
Night Prayer: 1 John 1:7

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When we are young just learning about life, we experience things that we never thought we would go through and experience. Things happen in our life that may change us for the better, or for the worse. I suppose if we looked at things in a different way, we could find peace in it, or we could put it in the back of our minds and not think about it. As we grow in life, we learn new things, and we improve upon some of the things we already know about. While we are learning new things, and gaining wisdom along the way, we just may feel like we are coming and going through things that we feel like we may never understand. Everything is not made for us to understand, some things are just meant for us to go through so we can help others.
Whenever I think about the things I have come and gone through, I see that it made me strong. I see that it was not meant to hurt me, but to grow me spiritually, mentally, physically, and emotionally. Certain circumstances that we face in life could be learning experiences; it all depends upon how one looks at things. No one sees things in the same light as the other person. Everyone has their opinion about what things are, and what they may mean to them. Things we go through does not last forever, it is only for a short time, and again, it is the way it is perceived.
When I think about what Jesus went through, He knew that He was only going to be on earth for a short amount of time. He knew that He had a mission that had to take place so things could be made right between God and man. He knew that when time came it was not going to be something that He wanted to go through, but He knew what He was sent here for. He knew that things were going to change for the better and then it was never going to be the same again. He knew that there were going to be those who did not believe, and He knew those who were going to believe without a shadow of a doubt what was going to take place after He died for those two days, because on the third day He rose again just like He said He would.
So, when we look at trials and tribulations that we come and go through it is nothing compared to what Jesus went through for the whole human race. That was a terrible trial that Jesus went through. Just think how it must have felt for Him to be beaten all night long, and then had to carry a cross on His back with the help of someone else who He was dying for. He went through all of that for us and came out victorious! Look at how Peter suffered when he denied Jesus three times. Look how Jesus used Peter after the resurrection. Look at what John went through being exiled on the island of Patmos, but look what happened when Jesus met him there, Revelation was written.
Look at what happened to Saul on the Damascus Road, he met Jesus, and his life was changed for the better. So, we are never alone when we are coming and going through trials and tribulations. God bless.
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In the multitude of my thoughts within me Thy comforts delight my soul. Psalm 94:19 KJV https://bible.com/bible/1/psa.94.19.KJV
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I pray you are blessed by this verse.


Looking for a new way to refresh your Bible study? The Bible is multi-faceted and can be approached from a number of perspectives… We can read it chronologically: Chronological Study Bible (NIV) Chronological Study Bible (NKJV) Harmony of the Gospels (NASB) We can read it with an ancient perspective: NKJV Ancient-Modern Bible We can read it to learn more about original languages: Greek NT Produced at Tyndale House with Parsings BHS with Critical Apparatus NA28 with Critical Apparatus LXX with Critical Apparatus We can read it devotionally: Message Devotional Bible We can read it dramatically: The Voice Bible We can listen to the Bible: Inspired By… The Bible Experience NKJV Voice Only Audio Bible (Simon Bubb) The Message Audio Bible All Discounted Titles! See all of our discounted titles by clicking here!

