Thursday, May 7, 2026

Treasures in a Mother’s Heart A Mother’s Day Reflection

 This Sunday across America, families will gather together to celebrate Mother’s Day. In a world filled with confusion, division, violence, and uncertainty, it is good for us to pause and honor the women who have carried the burdens of love, sacrifice, and faithfulness often without recognition.

For many, Mother’s Day is a joyful gathering around the table. For others, it is a reminder of loss, struggle, or sacrifice. Many homes today are held together by single mothers carrying responsibilities that seem almost impossible to bear. They work long hours, fight exhaustion, carry emotional wounds, and still somehow find the strength to keep going. The weight they carry is often unseen by the world.

Yet what keeps many mothers moving forward are the quiet moments when a child says, “I love you,” gives a hug, or simply smiles with gratitude. Those moments become treasures stored deep within the heart.

The Bible gives us one of the most beautiful pictures of a mother’s heart in the life of Mary, the mother of Jesus.

After the shepherds arrived at Bethlehem telling of the angelic announcement concerning Christ, the Scriptures say:

“But Mary kept all these things, and pondered them in her heart.”
— King James Version Luke 2:19

That small verse is often passed over quickly, yet it reveals something powerful about motherhood.

Mary listened carefully to the words spoken about her child. She treasured every moment, every promise, every miracle, and every memory. She carried them quietly within her heart. The word “pondered” means she reflected deeply upon them. She thought about them over and over, seeking understanding and meaning.

What a picture of mothers everywhere.

A mother remembers the first cry of her child.
She remembers sleepless nights beside a sick bed.
She remembers first steps, first words, graduations, heartbreaks, and victories.
She carries memories no one else fully understands.

Long after children forget certain moments, mothers still treasure them in their hearts.

There is also something deeply spiritual in Mary’s example. She did not fully understand everything God was doing, but she trusted Him anyway. She quietly reflected on His work with humility and faith.

That describes countless godly mothers through the generations.

Many mothers have prayed silently for children who wandered far from God.
Many have cried alone where no one could see.
Many have sacrificed dreams, comforts, and personal desires so their children could survive and succeed.

The world often measures greatness by wealth, fame, or power. But heaven sees greatness differently.

A mother kneeling beside a child’s bed in prayer is precious in the sight of God.

A weary mother working two jobs to provide for her family demonstrates a strength the world rarely honors enough.

A grandmother faithfully praying for her family carries spiritual influence greater than many leaders or celebrities.

The heart of a mother reflects something of the nurturing love of God Himself.

The Apostle Paul wrote:

“When my father and my mother forsake me, then the LORD will take me up.”
— Psalm 27:10

Even in broken homes and painful situations, God sees the burdens carried by mothers. He sees every tear, every sacrifice, every fearful night, and every whispered prayer.

This Mother’s Day, perhaps the greatest gift we can give is not merely flowers or cards, but gratitude and honor.

Tell your mother you love her while you still can.
Thank the woman who prayed for you.
Honor the grandmother who kept the family together.
Encourage the single mother who feels exhausted and overwhelmed.
Remember the mothers around the world living in war zones, poverty, persecution, and hardship, still holding their families together through courage and love.

And like Mary, may we all learn to treasure the things of God in our hearts.

In a noisy and chaotic world, there is still great power in quiet faithfulness, thoughtful reflection, and enduring love.

Today we honor mothers everywhere—the women who carry treasures in their hearts that the world may never fully see, but heaven surely remembers.

The Fragile Web We Trust: How One Cyber Attack Could Cripple Modern Civilization

 For decades, we have been told that technology would make the world stronger, smarter, and safer. Yet the more advanced our systems become, the more fragile they appear. The modern economy now rests on a digital foundation so interconnected that a major cyberattack could shake civilization in ways most people cannot imagine.

The recent Asia Times article compared the internet to the Strait of Hormuz—the narrow waterway through which much of the world’s oil flows. If Hormuz is blocked, oil prices explode, and economies suffer. But now the world faces another danger: digital chokepoints.

The global economy no longer depends only upon oil pipelines and shipping lanes. It depends upon:

  • Undersea internet cables
  • Cloud computing centers
  • Digital banking systems
  • AI infrastructure
  • Electrical grids
  • Satellite communications
  • GPS systems
  • Electronic payment networks
  • Automated trucking and logistics systems

Most people never think about these systems because they are invisible. Yet nearly every part of daily life now depends upon them functioning without interruption.

What happens if they fail?

A World One Attack Away from Chaos

Imagine waking up tomorrow to discover:

  • Debit cards no longer work
  • ATMs are offline
  • Gas stations cannot process payments
  • Grocery stores cannot restock shelves
  • Cell towers are malfunctioning
  • Power grids are unstable
  • Hospitals lose digital access
  • Supply chains freeze
  • Internet communications collapse

This is not science fiction.

