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Isaiah 58:1
1Cry aloud, don`t spare, lift up your voice like a trumpet, and declare to my people their disobedience, and to the house of Jacob their sins.
135 results found
Isaiah 58:1-12 2:4-13 offers a prayer-shaped life: grace received in worship, carried into ordinary days—today, not someday.
Isaiah 58:1-12 18:1-11 refuses a private gospel; the kingdom always leaks into public life—today, not someday.
Isaiah 58:1-12 80:1-2, 8-19 is inconvenient on purpose—God interrupts comfort to liberate the oppressed—today, not someday.
Isaiah 58:1-12 Luke 16:19-31, the text presses one question: will we trust God’s Word and live it?
Isaiah 58:1-12 1-21 is a steady hand on the shoulder: God is near, and you are not alone in obedience.
Isaiah 58:1-12 Hebrews 11:29-12:2 irritates you, it may be because God is touching the idol you protect.
The arch enemy—called by Scripture the old serpent, Satan, the roaring lion—commands tremendous power and malignity, marshaling principalities and powers under his dominion.
The passage presents three critical pieces of this celestial armour, each representing a facet of God's redemptive nature.
Isaiah 58:16 declares: "Thou shalt also suck the milk of the Gentiles." This remarkable promise describes the Church's sustenance through the wealth, power, and resources that nations and kings willingly contribute to her growth. The imagery is maternal, not predatory....
Every January, Marcus Reed led his congregation through a twenty-one-day fast at Grace Covenant Church in Memphis. They prayed, journaled, skipped meals, and gathered for...
Every Sunday for eleven years, members of Antioch AME Church in Springfield, Illinois, arrived early to sing, pray, and study scripture. They tithed faithfully. They...
In 369 AD, during a devastating famine in Caesarea — in modern-day Turkey — Bishop Basil stood before his wealthy congregation and preached words that...
In 2019, a school district in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania made national news when cafeteria workers were instructed to throw away the hot lunches of children whose...
Pandita Ramabai was born into a high-caste Brahmin family in India in 1858 and became one of the most learned women in the country, earning...
In 1873, a Belgian priest named Damien De Veuster stepped off a boat onto the shores of Molokai, Hawaii, and into a colony of eight...
In the winter of 1934, Dorothy Day stood in a cramped kitchen at 115 Mott Street in lower Manhattan, ladling bean soup to a line...
In 1873, a thirty-three-year-old Belgian priest named Damien De Veuster stepped off a cargo ship onto the rocky shore of Kalaupapa, a leper colony on...
In 1933, Dorothy Day stood on a cold New York sidewalk and handed a bowl of soup to a man whose shoes had no soles....
Every Saturday morning for eleven years, First Baptist Church of downtown Louisville held a prayer breakfast. The deacons arrived at 6 a.m., brewed coffee, read...
On March 9, 1892, a white mob dragged three Black men from a Memphis jail and shot them dead. Thomas Moss, Calvin McDowell, and Henry...
In 1896, famine crept across western India like a slow fire. Crops failed in Maharashtra. Villages emptied. Child widows — already outcasts under Hindu law...
In 1758, John Woolman stood before the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends in an undyed wool coat. The other Quakers wore fine fabrics — indigo,...
Every Saturday morning for eleven years, Rosa Gutierrez set her alarm for 4:15 a.m. and drove to St. Matthew's Church in the Bronx. She arranged...
In 2019, a small congregation in Flint, Michigan, had been holding weekly prayer vigils about the water crisis for nearly four years. They fasted. They...