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The Word For Today-A Daily Update
TODAY'S WORD FOR TODAY

A truly challenging commandment


‘This is my commandment: Love each other in the same way I have loved you.’
John 15:12 NLT

The UCB Word for Today - 23 July 2019

Jesus said, ‘I have told you these things so that you will be filled with my joy. Yes, your joy will overflow!’ (v. 11 NLT).

What are these ‘things’ that you must do to have His joy in life? Jesus tells us in the next verse: ‘This is my commandment: Love each other in the same way I have loved you.’

You say, ‘That’s a truly challenging commandment!’ Yes, and you’ll have to do a lot of growing and maturing in order to keep it.

But to enjoy the life Jesus wants you to have, you must commit yourself to doing it! God created all kinds of people with different temperaments and personalities, so clearly He loves variety.

When God made the first person He said, ‘It was good.’ So not only are there varieties of people, but there’s ‘good’ in everybody and you’re supposed to look for it.

Much of our unhappiness in life is caused by people not being what we want them to be or doing what we want them to do. What’s the answer?

How can you enjoy each day if you’re going to have to deal with annoying people? By making up your mind to love them.

You don’t have to like their ways, but you have to love them in spite of their ways. But when you think about it, that’s how God treats you, right?

Here’s a key to loving annoying people: annoying people are usually annoyed about something in their life. When you treat the source of their pain, they’ll begin to feel better and treat you better.

Esther 9-10, Romans 12
 
TODAY'S WORD FOR TODAY

The blessing comes by ‘doing’


‘I do Your commandments.’
Psalm 119:166 NKJV

The UCB Word for Today - 24 July 2019

In his book Traveling Hopefully, Stan Mooneyham writes: ‘I will go, when – I will give, after – I will obey, but first – one can always find reasons for delay, and sometimes they may even seem to be valid reasons. A close friend of mine and I were called to preach about the same time, and we went to university together.

I was out mutilating homiletics in rural Oklahoma churches during those four years of study, but my friend insisted he wouldn’t preach his first sermon until he had received his PhD. That was over thirty years ago.

I am still mutilating homiletics, but my friend isn’t preaching at all. He never did.

Preparation is important, but doing is a vitally important part of preparation. In the Old Testament we hear much about offerings of “first fruits”.

God’s portion came right off the top. Nowadays we are more likely to be known by and for our “last fruits”. Near the hold button on the hotline to heaven, these classic words would be appropriate: “If not I, who?

If not here, where? If not now, when?” Are you waiting for the “perfect moment” to come before you step out in faith and obey what God has told you to do? Obey God. Now!

It’s not enough to say you believe God’s Word, you must obey it. It’s not enough to accumulate Bible knowledge, you must apply the knowledge God has given you to your daily living.’

James writes, ‘Be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves …a doer…will be blessed in what he does’ (James 1:22, 25 NKJV). The blessing comes by ‘doing’.

Job 1-2, Romans 13
 
TODAY'S WORD FOR TODAY

Answer these two questions


‘May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him.’
Romans 15:13 NIV

The UCB Word for Today - 25 July 2019

First, how is your relationship with God right now? Do you doubt His promises, His call on your life, your ability to hear from Him, His pleasure in you, or whether you can do enough to keep Him happy?

If so, this Scripture is custom-designed for you: ‘May the God of hope fill you with…joy and peace as you trust in him.’ Notice, when you stop trusting God and start trusting in your own efforts, you lose your joy and peace.

Have you lost yours today? If you want them back, you must get out of doubt and back into faith!

Second, how is your relationship with yourself right now? One Christian author writes: ‘For years the only relationship I had with myself was one of doubt.

I doubted my decisions, my appearance, whether I was saying or doing the right thing…whether I was in any way pleasing God, or anybody else. I knew I wasn’t pleased with myself, so how could God or anybody else be pleased with me?

Those years of misery are behind me, because now I know God’s grace covers me like a blanket. I know it’s through Jesus alone that I’m made righteous and acceptable to God.

What a joy! I was so bound by legalistic religion that I’ll always have to be on guard against it. But now I know how to recognise its symptoms.’

Paul writes, ‘Stand fast then, and do not…submit again to a yoke of slavery [which you have once put off]’ (Galatians 5:1 AMPC). Stop doubting your salvation, or yourself, or God!

Job 3-4, Romans 14
 
TODAY'S WORD FOR TODAY

Steps to getting well


‘Do you want to get well?’
John 5:6 NIV

The UCB Word for Today - 26 July 2019

Jesus asked a sick man an unusual question: ‘Do you want to get well?’ For thirty-eight years this man’s condition had immobilised him, bought him the sympathy of others, and perhaps given him a reason to say, ‘I’m not responsible.’

But all of us are responsible for two things: our attitudes and our choices. The fact is we’ve all been hurt in some way.

But if you’re still focused on it twenty years later you’re not a victim by circumstance, but by choice. What exactly is a victim by choice?

