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Psalm 13
1How long, Yahweh? Will you forget me forever? How long will you hide your face from me?
2How long shall I take counsel in my soul, Having sorrow in my heart every day? How long shall my enemy triumph over me?
3Behold, and answer me, Yahweh, my God. Give light to my eyes, lest I sleep in death;
4Lest my enemy say, "I have prevailed against him;" Lest my adversaries rejoice when I fall.
5But I trust in your lovingkindness. My heart rejoices in your salvation.
6I will sing to Yahweh, Because he has been good to me. Psalm 14 For the Chief Musician. By David.
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In The Elephant Man, John Merrick suffers severe deformities that make him a carnival freak. Frederick Treves sees past the exterior to the gentle, intelligent soul within. I am not an animal! I am a human being! Merrick cries.
Chiron carries his true self buried so deep even he can barely find it. In a world that demands he be hard, he builds walls of muscle and silence. Only Juan, a drug dealer who becomes a father figure, sees the frightened boy inside.
In Wonder, Auggie Pullman enters middle school with a severe facial difference. He is stared at, bullied, isolated. Yet the film insists: he is fearfully and wonderfully made. The Psalmist says, I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made.
Psalm 137 challenges spiritual passivity—grace is not an excuse to stay unchanged—today, not someday.
Psalm 137 reminds us: God’s presence is not distant—He strengthens the weak and fills the hungry.
Psalm 138 is inconvenient on purpose—God interrupts comfort to liberate the oppressed—today, not someday.
Psalm 138 shatters self-salvation—your best efforts can’t pay what only Christ can forgive—today, not someday.
Psalm 130 50:1-8, 22-23 shows that God’s power is for love, not spectacle—today, not someday.
Psalm 130 Luke 14:25-33, grace isn’t abstract—it’s God drawing you to trust Him today—today, not someday.
Psalm 139: In Spirit-led life, it stirs hunger for God’s presence and empowered ministry.
Psalm 130 32:1-3a, 6-15 shows that revival is not hype; it is Spirit-wrought transformation—today, not someday.
Psalm 139: By prevenient grace, it meets us gently—invites a real response that grows into holy love.
Psalm 139: Under God’s sovereignty, it doesn’t flatter us—magnifies grace and summons covenant faithfulness to God’s glory.
Psalm 139: By prevenient grace, it invites a real response that grows into holy love.
Psalm 130 11:1-11 confronts our distractions—without watchfulness, we lose our souls by inches—today, not someday.
Psalm 130 19:1-10 exposes pious excuses—if faith never costs power, it’s probably not liberation—today, not someday.
Psalm 137 makes room for the wounded: God sees the overlooked and calls the Church to solidarity.
Psalm 137 encourages the long obedience of prayer, fasting, and mercy—today, not someday.
Psalm 139: Within the deposit of faith, it doesn’t flatter us—draws us into grace through the Church’s sacramental life.
Psalm 130 13:10-17 names what we avoid: neutrality in injustice is still a choice—today, not someday.
Psalm 139: Under God’s sovereignty, it magnifies grace and summons covenant faithfulness to God’s glory.
Psalm 130 Luke 14:1, 7-14, orthodoxy becomes obedience—truth received becomes truth lived—today, not someday.
Psalm 139: In Spirit-led life, it doesn’t flatter us—stirs hunger for God’s presence and empowered ministry.
Psalm 130 Jeremiah 4:11-12, 22-28 never moves you outward, you may be reading it for information, not transformation.