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New every morning is your love, great God of light, and all day long you are working for good in the world. Stir up in us desire to serve you, to live peacefully with our neighbors and all your creation, and to devote each day to your Son, our Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.

"A Liturgy for Morning Prayer," Upper Room Worshipbook

Used by permission from the Book of Common Worship, © 2018 Westminster John Knox Press. All rights reserved. This prayer appears in “A Liturgy for Morning Prayer” in Upper Room Worshipbook.

 

Today's Reflection

Your children can always take more than you can give and will always need more than you have, so know when to wave the white flag and ask for help. Each person’s “tells” are unique. Ask for time for yourself before you are at the end of your rope. Only we know what diminishes the divine spark we carry within us.

—Lauren Burdette, This Life That Is Ours: Motherhood as Spiritual Practice (Upper Room Books, 2019)

Today's Question

What are your simple, life-giving, practices that tend your divine spark? [question from This Life That Is Ours] Join the conversation.

Today's Scripture

Generous persons will prosper;
those who refresh others will themselves be refreshed.
—Proverbs 11:25 (CEB)

Prayer for the Week

Dear God, may I see my moments of strength and my moments of weakness as invitations to draw more closely to you. Amen. [prayer adapted from from This Life That Is Ours]
Submit your prayer to The Upper Room.

Something More

While personal reflection is the most popular use of The Upper Room daily devotional, did you know there are many other ways to use it in your ministry? Here are eight of our favorite ways to encourage daily life with God in your congregation (and beyond) with The Upper Room. Read more here.

Lectionary Readings

(Courtesy of Vanderbilt Divinity Library)

Looking for lectionary-based resources? Learn more about The Upper Room Disciplines.

2 Comments | Join the Conversation.

 

Today's Reflection

You are coming back home to yourself. You have poured out yourself in care for your children. In those early months and years, you’ve been consumed by their holy fire. You have forgotten yourself and died to yourself. You have been broken apart and are now being reconstituted. Can you hear the invitation to new life? However this beginning looks and feels for you, know that it is just that: a beginning. Our becoming is ongoing. We continue to be created and formed.

—Lauren Burdette, This Life That Is Ours: Motherhood as Spiritual Practice (Upper Room Books, 2019)

Today's Question

What is it like to come back home to yourself? [question from This Life That Is Ours] Join the conversation.

Today's Scripture

If anyone is in Christ, that person is part of the new creation. The old things have gone away, and look, new things have arrived!
—2 Corinthians 5:17 (CEB)

Prayer for the Week

Dear God, may I see my moments of strength and my moments of weakness as invitations to draw more closely to you. Amen. [prayer adapted from from This Life That Is Ours]
Submit your prayer to The Upper Room.

Something More

While personal reflection is the most popular use of The Upper Room daily devotional, did you know there are many other ways to use it in your ministry? Here are eight of our favorite ways to encourage daily life with God in your congregation (and beyond) with The Upper Room. Read more here.

Lectionary Readings

(Courtesy of Vanderbilt Divinity Library)

Looking for lectionary-based resources? Learn more about The Upper Room Disciplines.

2 Comments | Join the Conversation.

 

Today's Reflection

In community, soul speaks to soul. We recognize our own pain when we see others who are suffering in some way. And we recognize our own joys when we share the joy of others.

Community—this is our word for a “common unity.” It’s easy to lose sight of what unites us when there are battles being waged over policy, preferences, and power. Yet in community we learn grace—both how to receive it and how to give it. And in this unity of grace, we find God whose “work is done in faithfulness. . . . the earth is full of the steadfast love of the Lord” (Ps. 33:4-5). 

—Marsha Crockett, "The Path of Community," in Speak, My Soul: Listening to the Divine with Holy Purpose (Upper Room Books, 2024)

Today's Question

How would you describe your own relationship with your faith community? In what ways are you growing in patience and the ability to bear with one another in love? [questions from Speak, My Soul]
Join the conversation.

Today's Scripture

Walk in a manner worthy of the calling to which you have been called, with all humility and gentleness, with patience, bearing with one another in love.
—Ephesians 4:1-2 (NRSVUE)

Prayer for the Week

Dear God, stay with me. Help me still my mind so that I can hear you speak within my soul. Amen.
Submit your prayer to The Upper Room.

Something More

In Speak, My Soul, spiritual guide Marsha Crockett points us to seven inner pathways to help us slow down, listen, and draw closer to God. Explore the sacred paths of discernment, discipline, abiding, wilderness, identity, community, and contemplation in this practical and inspiring new resource. Learn more here.

Lectionary Readings

(Courtesy of Vanderbilt Divinity Library)

Looking for lectionary-based resources? Learn more about The Upper Room Disciplines.

0 Comments | Join the Conversation.

 

Today's Reflection

Knowing God and knowing self is an every day, every hour, every minute invitation. It’s a constant give and take, receiving and releasing, embracing and letting go that occurs as we continually turn our lives toward God. It is recognizing what doesn’t make up our identity—the roles, titles, accomplishments, and measures of success—and what does.