Someone who thinks negative attention is better than no attention at all! Jesus said, ‘If you are angry with someone, forgive him so that your Father in heaven will also forgive your sins’ (Mark 11:25 NCV).

Those words presuppose someone has hurt you. They also hold you responsible for your reaction to that person.

Jesus taught that if you don’t forgive, you can’t receive forgiveness yourself when you need it. Whatever others may have taken from you in the past, if you remain bitter they’ll take more from you in the future.

Maybe you’re thinking, ‘If only they’d come back and ask for forgiveness.’ Is that what you’re waiting for?

Don’t waste your time! The key to happiness is in your hands, not theirs. And that key is forgiveness.

Are you waiting for someone to say, ‘I forgive you’ before you can forgive yourself? What if they never do?

Here’s the formula for freedom:
1) Apologise if you need to.
2) Make amends if you can.
3) Forgive yourself.
4) Move on.

Do you want to get well? These are the steps.

Job 5-7, Romans 15:1-13
 
TODAY'S WORD FOR TODAY

Strive for intimacy in your marriage


‘Marry a believer and have the blessing of the Master.’
1 Corinthians 7:39 MSG

The UCB Word for Today - 27 July 2019

The Bible teaches us that the basis for a good marriage isn’t just sharing the same bed every night, but the same values and goals every day. Without those, it will be like talking to each other in a foreign language.

Now, you won’t always agree, and you must accept that. But if you want to reach the same destination you’ve got to follow the same road map.

Like building a house, you need to work from an agreed-upon set of blueprints. After a while you discover that physical intimacy alone isn’t enough.

That might get you through the night, but it takes genuine friendship and shared faith in God to get you through the years. We’re talking about husbands and wives who communicate without saying a word because the same purposes and principles govern their lives.

And when problems arise, as they invariably do, they seek solutions from the same source – God. When life fell apart for Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, they came before God together because they had both had a relationship with Him.

After all, how can you correct the problem if one of you doesn’t think there is a problem? True intimacy comes when the sex is over and the commitment is stronger than ever.

It allows you to be with someone without always needing to impress them. One author puts it like this: ‘When we know we’re loved because of who we are, we become healthier in mind and more intimate in expression.

We’re freed from the fear of rejection and loosed from the anxiety of having to perform.’

Job 8-10, Romans 15:14-33
 
TODAY'S WORD FOR TODAY

Leave a legacy


‘Well done, thou good and faithful servant.’
Matthew 25:21 KJV

The UCB Word for Today - 28 July 2019

You don’t get to choose the moment of your arrival and departure here on earth, but you get to choose what your legacy will be, what you will be remembered for. At five, he wrote an advanced concerto for the harpsichord.

Before he was ten he published several violin sonatas and was playing the best of Handel and Bach from memory. Soon after his twelfth birthday he composed and conducted his first opera.

He was awarded an honorary appointment as concertmaster with the Salzburg Symphony Orchestra, and within a few years was hailed as the pride of Salzburg. When he died at age thirty-five he had written forty-eight symphonies; forty-seven arias, duets, and quartets, with orchestral accompaniment; and more than a dozen operas.

He’s credited with some 600 original compositions in all. Even so, Mozart lived most of his life in poverty and died in obscurity.

His sick widow seemed indifferent about his death. A few friends made it to the church for his funeral, but a storm prohibited their going to the graveside for his burial.

So the location of his grave became virtually impossible to identify. No shrine marks his resting place.

Today, what is Mozart remembered for? What is his legacy?

Not the life he lived, but the music he gave the world that still enriches our lives. When your life’s sole focus is self-interest, you won’t be missed when you are gone, or missed for the right reasons.

So find a cause greater than yourself, one that will outlive you, and pour yourself into it. Don’t just leave a will, leave a legacy that fulfils God’s will.

Luke 14:1-24, Psalm 77-78
 
TODAY'S WORD FOR TODAY

God accepts you ‘in Christ’, so accept yourself


‘God saw everything that He had made, and behold, it was very good…and He approved it completely.’
Genesis 1:31 AMPC

The UCB Word for Today - 29 July 2019

You can’t deal with anything effectively until you first accept it for what it is – including yourself! Dictionary definitions for ‘accept’ include:

1) to receive willingly;
2) to view as right;
3) to agree with.

First, acceptance involves your will. You can choose to accept yourself or not; it’s up to you.

Second, when something is acceptable it’s viewed as being ‘right’. We tend to reject ourselves because we see only what’s wrong with us, rarely what’s right.

Often this attitude was instilled in us early in life by those who focused on our weaknesses instead of our strengths, and we still carry their opinions with us. Third, the word ‘accept’ means ‘to agree with’.

If you’re having a problem accepting yourself, you need to get into agreement with God’s Word. He says you’re ‘righteous’, so start saying the same thing (see 2 Corinthians 5:21).

That can take a while to sink in, but over time it will take root within you. The Bible says, ‘Can two walk together, except they be agreed?’ (Amos 3:3 KJV).

