dear God, yeah, I don’t know what to do with passages like this. As Luke wrote this towards the end of that “generation,” I wonder if he wasn’t warning people that the Kingdom of God is near. Going back to verse 27 where Jesus talks about himself coming on a cloud–returning–feels to me like one of those parts of the Bible that I just kind of look the other way at the prophecy and passively say that they misunderstood what Jesus was saying. There are a lot of the other parts of the prophecy that come true. It’s the second coming that still hasn’t happened 2,000 years later. Or has it, but we just didn’t understand?

Who knows? You do. But that’s it. Just you. And I’m okay to leave that knowledge with you and not try to figure it out for myself. How could I possibly know your mind? And why do I need to know? That knowledge wouldn’t help me to love you more or love my neighbor better. I like knowing that there’s this whole afterlife thing that will bring me into a purer form of relating to you and worshipping you. I like the idea of being unencumbered by my limited mind and body. But I don’t need to know when or how.

Father, my wife and I had a long talk this morning already about some things that frustrate us. Not with each other, but with other aspects of our lives. But we worship you. We love you. We ask that you teach us to pray to you and for others. She’s so much better at praying for others than I am. I need to be better about that. Help me to be better. Help me to pray for others better. As I sit here and type this, I find that I don’t want to pray those words because I am afraid of the commitment it will take for me to really pray for others in a better way. But that seems to be where the Holy Spirit is leading me this morning, so help me, Father, Jesus, and Holy Spirit.

I pray this in the power of Jesus and with the Holy Spirit,

Amen

 
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Posted by on November 28, 2025 in Luke

 

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Daniel 6

Darius the Mede decided to divide the kingdom into 120 provinces, and he appointed a high officer to rule over each province. The king also chose Daniel and two others as administrators to supervise the high officers and protect the king’s interests. Daniel soon proved himself more capable than all the other administrators and high officers. Because of Daniel’s great ability, the king made plans to place him over the entire empire.

Then the other administrators and high officers began searching for some fault in the way Daniel was handling government affairs, but they couldn’t find anything to criticize or condemn. He was faithful, always responsible, and completely trustworthy. So they concluded, “Our only chance of finding grounds for accusing Daniel will be in connection with the rules of his religion.”

So the administrators and high officers went to the king and said, “Long live King Darius! We are all in agreement—we administrators, officials, high officers, advisers, and governors—that the king should make a law that will be strictly enforced. Give orders that for the next thirty days any person who prays to anyone, divine or human—except to you, Your Majesty—will be thrown into the den of lions. And now, Your Majesty, issue and sign this law so it cannot be changed, an official law of the Medes and Persians that cannot be revoked.” So King Darius signed the law.

10 But when Daniel learned that the law had been signed, he went home and knelt down as usual in his upstairs room, with its windows open toward Jerusalem. He prayed three times a day, just as he had always done, giving thanks to his God. 11 Then the officials went together to Daniel’s house and found him praying and asking for God’s help. 12 So they went straight to the king and reminded him about his law. “Did you not sign a law that for the next thirty days any person who prays to anyone, divine or human—except to you, Your Majesty—will be thrown into the den of lions?”

“Yes,” the king replied, “that decision stands; it is an official law of the Medes and Persians that cannot be revoked.”

13 Then they told the king, “That man Daniel, one of the captives from Judah, is ignoring you and your law. He still prays to his God three times a day.”

14 Hearing this, the king was deeply troubled, and he tried to think of a way to save Daniel. He spent the rest of the day looking for a way to get Daniel out of this predicament.

15 In the evening the men went together to the king and said, “Your Majesty, you know that according to the law of the Medes and the Persians, no law that the king signs can be changed.”

16 So at last the king gave orders for Daniel to be arrested and thrown into the den of lions. The king said to him, “May your God, whom you serve so faithfully, rescue you.”

17 A stone was brought and placed over the mouth of the den. The king sealed the stone with his own royal seal and the seals of his nobles, so that no one could rescue Daniel. 18 Then the king returned to his palace and spent the night fasting. He refused his usual entertainment and couldn’t sleep at all that night.