. . . Our circumstances and emotions in life can change with the blink of an eye or over the slow passing of time. They play a vital role in the spiritual journey of human existence and how we recognize God in the midst of it all. But beyond our own emotional responses to a set of circumstances, we exist in a still truer identity within the heart of God where we are held secure and can claim our true self as being “wonderfully made” (Ps. 139:14), and “more than victorious” (Rom. 8:37). 

—Marsha Crockett, "The Path of Identity," in Speak, My Soul: Listening to the Divine with Holy Purpose (Upper Room Books, 2024)

Today's Question

How does it feel to set aside your roles, accomplishments, and circumstances and to get to the heart of your true identity? [question adapted from Speak, My Soul] Join the conversation.

Today's Scripture

In [God] we live and move and have our being.
—Acts 17:28 (NRSVUE)

Prayer for the Week

Dear God, stay with me. Help me still my mind so that I can hear you speak within my soul. Amen.
Submit your prayer to The Upper Room.

Something More

In Speak, My Soul, spiritual guide Marsha Crockett points us to seven inner pathways to help us slow down, listen, and draw closer to God. Explore the sacred paths of discernment, discipline, abiding, wilderness, identity, community, and contemplation in this practical and inspiring new resource. Learn more here.

Lectionary Readings

(Courtesy of Vanderbilt Divinity Library)

Looking for lectionary-based resources? Learn more about The Upper Room Disciplines.

1 Comments | Join the Conversation.

 

Today's Reflection

Even if we learn to abide and feel at home with the Divine, . . . we may abruptly come to a wilderness landscape that leaves us wondering if we took a wrong turn somewhere along the way. Often our first response is to redouble our efforts in the disciplines. But as we seek the Lord in prayer, we may still come up empty. We meditate on the Word, but our spirit faints for lack of nourishment, we may begin to wonder what’s true and what’s real about faith.

At this stage of the journey, wondering and wandering feel like uninvited strangers on the wilderness path. But rather than looking at them with a skeptical eye, it seems the Spirit invites both the wondering and wandering to join the journey. When we face them and invite them along instead of running from them or ignoring them, they can ultimately lead us to deeper mysteries of faith that may feel barren in the beginning.

—Marsha Crockett, “The Path in the Wilderness," in Speak, My Soul: Listening to the Divine with Holy Purpose (Upper Room Books, 2024)

Today's Question

In what ways can you embrace wondering and wandering in your spiritual journey?
Join the conversation.

Today's Scripture

I will make the wilderness a pool of water
and the dry land springs of water.
—Isaiah 41:18 (NRSVUE)

Prayer for the Week

Dear God, stay with me. Help me still my mind so that I can hear you speak within my soul. Amen.
Submit your prayer to The Upper Room.

Something More

In Speak, My Soul, spiritual guide Marsha Crockett points us to seven inner pathways to help us slow down, listen, and draw closer to God. Explore the sacred paths of discernment, discipline, abiding, wilderness, identity, community, and contemplation in this practical and inspiring new resource. Learn more here.

Lectionary Readings

(Courtesy of Vanderbilt Divinity Library)

Looking for lectionary-based resources? Learn more about The Upper Room Disciplines.

1 Comments | Join the Conversation.

 

Today's Reflection

I’m stopping to listen more deeply, to give pause to what feels like a prayer, asking Jesus to abide with me, stay with me, as the disciples on the road to Emmaus ask, “Stay with us, because it is almost eve¬ning and the day is now nearly over” (Luke 24:29). I am drawn to this prayer because it isn’t focused on how I can or should abide with Jesus (although he asks that I do). There’s nothing I must do to earn the presence of the Christ or the grace of knowing God. Rather, this message tells me that Jesus comes to me and abides with me even when I fail to recognize him. In my ordinary life and in my persistent weaknesses, even when it feels like evening, as darkness deepens during times of sorrow, there is the abiding Christ.

—Marsha Crockett, “The Path of Abiding," in Speak, My Soul: Listening to the Divine with Holy Purpose (Upper Room Books, 2024)

Today's Question

How do you respond to the idea of Jesus taking up residence in your daily life? [question from Speak, My Soul] Join the conversation.

Today's Scripture

My spirit abides among you; do not fear.
—Haggai 2:5 (NRSVUE)

Prayer for the Week

Dear God, stay with me. Help me still my mind so that I can hear you speak within my soul. Amen.
Submit your prayer to The Upper Room.

Something More

In Speak, My Soul, spiritual guide Marsha Crockett points us to seven inner pathways to help us slow down, listen, and draw closer to God. Explore the sacred paths of discernment, discipline, abiding, wilderness, identity, community, and contemplation in this practical and inspiring new resource. Learn more here.

Lectionary Readings

(Courtesy of Vanderbilt Divinity Library)

Looking for lectionary-based resources? Learn more about The Upper Room Disciplines.

1 Comments | Join the Conversation.