Dancing through the Minefields

This week marks six months since my bone marrow transplant (and 15 months since diagnosis). My PET scan shows that my cancer is still in remission. This is a huge praise. 

In addition to this good news, my latest echocardiogram shows that my heart is doing well. This means the heart failure I experienced during transplant was likely circumstantial instead of chronic. This is great news. I have to return again to Houston in three months for more immunity shots and another PET scan. Please continue to pray the cancer stays away. You can watch our video update here.

Oh give thanks to the LORD, for he is good, for his steadfast love endures forever! (Psalm 107:1)

My heart is steadfast, O God! I will sing and make melody with all my being! (Psalm 108:1)

The transplant brought numerous trials that we never expected. Through it all, Jenny has been by my side. She was with me in the worst moments and cared for me in countless ways. Whether it was reading Scripture out loud when I was anxious or helping me as my skin burned off, she was there. God is my very present help in times of need and one way he has been present is through Jenny. 

We took Christmas photos early this year. While taking photos, Jenny and I were able to dance at the Jacksonville Arboretum. Back in May, I could not walk without Jenny holding me up. But today I’m able to dance and twirl her around. Our hearts are filled with gratitude to God to make this possible. We believe each day is a gift from Jesus. 

To all our friends and family, thank you for your prayers and being with us on this journey. 

Jenny, I’m so glad I can continue dancing with you through the minefields.

Photo Credit: Victoria Hope Waters

My Three-Month Checkup

Updates

  • Jenny and I flew to Houston this week for scans and my fourth round of maintenance chemo.
  • My PET scan is “spotless,” according to my medical team.
  • I will continue to get chemo through the end of the year, and my next PET scan is three months from now.

Prayer Requests & Praises

  • It is an immense blessing to have a clear PET scan. Praise the Lord! Thank you for praying!
  • Please pray for continued clean scans in the months ahead and for protection from infections while I’m immunocompromised.

What I’m Learning

  • A frequent prayer of mine is that God would teach me to number my days so that I may gain a heart of wisdom. Each day feels more precious than it did before cancer arrived. We want to prioritize time with the Lord, family, friends, and the church.
  • Investing in eternal matters now carries a weight of glory that feels tangibly heavier and more valuable. I find myself asking questions like, “Is what we are watching worth the time I may have left? Is what I’m doing actually important—or trivial and frivolous? What good works remain that I should pursue if my time is limited?”
  • God has seen to it that there are good works still left for me to complete. He has prepared them in advance for me. The same is true for you!

So teach us to number our days that we may get a heart of wisdom.
Return, O LORD! How long? Have pity on your servants!
Satisfy us in the morning with your steadfast love, that we may rejoice and be glad all our days.
(Psalm 90:12–14)

For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast. For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.
(Ephesians 2:8–10)

What Has Been Encouraging

  • Awaiting the results of a medical scan is unpleasant—especially a serious scan. I’ve been encouraged by Psalm 27, which calls the people of God to put away fear and put on trust in the Lord. Even if an army encamps against us, there is no reason to fear when God is our shelter in the day of trouble.
  • David exhorts us to wait on the Lord and to take up courage. This psalm is a timely word for anyone who is facing the unknown. The Lord knows the future, and our hope is in him.

Though an army encamp against me,
my heart shall not fear;
though war arise against me,
yet I will be confident. (Psalm 27:3)

For he will hide me in his shelter
in the day of trouble;
he will conceal me under the cover of his tent;
he will lift me high upon a rock. (Psalm 27:5)

Normal Isn’t the Right Word

Updates:

  • Yesterday I received my chemo infusion here in Jacksonville. I’m thankful to be alive and home!
  • It will take time to know if the bone marrow transplant was effective. That requires a PET scan about every three months.
  • My next scan is in August. I’ll be taking a break from weekly blogging about our journey and will only provide updates for big events, such as scans or complications.

Prayer Requests and Praises:

  • Jenny and I are incredibly thankful for all your prayers over the past year. We have two remaining requests for the months ahead:
    1. That my chemo treatments would destroy any remaining cancer following the transplant. Please pray that I will live to see my children’s children.
    2. That my immunity would continue to increase and that I would avoid sickness. I’m not afraid of the hospital, but it does make things more complicated.
  • I will be heavily immunocompromised until the end of 2025, and then it will take six more months for my system to return to a normal level.

