Friday, April 24, 2026

peace

 You will keep in perfect peace all who trust in you, all whose thoughts are fixed on you!
- Isaiah 26:3 (NLT)
 
After a week like this… after all the noise, the battles, the ups and downs… peace can feel a little out of reach.
Not because we don’t want it—
but because life doesn’t exactly slow down long enough for us to catch it.
There’s always something pulling at our attention.
Something to worry about, think through, figure out, or carry.
And if we’re not careful, our thoughts can end up fixed on everything except the One who gives us peace.
But this verse is so simple… and so direct.
Peace isn’t found in everything going right.
It’s found in where we place our focus.
“All whose thoughts are fixed on You…”
That word fixed gets me.
Not drifting. Not occasionally checking in.
Fixed. Steady. Intentional. Anchored.
Because the truth is, whatever we fix our minds on… that’s what fills us.
If we stay focused on the stress, we feel overwhelmed.
If we stay focused on the unknowns, we feel anxious.
But when we turn our focus back to God—who He is, what He’s done, how faithful He’s been—something begins to settle in our hearts.
Not because everything around us changed… but because we did.
And maybe that’s where worship has been leading us all week.
It’s not just a weapon for the battle.
It’s the pathway to peace.
Every time we choose to worship—whether it’s through a song, a prayer, or just a quiet moment of turning our thoughts back to Him—we’re gently fixing our eyes where they belong.
And in that place… peace follows.
Real peace. Lasting peace. His peace.
 
#dailybreadbykitty
Daily Inspiration from the Bible

Thursday, April 23, 2026

chains

About midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the other prisoners were listening to them. Suddenly there was such a violent earthquake that the foundations of the prison were shaken. At once all the prison doors flew open, and everyone’s chains came loose.
- Acts 16:25-26 (NIV)
 
Midnight.
Not the highlight of the day. Not the moment when everything feels hopeful and full of light. Midnight is the heavy part—the quiet, the dark, the place where everything can feel a little harder.
And that’s exactly where Paul and Silas found themselves.
Beaten. Chained. Sitting in a prison cell.
If anyone had a reason not to worship, it was them.
But instead of complaining… instead of questioning…
they started praying and singing.
In the dark. In the pain. In the middle of it all.
That kind of worship is different.
It’s not based on comfort or circumstances.
It’s a declaration that says, “God, even here… You are still worthy.”
And then something incredible happens.
Not before they started worshiping.
Not after everything got better.
But in the middle of their praise—the chains broke.
The doors opened. The ground shook.
Worship didn’t just fill the room… it shifted the situation.
And I can’t help but notice—everyone’s chains came loose.
Their worship didn’t just impact them. It impacted the people around them too.
That’s the power of it.
When we choose to worship in our hardest moments, something begins to move. Maybe not always in ways we can see right away… but something is breaking, something is loosening, something is shifting.
Because worship is a weapon.
It reaches into the darkest places and reminds us—and everyone listening—that God is still bigger than what we’re facing.
So whatever “midnight” moment you might be in…
don’t underestimate what your worship can do there.
 
#dailybreadbykitty
Daily Inspiration from the Bible

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

always

I will bless the Lord at all times; His praise shall continually be in my mouth.
- Psalm 34:1 (NKJV)
 
“I will bless the Lord at all times…”
That sounds beautiful… until you really stop and think about it.
All times?
Even the stressful ones? The overwhelming ones? The moments where everything in you feels tired, frustrated, or just done?
If I’m being honest, those are usually the moments when worship is the last thing on my mind.
It’s easy to praise God when things are going well. When prayers are answered, when life feels steady, when joy comes naturally. But there are other days—the hard ones—where worship feels like a stretch.
Not because God isn’t worthy… but because our hearts just aren’t there.
And maybe that’s exactly why this verse matters so much.
David didn’t say, “I will bless the Lord when I feel like it.”
He said, “I will bless the Lord at all times.”
That’s a choice.
Worship isn’t always emotional. Sometimes it’s intentional.
It’s choosing to whisper a prayer when your mind is racing.
It’s turning on a song when your heart feels heavy.
It’s reminding yourself of who God is, even when your feelings haven’t caught up yet.
And here’s the thing—those are often the moments when worship is the most powerful.
Because it’s real.
It’s not based on circumstances. It’s not driven by emotion.
It’s rooted in truth.
God is still good.
God is still faithful.
God is still worthy.
Even here. Even now.
So maybe today isn’t about perfect, put-together praise.
Maybe it’s just about showing up… and choosing Him anyway.
 