Governments around the world openly warn that cyber warfare is now one of the greatest threats facing modern nations. Military leaders already consider cyber attacks equal to acts of war.

The frightening reality is this:

The modern economy is built upon “just in time” systems with very little margin for disruption.

Most grocery stores only have a few days of food inventory.

Most gas stations rely upon electronic payment systems.

Most banks operate digitally rather than physically.

Most businesses cannot function without internet connectivity.

Our society appears powerful, but beneath the surface it is extremely dependent on fragile systems.

The Illusion of Stability

The modern world gives the illusion of strength because everything works—until suddenly it does not.

The Roman Empire looked invincible until supply lines failed.

The Great Depression revealed how fragile financial systems were.

The 2008 financial crisis showed how quickly markets could unravel.

COVID exposed how weak global supply chains truly are.

Now civilization faces another layer of vulnerability:

Digital dependence.

The Bible repeatedly warns against trusting in earthly systems as though they are permanent.

“Put not your trust in princes, nor in the son of man, in whom there is no help.” — Psalm 146:3 KJV.

And again:

“Except the LORD keep the city, the watchman waketh but in vain.” — Psalm 127:1 KJV

Man believes technology can secure the future. Yet a coordinated cyberattack could cause enormous disruption within hours.

The Danger of Centralization

One of the greatest dangers today is the concentration of power into a handful of systems and corporations.

A few companies control:

  • Cloud computing
  • Digital communications
  • Financial processing
  • AI infrastructure
  • Online commerce
  • Social media platforms

The internet was originally designed to survive disaster through decentralization. Ironically, it has become centralized again.

This means that attacks against a few strategic systems could simultaneously impact millions.

Scripture warns about societies becoming overly dependent upon systems of trade and wealth.

“For in one hour so great riches is come to naught.” — Revelation 18:17 KJV.

Notice how quickly collapse can come:

“In one hour.”

Modern civilization moves at digital speed. Therefore, disruption can also happen at digital speed.

Why Christians Should Prepare

Some Christians mistakenly believe that preparation shows fear or a lack of faith. The opposite is often true.

The Bible repeatedly teaches wisdom, foresight, and preparation.

“A prudent man foreseeth the evil, and hideth himself: but the simple pass on, and are punished.” — Proverbs 22:3 KJV.

Joseph prepared Egypt for famine.

Noah prepared the ark before the flood.

The early Church stored and shared resources during hardship.

Preparation is not panic.

Preparation is wisdom.

A cyber crisis could affect:

  • Access to money
  • Access to medicine
  • Food distribution
  • Fuel availability
  • Communications
  • Emergency services

Families that prepare now may not only help themselves, but also help neighbors, churches, and communities during crisis.

Practical Areas of Preparation

Christians should think seriously about resilience rather than panic.

Consider:

  • Keeping extra food and water
  • Having backup medicines
  • Maintaining emergency cash
  • Learning practical skills
  • Strengthening local church/community ties
  • Having alternative communication methods
  • Reducing debt where possible
  • Becoming less dependent on fragile systems

Most importantly:

Prepare spiritually.

The greatest danger is not merely economic collapse, but spiritual deception and fear.

Jesus warned repeatedly that difficult times would come:

“And there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places. All these are the beginning of sorrows.” — Matthew 24:7–8 KJV

The answer is not hysteria.

The answer is readiness.

The Church Must Wake Up

Much of the modern Church has become comfortable inside a consumer-driven society. We assume the systems around us will always function normally.

But history teaches otherwise.

Civilizations change rapidly.

Economies can collapse suddenly.

Wars escalate unexpectedly.

Technology can fail catastrophically.

The Church must return to:

  • Prayer
  • Simplicity
  • Community
  • Faithfulness
  • Evangelism
  • Spiritual discernment

Instead of trusting entirely in digital systems, Christians must remember where true security comes from.

“God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.” — Psalm 46:1 KJV.

The world is becoming increasingly fragile. One cyber attack, one major war, or one systemic failure could expose how unstable modern civilization truly is.

Now is the time for wisdom.

Now is the time for spiritual awakening.

Now is the time to prepare.

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Imprecatory Prayers Are in Scripture: Let God Judge the Wicked

 There is a growing darkness in our world. Every day we witness corruption, violence, lies, greed, mockery of righteousness, and the shedding of innocent blood. Many people respond to this darkness with rage. Others call for violence, revenge, uprising, and hatred. Some believe the answer is found in political power, street protests, or force. But the believer in Christ must ask a different question:

What does Scripture teach the people of God to do when evil rulers and wickedness seem to prevail?

The answer may surprise many modern Christians.

