God is on our side

Thu, May 20th 2021, 08:43 AM

"I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete. My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. You are my friends if you do what I command. I no longer call you servants, because a servant does not know his master’s business. Instead, I have called you friends, for everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you.”– John 15:11-15

When someone offers to pray for you, they are offering you a blessing and a gift that is worth more than all the silver and gold you can amass. Often, I receive letters from people all over the world who say that they are lifting my congregation and me up in prayer. I do not know these people, yet they are praying for me.
I thank God for those who continue to pray for my congregation and me. They are prayer warriors who constantly make prayer petitions for us.
Last Sunday was the Seventh Sunday after Easter, the last Sunday in the Easter festival. The last Sunday after Easter follows three days after Ascension Day or 40 days after Easter.
In the text, Jesus speaks words of encouragement and assurance in a beautiful prayer. The words of this prayer are quite powerful. They also cover us in the world today.
Our Lord prays for the unity of his disciples, his small company of followers. He prays that they remain focused in him and the cross, that they not fall apart.
He requests that they remain one in heart and mind. This unity, he prays, would be as the unity between him and the Father. This prayer is most appropriate because, almost immediately after the ascension of our Lord, the church came remarkably close to disintegration.
Even though he left them in the world, they were not of the world. He prayed that the Father would protect them while they were in the world because, while in the world, they would encounter the scorn of the world.

When someone offers to pray for you, they are offering you a blessing and a gift that is worth more than all the silver and gold you can amass. Often, I receive letters from people all over the world who say that they are lifting my congregation and me up in prayer. I do not know these people, yet they are praying for me.

I thank God for those who continue to pray for my congregation and me. They are prayer warriors who constantly make prayer petitions for us.

Last Sunday was the Seventh Sunday after Easter, the last Sunday in the Easter festival. The last Sunday after Easter follows three days after Ascension Day or 40 days after Easter.

In the text, Jesus speaks words of encouragement and assurance in a beautiful prayer. The words of this prayer are quite powerful. They also cover us in the world today.

Our Lord prays for the unity of his disciples, his small company of followers. He prays that they remain focused in him and the cross, that they not fall apart.

He requests that they remain one in heart and mind. This unity, he prays, would be as the unity between him and the Father. This prayer is most appropriate because, almost immediately after the ascension of our Lord, the church came remarkably close to disintegration.

Even though he left them in the world, they were not of the world. He prayed that the Father would protect them while they were in the world because, while in the world, they would encounter the scorn of the world.

Click here to read more at The Nassau Guardian

 Sponsored Ads