Saturday, May 23, 2026

Sabbath Vespers: 7 Principles of Prayer

                                         

Prayer is a very special communication between man and God. And communication makes sense only when it makes sense to both sides. The Bible has many principles of such communications - and today we bring these to you. 

The 7 Principle of Prayer

1. Principle 1: It is in giving that we receive. Pray to give, not just to get. Pray for others - even if you pray for yourself - see how it will benefit others.
2. 
Principle 2: Count your blessings and give thanks. Look for blessings past and present. No one is without them, no matter what their situation is.
3. 
Principle 3: Don't jump into prayer. Silently, for a while, focus on your heart. Ask and give time for the Holy Spirit to renew you. Remain inside yourself - with no external noise.
4. 
Principle 4: Don't tell God what to do. Just focus on the end result. All things are possible for God, for those who believe.
5. 
Principle5 : Ask, look for the answers. Remember, God is in the silent whisper. And go on knocking and seeking till you find. And find you will.
6. Principle 6 : Trust in God implicitly and not on your own so called wisdom. He will direct us on the path- but we must be ready to follow.
7. Principle 7: God is the source of our supply. Not our jobs, not our business, not our benefactors but God and God alone. Acknowledge this.  Ask according to His will - His will being that we love one another, look our for each other, use our resources for Gods work and put God in all things, above all things. 

Heavenly Father,
We come before You today lifting up those who are in need. Needs known to you. Who are in uncertainty, exhaustion, and spiritual warfare. We anchor this prayer in Your Word, specifically the promise that whoever dwells in Your shelter will find rest in Your shadow.
Lord, we pray for those seeking refuge in you from their respective situations: 
We pray for Samira - We thank you for what you have blest her with. You grace, Your healing and your strength. We pray for it to continue in her upcoming immuno session. For Lisa, as she supports tries to find her life again after defeating cancer and being deserted by her husband. We thank you for your mercy on her daughter, also suffering from the pestilence of cancer, where you have not let it spread and we ask that you grant her strength for her chemo sessions.  For the miracle of complete healing for Arielle. We pray for Victoria and Alison, for Joan and Lindsey. We thank you for your healing bestowed on Joan and for stopping the pestilence in Jen to stop its relentless growth and become controllable. She is your missionary, protect her Lord. Give her relief from the pain and the side effects of chemo. We pray for Skyle; for your mercy of healing for the child. 
For all the people who feel going through through illness, financial strain, or emotional heaviness—we ask that You draw them into Your secret place. Let them not just visit Your presence, but dwell there, finding a permanent home in Your grace.
We pray for divine rest: May Your shadow be a cooling canopy that shields them from the heat of their current trials.
We thank You that You are El Shaddai—the All-Sufficient God. Because You are the Most High, no situation we face is higher than Your authority. We ask that we all would feel the tangible comfort of Your wings today, knowing that Your faithfulness is our shield and rampart.
Establish our footsteps, cover our households, and let the peace that surpasses all understanding guard our hearts and minds.
In the name of Jesus, Amen.




Thursday, May 21, 2026

Great Expectations: Finding Hope in the Heart of the Exile

"For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the LORD, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end."
 — Jeremiah 29:11

There is a masterpiece in English literature by Charles Dickens titled Great Expectations. If you have never read it, it is a story worth exploring. The novel follows a young orphan named Pip who suddenly inherits a vast fortune from an anonymous benefactor. However, as Pip chases after high society, wealth, and status, he undergoes a tragic transformation—moving from a place of simple empathy and goodness to selfish pride and empty ambition. Dickens brilliantly critiques how chasing the wrong expectations can cause us to lose our core values and genuine relationships.
Unwittingly, Dickens captured a profound spiritual truth. When we approach God, a silent but incredibly deep question questions our hearts: What are our expectations from God?
In Jeremiah 29:11, God clearly states His true intentions toward mankind. He doesn't just speak these intentions; He backs them up with the ultimate action—sending His Son, Jesus Christ, to a fate literally worse than death so that we would not face the retribution of our sins.
Nothing can be stated more beautifully than this promise. In this passage, an "expected end" is a future filled with hope, restoration, and ultimate good. It is God’s reassurance that no matter how painful, dark, or long your current season of trial may be, He is actively directing history toward a purposeful, beneficial conclusion. That is Gods stated and promised intention. What about our expectations? 
In our human nature, we often treat God like an anonymous benefactor, projecting our own "great expectations" onto Him. We expect money, wealth, ease, and elevated status. But God, in His perfect love, doesn't want us to lose our souls to selfish pride. He has a much higher standard for our lives.
If we want to experience this "expected end," we must realign our expectations with His intentions. Based on His Word, here are three things we can truly expect from God:

1. Expect Great Things—Aligned with His Word
Our expectations must be in sync with the Scriptures. When our desires line up with God’s heart, He delights in fulfilling them. Because our God is a great God, we should have truly great expectations—not for worldly vanity, but for spiritual victory, transformation, and provision as promised in the Bible. Anchor your mind to His promises, declare them continually over your life, and watch how God brings them to pass.
2. Expect Growth, Not Shortcuts
We must remember the context of Jeremiah's letter: it was written to captives who were told they would be stuck in exile for 70 years. There were no shortcuts. Sometimes, God’s plan involves enduring the trial, settling in, and growing during the exile rather than escaping it. We can confidently expect that God is present and active even in our darkest seasons, providing the exact grace we need to endure.

3. Expect a Meaningful Conclusion
You can rest assured that your suffering is not meaningless. Because God has "thoughts of peace, and not of evil" toward you, He is actively weaving your most difficult, broken circumstances into a beautiful tapestry. Your story will not end in despair.

Today, let us align our desire perfectly with His Word, Trust in the seasons of waiting and exile, knowing that He is present in the dark. 


Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Our Spiritual Temperature

                                          
"And if it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord, choose you this day whom ye will serve... but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord."
Joshua 24:15 (KJV)

Have you ever walked into a house and immediately felt a deep sense of peace? Conversely, have you ever stepped into a room and instantly felt a heavy, unspoken tension?

A home is so much more than four walls, a roof, and furniture. It is an environment. Every single day, whether we realize it or not, we are cultivating a specific spiritual climate inside our living spaces. We often treat our faith as a deeply personal, private matter, but the Bible paints a different picture. The choices we make, the words we speak, and the attitudes we harbor set the daily temperature for everyone living under our roof.
And you are the gatekeeper. 
Spiritual maturity begins with a powerful recognition: you are the gatekeeper of your home’s atmosphere.
If we allow constant complaining, discord, or worldly compromise to dominate the airwaves of our living rooms, we cannot reasonably expect a harvest of righteousness, joy, and peace in our spouses or our children. You can't plant seeds of chaos and expect to grow a garden of peace.
When Joshua stood before the Israelites and declared, "as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord," he was drawing a line in the sand. He wasn't waiting to see what the culture around him was going to do. He made a proactive, intentional choice. When you dedicate your household to the Lord, you are drawing that same line, signaling to the enemy that he is not allowed to cross into your territory.
The Takeaway: Your home is meant to be a sanctuary, not just a residence. Do not allow the chaos of the outside world to dictate the peace of your inside world.
Strengthening your family's spiritual health requires a daily "cleansing" of the environment. It means refusing to let bitterness settle in the corners or compromise take root in the daily routine. 
As you intentionally choose to serve the Lord with your whole house, you will unlock a beautiful new level of divine protection and joy.

Let your home be a lighthouse in a dark neighborhood. Yield your family life, your schedules, and your conversations to the leadership of the Holy Spirit today.
Reflection 
What is the current "temperature" of my home, and what changes can I make today to bring more of God's peace into it?
Are there any "open doors" (attitudes, media, or habits) that I need to close to protect my family's spiritual atmosphere?




