Your Daily Prayer

Every morning, the team of women behind iBelieve.com bring you a devotional and prayer to help you start your day in conversation with God. The Bible tells us to bring our prayers and petitions before God and He WILL give us peace! May these daily prayers help you find the words to pray and focus your heart and mind on the love of God today.

  1. 7 hr ago

    A Prayer to Embrace Imperfection

    Isn't it oddly freeing to be humbled? To be gently caught in a blind spot and brought back down to solid ground? In this warm and disarming episode, Lia Girard invites us to reconsider our relationship with imperfection — not as something to be ashamed of or frantically fixed, but as part of God's purposeful, loving design. In a world that bombards us with impossible standards of beauty, brilliance, and success, the pressure to appear perfect is relentless. And for Christians, it can feel even more loaded — especially when Jesus Himself says in Matthew 5:48, "Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect." But here's where the Greek original opens everything up. The word used — teleios — doesn't mean flawless. It means to mature in pursuing a goal. And Romans 3:23-24 makes the rest beautifully clear: not one of us achieves perfection on this earth. We all fall short. Every single one. That is not a verdict of shame — it is an invitation to grace. Our imperfection is what keeps us running to God, receiving His forgiveness, and extending compassion to others who are equally in need. Lia reminds us that only Jesus is perfect, and it is His perfection — not ours — that reconciles us to God. So rather than chasing the illusion of flawlessness, we are invited to happily, humbly become works in progress — directed, healed, and matured in His loving hands. Today's Bible Verse "...for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and all are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus." — Romans 3:23-24, NIV Ponder Today Imperfection is not a flaw in God's design — it is part of it. Our propensity for sin and our need for grace are what continually draw us back to God, to receive His love and redemption, and to realize that only Jesus is perfect. Teleios means mature, not flawless. When Jesus calls us to be "perfect," He is calling us to grow and pursue Christlikeness — not to achieve a sinless standard we were never designed to reach on our own. Humility is a gift, not a defeat. Being made aware of our shortcomings protects us from pride and self-glorification — the very trap Satan uses to lead us away from dependence on God. A humble heart is a protected heart. Our imperfection gives us the capacity for compassion. When we honestly face our own sin and receive God's forgiveness, we become better equipped to extend that same grace to others who are struggling alongside us. Chasing the illusion of perfection keeps us from receiving grace. When we cover up or ignore our weak places to appear flawless, we rob ourselves of the very thing we need most — God's transforming, healing presence in those exact places. A Prayer for You Today Dear God, it's never easy to face imperfection. But I know You made me on purpose, and I don't need to compare myself to anyone else — because we are all unique creations. Help me understand that there is no human standard for "perfect." Help me remember that my propensity for sin gives me the opportunity to receive Your forgiveness and grace, which equips me to show compassion to others. Don't let me be misled by the pursuit of flawlessness — because only You are perfect. Instead, help me to happily and humbly be a work in progress, directed, healed, and matured in Your loving hands. I love and thank You. Amen. Don't Miss an Episode If today's prayer gave you permission to stop striving and start growing, we'd love to stay connected. Subscribe to the LifeAudio newsletter at LifeAudio.com for daily prayers, devotionals, and more content to walk with you — imperfectly and beautifully — in faith every day. If you like this podcast, be sure to check out our sister podcast, Your Nightly Prayer - an evening Christian prayer podcast to help you end your day in conversation with God. https://www.lifeaudio.com/your-nightly-prayer/ Discover more Christian podcasts at lifeaudio.com and inquire about advertising opportunities at lifeaudio.com/contact-us.

