Ezekiel 11:19-20 ” I will give them an undivided heart and put a new Spirit in them. I will remove from them their heart of stone and give them a heart of flesh. Them they will follow My decrees and be careful to keep My Laws.”

Sometimes the very best thing you can do for someone is to back away, pray for them, and allow God to do what only He can do. It may be your wayward child who has turned their back on everything you’ve taught them in the past about Jesus. Or it may be a close friend who is going down the wrong path with a relationship. Then again, it may be a family member who’s making unwise & potentially dangerous life-style decisions. When we’ve talked ourselves blue in the face and they still refuse to listen in defiance & disobedience…it’s time to release them to God. For God loves them more than we will ever, He knows every detail of their life, and He can turn any situation around for good. And when we allow the Holy Spirit to work in their lives, He can woo, reveal, convict, and admonish as only the Holy Spirit can do. I know it’s difficult, but sometimes the only way a person will look up, is when they find themselves lying in the gutter.

Mark 5: 22-24 ” Then one of the synagogue rulers, named Jairus, came there. Seeing Jesus, he fell at His feet and pleaded earnestly with Him. ‘My little daughter is dying. Please come and put Your hands on her so that she will be healed and live.’ So Jesus went with him.”

At this time, Jesus was back in Galilee… when Jairus frantically beseeched Him to come and heal his beloved little girl. Now Jairus was a Jewish layman responsible for the upkeep of the synagogue plus monitoring the services and choosing the Torah readings, etc. He was very highly respected in the community…so it was odd that he not only knew who Jesus was but was aware of the many healings He had performed. So much so, that Jairus had sought Jesus out, knowing He could heal his daughter. They had not yet made it to Jairus’s home when someone rushed up to tell them the child had just died. What Jesus said next to Jairus did not dwell on her death, but on his faith. “Don’t be afraid just believe and she will be healed.” Jesus wanted Jarius to focus on faith not fear. That’s because hopelessness creeps in on the heels of fear. Or as Ecclesiastes 9:4 says, “Anyone who is among the living has hope.” And true to His word, Jeus took ahold of the little girl’s hand and raised her up healed and whole from her deathbed.

Acts 13:2 ” Set apart for Me Barnabus and Saul for the work to which I have called them.”

The time was now for the rubber to finally hit the road for the early Church. They had enjoyed a wonderfully blessed period of fellowship, building up the body of Believers within, and worshipping their risen Savior…but this was all inwardly focused. And it seemed like the disciples had kinda forgotten about Jesus giving them the Great Commission to, “Go and make disciples of all nations.” (Matthew 28:16-20) So in the same way the eagle stirs up the nest in order to teach her young to fly, (Deuteronomy 32:11) God was pushing His youngsters out of their warm cozy environment to try their wings. And thus, this was the very first Missionary journey of Paul & Barnabus as they carried the Gospel Message into new regions.

Colossians 3:15 ” Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts…”

Think about this…prayer is the bridge between panic to peace, from anxiety to trust, from being scared to serenity. Prayer allows our emotions to pass from overpowering fear to that of quiet tranquility…or as Philippians 4:6 tells us, “Don’t be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.” And when we make a habit of seeking the Lord in prayer first rather than as a last resort, we’ll find that the peace of Christ will indeed rule and reign in our hearts.

II Corinthians 5:20 ” We are, therefore, Christ’s ambassadors, with God making His appeal through us.”

We are to be bearers of God’s light and truth in the midst of a very dark world. As the Scripture above reminds us, we are to be ambassadors or envoys, bearing the Message of the Cross to our dying world. We are to be the Standard bearers…. leading the cause & carrying the Gospel to the far reaches of the earth for His sake. But just how well are we doing? Can the casual observer standing behind you in the long line at the store, or at your child’s sports game tell immediately that you are an ambassador for Christ? Or are your attitudes & actions no different than anyone else’s? ln I Peter 2:9 we are called a peculiar people…that is, people that are different & stand out from the crowd… ever called to joyfully bear witness to the saving acts of God.

Mark 3:4 ” Then Jesus asked them, ‘Which is lawful on the Sabbath: to do good or to do evil, to save a life or to kill?’ “

Earlier, Jesus had upset the Pharisees when He told them that, “The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.” And so, Jesus intentionally healed people on the Sabbath just to make His point clear. There was the man with the shriveled hand, the man with dropsy, (edema from excess fluids in the body) and the bent over & crippled woman…all healed by Jesus on the Sabbath. For nowhere in the Law does it disallow healing on the Sabbath…but rather it had been man’s “interpretation” of the Law and piling on of legalistic traditions that had put all the undue burdens on God’s people. A day of rest & blessings was what God intended the Sabbath to be…but man had twisted it into a strict conformity of religious rules.

Psalm 56:3 ” When I am afraid, I put my trust in You.”

Experiencing fear from time to time isn’t unusual for God’s people. But our faith must then be exercised during these frightening times as we resolve to trust God. One of the most well-known Psalms tells us, “Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for You are with me…” (Psalm 23:4) Charles Spurgeon once wrote about this, “There is no excuse for fear when God is the foundation of our trust…We have been in many trials, but we have never yet been in a place where we couldn’t find our God all that we needed. ‘Trust in the Lord forever, for in the Lord is everlasting strength.’ (Isaiah 26:4) ” And so with this assurance, we can move from fear to faith…trusting in God’s deliverance. (Psalm 34:4)

Romans 5:3-4 ” And we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.”

This Scripture is about character-building…but not in the way we’d like. It’s the type of refinement that only comes through the tests & trials of suffering, pain, and hardship. It’s a deep-seated faith that perseveres through affliction with patient endurance, with us coming through the other side better, not bitter. When we let our problems lead us to become a better person, we can look beyond the misery, loss, and frustration to what God is really trying to do all along…that is perfecting us into His image.

Psalm 103:5 ” Who satisfies your desires with good things so that your youth is renewed like the eagle’s.”

I became a Certified Nursing Assistant at eighteen, and a few years later went back to school to become a Nurse. My Medical career spanned across 44 years of caring for people. And I found out very early on that sick, frightened, and chronically ill people need lots of compassion, support, encouragement, and care. But I also discovered that if you’re not careful, at the end of the day, your emotional gas tank will be running on fumes. So, on the eight-mile trip back and forth to work I made it a habit to pray. My car became my “prayer closet” every morning & evening. In the mornings I would be reminded of Psalm 90:14, “Satisfy us in the morning with Your unfailing love.”… knowing that God would graciously provide everything that’s constructive & wholesome I would need for the day ahead. And in the evening, I would thank Him for His abundant provision and restoration that day, for when God opens His hands, we are satisfied with good things. (Psalm 104:28)

Matthew 6:9 ” Your kingdom come; Your Will be done on earth as it is in Heaven.”

The very best thing you can do for those you love, is to pray for them. Throughout the Gospels, we see Jesus praying for others not standing in front of Him…the centurion’s servant, the ruler’s daughter, the Syrophoenician woman’s little girl. His prayers for them were as simple & direct as the Lord’s Prayer was He taught the disciples in Matthew 6…”Your Will be done.” He even went on to repeat this phrase for Himself in the Garden of Gethsemane, “Yet not as I will, but as You Will.” (Matthew 26:39) Praying God’s Divine Will over our loved ones frees God’s perfect purpose to be achieved. For if we admit it, most times we don’t know the full story or details of someone’s struggles…but God does. And just voicing biased opinions of what we think needs to happen is not constructive. But when we pray for someone, we also need to let them know they’re being prayed for…encouraging, supporting, and lifting their spirits knowing someone cares enough to pray.