Loading...
Gethsemane | Love Revealed By Jesus ChristJesus | Miracles | Prayers For HealingJesus Prayer | Love Revealed By Jesus ChristMeditations On The Love Of Jesus Christ | King James Audio Bible KJV | Prayer With Jesus

Seven Prayers With Jesus In The Garden Of Gethsemane | Meditations On The Love Of Jesus Christ | Love Revealed By Jesus | King James Audio Bible | KJV

Prayer with Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane | Meditations on the love of Jesus Christ

Christian Art | Prayer With Jesus In The Garden Of Gethsemane | Meditations On The Love Of Jesus Christ | King James Audio Bible | KJV

Luke 22: 39-46 | King James Audio Bible | KJV | King James Version | Gethsemane

Prayer of Surrender and Trust | Trusting in God’s Plan

‘Nevertheless not my will, but thine, be done.’ – Luke 22:42

In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus humbly surrendered his own desires to trust in God’s plan. Let us learn from Jesus’ example and place our trust in God, knowing that His plan is always best.

Dear Jesus, just as you trusted in God’s plan in the Garden of Gethsemane, help me surrender my will to Him. I trust that you know what is best for me, even when things are hard or confusing. Guide me, and help me to trust in your perfect plan for my life. Amen.

Prayer For Divine Assistance | Seeking Strength In God’s Help

‘And there appeared an angel unto him from heaven, strengthening him.’ – Luke 22:43

In the Garden of Gethsemane, an angel appeared to Jesus and provided him with strength. Let us remember that God is always ready to assist and strengthen us in our times of need.

Dear Jesus, when I am weak and in need of help, I know that you are there for me. Just as an angel strengthened you in the garden, I ask for your divine assistance. Please give me the strength, courage, and perseverance to face any challenges that come my way. Thank you for being my source of strength and support. Amen.

Prayer For Forgiveness And Reconciliation | Extending Forgiveness And Love

‘Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.’ – Luke 23:34

In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus displayed unparalleled forgiveness and love. He prayed for forgiveness for those who crucified him, showing us the importance of extending forgiveness to others.

Dear Jesus, your forgiveness and love in the Garden of Gethsemane inspire me. Help me to forgive those who have hurt me, just as you forgave those who crucified you. Grant me the strength and grace to let go of any bitterness or resentment in my heart. Fill me with your love and compassion, and help me to reconcile with others. Amen.

Prayer For Strength And Perseverance | Finding Strength In God’s Presence

‘Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation: the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak.’ – Matthew 26:41

In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus reminded His disciples to watch and pray to avoid falling into temptation. He understood the struggles of human nature and the need for spiritual strength.

Dear Jesus, I recognize my weaknesses and the temptations that surround me. Just as you encouraged your disciples to watch and pray, I ask for your help in staying strong and faithful. Grant me the wisdom to recognize temptation and the strength to overcome it. May your presence empower me to persevere and live according to your teachings. Amen.

Prayer For Spiritual Growth | Growing In Faith And Love

‘Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine; no more can ye, except ye abide in me.’ – John 15:4

In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus taught the importance of staying connected to him, just as a branch abides in the vine. He emphasized the need for a deep and fruitful relationship with him.

Dear Jesus, I desire to grow in my faith and love for you. Teach me to abide in you and allow you to abide in me. Help me to remain connected to you through prayer, studying your word, and seeking your guidance. May my life bear fruit that glorifies you and blesses others. Strengthen my faith and deepen my relationship with you. Amen.

Psalm 29 | King James Audio Bible | KJV | King David Psalms | King James Version

Prayer For Compassion And Service | Serving Others With Love

‘A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you.’ – John 13:34

In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus exemplified selfless love and service. He commanded his disciples to love one another as he loved them, setting an example for us to follow.

Dear Jesus, your selfless love in the Garden of Gethsemane is a powerful example for me. Teach me to love others with the same love you have shown me. Open my eyes to the needs around me, and give me the heart to serve others. Help me to be compassionate, kind, and generous in my words and actions. May your love flow through me, touching the lives of those I encounter. Amen.

Prayer For Hope And Resurrection | Embracing Hope Of Resurrection

‘And he said unto Jesus, Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom. And Jesus said unto him, Verily I say unto thee, Today shalt thou be with me in paradise.’ – Luke 23:42-43

In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus faced the weight of his impending crucifixion. Through his ultimate sacrifice and resurrection, he offers us the hope of eternal life. Let us embrace this hope and find solace in the promise of resurrection and being with Jesus in paradise.