Your Mission: Pastor Rajiv's Mid-Week Message

 

Every Christian is in the ministry and wherever a Christian is placed in this world is – The Christian Mission field. What does this mean for you and me? Find out as Pastor Rajiv covers this in his very important mid-week message where he defines our purpose as Christians.

 


Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The Mirror of Life


But be ye doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving your own selves. 
James 1:22 (KJV)

Have you ever looked in a mirror, noticed a smudge on your face, and then just walked away without cleaning it? 
The mirror did its job by showing you the truth, but the look was useless because you didn't act on what you saw. 
The Bible is a spiritual mirror. It shows us our true condition—our pride, our potential, and our need for grace. Many believers are professional hearers; they take notes, listen to podcasts, and attend studies, yet their lives remain exactly the same. We are not called to only hear but to also do. 
Friends, your growth is found in your obedience, not just your information; do not settle for a head full of knowledge and a heart full of old habits. Spiritual maturity is found in the believer who is quick to adjust their life to the light of Scripture. Strengthening your walk involves a daily response to the Mirror, refusing to ignore the areas where God is calling for change. As you become a doer of the Word, you will find a new level of integrity and a greater power in your walk. Let the Word of God be the final authority for your actions. Yield your opinions to His instructions today.
Transformation only happens when the truth you see on the page becomes the choice you make in your day.

Prayer point: Almighty God, help me to be a faithful doer of Your Word. Forgive me for the times I have heard Your truth but failed to put it into practice. Grant me the courage and the strength to change whatever needs to be changed in my life. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


Devotional from KJV
Copyright @Watchdis Media

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Monday Reset: Ditches in the Dry Valleys

"And he said, Thus saith the Lord, Make this valley full of ditches. For thus saith the Lord, Ye shall not see wind, neither shall ye see rain; yet that valley shall be filled with water, that ye may drink, both ye and your cattle, and your beasts."
— 2 Kings 3:16-17

Monday Focus: Believing Preparation

We often start our Mondays looking at the dry valleys in our lives—the looming workloads, the exhausted resources, the relationship challenges, or the overwhelming demands of the week ahead. Like the three kings in this passage, we can find ourselves at our wits’ end, feeling utterly helpless to bring down the rain we so desperately need.
But God's instruction to the people was simple yet profound: Prepare for the blessing before you see the evidence.
Before a single drop of water was visible, they were commanded to dig. They had to sweat, labor, and prepare the ground to hold the miracle.

This Monday, God is asking us to do the same. We are called to make a believing preparation. The trenches we dig through our prayers, our faithfulness, our hard work, and our quiet trust are the very vessels that will hold the grace God is preparing to pour out.
How the Blessing Arrives: Silent & Sovereign
Sometimes we expect God to move only in the spectacular—with the rush of wind and the roar of thunder (like Elijah’s heavy rains). But 2 Kings reminds us of God's quiet sovereignty: "Ye shall not see wind, neither shall ye see rain; yet that valley shall be filled."
God does not need a storm to bring a breakthrough. He can fill your dry spaces silently, mysteriously, and when you least expect it.
You might not see the "wind" of sudden promotion.
You might not see the "rain" of an obvious miracle.
Yet, by tomorrow morning, you may find your dry valley quietly overflowing with His peace, provision, and strength.
He is not tied to our methods or our timelines. Our job is simply to prepare thankfully, receive humbly, and trust completely.

As you step into this week, ask yourself: Am I waiting to see the rain before I start digging? Or am I preparing the ground in faith?
Here are three practical ways to "dig your ditches" this week:
The Ditch of Prayer: Pray not just for relief, but with the expectation of rain. Set aside 5 minutes every morning to dedicate your day to Him.
The Ditch of Preparation: Do your part with excellence. Prepare your schedule, organize your tasks, and show up ready, trusting that God will multiply your efforts.
The Ditch of Trust: Release the need to control how the blessing arrives. Let go of trying to dictate the wind or the rain.
What is one dry area in my life right now where God is asking me to take a small, practical step of faith (dig a ditch) this week, even though I cannot see the rain yet?



This Week

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