Daily Devotions and Podcasts

Prayer: Lord, help me to see You in every part of my day, even in the places I least expect. Open my eyes to Your presence in the ordinary and the extraordinary moments of life. Amen.

The Cathedral of Hope Devotion Ministry began as an answer to Progressive Christians who wanted to start their days with a little insight, observation, or wisdom about the Christian faith from their own point of view. Conservative internet devotions were abundant, but there was not much out there for liberal thinkers. The need was clear.


Being a large church, we had a generous amount of writing talent available and also a large number of congregants with theological training who were not on the pulpit. In the early days of the ministry, most of the writing was done by the clergy, but gradually the majority of the writers emerged from those lay volunteers.


That dynamic is still in place as new authors are always joining in to keep the ideas fresh. It’s a fitting structure for any center of progressive thought. This particular Body of Christ has many voices and each one has a unique and important story to tell.


By Donald (Luke) Day August 25, 2025
READING "You can be sure if you have to walk on a stony life path, God will provide you with strong shoes." -Corrie Ten Boom WORDS OF HOPE Do you sometimes feel you have been walking on life’s stony path far too long? You are not alone. In times as chaotic and uncertain as ours, the Christian writer, Corrie Ten Boom is one of my most often read spiritual mentors. In the 1940’s, during Nazi control of her city of Amsterdam, her parents’ home provided shelter and care for many Jewish families until her family was betrayed and sent to a concentration camp. She was able to survive though her family tragically died there. Years later, in adult life, she became a Christian author and world-wide lecturer. We are painfully aware through her story that becoming a Christian does not guarantee us an easy life. We suffer the slings and arrows of adversity like everyone else. Like others, our bodies are frail and subject to accidents and disease. However, we do have a loving God who journeys through life with us, providing guidance and care. Earlier humanity which worshiped stone or wooden gods could only imagine that those divine images or idol of their gods understood life's pain and difficulty. In contrast to that uncertainty, Christians are reassured by the living example of Jesus who actually walked among us: who loved, cared, rejoiced, and wept with his followers. We know that our journey through life's hardships is not a solo trek; rather, we can trust in the steady presence and helping hand of Christ. In her book, Tramp for the Lord, Ten Boom observes: "Happiness is not dependent on certain events happening; rather, on relationships in those happenings." Truly entrusting ourselves to Christ insures that we will be equipped and strengthened to handle the obstacles we may encounter. We will be given strong and durable walking shoes. However, it's our choice either to put them on or reject them and continue life in flip-flops! PRAYER Lord Christ, I give you my love and thanks that on my life's journey you desire to be with me to guide and comfort. Thank you for the assurance that you walk hand-in-hand with me and will in my final steps draw me to your eternal self. Amen. DEVOTION AUTHOR Donald (Luke) Day Order of St. Francis and St.Clare

