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Tuesday, December 2, 2025
Monday, December 1, 2025
Faith That Endures the Prison Walls
“I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith.” — 2 Timothy 4:7
John Bunyan, a 17th-century English preacher and writer, spent much of his life in prison for preaching the gospel.
One notable incident occurred during his twelve-year imprisonment in Bedford jail. While confined, Bunyan faced harsh conditions and the constant threat of despair, yet he used the time to meditate, pray, and write. It was in this place of suffering that he composed The Pilgrim’s Progress, a book that has inspired millions with its vivid depiction of the Christian journey. Rather than letting confinement silence him, Bunyan allowed God to use the walls of the prison to produce a story of enduring faith, hope, and perseverance.
His life reminds us that God can turn even the hardest circumstances into opportunities for spiritual growth and eternal impact. When trials come, faith and obedience can transform suffering into a powerful testimony.
Prayer:
Dear Father in Heaven, help me remain steadfast in faith even in difficult seasons. Strengthen my heart to trust You fully and allow every challenge to deepen my devotion to You. In Jesus’ name. Amen
www.johnsoncherian.com
Saturday, November 29, 2025
Friday, November 28, 2025
“A Posture of Humble Fire”
William Seymour was known for praying with his head inside an old wooden shoebox. To outsiders this looked strange, even foolish. But to Seymour, it was a sacred posture—an expression of deep humility before God.
One day, as Seymour prayed in his usual way, the atmosphere in the small mission room began to shift. An unmistakable sense of God’s presence filled the place. Witnesses later described a thick, almost tangible glory settling over the room, and people began to weep, repent, and pray as the Holy Spirit moved. That day became one of the sparks that ignited the Azusa Street Revival, a movement God used to touch the world.
What most remember about that revival is the power—miracles, unity across race and class lines, and a fresh outpouring of the Holy Spirit.
But what ignited that fire was humility.
What sustained it was prayer.
And what defined Seymour was obedience, even when it looked small or odd to others.
Sometimes God calls us to postures of devotion that aren’t glamorous, public, or admired. The greatest transformations often begin in hidden places—knees on the floor, face bowed low, heart quietly yielded.
James 4:10
“Humble yourselves before the Lord, and He will lift you up.”
Seymour didn’t chase prominence; he chased God. His humility made room for heaven to move. When we lower ourselves before God, He raises up what He has planted within us.
Acts 1:14
“They all joined together constantly in prayer…”
Revival didn’t begin on Azusa Street—it began in hearts that refused to stop praying. Like the early believers, Seymour persisted in prayer until the promise broke open.
Where is God inviting you to a deeper humility—perhaps in a quiet habit of prayer, a daily surrender, or an unnoticed act of obedience?
You may not see the fire yet, but every hidden prayer is a spark. God starts His greatest works in secret places.
Dear Father in Heaven,
Thank You for the example of William Seymour and the way You used his humble obedience to ignite a movement that touched the world. Teach me to bow low so that You may be lifted high in my life. Form in me the same hunger for Your presence, the same persistence in prayer, and the same courage to obey You even in small and hidden places. Lord, let Your Spirit kindle fresh fire in my heart. I surrender again today. Come, Holy Spirit. Do in me what only You can do. In Jesus’ name, amen.
(William J. Seymour (1870–1922) was an African American holiness preacher whose humble leadership sparked the Azusa Street Revival and shaped the global Pentecostal movement.)
www.johnsoncherian.com
Thursday, November 27, 2025
“The Life That Flows Through Me”
John G. Lake often told the story of serving in South Africa during a severe plague outbreak. Many around him were dying, yet he and his coworkers remained unharmed while caring for the sick. When asked how he stayed safe, Lake explained that he lived in the awareness that the Spirit of God within him was stronger than any sickness around him.
He once illustrated this by handling the frothy saliva of a plague victim under a microscope. According to the account, doctors watched as the living germs died on contact with his hand. Lake said the power at work was not his own—it was the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus, a reality he believed superseded the “law of sin and death.”
This incident reminds us that the Christian life is not lived by our strength but by God’s indwelling life. Though not all are called to dramatic moments, every believer can walk with the same confidence that Christ in us is greater than anything that comes against us.
Romans 8:2 (NIV)
“Because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit of life has set you free from the law of sin and death.”
1 John 4:4 (NKJV)
“He who is in you is greater than he who is in the world.”
Are you facing fear, weakness, or pressure today?
Lake’s example is not a call to presumption, but a reminder of identity—that believers are carriers of God’s life, peace, and authority.
Ask the Holy Spirit to make you aware of His presence within you, and let that awareness reshape how you face the challenges before you.
Prayer
Dear Father in Heaven, thank You for the life of Christ that dwells within me.
Teach me to walk in the confidence of Your presence and not in fear of the circumstances around me.
Let Your Spirit strengthen me, guide me, and fill me with courage.
Help me to see every challenge through the lens of Your power at work in me.
May Your life flow through me to bring hope, healing, and peace to others.
In Jesus’ name, amen.
(John G. Lake (1870–1935) was a pioneering American healing evangelist and missionary known for his powerful ministry of faith and divine healing.)
www.johnsoncherian.com
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Sermons in the cell
At midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the prisoners were listening to them. (Acts 16:25)
There is a period from Richard Wurmbrand’s years in solitary confinement that continues to stir hearts around the world. Locked in a pitch-black underground cell, cut off from every human voice, forbidden even to speak aloud, Richard chose to do something completely unreasonable to the natural mind—he composed sermons and preached them to the darkness.
He later wrote that he would stand in the middle of his tiny cell, straighten his back as though facing a congregation, and proclaim the hope of Christ to an audience only God could see.
There were no pews, no church building, no listeners—nothing but cold walls and oppressive silence.
Yet Richard preached with joy.
Why?
Because he believed that Christ was present even there, and that communion with Him could never be taken by force.
And so, in a place designed to break him, Richard built an altar.
When life feels like a kind of prison—when you are isolated, misunderstood, or walking through a season where hope is hard to see—Richard’s witness reminds us of something profound:
Worship is not dependent on our surroundings; it flows from the One who surrounds us.
Your cell may not be a literal prison, but your circumstances may feel just as limiting.
Yet God has not changed.
His presence fills even the smallest, darkest spaces.
Every whispered prayer, every song sung through tears, every choice to trust—these become sermons heaven records.
Prayer
Dear Father in Heaven, teach me to worship You in every circumstance.
When I feel alone, remind me that You are present. When the walls close in, help me lift my voice anyway. May my heart become an altar of praise in dark places,
and may Your light shine through my life as it did through Your servant Richard Wurmbrand. In Jesus' name. Amen.
www.johnsoncherian.com
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
Monday, November 24, 2025
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