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Saturday, June 20, 2026

What is Your Mammon?

 Readings 062026  

What is the mammon of the world today?
It’s money, yes—
but it’s also reputation, applause, comfort, and control.
It’s whatever feeds the ego.
Whatever tells you,
“You can stand on your own. You can build your own life.”
Mammon is pride wearing a friendly face.

And this is why humility becomes more than a virtue.
It becomes a choice of allegiance.

There comes a moment in every believer’s life
when the heart has to decide
whose voice it will follow.
Because pride always tries to build its own kingdom,
and humility quietly hands the keys back to God.

Jesus says, “No one can serve two masters.”
Not because God is demanding,
but because the human heart is too small
to hold competing loves.
One will always rise.
One will always shape how we see,
how we choose,
how we desire.

So let me ask you gently—
what is your mammon?
What is the thing that tries to claim your loyalty,
your worth,
your identity,
your future?

Mammon is the illusion of self‑reliance.
But humility breaks that illusion.
It teaches us to kneel,
to loosen our grip on false treasures,
and to let God be the One who defines us.

And here is the quiet miracle:
when we choose God as our only Master,
we do not lose freedom—
we finally find it.
The heart grows lighter.
The path grows clearer.
The soul grows whole.

Today, let humility lead you back to the One Master
who never enslaves,
but always sets free.

Prayer 

Lord Jesus, 

Teach my heart to choose You 

Loosen my grip on the things 

that promise much but leave me empty.
Quiet the pride that tries 

to build its own kingdom.
Strengthen the humility that 

hands everything back to You.
Be my only Master, 

my only security, 

my only peace.
Lead me into the freedom of trusting You alone.

Amen


Friday, June 19, 2026

Falling Into His Light

Readings 061926 

There was a moment in my life
when I realized my pride
had become a stone around my neck.
It showed itself in jealousy,
in envy,
in anger toward others—
not because they had failed me,
but because I was disappointed in myself.

That truth surfaced the day
I said something not terrible,
not vile,
but simply ugly
to someone I had once called a friend.
The wall of pride I had built
could push away any friendship
that tried to reach me.
And when I walked away,
I knew how broken I was.

There comes a moment
in every believer’s life
when pride finally cracks,
and the heart can no longer
hold itself together.
Humility is not polished.
It is not perfect.
It is the courage to fall,
to drop to your knees in tears,
and let the soul cry out
the prayer it cannot form.
God knows.
God hears.
God receives.

Jesus calls this
the battle of the heart.
Where your treasure is,
there your heart will be.
If the eye is clear,
light fills everything.
But if the eye is clouded
by pride or self‑reliance,
the whole interior world
grows dim.

Only those who release
their earthly treasure
can receive heavenly treasure.
Only those who kneel
can rise.
Only the humble,
the poor in spirit,
can see clearly enough
to walk in His light.

Humility is not humiliation.
It is the holy moment
when the soul whispers,
“Lord, I cannot carry this,”
and heaven answers,
“I know.
Let Me.”

Prayer

Lord, break open my pride
and steady me as I fall.
Let Your light fill the places
where I have tried to stand alone.
Teach my heart to kneel in trust,
and lift me in Your mercy.

Amen