#dailybreadbykitty
Daily Inspiration from the Bible

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

battle

After consulting the people, the king appointed singers to walk ahead of the army, singing to the Lord and praising Him for His holy splendor. This is what they sang: “Give thanks to the Lord; His faithful love endures forever!” At the very moment they began to sing and give praise, the Lord caused the armies of Ammon, Moab, and Mount Seir to start fighting among themselves.
- 2 Chronicles 20:21-22 (NLT)
 
There’s something about this story that just doesn’t make sense at first.
An army is coming. A real threat. A real battle.
And instead of sending out the strongest fighters first… they send out the singers.
Can you imagine being in that group? Walking straight toward the unknown, not with weapons in your hands, but with praise on your lips?
That’s not the strategy we would choose.
When life feels like a battle, our instinct is to fix it, control it, or at the very least worry our way through it. We brace ourselves, overthink every outcome, and try to prepare for every possible scenario.
But God’s way looked different then—and it still does now.
They didn’t wait for the victory to start praising.
They praised on the way into the battle.
And that’s the part that gets me.
Worship isn’t just something we do after everything works out. It’s something we choose right in the middle of the unknown—before we see how it’s all going to turn out.
Because worship shifts who we’re trusting.
It says, “God, I don’t know how this is going to play out… but I know You’re already there.”
It reminds our hearts that we’re not walking into the battle alone.
And just like in this story, sometimes the breakthrough begins in the very moment we choose to praise.
Not because the situation changed yet… but because our posture did.
Maybe today looks a little like a battle for you—stress, uncertainty, things you can’t control.
What would it look like to lead with worship instead of worry?
 
#dailybreadbykitty
Daily Inspiration from the Bible 

Monday, April 20, 2026

worship

God is spirit, and His worshipers must worship in the Spirit and in truth.
- John 4:24 (NIV)
 
On my way to work the other day, I heard something on the radio that stopped me in my tracks: “Worship is a weapon.”
At first, it caught me a little off guard. When I think of worship, I usually think of music—songs on Sunday mornings, hands raised, voices lifted. It feels peaceful… gentle.
But a weapon? That feels different.
The more I sat with it, the more I realized—worship isn’t just about what we sing, it’s about where our heart is positioned.
Worship is choosing God in the middle of everything else.
It’s easy to worship when life feels good, when prayers are being answered, and everything is going the way we hoped. But real worship—the kind Jesus is talking about in John 4—is deeper than that. It’s not tied to a place, a song, or even a moment. It’s rooted in truth.
It’s choosing to say, “God, You are still good,” even when the day didn’t go the way we planned.
It’s turning our thoughts back to Him when stress, frustration, or worry try to take over.
It’s a posture of the heart that says, “No matter what I’m facing, I choose You.”
Maybe that’s why it’s called a weapon.
Because when we worship, we’re not just expressing something—we’re shifting something.
We’re taking our focus off the noise, the pressure, the problems… and placing it back on the One who is steady, faithful, and unchanging.
After a long week, that feels like exactly what I need.
Not more noise. Not more striving.
Just a quiet return to Him.
 
#dailybreadbykitty
Daily Inspiration from the Bible

Friday, April 17, 2026

faith over fear

For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind
- 2 Timothy 1:7 (NKJV)
 
Fear has a way of showing up uninvited.
It whispers lies, clouds our thoughts, and tries to convince us to stay still—to not try, not step out, not move forward. It tells us to play it safe, to expect the worst, to hold back “just in case.”
But fear was never meant to lead us.
This week has been a reminder that we don’t have to believe every thought that crosses our mind. We don’t have to hold onto the lies. We don’t have to let our thoughts spiral into worst-case scenarios. And we don’t have to control everything to feel secure.
Because God has already given us what we need.
Not fear… but power.
Not doubt… but love.
Not chaos… but a sound, steady mind.
Choosing faith over fear doesn’t mean we never feel afraid. It means we don’t let fear decide our direction. It means we move forward anyway—trusting God with every unknown, every “what if,” every step.
Fear will try to speak…
but faith gets the final word.
And when we choose faith—again and again—we begin to live the kind of life God called us to… not held back, not weighed down, but free.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

in His hands

Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding.
- Proverbs 3:5 (NIV)
 
There are moments in life when everything feels completely out of our control.
I remember one October morning in Iowa—blizzard conditions, the kind where the snow is flying so fast it looks like something out of a movie. I had driven in weather like that before, and I felt confident I’d make it to work just fine.
Until I didn’t.
I hit black ice on a bridge, and in a matter of seconds—though it felt like slow motion—everything changed. The car lost control, and I ended up hitting the bridge head on. The impact was so severe the engine was pushed back into the firewall. The front doors wouldn’t even open. Emergency crews had to pull me out from the back of the car.
And somehow… I walked away.
At the hospital, the emergency team told my family they didn’t understand how I survived—that God must have been in the car with me.
And I believe He was.
Because here’s the truth: I thought I was in control that morning. I trusted my driving, my experience, my ability. But in an instant, all of that was gone. There was nothing I could do to stop what was happening.
And yet… I was never out of God’s hands.
We spend so much time trying to control outcomes, to predict what’s coming, to make sure everything goes “right.” But life doesn’t always work that way. There will be moments we can’t plan for, can’t fix, can’t see coming.
That’s where trust comes in.
Not trust in ourselves… but trust in the One who sees what we can’t. The One who is present in every moment—even the terrifying, out-of-control ones.
Sometimes trusting God doesn’t mean everything goes smoothly.
Sometimes it means knowing that even when it doesn’t… He is still there, holding us through it.
 
#dailybreadbykitty
Daily Inspiration from the Bible

peace

  You will keep in perfect peace all who trust in you, all whose thoughts are fixed on you! - Isaiah 26:3 (NLT)   After a week like this… af...