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New every morning is your love, great God of light, and all day long you are working for good in the world. Stir up in us desire to serve you, to live peacefully with our neighbors and all your creation, and to devote each day to your Son, our Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.

"A Liturgy for Morning Prayer," Upper Room Worshipbook

Used by permission from the Book of Common Worship, © 2018 Westminster John Knox Press. All rights reserved. This prayer appears in “A Liturgy for Morning Prayer” in Upper Room Worshipbook.

 

Today’s Reflection

I see more now when I pay attention, which I often do not, and I am more overwhelmed by beauty that I now realize has nothing to do with me at all — except as it brings me half-understood messages of God’s goodness and love. Two sights from my adult past I remember now. The first is a huge oak tree outside my floor-to-ceiling window before my daughter was born. It was covered with dark red leaves of such an intensity that their red color and shapes reflected off the white walls of the apartment where I lived. It was truly astonishing and it hardly seemed possible, but there it was. Through that tree I received an obscure message of hope and beauty at a place in my life that seemed so hopeless I was not sure I could survive it.

—Roberta C. Bondi, Wild Things: Poems of Grief and Love, Loss and Gratitude (Upper Room Books, 2014)

Today’s Question

What might God want you to notice today as a message of hope? Join the conversation.

Today’s Scripture

Let your steadfast love, O LORD, be upon us, even as we hope in you.
—Psalm 33:22 (NRSVUE)

Prayer for the Week

Creator God, as you draw us closer to you, draw us closer to each other. Amen.
Submit your prayer to The Upper Room.

Something More

Advent is just around the corner. In Season’s Greetings, twelve vividly imagined letters from long-ago Bible characters who were there for the birth of Jesus speak to the many meanings of Christmas.
Learn more here.

Lectionary Readings

  • Ruth 3:1-5; 4:13-17
  • Psalm 127
  • Hebrews 9:24-28
  • Mark 12:38-44

Read the lectionary texts courtesy of Vanderbilt Divinity Library here.

Looking for lectionary-based resources? Learn more about The Upper Room Disciplines.

2 Comments

  • Ally Posted November 7, 2024 6:04 am

    I teach a program called WRAP: Wellness Recovery Action Plan. The first Key Recovery Concept of WRAP is Hope. Hope is the belief that we will come out on the other side. I tell my clients to hold onto hope when things seem bleak, and to use their coping skills to stay well. I’m having a tough time holding onto hope myself today. Lord, thank You for the reminder to sit with you and cling to hope and a future, as Jeremiah 29:11 says. Still sitting with God, or trying to. I pray for all us, dear ones.

  • robert moeller Posted November 7, 2024 6:44 am

    God is always with us, no one on earth can send God away. In God we have the best hope there is.
    Thank You, Lord.

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