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Friday, December 5, 2025

Morning Prayer for Friday, December 5, 2025

 

Praying the Scriptures

Friday Morning Prayer

December 5, 2025

“The kingship and dominion and the greatness of the kingdoms under the whole heaven shall be given to the people of the holy ones of the Most High; their kingdom shall be an everlasting kingdom, and all dominions shall serve and obey them.”Daniel 7:27

Lord,

As dawn gently rises over the quiet desert, I breathe in the cool morning air and feel the promise of a new day unfolding beneath Your watchful care. In this soft light, I remember that Your everlasting kingdom is drawing near—that holy reign foretold by Daniel, where all dominion belongs to You alone.

I lift my heart to You with reverence and hope, longing for the day when Your kingship will be fully revealed, when justice and peace will cover the earth like morning light spilling across the mountains. As I step into this day, teach me to live as one who belongs to the holy people of the Most High, shaped by Your dominion and called to reflect Your love.

In the stillness of this Advent morning, I wait with expectant trust. Strengthen my endurance, Lord, so that I may walk faithfully, watching for signs of Your coming and bearing witness to the greatness of Your kingdom. Let the quiet beauty of this dawn remind me that Your promises are true, Your reign is sure, and Your kingdom is everlasting.

Come, Lord Jesus. Establish Your kingdom in my heart today, and guide me to serve You with joy and obedience until the fullness of Your glory shines upon all creation.

Amen.

May the everlasting peace, hope, and gentle strength of God’s coming kingdom enfold us all as we walk faithfully into this Advent day.


The Bible passages come from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyrighted © 1989, 1993 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America and are used by permission. All rights reserved. Praying the Scriptures is penned daily by Kenny Sallee, ThM.

Verse of the Day for Friday, December 5, 2025

 

Verse of the Day

Friday, December 5, 2025

John 10:7, 9-10

So again Jesus said to them, “Very truly, I tell you, I am the gate for the sheep.… I am the gate. Whoever enters by me will be saved, and will come in and go out and find pasture. The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.

Introduction

In John 10:7, 9–10, Jesus presents one of the most striking statements in the Gospel of John: “I am the gate.” In a discourse rich with pastoral imagery, He identifies Himself not merely as a shepherd but as the very point of entry into salvation, safety, and life. This passage centers on Christ as the exclusive and life-giving access to God, contrasting His protective and nourishing role with the destructive intentions of those who mislead the flock. Theologically, Jesus’ declaration as “the gate” frames His mission as both protective and generative—He guards from danger and provides the entrance into abundant life.

Commentary

The term “gate” (Greek: thura) conveys both access and protection. In first-century sheepfolds, a shepherd might literally lie across the entrance at night, becoming the living gate. Jesus adopts this image to signal that He alone mediates entry into the secure realm of God’s care. He is not one option among many, but the decisive threshold through which true life is found.

To “be saved” (Greek: sōthēsetai) involves more than rescue from danger; it includes restoration, belonging, and participation in the life of God. Salvation here implies wholeness—safety from hostile forces, nourishment in God’s presence, and freedom to live under divine care.

“Pasture” evokes nourishment, rest, and flourishing. For sheep, pasture is more than landscape; it is life itself. Biblically, pasture symbolizes God’s provision (Psalm 23:2), righteousness (Jeremiah 50:7), and covenant faithfulness. Jesus promises that those who enter through Him will find a space where spiritual needs are met and their lives can thrive.

The “thief” represents those who exploit God’s people—false teachers, oppressive leaders, or anyone who manipulates the vulnerable for personal gain. The thief’s goals—“to steal and kill and destroy”—stand in stark contrast to Christ’s mission. Where the thief exploits, Jesus restores; where the thief destroys, Jesus gives life.

Christ declares, “I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.” The Greek phrase for “abundantly” (perisson) implies overflowing, beyond what is necessary, life in its fullest measure—not material excess, but spiritual fullness marked by intimacy with God, moral transformation, and deep joy. Scholars often note that this echoes John’s larger theme: Jesus brings eternal life that begins in the present and extends into eternity (John 17:3).

This passage, when set within the larger shepherd discourse, reveals a multifaceted metaphor: Jesus is the gate who grants access, the shepherd who guides, the protector who guards, and the giver of true life.

Understanding the Context

John 10 flows directly from the events of John 9, where Jesus heals the man born blind. The Pharisees react with hostility, demonstrating spiritual blindness and abusive authority. Jesus’ metaphor of sheepfolds, gates, shepherds, and thieves serves as a direct critique of these leaders. They claim authority but do not lead people to God; instead, they burden, exclude, and harm.

By calling Himself “the gate,” Jesus contrasts His ministry with theirs. They bar access to God through rigid legalism and social exclusion, while Jesus opens access through compassion, healing, and truth. The healed man in John 9 exemplifies one who “enters” through Jesus—rejected by earthly authorities yet welcomed into divine fellowship.

This imagery draws deeply from Old Testament shepherd traditions.

  • Ezekiel 34 condemns Israel’s shepherds who neglected, exploited, and scattered the flock. In this prophetic critique, God promises to shepherd the people Himself. Jesus fulfills this promise as both gate and shepherd.