The Key Word Commentary is not your average commentary. In fact, it’s incredibly different than every other commentary we’ve used. It provides 10 key insights every chapter of the Bible, all 1,189 of them. Let’s take a look inside! What’s Inside the Key Word Commentary? Using the commentary is fairly straightforward. Open it to the chapter you want to learn about. Then, you’ll find ten “key” categories that provide summary and analysis. There are ten key categories for each chapter: Before and After Analysis of Chapter Key Verse Key Word Key Person/Event Key Thought Key Thing(s) to Look For Key Bible Cross-Reference Key “By Way of Explanation” Key “Quotable Quote” As you can imagine, this makes for a very big book. In order to find the information you are looking for in the print version, you’ll thumb through over 1,000 pages. There are some resources that we don’t mind using paper versions of…but this is not one of them. Look how easy it is to use the Key Word Commentary in the app. Key Word Commentary & Olive Tree If you open the Key Word Commentary in the main window, you can use the verse chooser to quickly open any chapter you want. You can toggle between grid and list view by tapping the menu button in the upper-right corner. Once you open to the section you are looking for, you’ll see each of the ten “keys.” Here is what the Key Word Commentary has to share on Genesis chapter two. Information like this is helpful anytime you’re in need of a quick refresher. It can get you headed in the right direction for a quick Bible study or discussion. The Key Word Commentary is also useful for jumpstarting your own personal time in the Word. Even the most confusing chapters of the Bible have these 10 key points for you to reflect on. Using the Resource Guide We talk about the Resource Guide all the time because it helps you get the most out of your Bible study tools. The Key Word Commentary is no exception! Anytime you’re reading the Bible, you have quick access to the Key Word Commentary. Since this commentary covers every chapter of the Bible, it will constantly be available in the commentaries category of the Resource Guide. All you need to do is tap and it will appear side-by-side with your Bible translation. Lastly, don’t forget that all the verse references are hyperlinked! So, when the Key Word Commentary tells you about an important cross-reference, you can quickly get the scoop. Start Studying! Get started with the Key Word Commentary by tapping here
Whenever I look at sunflowers, I recognize how they will turn their blooms towards the sun. It has always amazed me how nature does what it wants to do. Sunflowers stand tall and beautiful giving off their fragrance that attracts butterflies and other animals that enjoy their beautifulness glowing in the sun. They are a joy to look at. Even when the day is coming to an end, and the sky begins to cast shadows from the clouds, they are still beautiful and standing tall. Who knows what goes on when night falls and they are just standing there cooling in the breeze waiting for the morning sun to peek over the horizon to welcome them to a new day to be even more beautiful than the day before.
Can you just feel the breeze of the morning air gracing the sky as they awaken to a new day never seen before. Look at how they stretch their blooms towards the sky all around them. While the others slowly awaken, they have already greeted the new day. They have already opened up and welcomed all of the little animals which takes pleasure in the blooms, and the leaves, and stem of the flower for their morning breakfast. How wonderful it must be to be a flower so pretty? How blessed they are to never have to worry if they are going to be taken care of?
Unlike us humans, we worry every minute of every day. It doesn’t matter what is going on around us, we are going to find something to worry about, and talk about. See, flowers just grow and stand tall and beautiful without a worry in the world. It would be great if we did not worry so much about things that we cannot control. God tells us not to worry about anything, because He knows what we need before we can even ask for it or think about it. He provides for the flowers and the birds, and He will provide for us as well. There isn’t anything that He cannot do for us when we ask in faith and believe.
So, next time when worry starts to creep in, we need to think about the sunflower and how it stands tall and beautiful without a worry in the world. We too can stand tall and beautiful without a worry in the world. What is the point in worrying about something we did not create? Leave it all in the master’s Hands, He can fix whatever is broken within us. Beauty is fleeting, and just as the flowers will fade, but the Word of God will never fade away. Standing tall and beautiful.
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Jesus said unto him, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. This is the first and great commandment. And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. Matthew 22:37-39 KJV https://bible.com/bible/1/mat.22.37-39.KJV
Question: What is life without having love for God, yourself, and others? Thinking about that question, how does it make you feel? What enters your thoughts? Take some time out today and meditate on the verse. Talk to God about what you are feeling and thinking. Love conquers all. Jesus is love, God is love, and we should love others because He loves everybody. If you have not talked to Jesus in a while, or if you have never known Him, He is waiting for you with arms wide open to run to Him. He is waiting to change your life. He is waiting to hear from you. He is waiting to give you a new life in Him. Go to Him with everything and give it to Him. He loves you very much. God bless.

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and said, Verily I say unto you, except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven. Whosoever therefore shall humble himself as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And whoso shall receive one such little child in my name receiveth me. Matthew 18:3-5 KJV https://bible.com/bible/1/mat.18.3-5.KJV

