Journey of Joy
Thursday, April 16, 2026
Lord's Supper - John Stott
During the meal in the upper room Jesus took bread, broke it, and gave it to his disciples saying, "This is my body given for you; do this in remembrance of me" (Luke 22:19).
These are immensely significant words and actions, for they tell us Jesus's own view of his death.
Three truths stand out:
1. The first is the centrality of his death. Jesus was giving his own instructions for his memorial service. They were to eat bread and drink wine in memory of him. Moreover, the bread would stand not for his living body but for his body given for them and the wine for his blood shed for them. In other words, death would speak from both the elements.
So it was by his death that he wished to be remembered.
2. The second truth we learn from the Lord's supper concerns the purpose of Jesus's death. According to Matthew, the cup stood for "my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins" (Matt 26:28).
This is the truly fantastic claim that through the shedding of his blood in death God would establish the new covenant promised through Jeremiah (Jeremiah 31), one of whose greatest promises was the forgiveness of sins.
3. The third truth taught by the Lord's Supper concerns the need for us to appropriate personally the benefits of Jesus's death.
For in the drama of the upper room the disciples were not spectators only but participants. Jesus not only broke the bread but gave it to them to eat. Similarly, he not only poured the wine, but gave it to them to drink.
Just so, it was not enough for Christ to die; we have to make the blessings of his death our own. The eating and the drinking were, and still are, a vividly acted parable of receiving Christ as our crucified Savior and of feeding on him in our hearts by faith.
The Lord's Supper, as instituted by Jesus, was evidently not meant to be a slightly sentimental "forget me not" service; it was rather a drama rich in spiritual significance.
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
What Does Prayer Really Do? C S Lewis
What Does Prayer Really Do? C S Lewis
"Prayer is either a sheer illusion or a personal contact between embryonic, incomplete persons (ourselves) and the utterly complete Person.
Prayer, in the sense of petition, asking for things, is a small part of it; confession and penitence are its threshold, adoration its sanctuary, the presence and vision and the enjoyment of God its bread and wine.
In it God shows Himself to us."
So in prayer God shows Himself to us....don't we usually get it backwards?
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Important People We Never Heard Of -- #1
There was a farmer in North Carolina, in the 1930's, who greatly influenced history.
He was a Christian and excited about a revival going on near him. The preacher, Mordecai Ham, was well-known and great crowds were attending and many were receiving Christ as their Savior.
The farmer decided to invite his neighbors to attend the meetings with him and he loaded them into his pickup!
A sixteen-year old boy joined the group. Every night he went to the revival and the farmer kept praying for his salvation.
Finally, the last night, the lad went forward and received Christ as his Savior.
That young man was Billy Graham!
Just think how the world has changed, for millions of people, by that farmer's obedience to proclaim God's message.
Today's challenge: we might not have a pickup, but we have a multitude of other ways to get out the joyous message of freedom in Christ. God loves us and invites us to co-partner with him to change people and so change the world. We don't have to be famous, or rich, or powerful. God can use us just as we are! With or without a pickup!
How can He use you today?
Monday, April 13, 2026
My Worst Day - Jerry Bridges
Does He care?
The good news of the gospel is that God's grace is available on our worst days.
That's true because Christ fully satisfied the claims of God's justice and fully paid the penalty of the broken law when He died on the cross in our place. Because of that, Paul could write, "He forgave us all our sins" (Colossians 2:13).
Does this mean God no longer cares whether we obey or disobey? Not at all. The Scripture speaks of our grieving the Holy Spirit through our sins (Ephesians 4:30). And Paul prayed that we "may please God in every way" (Colossians 1:10).
Clearly, He cares about conduct and will discipline us when we refuse to repent of conscious sin. But God is no longer our Judge. Through Christ He is now our heavenly Father who disciplines us only out of love and only for our good.
If God's blessings were dependent on our performance, they would be meager indeed. Even our best works are shot through with sin--with varying degrees of impure motives and lots of imperfect performance.
We're always, to some degree, looking out for ourselves, guarding our flanks, protecting our egos. It's because we don't realize the utter depravity of the principle of sin remaining in us and staining everything we do that we entertain any notion of earning God's blessings through our obedience.
And because we don't fully grasp that Jesus paid the penalty for all our sins, we despair of God's blessing when we've failed to live up to even our own desires to please God.
Your worst days are never so bad that you're beyond the reach of God's grace. And your best days are never so good that you're beyond the need of God's grace.
Sunday, April 12, 2026
Reshaping the Pot
Reshaping the Pot
Jeremiah 18:1-6 "...The pot he was shaping from the clay was marred in his hand; so the potter formed it into another pot, shaping it as seemed best to him."
God sent Jeremiah to visit a potter's house and he sees the potter shaping the "marred" clay with his hand, carefully handling the material and forming it into another pot.
The prophet reminds us that God is the skillful Potter and we are the clay.
He is sovereign and can use what He creates to both destroy evil and create beauty in us. God can shape us even when we are broken. He, the master Potter, can and is willing to create new and precious pottery from our shattered pieces. He doesn't look at our broken lives and mistakes them as waste to be thrown away.
Instead, He picks up our pieces and reshapes them as He sees fit.
Even in our brokenness we have immense value to our Master Potter.
In His hands, the broken pieces of our lives can be reshaped into beautiful vessels to be used by Him.
Something beautiful, something good
All my confusion He understood
All I had to offer Him was brokenness and strife
But He made something beautiful of my life!