    7 min
  2. 1 day ago

    A Prayer to Connect with God in the Woods

    The moment you step onto a forest trail, something shifts. Traffic fades. The pressure of your schedule loosens its grip. Sunlight filters through branches, leaves crunch underfoot, and suddenly — almost without trying — you find it easier to notice God. In this quietly beautiful episode, Whitney Hopler invites us into the woods not just for a walk, but for a spiritual encounter with the Creator who designed every tree, root, and rustling leaf to point back to Him. Because the trees, it turns out, have something profound to teach us about trust. Jeremiah 17:7-8 paints a picture of a tree planted beside a stream — unhurried, unafraid, steadily rooted and consistently fruitful even through drought and heat. That tree isn't anxious. It isn't striving. It simply stays connected to its source, and everything it needs flows from that hidden, unseen rootedness. Whitney draws a luminous parallel to the life of faith: trust in God grows the same way roots do — quietly, beneath the surface, through steady habits of prayer, surrender, and turning our thoughts toward Him rather than toward worry. You can't always see it happening. But when the storms come, the roots hold. And a life deeply rooted in God will not be moved. Today's Bible Verse "Blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord, whose confidence is in him. They will be like a tree planted by the water that sends out its roots by the stream. It does not fear when heat comes; its leaves are always green. It has no worries in a year of drought and never fails to bear fruit." — Jeremiah 17:7-8, NIV Ponder Today Creation is one of God's most accessible classrooms. The woods, the trees, the filtered sunlight — all of it naturally points to the Creator. When the noise of life gets too loud, stepping outside can be one of the most spiritual things you do. Trees don't strive — they stay rooted. They can't control the weather or make it rain. Their strength comes entirely from their connection to the water source beneath them. That is the picture God holds out for your life of faith. Trust grows quietly, beneath the surface. Just as roots push unseen through soil, faith deepens in the everyday moments — when you choose prayer over worry, God's wisdom over your own understanding, and surrender over control. The hidden work is the most important work. No one walking past a tree sees the root system doing its work — but that invisible network is what keeps the tree standing through every storm. Your private, unseen life with God is what sustains your visible life. Rooted trust produces fruit even in drought. Difficult seasons do not have to devastate you. When your roots go deep into God, challenging circumstances lose their power to define you — and your life continues to bear fruit regardless of the conditions around you. A Prayer for You Today Dear God, as I look at the quiet strength of the trees, I realize how much I want to trust You the way they do. They stand steady through storms because their roots reach toward the water. I want my heart to be rooted in You — the Living Water who sustains and renews me. Teach me to trust You more deeply each day. When worries pull my attention away, remind me that You are my source of strength and peace. Grow my faith beneath the surface of my life, the way roots grow beneath the soil. And as my trust deepens, let my life become strong and fruitful. Thank You, God. Amen. Don't Miss an Episode If today's prayer made you want to step outside and meet God in His creation, we'd love to stay connected. Subscribe to the LifeAudio newsletter at LifeAudio.com for daily prayers, devotionals, and more content to root your faith deeper in Him every day. If you like this podcast, be sure to check out our sister podcast, Your Nightly Prayer - an evening Christian prayer podcast to help you end your day in conversation with God. https://www.lifeaudio.com/your-nightly-prayer/ Discover more Christian podcasts at lifeaudio.com and inquire about advertising opportunities at lifeaudio.com/contact-us.

    7 min
  3. Bonus Episode: Tim Tebow on Identity, Intimacy and Impact Through the Lens of the Cross

    2 days ago ·  Bonus

    Bonus Episode: Tim Tebow on Identity, Intimacy and Impact Through the Lens of the Cross

    Join us for a special weekend episode from the Built Different podcast hosted by Dr. Zach Clinton. What defines a life well lived? In this powerful conversation, Dr. Zach Clinton welcomes Tim Tebow to discuss identity, intimacy with Christ, and living a life marked by lasting impact. While many know Tim first as a Heisman Trophy winner, national champion, and NFL quarterback, his greatest mission has always extended far beyond football. From serving the “Most Vulnerable People” through the Tim Tebow Foundation to stepping into fatherhood with his wife Demi-Leigh and their daughter Daphne, Tim shares how identity, calling, and purpose have taken on even greater meaning in this season of life. At the center of this conversation is Tim’s new book, If the Tree Could Speak, a creative retelling of the crucifixion inspired by Luke 19:40. Through the perspective of the cross itself, Tim invites listeners to slow down and truly see the love displayed at Calvary—not as distant history, but as a deeply personal rescue mission. Together, Tim and Zach explore: Living with urgency without anxiety Leading with conviction anchored in love Seeing and valuing the people the world often overlooks Finding identity rooted in Christ instead of achievement The transforming power of the cross If you’ve ever felt unseen, dismissed, or forgotten, this episode is a reminder that the greatest declaration of love in history was completed for you. About Built Different Built Different with Dr. Zach Clinton helps listeners grow emotionally, relationally, and spiritually through conversations centered on faith, mental health, identity, and purpose. Be sure to follow Built Different for more encouraging conversations like this one. Episode Links Find Out More About Tim: https://timtebow.com/ Find Out More About the Tim Tebow Foundation: https://timtebowfoundation.org/ Purchase If the Tree Could Speak: https://timtebow.com/tree Purchase Look Again: https://shorturl.at/JFL2B Follow Tim on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/timtebow/ Find Christian Counseling or Coaching: https://christiancareconnect.com/ Discover more Christian podcasts at lifeaudio.com and inquire about advertising opportunities at lifeaudio.com/contact-us.