What I Am Learning:

  • I’m grateful to the Lord that I was able to preach on Sunday. I didn’t feel well that morning, but the Lord strengthened me and answered your prayers. While preaching, I honestly forgot I was sick. I crashed later that day, but it was such a blessing to be back at First Baptist.

What Has Been Encouraging:

  • This past year has caused us to think about death more often than usual. It has sharpened our hearts and made us want to spend our time on what matters most.
  • Since being home, I have experienced many encouraging moments—like returning to church, taking evening walks with Jenny, reading books to our children, and seeing dear friends.
  • While it will take months for me to return to “normal,” it’s our hope that we are never normal again when it comes to cherishing the precious gifts God has given us.

So teach us to number our days that we may get a heart of wisdom. Return, O LORD! How long? Have pity on your servants! Satisfy us in the morning with your steadfast love, that we may rejoice and be glad all our days. Make us glad for as many days as you have afflicted us, and for as many years as we have seen evil. Let your work be shown to your servants, and your glorious power to their children. Let the favor of the Lord our God be upon us, and establish the work of our hands upon us; yes, establish the work of our hands! (Psalm 90:12–17)

A Storm on the Horizon

Updates:

  • We are home! Our return flight was delayed at least five times, so we ended up arriving at our house around 3 a.m. The trip wiped me out, but I’m recovering!
  • We’ve started unpacking!
  • My next chemo treatment is scheduled for July 24th.

Prayer Requests and Praises:

  • We are thankful to be home. It is surreal.
  • This Sunday, I will be preaching at First Baptist on my cancer journey and Psalm 34. We’d love to see you there!
    The service is at 10:45 a.m. (EST) and you can livestream it at this link if you’re unable to attend: https://fbcjax.com
  • I discovered I couldn’t fit into any of my dress clothes. This is an answer to prayer because a big concern at the beginning of our transplant journey was potential weight loss. (I also know many folks have wanted me to gain weight for a while!) We went shopping and tried on clothes to make sure I had something to preach in on Sunday instead of gym shorts.
  • My mysterious water retention continues (also probably contributes to my increase in size), but I’m not alarmed. I’ll continue to be monitored in the weeks ahead.

What I’m Learning:

  • I’ve been reflecting on Proverbs 10:24–25. This passage teaches how the righteous respond to trials compared with the wicked:

What the wicked dreads will come upon him,
but the desire of the righteous will be granted.
When the tempest passes, the wicked is no more,
but the righteous is established forever.
(Proverbs 10:24–25)

  • This passage assumes that a storm is coming—for everyone. “When the tempest passes.” There is a storm on the horizon for each of us. I don’t know when yours will arrive, but I know it’s coming.
  • Before the storm comes, turn to the Lord. Nurture your relationship with Him now by faith, so that when the tempest passes, you will be established forever—and not like the wicked, who are devastated.
  • Deliverance in this life is a “glimpse” of the deliverance to come in eternal life. And when the wicked are destroyed in this life, it serves as a parable of what will happen in the end times, when Christ judges the world. The righteous will be saved; the wicked will be condemned.
  • Deliverance from cancer—and from every affliction—is meant to cause us to reflect upon our final state and whether we will be delivered in the end.

What Has Been Encouraging:

  • After three months, we are finally home. When we walked into our house, it was clear that someone from First Baptist had been here. Posters with handwritten notes from church members are all over our walls!
  • There are so many, I’m pretty sure we’ll be finding them in different rooms for a while. It will take us some time to read through all the encouragement. We are grateful to be back in Florida with our First Baptist church family.

Heading Home

Updates:

  • Today was my last day of doctor appointments in Houston before heading home next week. I have swelling in my arms, legs, and face that is mysterious but will not prevent me from traveling.
  • We have started packing!

Prayer Requests and Praises:

  • We are planning to return to Jacksonville! Praise the Lord!
  • For some reason, I continue to retain water. My medical team is monitoring this, but please pray that it ceases. It’s likely a side effect of the transplant and my current chemotherapy.
  • Lord willing, I will be preaching at First Baptist on July 20th. We would love to see you there!