Dear Jesus, in the Garden of Gethsemane, you willingly faced the agony of the cross for our sake. We thank you for the hope and assurance of resurrection that you offer us. Help me to hold onto this hope, especially in times of difficulty or despair. Fill my heart with the anticipation of eternal life with you. May the promise of being with you in paradise inspire me to live a life worthy of your sacrifice. Amen.

Meditations On The Love Of Jesus Christ | Bible Verses | Reflections On The Gospel | Prayer With Jesus
  • Prayer With Jesus | Prayer For Compassion | Love Revealed By Jesus Christ | Word Aloud

    Gospel Reading: Matthew 25:35-36 (KJV) ‘For I was an hungred, and ye gave me no meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me no drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me not in: Naked, and ye clothed me not: I was sick, and ye visited me not: I was in prison, and ye came unto me not.’ Reflection on the Gospel In these verses, Jesus speaks about compassion and how our actions towards others reflect our love for Jesus. Jesus teaches us that by caring for those in need, we are also caring for Jesus. This passage challenges us to look beyond ourselves and extend kindness and mercy to those around us. Prayer Heavenly Father, I come to you asking for a heart filled with compassion. Help me to see others through your eyes, to feel their pain, and to be moved to action. Teach me to love and care for those who are suffering, just as Jesus did. Let my actions reflect your love and bring comfort to those in need. Thank you for your endless compassion and grace. In Jesus’ name, I pray. Amen. Personal Reflection I think about a time when I was in need and someone showed me compassion. How did it make me feel? Now, I consider a time when I had the opportunity to help someone else. How did my actions impact them? Compassion is more than just feeling sympathy for others; it is about taking action to alleviate their suffering. By practicing compassion, I bring God’s love into the world. Meditation On The Prayer And Gospel Compassion begins with recognizing the humanity in others and responding with love and kindness. Jesus’ words in Matthew 25:35-36 remind me that my treatment of others is a reflection of my relationship with Jesus. This is not only a call to action but an invitation to embody God’s love in my daily life. As I meditate on this prayer, I remember the story of the Good Samaritan. Despite being a stranger, the Samaritan showed great compassion to a wounded traveler, demonstrating the kind of love Jesus calls me to show. This story illustrates that true compassion knows no boundaries and is driven by love. I think about those in my community who are in need. I visualize their faces and hold them in my thoughts. I imagine Jesus standing with me, encouraging me to extend compassion and kindness. I feel the warmth of Jesus’ love as I commit to making a difference in their lives. Compassion is not just about grand gestures but also about small acts of kindness that can transform someone’s day. It involves listening, understanding, and being present for others. As I practice compassion, I become a vessel of God’s grace, reflecting Jesus’ love to those around me. Prayer Lord Jesus, thank you for your example of compassion. Help me to follow your footsteps and show love to those in need. Grant me the strength and courage to act with kindness and mercy. Fill my heart with empathy and understanding, and let your love be evident in all that I do. Amen. Scripture Reading: Colossians 3:12 (KJV) ‘Put on therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, bowels of mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, longsuffering;’ Blessing May the compassion of God fill my heart and guide my actions. May His grace empower me to show love and kindness to those in need. Go forth in His love, extending mercy and compassion to all you meet. Amen.