    33 min
  4. 2 days ago

    A Prayer to Develop the Spiritual Fruit of Self-Control

    A screaming, fist-swinging baby who wants the whole world to know he's unhappy — it's a picture that's easy to laugh at, until we recognize ourselves in it. In this honest and relatable episode, Vivian Bricker reflects on how many of us feel that same urge to cry, kick, and lash out — and how the fruit of self-control is one of the hardest, most necessary gifts the Holy Spirit grows in us. From childhood tantrums to adult struggles with anger, impulse spending, peer pressure, and addiction, the battle for self-control is one every believer knows well. Vivian shares the story of a friend whose struggle to say "no" to alcohol grew quietly and steadily until it became something he could no longer manage on his own — and whose eventual freedom came not through willpower, but through the work of God and the Holy Spirit's cultivation of egkrateia: Spirit-enabled mastery over desires, impulses, and habits so that they serve rather than rule us. That same Spirit is available to every one of us today. Self-control is the last fruit listed in Galatians 5:22-23 — but it may be the one we need to pray for most urgently. The road is long, but God walks every step of it with us. Today's Bible Verse "But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law." — Galatians 5:22-23, NIV Ponder Today Self-control is a fruit of the Spirit, not a product of willpower. You cannot manufacture it through discipline alone. It is cultivated by the Holy Spirit working in and through you — which means the starting point is always surrender, not striving. The Greek word egkrateia reframes everything. Self-control is not white-knuckled restraint — it is Spirit-enabled mastery of desires, impulses, and habits so that they serve rather than rule you. That changes how we pray for it. Walking in the flesh leaves us empty; walking in the Spirit brings life. Whatever area of self-control you're struggling with today, the path toward freedom runs through the Holy Spirit — not around Him. A Prayer for You Today Dear Holy Spirit, I confess that I do not do well with self-control. I get angry over small things, give in to impulses, and struggle to master the desires of the flesh. Please help me begin cultivating self-control today. Bless me with the ability to have mastery over my desires, impulses, and habits. The only thing that truly brings me joy is walking in alignment with You — and I trust that You can produce in me what I cannot produce in myself. In Jesus' name, Amen. Don't Miss an Episode If today's prayer stirred a desire to walk in greater freedom and self-mastery, we'd love to stay connected. Subscribe to the LifeAudio newsletter at LifeAudio.com for daily prayers, devotionals, and more content to help you grow in the fruit of the Spirit every day. If you like this podcast, be sure to check out our sister podcast, Your Nightly Prayer - an evening Christian prayer podcast to help you end your day in conversation with God. https://www.lifeaudio.com/your-nightly-prayer/ Discover more Christian podcasts at lifeaudio.com and inquire about advertising opportunities at lifeaudio.com/contact-us.