What I Am Learning

  • Last week, I mentioned that I’ve been reading about Hezekiah in the book of Isaiah. There’s a story in which he and Jerusalem are surrounded by the Assyrian army. Hezekiah receives several messages from the enemy, yet he turns to God in prayer for deliverance.
  • One of the ways God answers his prayer is by sending the angel of the Lord to slay the Assyrian army in the night. It was a miraculous, surprise attack.

“For I will defend this city to save it, for my own sake and for the sake of my servant David.” And the angel of the LORD went out and struck down 185,000 in the camp of the Assyrians. And when people arose early in the morning, behold, these were all dead bodies. Then Sennacherib king of Assyria departed and returned home and lived at Nineveh. (Isaiah 37:35–37)

  • God could have chosen any method to destroy His enemies, but He chose to send the angel of the Lord. This is the same angel who surrounds God’s people today. As Christians, we inherit the promises of Psalm 34:

This poor man cried, and the LORD heard him and saved him out of all his troubles. The angel of the LORD encamps around those who fear him, and delivers them. (Psalm 34:6–7)

  • Hezekiah knew the Psalms. He humbled himself as a poor man, and the Lord delivered him using the very angel mentioned in Psalm 34:7. God will do the same for us today if we turn to Him in faith.

What Has Been Encouraging

  • As we reflect on the past three months, it’s clear we have not walked this journey alone. The Lord has been with us, and He has given us the body of Christ to care for us at every turn.
  • First Baptist Church members have supported us, prayed for us, and stayed in touch through these tumultuous weeks. Our story is their story—they have walked through the fire with us. The kindness we have experienced is overwhelming. We are eager to return!
  • Local churches in Houston have also come alongside us in humbling ways. Some didn’t even know us, yet they loved and served us as if we were members of their own congregations.
  • Jenny and I slipped into a chapel service at MD Anderson this past week. It was a short service between appointments. As we stood at the door, we saw my primary doctor enter the chapel. We quietly sat down beside him as the Scripture was being read. It was a wonderful moment as we prayed together, knowing we both need the Lord’s help.
  • The community of the saints is one of the great blessings of life. If you’ve stumbled upon this blog and aren’t connected to a local church—don’t miss out! Plan to attend a Bible-preaching church this Sunday. You just might be surprised by how wonderful it can be.

The Black Sky of Suffering

Updates:

  • I just received my second chemo treatment here in Houston and, Lord willing, plan to have my next infusion in Jacksonville.
  • My next PET scan is scheduled for August 14th. It will mark 100 days since my transplant.

Prayer Requests and Praises:

  • We are eager to return to Jacksonville! Please pray that nothing hinders this return.
  • For some reason, I am retaining water and experiencing swelling in my face, arms, and legs. My medical team is monitoring this, but please pray that it ceases.
  • I still have not experienced a significant allergic reaction to my new chemo. Praise the Lord!

What I Am Learning

  • At night, I’ve been reading about Hezekiah from the book of Isaiah. There’s a story where he and Jerusalem are surrounded by the Assyrian army. Hezekiah receives several messages from the enemy claiming they are fully capable of them.
  • Upon receiving a chilling letter from the Assyrians, Hezekiah recognizes his plight and turns to the Lord:

Hezekiah received the letter from the hand of the messengers and read it. Then Hezekiah went up to the house of the Lord and spread it before the Lord. And Hezekiah prayed to the Lord:

“O Lord of hosts, God of Israel, enthroned above the cherubim, you are the God—you alone—of all the kingdoms of the earth; you have made heaven and earth.

Incline your ear, O Lord, and hear; open your eyes, O Lord, and see; and hear all the words of Sennacherib, which he has sent to mock the living God.

Truly, O Lord, the kings of Assyria have laid waste all the nations and their lands, and have cast their gods into the fire. For they were no gods, but the work of men’s hands, wood and stone. Therefore they were destroyed.