Heavenly Father, help us to receive your Son with the heart of a child, and the faith of a child. Help us to know that You can and will be there for us forever. Help our unbelief if there be any unbelief within us in our hearts. Help us to know that Jesus, Your Son, is the way, the truth, and the life and that the only way to You is through Him. Thank You for Your Word. Thank You for every blessing large and small. Thank You for the blessings we don’t see, and for those that we do see. Thank You for the life You give to us each day. Thank You for always watching over us, and keeping us from harm. Thank You for all that You have done, doing, and going to do in our life. Most of all, thank You for Your Son, Jesus Christ and what He did for all of us. We are grateful to You for Him. We are thankful that He shed His precious blood for us. Thank You for loving us enough to sacrifice Your Only Son for us to save our sinful souls. There is no one like you, Heavenly Father. All praise, glory, and honor belong to You, in Jesus’s name, Amen.
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In exhorting the church to conduct themselves faithfully during a time of intense trial, Peter weaves the themes of humility and suffering together. Humility emphasizes the need for submission to both God-appointed leaders and God Himself in prayer. Suffering emphasizes the need for standing firm. Here’s some help working through these verses from the Bible Knowledge Commentary. 1 Peter 5:5 “In the same way, you who are younger, submit yourselves to your elders. All of you, clothe yourselves with humility toward one another, because, ‘God opposes the proud but shows favor to the humble.” Young men…be submissive (hypotagete; cf. 3:1) to those who are older. Church leaders were usually older members. The younger members were to place themselves willingly under the authority of those who had been given the responsibility of leadership. Peter exhorted both young and old alike to clothe (enkombosasthe, “clothe or tie on oneself”; an enkomboma was the apron of a slave) yourselves with humility. True humility is attractive dress (cf. 3:8). Peter may have alluded to Christ’s girding Himself with a towel and teaching the disciples that humility is the prerequisite for service and service is the practice of humility (John 13:4-15). Peter quoted Proverbs 3:34 to emphasize God’s different attitudes toward the proud and the humble. God opposes (lit., “sets Himself against”) the arrogant but grants favor and acceptance to the humble. 1 Peter 5:6-7 “Humble yourselves, therefore, under God’s mighty hand, that he may lift you up in due time. Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you.” Knowing God’s attitude should cause Christians not only to be subject to others but also to subject themselves deliberately to God’s sovereign rule. The command humble yourselves (tapeinothete) could be translated “allow yourselves to be humbled.” Those who were suffering persecution for Christ’s sake could be encouraged by the fact that the same mighty hand that let them suffer would one day lift (hypsose, “exalt”) them up (cf. James 4:10). Peter then referred to Christ’s classic words of encouragement in the Sermon on the Mount (Matt. 6:25-32), while quoting Psalm 55:22: “Cast your cares on the Lord and He will sustain you.” All a believer’s anxieties can be cast…on Him. Christ sustains because He cares. A Christian’s confidence rests in the fact that Christ is genuinely concerned for his welfare. 1 Peter 5:8-9 “Be alert and of sober mind. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. Resist him, standing firm in the faith, because you know that the family of believers throughout the world is undergoing the same kind of sufferings.” Be self-controlled (nepsate; cf. 1:13; 4:7) and alert (gregoresate; cf. 1 Thes. 5:6, 10). Christians should be constantly alert because the enemy (antidikos, “adversary”), the devil (diabolos, “slanderer”), is always actively seeking an opportunity for a vicious attack. This verse could also be a veiled allusion to the horrors of the Neronian persecution in the Roman Coliseum, in which lions mauled and devoured Christians. Satan desired to do the same thing spiritually, to defeat believers’ testimonies. The devil can be and should be resisted. Resist (antistete means “withstand,” used also in James 4:7, cf. antidikos, “enemy” in 1 Peter 5:8). It is a term of defense rather than attack. Christians may stand firm against Satan only if they depend wholly on Christ, standing firm in the faith (cf. v. 12; Col. 2:5). Peter also encouraged his readers by reminding them that they were not alone in their suffering. The knowledge that other Christians, your brothers throughout the world, were suffering, would strengthen their resolve to continue to stand firm. 1 Peter 5:10-11 “And the God of all grace, who called you to his eternal glory in Christ, after you have suffered a little while, will himself restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast. To him be the power for ever and ever. Amen.” Peter had encouraged his readers to endure suffering in such a way that the grace of God would be made manifest in their lives. Now in a closing word of benediction he committed them to the God of all grace (cf. 4:10). The benediction briefly summarizes Peter’s message of encouragement. Christians’ suffering will last only a little while, while their glory in Christ, to which they were called, will be eternal (cf. Rom. 8:17-18; 2 Cor. 4:16-18). (This is Peter’s last of eight uses of “glory” in this epistle: 1 Peter 1:7, 11, 21, 24; 2:20; 4:14; 5:1, 10.) God Himself would restore them and make them strong (sterixei; cf. 2 Thes. 2:17), firm (sthenosei, used only here in the NT), and steadfast (themeliosei, “established”; cf. Eph. 3:17; Col. 1:23). To Him be the power (kratos, “might”) forever and ever. Amen. In this benediction, similar to the one in 4:11, Peter praised Christ who has all power for all time (cf. Rom. 11:36; 1 Tim. 6:16). Certainly He has the power to strengthen His own as they undergo persecution. Bible Knowledge Commentary Written and edited by scholars solely from Dallas Theological Seminary, the two-volume Bible Knowledge Commentary is an accessible and thorough commentary on the entire Bible. No matter your level of reading and study, this resource will provide helpful and enlightening commentary on the whole Bible. TAP HERE to get a copy of the Bible Knowledge Commentary (2 Vols.).