  • Psalm 23 presents the Lord as the shepherd who leads His people to green pastures, restores their souls, and guides them in safety. Jesus’ claim aligns Himself with this divine shepherding role and its life-giving care.

Thus, the context frames Jesus as both the remedy for failed leadership and the fulfillment of God’s ancient promises to guard, guide, and nourish His people.

Application for Today

To “enter through Jesus” means embracing Him as the defining truth, the guiding authority, and the source of life. It involves a relationship marked by trust, obedience, and willingness to follow His voice above competing influences. In a world saturated with spiritual alternatives and self-made identities, Jesus’ exclusive claim challenges Christians to ground their identity and salvation in Him alone.

The notion of abundant life requires careful interpretation. It does not refer to material prosperity, financial gain, or an absence of hardship. Instead, it points to a transformed quality of life—marked by purpose, love, integrity, and communion with God. Abundant life is spiritual richness, not material accumulation; resilience, not ease; depth of character, not circumstantial success.

For discipleship, this passage encourages believers to discern whose voice they follow. False shepherds—modern “thieves”—may take the form of ideologies, charismatic personalities, addictive patterns, or cultural narratives that promise freedom yet lead to spiritual depletion.

For pastoral ministry, Jesus’ role as gate challenges leaders to be servants, not gatekeepers; to facilitate access to Christ rather than block it; and to model sacrificial love instead of self-serving authority.

For Christian community, the imagery invites congregations to be places of safety, nourishment, and welcome—spaces where people can “come in and go out” freely, growing in grace and flourishing under Christ’s care.

Reflection

Jesus’ declaration that He is “the gate” invites a deeper consideration of what, or whom, we allow to shape our identity and direction. Gates represent thresholds—points of decision, entry, security, and belonging. To choose Jesus as the gate is to allow Him to define the contours of our life, guiding where we go, how we grow, and what we value. It is a reminder that true freedom is found not in limitless autonomy but in the protective and life-giving boundaries of God’s love. In a world full of conflicting voices and countless paths, this passage challenges us to listen for the voice of the true Shepherd and to walk through the gate that leads to genuine, abundant life.


The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyright © 1989, 1993 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Verse of the Day is a daily inspirational and encouraging Bible verse, extracted from BibleGateway.com. Commentary by Kenny Sallee, ThM.

Daily Devotions for Friday, December 5, 2025: Faith in the Fog: Trusting God in Life’s Great Mysteries

 

The Daily Devotional

Friday, December 5, 2025

Faith in the Fog: Trusting God in Life’s Great Mysteries

“The secret things belong to the Lord our God, but the revealed things belong to us and to our children forever…”Deuteronomy 29:29
“He woke up and rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, ‘Peace! Be still!’ Then the wind ceased, and there was a dead calm.”Mark 4:39

Introduction

Some mysteries linger through the ages, refusing to give us the answers we long for. Scripture reminds us that God reveals what we need to know—and keeps hidden what we do not. Advent invites us into this rhythm of holy patience, where the unknown becomes a place of quiet expectation rather than fear.

Reflection

In 1872, the British brig Dei Gratia encountered the American merchant vessel Mary Celeste drifting empty near the Azores. Her hull was sound, her provisions plentiful, her cargo untouched—yet her crew had vanished without a trace. For more than a century and a half, theories have come and gone, but the truth remains elusive. The Mary Celeste persists as one of maritime history’s great unsolved mysteries.

For anyone who has spent time on the water, the sea reveals itself as beautiful, unpredictable, and deeply humbling. Mariners discover early that human understanding has limits. You can walk a deck and feel the ocean rise and fall beneath your feet in ways that defy explanation, or watch the weather turn quicker than any instrument warns. Such moments have a way of instilling reverence.

Life brings its own “Mary Celeste moments”—experiences that drift into our days without warning, offering no clear answers. A medical test that raises more questions than it resolves. A loved one’s sudden silence. A change of direction you didn’t anticipate. These moments remind us that not all mysteries are meant to be solved; some are meant to be entrusted.

Advent speaks into this space. Like the disciples caught in the storm of Mark 4, we often panic when the winds rise around us, forgetting that Christ is still present—even when He seems silent. Advent teaches us to wait with hope, knowing the One who commands the seas also guides us through the fog of uncertainty.

Application

Today, entrust the mysteries you cannot untangle to the God who holds all knowledge. Rather than searching endlessly for explanations, seek the peace that comes from surrender. Allow Advent to turn your questions into prayers and your uncertainties into places where Christ can speak, “Peace, be still.”

Conclusion

The Mary Celeste reminds us that not every puzzle will be solved in this life—but faith does not rest on answers. It rests on God. As you journey through Advent, may you find comfort not in understanding everything, but in trusting the One who knows all things.

Prayer

Lord God, in this season of waiting and wonder, calm my heart when I face what I cannot explain. Teach me to trust You with the mysteries that trouble my mind and the uncertainties that cloud my days. As You stilled the stormy sea, speak peace into my spirit, and guide me through every fog with Your steady light. In hope and expectation, I watch for Your presence. Amen.


Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA

The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible (NRSV)© 1989, 1993, the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.