So now, O Lord our God, save us from his hand, that all the kingdoms of the earth may know that you alone are the Lord.”
— Isaiah 37:14–20

  • I love how Hezekiah spreads out the letter of certain death before God and gives it over to Him. He turns to the Lord, prays, and trusts God to save. These steps outline the same path we must take when we are in trouble. We must lift our eyes to the hills, where our help comes from—the Maker of heaven and earth (See also Psalm 121).
  • If you’ve never read the full story, start in Isaiah 36. See how God miraculously delivers His people when Hezekiah calls upon His name. God hears our prayers—and yet, He makes an even better promise than the one found in Isaiah 36–37. Jesus offers eternal salvation through His life and death to everyone who calls upon His name:

And it shall come to pass that everyone who calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.
— Acts 2:21


What Has Been Encouraging

  • Last night was the Fourth of July, and we let our kids stay up late to watch the fireworks. We watched from the rooftop of a building downtown in the medical center. I could see many hospital offices and emergency departments—the med center has 21 hospitals.
  • As we stood watching, Jenny and I reflected on how I had been in the building next door for 30 days. My hospital window didn’t offer nearly the same view. Feeling the wind on the rooftop and watching fireworks with my family—the kids in their firecracker PJs—was a real blessing. I’m thankful to be out of the hospital and prayed for those still inside that familiar building.
  • I was reminded of a quote I once heard: like a firework, God’s glory shines best against a background of darkness. This is especially true in suffering. Our trials create the black sky upon which God’s magnificence explodes with color.

15 Observations from a Cancer Center

Updates:

  • We are now in a mold-free apartment!
  • I continue my chemo treatments with mild side effects. However, I am nauseous most evenings.
  • This past week was my physical therapy evaluation. I’ve made substantial progress!

Prayer Requests and Praises:

  • We are very thankful to be in a mold-free place. Two mold companies had pity on us and conducted two different mold tests for free. It’s a real blessing to be together as a family now.
  • When I started physical therapy, I didn’t think I could walk for six minutes using a walker. Now, I’m able to walk on a treadmill for ten minutes. I received a good report on my reassessment, but my therapists want me to continue training through the month of July.
  • I still haven’t experienced a significant allergic reaction to my new chemo. I’m very grateful for this — please pray that it continues!

What I’m Learning

While receiving treatment, I decided to journal some simple observations. I’ve collected 25 reflections based on what I’ve noticed at the cancer center. Below are 15 of them.

Consider these thoughts written in the spirit of the book of Proverbs. Some are generally meaningful; others are more niche. They’re listed in no particular order — just as they came to me:

  1. There is always someone worse off than you.
  2. The amount of sacrifice Jenny has given is untold — and cannot be properly retold.
  3. When people tell me I am “strong,” they misunderstand the situation.
  4. Not all stem cell transplants are created equal.
  5. “Where you go first matters.” – M.D. Anderson
  6. Facing an unknown future will either increase faith or cause it to buckle.
  7. One hallway in a cancer center may be filled with rejoicing, another with weeping.
  8. Bedside manner boosts confidence in medicine, just as “sweetness of speech increases persuasiveness.”
  9. These are the moments why I married Jenny: not for her beauty, but for her evergreen and ever-serving love.
  10. Suffering should lead its students to depend continually on the Lord.
  11. All my allergic reactions remind me of my frailty — and God’s faithfulness.
  12. A well-timed — and love-motivated — question can open a relationship and change a life. (Theo of Golden)
  13. I visited three cancer centers to try to save my life. The most aesthetically pleasing campus nearly cost me it. The ugliest one may have the greatest chance at saving it. A center’s attractive appearance only matters if it works.
  14. The storms of life are meant to remove the dead branches of self-reliance so we can depend more fully on Christ. (Spurgeon)
  15. “People everywhere love fountains.” (Theo of Golden)

What Has Been Encouraging

  • This week back home was “Glow Camp” at First Baptist. Our kids are big fans every year, and we were disappointed to miss it. But even though we’re in Houston, some kind and clever folks at FBC made sure to include our children.
  • Our kids were able to FaceTime into many of the assemblies and teaching sessions. We even had two of the main stage pirate characters visit our house and leave a secret message on our security doorbell! The kids felt so included, they asked to make a poster on poster day. What a blessing!

“And there is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.” (Acts 4:12)

Moving and Mold: God’s Plan

Updates:

  • I have started my new chemo treatment and will continue this regimen until Christmas.
  • We found mold in our rental house. Thankfully, we have now secured a new apartment and will be moving in this weekend.