    7 min
  5. 3 days ago

    A Prayer for God to Empty You

    "You can't pour from an empty cup." It's a phrase that floods social media feeds and self-care conversations — and on the surface, it sounds reasonable. But in this episode, Emily Rose Massey gently but boldly challenges the ideology beneath it. Because if we wait until our cup is perfectly full before we give to others, we may wait forever — and miss the profound, counter-cultural beauty of a life lived in total dependence on God's grace. The Christian life, as modeled by Jesus Himself, is not one of self-preservation first. It is one of sacrifice, selflessness, and humility. Philippians 2:3-4 calls us to regard others as more important than ourselves — not from a place of overflow, but from a place of surrender. Jesus didn't wait until conditions were ideal. He stepped down from a heavenly throne, emptied Himself, took the form of a servant, and gave everything. Emily invites us to ask a searching question: what do we reach for when we feel like we're running on empty? The world offers endless distractions and temporary fixes — but God may be inviting us to something better. When we come to the end of our own strength, His strength can finally shine through. And an empty cup, offered to God in humility, may be exactly what He uses to fill others and conform us into the image of Christ. Today's Bible Verse "Do nothing from selfishness or empty conceit, but with humility of mind regard one another as more important than yourselves; do not merely look out for your own personal interests, but also for the interests of others." — Philippians 2:3-4, NASB Ponder Today The Christian life is one of sacrifice, not self-preservation. Jesus is our model — and He did not wait until He was "full" before giving. He emptied Himself completely, and in doing so, showed us the way of true humility. Weakness is not a barrier to serving others — it is an invitation to depend on God. When we reach the end of our own strength, His strength has room to shine. Our limitations are not obstacles to His work; they are the very conditions He works through (2 Corinthians 12:9). What you reach for when you're running on empty reveals what you truly trust. Worldly distractions and temporary fixes will never truly fill you. God wants to be your first stop, not your last resort. Vulnerability with others is an act of love, not weakness. Isolating ourselves when we're struggling robs the Body of Christ of the opportunity to serve us — and us of the opportunity to experience God's grace through community. God gives grace to the humble. When we stop striving to fill our own cup and bow before Him in our emptiness, He meets us there — with the grace, strength, and renewal we could never manufacture on our own (James 4:6). A Prayer for You Today Heavenly Father, there are so many days when I feel drained and weak — but I'm learning that is exactly where You want me, so I can fully rely on Your strength and not my own. You don't call me to grit my teeth and bear it. You call me to live by the power of Your Spirit, who empowers me to walk in obedience and humility. Thank You for showing me what great sacrifice looks like. Christ laid down His life for me — may I live to lay down my life for Him by serving others and preferring others above myself. In Jesus' name, Amen. Don't Miss an Episode If today's prayer shifted your perspective from self-reliance to surrender, we'd love to stay connected. Subscribe to the LifeAudio newsletter at LifeAudio.com for daily prayers, devotionals, and more content to help you live a life of humble, Spirit-empowered faith every day. If you like this podcast, be sure to check out our sister podcast, Your Nightly Prayer - an evening Christian prayer podcast to help you end your day in conversation with God. https://www.lifeaudio.com/your-nightly-prayer/ Discover more Christian podcasts at lifeaudio.com and inquire about advertising opportunities at lifeaudio.com/contact-us.

    7 min
  6. 4 days ago

    A Prayer for When It's Hard to Love Others

    In the film Where the Wild Things Are, a boy in a wolf suit discovers what most of us already know but rarely say out loud: loving others is hard. The wild things wanted a king who could keep them together and shield them from sadness — but no king, no matter how great, can do that. And neither can we. In this beautifully crafted episode, Sophia Bricker weaves together film, literature, Scripture, and raw honesty to name something we all experience but often feel guilty admitting — that love, in all its forms, is messy, costly, and sometimes feels beyond us. C.S. Lewis wrote that to love at all is to be vulnerable — that a heart given to anyone will certainly be wrung and possibly broken. Yet Jesus, who knew this better than anyone, chose to love anyway. He gave up divine privilege, took on human flesh, and died a criminal's death — not because it was easy, but because love requires sacrifice. Paul's instruction to the Philippians was simple and staggering all at once: have the same mindset as Christ in your relationships. That kind of love — wildly generous, sacrificial, seeking the good of others above our own — is not natural to us. But it is possible. Not through sheer willpower, but through the transforming work of the Holy Spirit in us, mirroring back the love we have already received from the nail-scarred hands of God. Today's Bible Verse "Though he was God, he did not think of equality with God as something to cling to. Instead, he gave up his divine privileges; he took the humble position of a slave and was born as a human being. When he appeared in human form, he humbled himself in obedience to God and died a criminal's death on a cross." — Philippians 2:6-8, NLT Ponder Today Loving others is hard — and admitting that is not a failure of faith. Every family, friendship, and community experiences conflict, hurt, and misunderstanding. Acknowledging the difficulty of love is the first honest step toward growing in it. To love is to be vulnerable. As C.S. Lewis reminds us, a heart kept safely away from others is a heart that never truly loves. The risk of being hurt is not a reason to withhold love — it is the very nature of it. Jesus is the ultimate model of sacrificial love. He did not cling to comfort or divine privilege. He entered our mess, bore our sin, and loved us at great personal cost. That is the standard — and the Spirit in us makes it possible. We are not more deserving of love than those we struggle to love. As Sophia asks so pointedly — are we not equally guilty of breaking a heart or speaking a careless word? Remembering our own need for grace softens us toward others who need it too. A Prayer for You Today Savior, I am amazed by Your choice to enter this broken world, taking the curse of sin upon Yourself to save all people. Who am I that I should receive such love? Yet I confess that I struggle to love those around me — people with pasts and flaws not so different from my own. Work in me to produce the fruit of sacrificial, wildly generous love that seeks nothing other than to reflect what You have given me. Produce in me by Your Spirit a new way of life marked by grace and mercy — and the courage to love, even when it's hard. In Your name, Jesus, Amen. Don't Miss an Episode If today's prayer stirred your heart toward someone you've been finding hard to love, we'd love to stay connected. Subscribe to the LifeAudio newsletter at LifeAudio.com for daily prayers, devotionals, and more content to grow your faith and deepen your love for God and others every day. If you like this podcast, be sure to check out our sister podcast, Your Nightly Prayer - an evening Christian prayer podcast to help you end your day in conversation with God. https://www.lifeaudio.com/your-nightly-prayer/ Discover more Christian podcasts at lifeaudio.com and inquire about advertising opportunities at lifeaudio.com/contact-us.