The Bible contains what are called imprecatory prayers—prayers where God's people cry out for the LORD to judge wickedness, stop evil, defend the innocent, and bring justice upon those who oppress others. These prayers are not prayers of personal revenge. They are appeals to Heaven itself. They place judgment in God's hands rather than man's.

David prayed:

"O LORD God, to whom vengeance belongeth; O God, to whom vengeance belongeth, shew thyself."

— Psalm 94:1 (KJV)

Notice carefully: David did not take vengeance himself. He appealed to the Judge of all the earth.

Today many Christians become uncomfortable whenever someone speaks of praying against evil. Yet the Scriptures are filled with such prayers.

Psalm 94 asks:

"Lord, how long shall the wicked, how long shall the wicked triumph?"

— Psalm 94:3

Does that not sound like the cry of many believers today? We look around and see corruption celebrated while righteousness is mocked. We see laws that reward evil and punish truth. We see innocent lives destroyed while powerful men enrich themselves.

The psalmist continued:

"They slay the widow and the stranger, and murder the fatherless."

— Psalm 94:6

How different is our generation? Millions of unborn children have been destroyed. The elderly are discarded. Families are shattered. Truth is exchanged for lies. God's commandments are mocked openly by leaders, entertainers, educators, and even some churches.

Yet the modern Church often says, "Do not speak against evil. Do not pray for judgment. Just stay silent."

But silence in the face of wickedness is not biblical.

The prophets cried out against evil kings. Elijah confronted Ahab. Nathan rebuked David. John the Baptist rebuked Herod. Jesus Himself overturned tables in the Temple and publicly condemned hypocrisy.

What many fail to understand is this: imprecatory prayer is not a call to hatred or violence. It is the opposite.

It is choosing to let God judge rather than taking vengeance ourselves.

The Apostle Paul wrote:

"Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves… for it is written, Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord."

— Romans 12:19

The world says, "Fight evil with violence."

The believer says, "I will fall on my knees before God."

That is not weakness. That is spiritual warfare.

Far too many today are placing their hope in politicians, governments, protests, or revolutions. But Scripture teaches that the real battle is spiritual.

"For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers…"

— Ephesians 6:12

The answer is not mob violence. The answer is not hatred. The answer is not burning cities, threatening neighbors, or calling for civil war.

The answer is repentance, prayer, righteousness, courage, and truth.

When believers stop praying, darkness advances unchecked.

Throughout history, revivals did not begin in government buildings. They began in prayer meetings. They began when broken men and women cried out to God for mercy and justice.

Even the saints in Heaven cry out for God's righteous judgment:

"How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood…?"

— Revelation 6:10

Notice they are not asking for personal revenge. They are asking for divine justice.

There is a difference.

Some Christians have become so afraid of appearing "unloving" that they no longer stand against evil at all. But biblical love does not celebrate wickedness. Love warns. Love calls for repentance. Love pleads for men to turn before judgment falls.

Sometimes the most loving prayer is:

"Lord, stop the evil. Expose the corruption. Bring conviction. Shake the wicked from their rebellion before they destroy themselves and others."

Why?

Because God's judgment is often meant to lead people to repentance.

Many in Scripture only turned back to God after discipline, hardship, or national shaking. The prodigal son came to himself in the famine. Nebuchadnezzar humbled himself after judgment. Even Israel repeatedly returned to God after chastisement.

God's desire is not destruction but repentance.

"The Lord is… not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance."

— 2 Peter 3:9

That is why believers should pray fervently—not for personal vengeance, but for God to intervene in righteousness. We should pray that evil be restrained, truth exposed, corruption broken, and hearts convicted.

We are living in an hour where many professing Christians have become spiritually asleep. Comfort has replaced holiness. Entertainment has replaced prayer meetings. Political loyalty has replaced loyalty to Christ.

But God is still looking for those willing to stand.

The Three Hebrew Children stood before Nebuchadnezzar and declared:

"Our God whom we serve is able to deliver us… But if not… we will not serve thy gods."

— Daniel 3:17–18

That is the spirit the Church needs again.

Not hatred.

Not violence.

Not revenge.

But holy courage.

The Church does not conquer by the sword of man but by the power of God.

We must become people of prayer again. We must put on the whole armor of God. We must stand for truth even if the culture mocks us. We must cry out for mercy while there is still time.

The darkness is growing, but prayer is still powerful.

The throne of Heaven is still occupied.

God still hears the cries of His people.

And perhaps now more than ever, the Church must once again learn how to pray like David:

"O LORD God, to whom vengeance belongeth… shew thyself."

— Psalm 94:1

Not because we hate sinners.

But because we long to see righteousness return, evil restrained, and souls awakened before it is too late.

Lord, teach us to pray again.