Prayer Requests and Praises:

  • My medical team described this new chemo as the “icing on the [transplant] cake”—their effort to eliminate any remaining cancer cells. They know the cancer is aggressive and want to use every available means to eradicate it. Please pray that this treatment is effective!
  • My appetite has improved! While I’m still not very hungry at dinnertime, I am maintaining my weight. Thank you for praying about this.
  • We plan to move back in with our kids this weekend. It’s been two months since I’ve lived with them! Please pray the move goes smoothly and isn’t further delayed.

What I Am Learning

“The heart of man plans his way, but the LORD establishes his steps.” (Proverbs 16:9)

  • We have been so excited to be reunited with our kids. The plan was to move in this past Monday. Our kids had gotten sick about 10 days earlier, so we had been waiting for them to recover. Once they were feeling great, we prepared to move in.
  • Before going to the house, we scheduled a cleaning just to make sure all the germs were gone. While cleaning, the company discovered mold coming from the air vents.
  • Mold is especially dangerous for me right now. We are so thankful for God’s providence and protection that kept us from moving in. It’s remarkable—if the kids hadn’t gotten sick (which at the time felt like a setback), I would have moved in right away and been unknowingly exposed to mold. We wouldn’t have hired cleaners if the kids hadn’t been sick. In God’s providence, their illness prevented what could have been a serious health risk. We made our plans, but the Lord directed our steps.

“And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose. For those whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son… And those whom he predestined he also called, and those whom he called he also justified, and those whom he justified he also glorified.”
(Romans 8:28–30)


What Has Been Encouraging

  • We didn’t plan to move in the middle of our stay in Texas, but that is what God planned. The owner of the rental home has been incredibly kind to us throughout and is graciously helping us as we transition to a new place.
  • Even though we don’t have a lot of stuff, moving is a lot of work. I’m not able to help with physical labor—I’m just now relearning how to walk up and down stairs and can’t lift anything heavy. Jenny needs help, and the Lord has provided!
  • First Baptist Houston heard about our situation and has stepped in to help with the move. They’ve gone above and beyond to transport our things and protect us from further exposure to illness.
  • We’re so thankful for their kindness! They’ve repeatedly told us: “You might be far from home, but you are not alone here!”

God Answers Prayer

Updates:

  • I’m doing physical therapy three times a week and making progress each day. The goal is that by the end of June, I’ll be able to stand for an hour without getting winded. It’s amazing to realize just how deconditioned my body has become — even the simplest exercises are tough!
  • The doctors are optimistic that the transplant was successful. Despite this good news, I will need to receive more chemotherapy for the next six months. A new study shows this additional treatment might help patients with my condition stay in remission, and my doctor wants to pursue it. I’ll receive two rounds here in Houston and the rest back in Jacksonville.

Prayer Requests and Praises:

  • This week, I met with my main transplant doctor and oncologist. He said my bloodwork is “pristine” for where I should be in recovery — wonderful news!
  • My appetite is strong for one meal, mediocre for a second, and almost absent by dinner. Please pray for my appetite to fully return.
  • It will take months to rebuild my immune system. Please pray that I remain healthy and do not need to return to the hospital.

What I’m Learning:

  • Sometimes, I’m a slow learner. It has taken me months to realize that one of the primary ways God is using this suffering is to encourage others in prayer. Again and again, I’ve heard people say they’ve been praying for me — and then they’ve seen God answer their prayers. Most of the time, He goes above and beyond what we could ask or imagine.
  • God has answered so many prayers and showered us with blessings during this wild and crazy time. I know He’s done this for His glory, and I’m so thankful for your prayers for me and my family. I hope you are encouraged in your own prayer life — to ask God for bold things, not just for me, but for yourself and His kingdom.