19 Very early the next morning, the king got up and hurried out to the lions’ den. 20 When he got there, he called out in anguish, “Daniel, servant of the living God! Was your God, whom you serve so faithfully, able to rescue you from the lions?”

21 Daniel answered, “Long live the king! 22 My God sent his angel to shut the lions’ mouths so that they would not hurt me, for I have been found innocent in his sight. And I have not wronged you, Your Majesty.”

23 The king was overjoyed and ordered that Daniel be lifted from the den. Not a scratch was found on him, for he had trusted in his God.

24 Then the king gave orders to arrest the men who had maliciously accused Daniel. He had them thrown into the lions’ den, along with their wives and children. The lions leaped on them and tore them apart before they even hit the floor of the den.

25 Then King Darius sent this message to the people of every race and nation and language throughout the world:

“Peace and prosperity to you!

26 “I decree that everyone throughout my kingdom should tremble with fear before the God of Daniel.

For he is the living God,
    and he will endure forever.
His kingdom will never be destroyed,
    and his rule will never end.
27 He rescues and saves his people;
    he performs miraculous signs and wonders
    in the heavens and on earth.
He has rescued Daniel
    from the power of the lions.”

28 So Daniel prospered during the reign of Darius and the reign of Cyrus the Persian.

Daniel 6

Dear God, I had an interesting thought as I read this story this morning: Should Daniel have tried to stop King Darius from killing the plotters and their families? Should he have said, “No, King. Have mercy”? And if the men needed to die, did their wives and children need to die too? I can see why Darius made this decision. He was a worldly king who made worldly decisions. But should Daniel have used it as a teachable moment for all of them? I honestly don’t know the answer to any of these questions, but they are the questions that came to mind when I read this story.

As I type this prayer to you, it is Thanksgiving morning. It’s a quiet morning for my wife and me. She is out walking the dog. I am taking advantage of this moment of solitude to pray to you. Holy Spirit, sit with me and talk with me as I make this moment intentional.

When I first started this morning and before I found the Daniel passage as the Old Testament reading for the day, I was thinking about Abraham Lincoln’s first Thanksgiving proclamation. It was published in October 1863 and decreed that the last Thursday of November should be a national day of Thanksgiving. I think we’ve tweaked it since then to make it the Thursday before the last weekend of November, but the tradition still stands. What’s remarkable to me about the proclamation is that it was set right in the middle of the Civil War. He found things to be grateful for in the midst of unimaginable suffering and anxiety, and he thought it was the best thing for the nation to be able to recognize the good in their lives. It is still that way. In the midst of a stressful year–and it has been a stressful year–the healthiest thing we can do is worship you and give thanks.

Father, as I sit here this morning, my life is not exactly the way I want it to be. I have sorrows and sadness. But there is so much that I’m taking for granted and ungrateful for in the midst of that sorrow, and my lack of gratitude is killing the fruit you are trying to grow in me. If I am ungrateful for the good and only focus on what I perceive to be bad (even though you might be using it and working the “bad” to be good, and I just cannot see it) then I will miss the opportunity to worship you, be grateful for what I have–starting with you–and then let your Spirit flow through me. I’m going to church here in a few minutes. I pledge to make it a time of great thanksgiving from my heart and worship of you.

I pray this in Jesus and with your Holy Spirit,

Amen

 
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Posted by on November 27, 2025 in Daniel

 

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Daniel 5 (with some Daniel 3)

Many years later King Belshazzar gave a great feast for 1,000 of his nobles, and he drank wine with them. While Belshazzar was drinking the wine, he gave orders to bring in the gold and silver cups that his predecessor, Nebuchadnezzar, had taken from the Temple in Jerusalem. He wanted to drink from them with his nobles, his wives, and his concubines. So they brought these gold cups taken from the Temple, the house of God in Jerusalem, and the king and his nobles, his wives, and his concubines drank from them. While they drank from them they praised their idols made of gold, silver, bronze, iron, wood, and stone.