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Words of Hope Podcast

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By Donald (Luke) Day August 25, 2025
READING "You can be sure if you have to walk on a stony life path, God will provide you with strong shoes." -Corrie Ten Boom WORDS OF HOPE Do you sometimes feel you have been walking on life’s stony path far too long? You are not alone. In times as chaotic and uncertain as ours, the Christian writer, Corrie Ten Boom is one of my most often read spiritual mentors. In the 1940’s, during Nazi control of her city of Amsterdam, her parents’ home provided shelter and care for many Jewish families until her family was betrayed and sent to a concentration camp. She was able to survive though her family tragically died there. Years later, in adult life, she became a Christian author and world-wide lecturer. We are painfully aware through her story that becoming a Christian does not guarantee us an easy life. We suffer the slings and arrows of adversity like everyone else. Like others, our bodies are frail and subject to accidents and disease. However, we do have a loving God who journeys through life with us, providing guidance and care. Earlier humanity which worshiped stone or wooden gods could only imagine that those divine images or idol of their gods understood life's pain and difficulty. In contrast to that uncertainty, Christians are reassured by the living example of Jesus who actually walked among us: who loved, cared, rejoiced, and wept with his followers. We know that our journey through life's hardships is not a solo trek; rather, we can trust in the steady presence and helping hand of Christ. In her book, Tramp for the Lord, Ten Boom observes: "Happiness is not dependent on certain events happening; rather, on relationships in those happenings." Truly entrusting ourselves to Christ insures that we will be equipped and strengthened to handle the obstacles we may encounter. We will be given strong and durable walking shoes. However, it's our choice either to put them on or reject them and continue life in flip-flops! PRAYER Lord Christ, I give you my love and thanks that on my life's journey you desire to be with me to guide and comfort. Thank you for the assurance that you walk hand-in-hand with me and will in my final steps draw me to your eternal self. Amen. DEVOTION AUTHOR Donald (Luke) Day Order of St. Francis and St.Clare
By Thomas McClellan August 22, 2025
SCRIPTURE Proverbs 23:5 Cast but a glance at riches, and they are gone, for they will surely sprout wings and fly off to the sky like an eagle. WORDS OF HOPE God My Provider A person will work their whole life getting richer, and by the end of their life, never know what it was to be rich. Why spend years for what you will only enjoy for days? So long as we have time, we have wealth, for a person’s happiness is in how they remember their time. Seeing as no one knows how much time they have can anyone afford to waste it? We lack time more than we lack money. The one who has little is not poor and the one who has much is not rich, but the one who finds happiness is satisfied. There are people living in mansions who cannot buy it and there are people living in clay houses who would never sell it. If you can count it, if you can measure it, then its value is limited. Happiness can neither be counted nor measured; by this, we know that it is priceless. Therefore, do not waste your wealth, that is your time, on trying to be wealthy. For once the money is spent, you will need more. Many people never enjoy peace because they think that they do not have enough money. They forget that its very purpose is to be spent, and if not spent by them, then by someone else after they are gone. No one keeps their money. Life does not begin when you have it, but when you wake up and begin your day. At the start of the day, we are gifted with time. How will we spend it? God has already considered everything that we need so that we may have peace in the world. Be at rest, for God will provide. PRAYER Jehovah Jireh, Bless You for the gift of life. We could never pay You back for the time You have given us. Yet sometimes, we fear not having enough. Help us to appreciate what we already have in You so that we may enjoy our time. Amen. DEVOTION AUTHOR Jonathon McClellan Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
By Dan Peeler August 21, 2025
SCRIPTURE John 5.3-9  In Jerusalem near the Sheep Gate at the pool, a great number of disabled people used to lie—the blind, the lame, the paralyzed. One who was there had been an invalid for thirty-eight years. When Jesus saw him lying there and learned that he had been in this condition for a long time, he asked him, “Do you want to get well?” “Sir,” the invalid replied, “I have no one to help me into the pool when the water is stirred. While I am trying to get in, someone else goes down ahead of me.” Then Jesus said to him, “Get up! Pick up your mat and walk.” At once the man was cured; he picked up his mat and walked. WORDS OF HOPE It’s August, the month in Texas when many of us look to a refreshing dip in the pool as our savior from the heat! The Savior’s pool mentioned in today’s scripture lesson was thought to have genuinely miraculous healing powers by the people of Jerusalem. It was visited often by the infirm. The man who was not able to walk would have been a typical visitor. His exchange with Jesus is interesting on several levels and inspires some questions. Had the man actually been coming to the pool for thirty-eight years? If so, who had been bringing him there since he could not walk? Couldn’t they also have carried him into the pool and not just deposited him there beside it? When Jesus asks if he wants to get well, instead of enthusiastically saying “yes”, he immediately starts making excuses about why he has not been able to get into the water, saying that no one will help him in and besides, everyone else breaks in line ahead of him. All in all, it’s simply not his fault. Everyone else is to blame. I’m sure you are not one of them, but I have known a lot of people throughout the years who are masters at making excuses. I could list a few politicians. George Washington Carver once said, “Ninety-nine percent of the failures come from people who have the habit of making excuses.” You probably know a few expert excuse-makers, too. They are usually people who, consciously or subconsciously, want to fail. Failure requires a great deal less work than success. Jesus’ reply to the invalid is succinct. “Get up! Pick up your mat and walk!” He didn’t waste time commiserating with the man about the cruel fate that surrounds him or condemning the selfish attitudes of the other pool patrons. He didn’t give the man a chance to elaborate on his excuses. It would seem that the man was shocked into action because not only was he immediately cured, but he also didn’t need any magic water to do it. Are you prepared to let Jesus shock you into action today? Are you ready to share the priceless gift of encouragement with someone who is discouraged, despondent, and down to their last excuse? Jesus didn’t judge or care about excuses. He just did what needed to be done. Considering the amounts of circumstances in all of our lives that are catalysts for excuses, you’ll probably have the opportunity soon to give someone a helpful nudge, too. PRAYER May we always follow the example of Jesus, being healers and never contributors to the adverse circumstances of life. As your followers, we have no excuses. Amen. DEVOTION AUTHOR Dan Peeler Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
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