Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Lord, I Hope This Day Is Good ~ Don Williams

 


Lord, I hope this day is goodI'm feelin' empty and misunderstoodI should be thankful, Lord, I know I shouldBut Lord, I hope this day is good
Lord, have You forgotten me?I've been prayin' to You faithfullyI'm not sayin' I'm a righteous manBut Lord, I hope You understand
I don't need fortune and I don't need fameSend down the thunder, Lord, send down the rainBut when You're plannin' just how it will bePlan a good day for me
Lord, I hope this day is goodI'm feelin' empty and misunderstoodI should be thankful, Lord, I know I shouldBut Lord, I hope this day is good
You've been the King since the dawn of timeAll that I'm asking is a little less crimeIt might be hard for the devil to doBut it would be easy for You
Lord, I hope this day is goodI'm feelin' empty and misunderstoodI should be thankful, Lord, I know I shouldBut Lord, I hope this day is good

Monday, June 8, 2026

The Power of Music

 



David would take up his lyre and play. Then relief would come to Saul. 

1 Samuel 16:23

On November 21, 1915, the hope of Sir Ernest Shackleton and his twenty-seven crew members sank, along with their ship Endurance, into the darkness below the Antarctic ice. They were stranded thousands of miles from home. Later, the crew shared several things that aided their survival, including a banjo. Embarking on their brutal trek, Leonard Hussey (the expedition’s meteorologist) was the only person allowed more than two pounds of personal gear. He was allowed to bring his twelve-pound Windsor banjo. “It’s vital mental medicine,” Shackleton told Hussey, “and we shall need it.” The crew’s journals explained the power of Hussey’s music. “The banjo does . . . supply brain food,” wrote one sailor. Another reflected on “Hussey’s indispensable banjo.” 

The Bible presents music as one of God’s immense gifts, a way His healing and comfort enter the human heart. In the tragic story of King Saul, we hear how (due to his disobedience) he was oppressed by an “evil spirit” (1 Samuel 16:14). And what did Saul’s attendants believe the king needed to provide relief? Music. So they found young David with his harp: “David would take up his lyre and play. Then relief would come to Saul; he would feel better, and the evil spirit would leave him” (v. 23).

Music offers more than mere entertainment. It can bring joy, renew hope, and comfort weary souls. It’s truly one of God’s powerful gifts.

By Winn Collier

Our Daily Bread email June 3, 2026

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Sunday, June 7, 2026

Memories become fragile things.

There’s a strange kind of sadness that comes with realizing a family tradition has quietly disappeared… and no one even noticed when it happened.

No official ending.
No announcement.
Just… silence where something meaningful used to live.
Maybe it was holiday recipes made from memory instead of cookbooks.
Sunday dinners packed too tight around one table.
Handwritten cards.
Family reunions.
Christmas ornaments passed down for years.
A certain prayer before meals.
A camping trip everyone used to look forward to.
Little things.
But somehow… those little things were holding entire generations together.
And I think what makes this topic emotional is that traditions were never really about the activity itself.
They were about belonging.
About identity.
Connection.
Familiarity.
They gave people a feeling of:
“This is who we are.”
But life changed.
Schedules got busier.
Families spread farther apart.
Technology replaced conversations.
And newer generations often inherited memories… without inheriting the meaning behind them.
And honestly?
Sometimes traditions disappear for understandable reasons.
Some families are healing from painful histories.
Some customs no longer fit the lives people live now.
Some things needed to evolve.
But I also think there’s a quiet grief in watching meaningful traditions fade simply because no one slowed down long enough to carry them forward.
Because once the people who held those traditions are gone…
Sometimes the traditions go with them.
And that realization hits differently as you get older.
You start noticing:
“Oh… nobody makes this recipe anymore.”
“We stopped gathering like we used to.”
“The kids never experienced that part of family life.”
And suddenly memories become fragile things.
Family therapists often talk about traditions as emotional anchors—shared experiences that help create stability, identity, and connection across generations.
Not perfection.
Just continuity.
A reminder that we belong to something bigger than ourselves.
And maybe traditions don’t have to stay exactly the same to still matter.
Maybe some are meant to evolve.
Maybe the real goal isn’t preserving every detail perfectly…
Maybe it’s protecting the feeling behind them.
The togetherness.
The storytelling.
The pause in a busy life where people simply showed up for each other.
Because in the end, most traditions weren’t remembered for being extravagant.
They were remembered because someone cared enough to keep repeating them.
Source: DēLádÿ Gėõrgę on Facebook 

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Life becomes beautiful when you learn to let go.

  


Life becomes beautiful when you learn to let go.
Not because you stop caring about the people you love, the dreams that inspire you, or the future you hope to create.
But because you stop carrying the weight of things that were never meant to live in your heart.
Life feels lighter when you no longer worry about the opinions of strangers.
When you stop seeking approval from people who do not truly know your story.
When you stop comparing your journey to the carefully edited moments others choose to share with the world.
You begin to realize that much of the pressure you carried was only an illusion.
The moment you stop trying to fit into every crowd, you start finding the souls who genuinely understand you.
The moment you stop chasing perfection, you begin to appreciate the beauty of growth.
The moment you stop giving power to every opinion, rumor, and passing drama, you finally hear the quiet wisdom of your own heart.
And suddenly, life becomes an adventure once again.
You laugh more freely.
You smile more sincerely.
You embrace opportunities more courageously.
You speak your truth with kindness.
You express yourself without fear.
You follow the paths that call to your spirit.
You become the person you were always meant to be.
Because you are no longer living as a performance for others.
The truth is, every person is carrying their own hopes, fears, and dreams. Most are far too busy navigating their own lives to spend much time judging yours.
So stop waiting for permission to live.
Dance if your heart feels the music.
Travel if your soul longs to explore.
Build what you dream of building.
Capture the moments that move you.
Start the conversation.
Take the chance.
Follow the dream that keeps calling your name.
Life is precious.
One day, many of the worries that feel so heavy today will fade like footprints washed away by the tide.
The embarrassment.
The criticism.
The judgment.
The endless opinions.
All of it will pass.
But the sunset you stopped to admire,
the friend you called,
the kindness you shared,
the places you explored,
the memories you created—
those will remain in the story of your life.
So cherish the present moment.
Love deeply.
Move freely.
Explore curiously.
Create fearlessly.
Because life becomes truly extraordinary when you stop holding on to everything that does not genuinely matter, and start embracing everything that does.

Source: Remember. on Facebook