Suddenly, they saw the fingers of a human hand writing on the plaster wall of the king’s palace, near the lampstand. The king himself saw the hand as it wrote, and his face turned pale with fright. His knees knocked together in fear and his legs gave way beneath him.

The king shouted for the enchanters, astrologers, and fortune-tellers to be brought before him. He said to these wise men of Babylon, “Whoever can read this writing and tell me what it means will be dressed in purple robes of royal honor and will have a gold chain placed around his neck. He will become the third highest ruler in the kingdom!”

But when all the king’s wise men had come in, none of them could read the writing or tell him what it meant. So the king grew even more alarmed, and his face turned pale. His nobles, too, were shaken.

10 But when the queen mother heard what was happening, she hurried to the banquet hall. She said to Belshazzar, “Long live the king! Don’t be so pale and frightened. 11 There is a man in your kingdom who has within him the spirit of the holy gods. During Nebuchadnezzar’s reign, this man was found to have insight, understanding, and wisdom like that of the gods. Your predecessor, the king—your predecessor King Nebuchadnezzar—made him chief over all the magicians, enchanters, astrologers, and fortune-tellers of Babylon. 12 This man Daniel, whom the king named Belteshazzar, has exceptional ability and is filled with divine knowledge and understanding. He can interpret dreams, explain riddles, and solve difficult problems. Call for Daniel, and he will tell you what the writing means.”

Daniel Explains the Writing

13 So Daniel was brought in before the king. The king asked him, “Are you Daniel, one of the exiles brought from Judah by my predecessor, King Nebuchadnezzar? 14 I have heard that you have the spirit of the gods within you and that you are filled with insight, understanding, and wisdom. 15 My wise men and enchanters have tried to read the words on the wall and tell me their meaning, but they cannot do it. 16 I am told that you can give interpretations and solve difficult problems. If you can read these words and tell me their meaning, you will be clothed in purple robes of royal honor, and you will have a gold chain placed around your neck. You will become the third highest ruler in the kingdom.”

17 Daniel answered the king, “Keep your gifts or give them to someone else, but I will tell you what the writing means. 18 Your Majesty, the Most High God gave sovereignty, majesty, glory, and honor to your predecessor, Nebuchadnezzar. 19 He made him so great that people of all races and nations and languages trembled before him in fear. He killed those he wanted to kill and spared those he wanted to spare. He honored those he wanted to honor and disgraced those he wanted to disgrace. 20 But when his heart and mind were puffed up with arrogance, he was brought down from his royal throne and stripped of his glory. 21 He was driven from human society. He was given the mind of a wild animal, and he lived among the wild donkeys. He ate grass like a cow, and he was drenched with the dew of heaven, until he learned that the Most High God rules over the kingdoms of the world and appoints anyone he desires to rule over them.

22 “You are his successor, O Belshazzar, and you knew all this, yet you have not humbled yourself. 23 For you have proudly defied the Lord of heaven and have had these cups from his Temple brought before you. You and your nobles and your wives and concubines have been drinking wine from them while praising gods of silver, gold, bronze, iron, wood, and stone—gods that neither see nor hear nor know anything at all. But you have not honored the God who gives you the breath of life and controls your destiny! 24 So God has sent this hand to write this message.

25 “This is the message that was written: Mene, mene, tekel, and Parsin. 26 This is what these words mean:

Mene means ‘numbered’—God has numbered the days of your reign and has brought it to an end.
27 Tekel means ‘weighed’—you have been weighed on the balances and have not measured up.
28 Parsin means ‘divided’—your kingdom has been divided and given to the Medes and Persians.”

29 Then at Belshazzar’s command, Daniel was dressed in purple robes, a gold chain was hung around his neck, and he was proclaimed the third highest ruler in the kingdom.

30 That very night Belshazzar, the Babylonian king, was killed.

31 And Darius the Mede took over the kingdom at the age of sixty-two.

Danie 5

Dear God, the Old Testament reading for the Catholic Church today was portions of Daniel 5, but I figured I’d just do the whole chapter since it forms the story. I think they were just trying to keep the public reading time down a little by focusing on the essence of the story.