And he said to them, “When you pray, say: ‘Father, hallowed be your name. Your kingdom come.’” (Luke 11:2)


Therefore, confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous person has great power as it is working. (James 5:16)

What Has Been Encouraging:

  • Book recommendations can be risky. It’s easy to recommend something you love only for others to dislike it. Everyone enjoys different genres and writing styles — Charles Dickens’s style, for example, tends to generate polarizing opinions!
  • During my transplant journey, I set out with a sizable reading list. Unfortunately, my time in the ICU and hospital didn’t allow for as much reading as I hoped. Still, there’s one book I finished right before I got sepsis — and it was quite an unusual choice for me. Yet I was completely captivated.
  • In fact, I’d say it’s now in my top five favorite books of all time. It became a real companion while I was in and out of the ER and waiting for appointments. The chapters are short (2–3 pages each), and I found the content incredibly powerful.
    I’ll say no more except: give Theo of Golden by Allen Levi a try. If you enjoy it, let me know. If not — don’t judge me too hard — and maybe give A Tale of Two Cities a try instead!

Reflections on Ringing the Gong

Updates:

  • After 30 days in the hospital, I have been released! My blood counts are improving daily, and I’ve been placed on a lymphoma “Fast Track” recovery plan. Each day, I go to MDA for at least one appointment, and they are monitoring me closely.
  • I currently have no immunity, so my doctors have me on strict protocols to prevent any infection or virus. Unfortunately, our kids recently caught a cold, which means I won’t be able to see them for another week.
  • I will have another PET scan later this month to check on the status of my cancer. I will continue to receive regular PET scans over the next five years. The doctors won’t know whether the treatment was ultimately successful until we reach that five-year mark.

Prayer Requests and Praises:

  • I’m incredibly thankful to the Lord that I’m an “early engrafter” and only had to stay in the hospital for 30 days. This is a true blessing and a surprise. I was told I would likely be a late engrafter for several reasons, but the Lord shocked us all!
  • I’m still re-learning simple tasks and currently walk with assistance. I attend physical therapy three times a week, and the main goal is to be walking without a walker by the end of June.
  • It will take months to rebuild my immune system. Please pray that I don’t get sick during this time, which would require a return to the hospital.

What I Am Learning:

  • I continue to learn the lesson of trusting God with all my heart (Proverbs 3:5–6). Ringing the gong on my way out of the hospital was a wonderful moment. I’ve been waiting since last August to ring some sort of cancer bell to signal the end of my treatment. The laughter and look on Jenny’s face when I rang the gong are priceless to me. I’m deeply thankful.
  • And yet, we still don’t know if the treatment worked. There’s no physical way to know right now—only time will tell. The doctors are optimistic but can’t offer guarantees. Even as we celebrate the completion of chemotherapy and my hospital discharge, there remains a deep opportunity to trust the Lord with the future. God has set it up this way, so I continue to depend on Him for complete healing. He’s not done stretching, shaping, and growing my faith through this trial.
  • I know the Lord has helped me every step of the way during this transplant process. But I must continue to trust Him with the years ahead and “lean not on my own understanding.” The journey of faith is not a one-time decision—it’s a lifelong pilgrimage to the celestial city.
  • While the doctors are optimistic and cannot guarantee total healing, Jesus promises that He will never leave me nor forsake me. The cross is my guarantee of that promise. Jesus died for my sins and rose again. Will He not also graciously give me everything I need? Will He not hold my future firmly, no matter what future PET scans may show?

“What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us? He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things? … Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword?”
— Romans 8:31–35

“Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths. Be not wise in your own eyes; fear the LORD, and turn away from evil. It will be healing to your flesh and refreshment to your bones.”
— Proverbs 3:5–8


What Has Been Encouraging:

  • Fresh air! It’s good to be out of the hospital, even if I’m still weak. The Lord has humbled me through this process, and it’s easier now to see all the things I once took for granted. Going to lunch with a friend is a gift from the Lord. Being able to bend down and put on socks is a blessing. Attending a crowded event without fear of illness is a favor from God.
  • When we aren’t facing sickness or trials, it’s easy to feel independent from God and forget that our ability to eat, sleep, drink, and enjoy one another is a result of His kindness. Taking our health and “normal” life for granted is a subtle form of pride.
  • On a personal level, what can you enjoy today that you might normally overlook? What can you thank God for that you’ve forgotten comes from Him? When was the last time you asked for your “daily bread,” or do you just assume it will come?

“Give us each day our daily bread, and forgive us our sins, for we ourselves forgive everyone who is indebted to us. And lead us not into temptation.”
— Luke 11:3–4

“So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.”
— 1 Corinthians 10:31

“Do not be deceived, my beloved brothers. Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change.”
— James 1:16–17