We know we should pray, and we do pray at certain times. But we need to pray more. Prayer should be an important part of our everyday lives. Communion with our Heavenly Father in prayer should be a part of the very fabric of our way of living.
There is one thing we can be sure of: God is always interested in what is good for us in the long run. Because He is, there are times when He allows events to unfold in such a way that we, and those around us, learn from our mistakes the hard way.
This week, let’s make it a priority to check up on ourselves. Are we growing closer to God from day to day? If not, we may be growing the other direction without realizing it. Let’s make sure, at whatever cost, that we do not lose our salvation.
Our eternal destiny will depend on what we did when we had to chose between alternatives. Do we realize the importance of our choices? Are we willing to take responsibility for them? And most important, are we ready to begin making better choices?
It does not take physical strength or carnal tactics to win the battle over sin. It only takes the courage to refuse to settle for anything less than what is true. Jesus said, “You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”
If only for the sake of our kids, we need to talk about heaven more. We need to pray about it and sing about it. The prospect of going there should be something they can see is surpassingly important to us, and not just in our words but in our deeds.
Let’s ponder the relationship we should have together as the Lord’s people. Especially since we have a responsibility to evangelize the community around us, we need to remember the effect believers’ love for one another can have on unbelievers.
Separated from our Creator — cut off and alienated from Him by sin — the thing we call “life” is hardly worth the name. With Paul, we may well be moved to cry, “Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?” (Romans 7:24).
Our motives are crucial to our discernment: the question is not whether we want to know the truth, but what we plan to do with it once we find it. Let’s think about whether our basic disposition is to obey all of the truth we presently know to obey.
Before it’s too late, we need to repent of the sinful traits that have crept into our character. Let’s quit making excuses for unacceptable conduct, repent of our wrongdoing, and make up our minds that we’re going to accept the help God gives us.