To walk with God you must agree with Him. He says He loves you and accepts you ‘in Christ’, so start to agree with Him and stop putting yourself down.

When God made us, He said, ‘It was very good’ and He hasn’t changed His mind. But be patient – He’s not through with His creative work in your life.

And He wants you to see yourself as He sees you and learn to love yourself while you’re still ‘under construction’.

Job 11-13, Romans 16
 
TODAY'S WORD FOR TODAY

Are you feeling threatened?


30 JULY 2019
‘When they had prayed, the place…was shaken.’

Acts 4:31 NASB
Are you in an intimidating situation? If so, notice four things the disciples did when they felt threatened by the religious authorities of their day. 1) They brought God into the picture. ‘Lord, behold their threatenings’ (v. 29 KJV). Have you talked to the Lord about it? If it’s not big enough to be a prayer, it’s too small to be a burden! God should be the first person you discuss it with, not the last.


Prayer is the door through which He enters your situation, so be sure you invite Him in. 2) They prayed for greater faith. ‘Grant…thy servants…boldness’ (v. 29 KJV). It’s unrealistic to think all your questions will be answered and all your fears will disappear.

Faith and fear will always be at work in your life. To be an overcomer, you must learn to starve your fear and feed your faith on God’s Word (see Romans 10:17). 3) They expected God to intervene. ‘Stretch out your hand’ (Acts 4:30 NIV 2011 Edition).

Don’t just sit in the seat of ‘do-nothing’ and expect God to move. Go on the offensive. When the disciples were in a storm the Bible says, ‘About four o’clock in the morning Jesus came to them, walking on the water!’ (Matthew 14:25 TLB).

Jesus works the night shift! He’s available any time you call. 4) They were filled with the Holy Spirit. ‘When they had prayed…they were all filled with the Holy Spirit’ (Acts 4:31 NASB). There’s the key! They were strengthened and energised by God’s power – you can be too.


Job 14-16, 1 Corinthians 1
Prophet Ebankole

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TODAY'S WORD FOR TODAY

Consecrate yourself to God


‘Consecrate yourselves, for tomorrow the LORD will do amazing things among you.’
Joshua 3:5 NIV

The UCB Word for Today - 31 July 2019

On the threshold of the Promised Land, God said to His people, ‘Consecrate yourselves, for tomorrow the Lord will do amazing things among you.’ When you consecrate yourself to God He will do things in you, with you, for you, and through you that will amaze you.

We want to do amazing things for God, and that seems noble. But we’ve got it backwards.

God wants to do amazing things for us. That’s His job, not ours.

Our job is consecration. And consecration is more than going to church, keeping the Ten Commandments, tithing, sharing your faith, repeating the sinner’s prayer, volunteering for a ministry, raising your hands in worship, and going on a mission trip.

All those are good things, but that isn’t consecration. The utensils used in temple worship were considered ‘consecrated’.

In other words, they were set apart for the exclusive use of God. They were devoted to His service.

Consecration means dethroning yourself and enthroning Jesus as Lord of your life. It’s the complete divestiture of all self-interest.

It’s giving God veto power. It’s surrendering all of you to all of Him.

It’s a simple recognition that every second of your time, every ounce of your energy, and every penny of your money is a gift from God and for God. Consecration is an ever-deepening love for Jesus, a childlike trust in your heavenly Father, and a blind obedience to the Holy Spirit.

So the word for you today is – consecrate yourself to God.

Job 17-19, 1 Corinthians 2
 
TODAY'S WORD FOR TODAY

God’s remedy for depression


‘Why, my soul, are you downcast?’
Psalm 43:5 NIVUK

The UCB Word for Today - 01 Aug 2019

According to the Counselling Directory, one in 10 people are affected by depression at some point in their lives, with up to 10 times more people suffering from depression now than in 1945. And most of them won’t reach for assistance because they believe depression is a personal weakness.

Now, let’s make an important distinction here. If you’re clinically depressed it could be due to a chemical imbalance in your body, and a doctor can help you.

But the Bible can help. If you’re feeling sad or hopeless, it provides wisdom on how to recover.

Your situation won’t be solved with a few clichés or a good pick-me-up lecture from a friend. What you need is ‘the wisdom that is from above’ (James 3:17 KJV).

After calling down fire from heaven, Elijah ‘sat down…and prayed that he might die’ (1 Kings 19:4 NKJV). Fortunately, he turned to the right source.

‘All at once an angel touched him and said, “Get up”’ (1 Kings 19:5 NIV 2011 Edition). Now, God may not send you an angel, but He will answer you, lift and restore you.

The psalmist said: ‘Why, my soul, are you downcast? Why so disturbed within me?

Put your hope in God, for I will yet praise him, my Saviour and my God.’ Who is David talking to?

Himself! First, he talked to God about his problem; that’s what you do in prayer. Next, he listened to God about his problem; that’s what you do when you read the Scriptures and speak them over your life.

That strategy works. It worked for David – and it will work for you too.

Job 20-21, 1 Corinthians 3