Of course, when I was reading this story I first wanted to compare myself with Daniel. How might I be faithful and wise like Daniel was? How might I be humble and eschew all glory offered to me and just humbly perform my assignment which includes glorifying you? What words of wisdom and warning are you giving to me that I need to share with others? Those are the questions I started to ask myself.

Then I saw this king sitting over there in the story. He’s actually the protagonist of this chapter in Daniel’s book. Belshazzar. Accomplished, but also handed a kingdom by his father Nebuchadnezzar. So more Solomon than David. Arrogant. Presumptuous. Self-congratulatory and disrespectful. In the end, powerless. How much of me is like him, and if I’m not like him now, how much potential do I have to become like him? What do I need to do to guard myself from slipping into the trap that grabbed him?

I think one of the first things I need to do is offer you all of my worship. The Catholic Psalm of the Day is Daniel 3:62-67 (I’ll confess, before today I never noticed the Catholic Church used psalms for the Psalm of the Day that weren’t from the Book of Psalms.

R. (59b) Give glory and eternal praise to him.
“Sun and moon, bless the Lord;
praise and exalt him above all forever.”
R. Give glory and eternal praise to him.
“Stars of heaven, bless the Lord;
praise and exalt him above all forever.”
R. Give glory and eternal praise to him.
“Every shower and dew, bless the Lord;
praise and exalt him above all forever.”
R. Give glory and eternal praise to him.
“All you winds, bless the Lord;
praise and exalt him above all forever.”
R. Give glory and eternal praise to him.
“Fire and heat, bless the Lord;
praise and exalt him above all forever.”
R. Give glory and eternal praise to him.
“Cold and chill, bless the Lord;
praise and exalt him above all forever.”
R. Give glory and eternal praise to him.

Interestingly, these verses are not in the Protestant Bible. They are in the Catholic Bible and, I presume, the Jewish version of Daniel. These words were sung by Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego in the fiery furnace (hence the references to heat and chill. These were the words sung by those who were facing persecution for their love for you. We really do miss something in our Protestant Bibles (and I say “our” because I am not Catholic, but continue to worship with Catholics because my wife is Catholic and I both think it’s important to worship with her and have come to appreciate parts of Catholic theology and tradition). I love having this piece of the story. Daniel 3 in the Protestant Bible has 30 verses. In the Catholic Bible, Daniel 3 has 100 verses. 70 verses of great stuff. Too bad I’ve never really noticed or read it before.

But I digress. How do I keep from becoming like Belshazzar? First, submit to you and worship you. Check. Next, examine my heart before you and repent. Where do I take credit for the things that I have when it could all be gone in a heartbeat? What do I take for granted that is really so fragile, up to and including my health and life? We are not as strong as we think we are. I am not as strong as I think I am. So second is self reflection/examination and repentance. Oh, Father, I am sorry for my ingratitude and arrogance in that area.

Next, how do I do with the second commandment (according to Jesus) of loving my neighbor as myself? Am I there sacrificing for others? Loving my enemies or those I simply don’t like? Am I willing to go the extra mile for not only my friends (even sinners do that), but also for those with whom I disagree or don’t appreciate? Father, give me eyes to see my hypocrisy here and help me to recognize when you are calling me to act in your name, regardless what it will cost me.

Father, I have a lot more Belshazzar in me than I do Daniel. On a spectrum of Belshazzar to Daniel, I would love for my needle to point towards the Daniel side of the scale than Belshazzar’s, but I recognize that it’s a constant struggle to submit to you in worship, submit to you in repentance, and submit to you and my neighbors in love and sacrifice. Walk with me, Holy Spirit. Speak to me. Guide me. And in the words of the song “Spirit of the Living God,” “Break me. Melt me. Mold Me. Fill me.”

I pray this in Jesus and with your Holy Spirit,

Amen

 
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Posted by on November 26, 2025 in Daniel

 

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