Thought for the Day Example
The Thought for the Day is a daily e-mail that is sent
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The Thought for the Day starts off with a scripture
verse and 2 devotionals.
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The Thought for the day Changes daily so be sure to
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EXAMPLE below.

Living Beyond the Grind of Compromise
One of the best-loved portions of God's Book is the Psalms. For centuries these songs have comforted, calmed, and consoled the hearts of readers.
The Hebrews' ancient hymnal begins with a song that addresses one of life's most common grinds—compromise. Please understand, I'm not referring to those give-and-take times so necessary for living in harmony with one another. Without that healthy kind of compromise, nations could never find a meeting ground for peaceful coexistence. Furthermore, growing family members would seldom enjoy the freedom involved in giving one another room to be different were it not for the tolerance such compromise encourages.
I'm thinking, rather, of compromising with wrong . . . allowing the slow-moving tentacles of evil to wrap themselves around us, squeezing the joys and rewards of obedience from our lives. It happens so silently, so subtly, we hardly realize it's taking place. Like an enormous oak that has decayed for years from within then suddenly falls, those who permit the eroding grind of compromise can expect an ultimate collapse.
Years ago I recall reading of the construction of a city hall and fire station in a small northern Pennsylvania community. All the citizens were so proud of their new red brick structure—a long-awaited dream come true. Not too many weeks after moving in, however, strange things began to happen. Several doors failed to shut completely and a few windows wouldn't slide open very easily. As time passed, ominous cracks began to appear in the walls. Within a few months, the front door couldn't be locked since the foundation had shifted, and the roof began to leak. By and by, the little building that was once the source of great civic pride had to be condemned. An intense investigation revealed that deep mining blasts several miles away caused underground shock waves which subsequently weakened the earth beneath the building foundation, resulting in its virtual self-destruction.
So it is with compromise in a life. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, one rationalization leads to another, which triggers a series of equally damaging alterations in a life that was once stable, strong, and reliable. That seems to be the concern of the psalmist as he composes his first song, which encourages us to resist even the slightest temptation to compromise our convictions.
Pause today and give yourself time to think deeply. Ask yourself a few probing questions such as:
- Are areas of my life showing signs of spiritual, ethical, or moral compromise?
- Does my life resemble the kind of tree described in Psalm 1?
- Should I put an end to some things that are dragging me down?

You are an epistle of Christ. —2 Corinthians 3:3
Because I’m a writer, occasionally a friend will say to me, “I want to write a book someday.”
“That’s a worthy goal,” I reply, “and I hope you do write a book. But it’s better to be one than to write one.”
I’m thinking of the apostle Paul’s words: “Clearly you are an epistle of Christ . . . written not with ink but by the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of flesh, that is, of the heart” (2 Cor. 3:3).
In his book The Practice of Piety, Lewis Bayly, chaplain to England’s King James I, said that “one who hopes to effect any good by his writings” will find that he will “instruct very few. . . . The most powerful means, therefore, of promoting what is good is by example. . . . One man in a thousand can write a book to instruct his neighbors. . . . But every man can be a pattern of living excellence to those around him.”
The work that Christ is doing in believers can result in an influence far greater than any book they might write. Through God’s Word, written “on their hearts” (Jer. 31:33), the Lord is displaying His love and goodness for all to see.
As a Christian, you may never write a book, but by living for God you will be one! You will be an open book, an “epistle of Christ” for all to read.
Oh, we would write our record plain
And come in time to see
Our unsaved neighbors won to Christ
While reading you and me. —Anon.
If someone were to read your life like a book,
would they find Jesus in its pages?
Even a fish stays out of trouble
if he keeps his mouth shut.


Pray for Our Troops!
Bill Humble, 3rd term in Iraq
Cpl Mark Steele, 2nd term in Iraq
Kim Rose-serving, 2nd term in Iraq
SGT Jared Tynes, 2nd term in Iraq
Andrew Rundell , Iraq
Keith Barker
Billy Hensley
Michael Flynn, Germany
Johnny Hedge
Earl Hedge
Eric Michael Acrivos.. 101st AirBorn.. INF.. Bravo Co
Derek Lisby, Jr
Luis R. Escapa, (Returned Home Safely)
SPC Jeremiah Luttrell, US Army - Germany
Christian Louer USAF Mississippi
Jesse Houseman, Lance Corporal E3, US Marines, Okinawa, Japan
Lt.Col. Shane Stover (Iraq)
Capt. James Stover (Fort Leonard Wood, MO)
Lance Corporal Larry Grady Camp Lejeune, NC.
Shane Warner Army RangersJay Tedder USMCMatt Klinner, USMC
Mike Weber- Iraq richard.frank.meyer@us.army.mil (MAJOR)Bill Schmidt-IraMichael L. Mead - IraqRuben Gonzalea-Army, AfghanistaLT Walter ReynoldsJoshua BottiglierJeremy Brown E3 Navy Tinker AFB OK.
Santiago Aguirre Basic Training San Diago, CA.Airman Adam Jordan, USS Dwight D. EisenhowerJeff Stoner - AfghanistanAB Ethan Brown - Basic Lackland AFDLance Corporal Casey Luedemann - IraqJustin Wagner - Iraq
Mary Beth Wheeler-US Airforce-Afghanistan
(If you would like a name added to the list,
Please e-mail me and I will add it.)
Photo of the Day
Have A Blessed Day!