  • A Bishop’s Lenten Homily | Jesus & Lazarus | Oliver Peers

    ‘Death,’ says His Grace, ‘throws it all apart. For we are not as we should be. Faith requires our adjustment to God’s truth. God’s triumph in a very real sense requires in us the loss of our everything. Which, as with Mary at the other end of Jesus’s life, is God’s truth.’ The Gospel reading is of John 11: 1-45, which is a long passage, and His Grace’s homiletic theme commences in textual wilderness. Our brokenness – in this place – a family home. Our faith, our doubt, our death… The irruption – death, doubt, fear – within our precious scenes and our most intimate places. Our domesticity. His Grace speaks from the chair, as is a bishop’s prerogative, and says: ‘So much is obscure in the Gospels. We’re always reaching through them. We’re never there. Really, we never are. Our knowledge, our understanding, of the Gospels is never complete, and with each reading comes a new revelation. There are always new riches there. Just as there are between all of us, between myself and you. The Gospels are living texts. This is a part of the conversation we have with our own Christianity. It is a part of who we are in our relationship with Jesus. We are in this sense always on the brink. ‘So yes, there is plenty that doesn’t seem to make sense. As one of the order of bishops, we would be lying if we said that weren’t the case. They are not easy texts to encounter, if by that word we may signify something more than a superficial glancing off against, but rather a profound search for the word of God. The Gospels are written by people who had their own ideas, and often didn’t know what had really happened. Luke is quite explicit on this point. His is an investigation, from the explicitly claimed point of view of an historian, rather than that of a first-hand witness, who attempts, so he says, to set out an orderly account, out of the chaos, the sheer muddle, that has been handed down to him. It is possible to imagine Luke researching and composing his account after many years, when there has arisen a desire to know what exactly happened, and this implies a certain call to faith and certain demands of historicity, to historical exactitude. So in these different ways, the people of the first years of Christian faith are in the dark. There is also a decisive need to define the life of Jesus. And people didn’t get Jesus. The whole meaning of Christianity is only now beginning to take root throughout the composition. So much needs to be evangelized. The light shines almost in tentative fashion like that first star, which drew the wise men from the east to our Lord’s cradle. ‘John’s is widely held to be a very late Gospel. There are others who say that John’s Gospel might have been the first to acquire its true shape, because it most fully expresses Jesus, as we know him to be, as members of the Catholic Church. We don’t really know when any of this is being written, but we get a feel in John of a Gospel refined over many years, through a community. So there’s a lot going on there that I’d like you to think about. ‘What I would like to suggest to you is that, while within the Gospels we are often confronted with clues, guesswork, stories that have been handed down through so many people, and so in this sense we might find ourselves to be in the wilderness, this is the very desolate space itself to which we must give ourselves in order to experience Christ’s full redemption in our lives. I suggest it is for God’s glory that we do so. ‘As we become aware of ourselves, in this seminary, we find ourselves in a very secure, comfortable setting, and there are signs of Easter everywhere. Within the very fabric of these buildings, our Lord is risen; our Lord lives. But now this is our Lenten journey, where death enters, where death breaks us. We are to ride into Jerusalem in triumph, and then we are to be utterly broken, all hope gone, our hope extinguished. And really, I suggest to you, it is only by inhabiting this thought, as if we don’t know Easter is there, that our new life can follow, just when we have given up all hope, when every promise that Jesus made to us seems to have been cancelled. ‘And here now we have the story of Lazarus. I should like to suggest to you that we have a very powerful call now. In our very comfortable space, our domesticity, with all this comfort, where so very little might seem to happen each day, so it might seem to you, there is a disturbance within all of this comfort, and that is a disturbance within ourselves, and that is our call to Jesus. I think it is correct to say that our most comfortable places break in the light of Jesus from the inside, in order that we may take the necessary steps to be with Jesus. ‘Faith is not comfortable. I think that we can all receive the message of the rolling away of the rock from the tomb of Lazarus to say something of vital importance to ourselves concerning our openness to God’s love. The rock we roll away can come in all sorts of guises, but we know when we are blocked, and I firmly believe if we are truthful then we know where those blocks might be. ‘Next Sunday, which will be Palm Sunday, we process as it were to Jerusalem, to begin our Holy Week. Now as I speak to you we are on the brink. Even now, I suggest it might be very good for all of us to lay aside what we think we know, to fall apart a little, and so […]

  • Audio Daily Bible Verses | Jesus In Nazareth | A Prophet In His Own Country | Christian Faith And Unbelief

    When Jesus returns to Nazareth, to his own country, he attends synagogue on the Saturday and teaches there, not as a leader of the synagogue but as a participant in the faith community. Nonetheless, Jesus’ teaching is different from other people’s. Jesus, we have been told, teaches with authority, and not as the scribes (Matthew 7: 29). Jesus does not merely interpret Scripture, according to scholarly tradition; rather, Jesus reworks Scripture, providing for the people a new Torah, which centres upon himself and which we may understand as Jesus himself. In this way, Jesus’ authority matches and exceeds that of Moses. Jesus is a new Moses, and then infinitely more [ … ]

Search Jesus Here | A Holy Land Jerusalem Pilgrimage? | A Safari? | An Escape..