    7 min
  7. 5 days ago

    A Prayer to Value Solitude

    We live in the most connected era in human history — and yet loneliness has never been more widespread. In this thoughtful and beautifully grounded episode, Lia Girard makes an important distinction between two very different kinds of being alone. There is the loneliness we dread — that gnawing disconnection felt even in a crowded room full of people staring at their screens. And then there is erēmos — the Greek word used in Luke 5:16 — a purposeful, chosen withdrawal to a quiet place to be with God. Jesus didn't just permit this kind of solitude. He modeled it, prioritized it, and returned to it again and again. Throughout the richly packed chapter of Luke 5, Jesus pours Himself out completely — healing, teaching, feeding, loving. And then He withdraws. Forty days alone in the wilderness. A mountainside after feeding five thousand. The Garden of Gethsemane, stepping away even from His closest friends to pray. If the Son of God — fully divine, fully human — needed the sanctuary of solitude to reorient His heart to the Father's will, how much more do we? Lia invites us to stop treating silence as something to fill and start treating it as the gift it truly is — a place where we can hear our own hearts, and the voice of God that is meant singularly for us. Today's Bible Verse "But Jesus often withdrew to lonely places and prayed." — Luke 5:16, NIV Ponder Today Solitude is not loneliness — it is sanctuary. The Greek word erēmos in Luke 5:16 describes a purposeful retreat to a quiet place. Chosen solitude with God is not isolation; it is intimacy. Jesus modeled solitude as a necessity, not a luxury. From forty days in the wilderness to a mountainside after feeding thousands, Jesus consistently withdrew to be with the Father. His example is both permission and invitation for us to do the same. Busyness and pouring ourselves out for others make solitude more necessary, not less. Jesus lived demanding, sacrificial days — and that is precisely why He withdrew. The fuller your life feels, the more urgently your soul needs quiet. Solitude protects the authenticity of your prayer life. Jesus warned against prayer performed for others to see. Time alone with God removes the audience and creates the conditions for an honest, unguarded outpouring of your heart. A Prayer for You Today Dear God, I'm not always comfortable with solitude — I tend to fill quiet moments with productivity or distraction rather than time with You. The world is loud, and my life feels full and demanding. Please help me reprioritize sitting in silence with You. Help me not to feel anxious when I'm alone, but to see stillness as a gift. Help me reestablish the practice of withdrawing to be refilled with Your guidance and presence. Thank You for Jesus, who shows us that solitude is a necessity, not a luxury — and that being alone is not lonely at all. In Jesus' mighty name, Amen. Don't Miss an Episode If today's prayer made you want to find a quiet place and simply be with God, we'd love to stay connected. Subscribe to the LifeAudio newsletter at LifeAudio.com for daily prayers, devotionals, and more content to help you cultivate a deeper, more intimate walk with Him every day. If you like this podcast, be sure to check out our sister podcast, Your Nightly Prayer - an evening Christian prayer podcast to help you end your day in conversation with God. https://www.lifeaudio.com/your-nightly-prayer/ Discover more Christian podcasts at lifeaudio.com and inquire about advertising opportunities at lifeaudio.com/contact-us.

    7 min
  8. 6 days ago

    A Prayer to Accept Criticism and to Grow from It

    Sitting across from her career coach, listening to her own writing be described as "dead," Vivian Bricker felt the familiar sting of criticism land somewhere deep — not just in her confidence as a writer, but in old wounds she thought had healed long ago. In this honest and tender episode, Vivian shares the raw experience of hearing hard feedback, the spiral of self-doubt that followed, and the slow, God-guided process of learning to receive correction as a gift rather than an attack. Because that's exactly what Proverbs 15:31-32 calls it — life-giving correction — the kind that leads to wisdom and understanding when we are willing to heed it. For many of us, criticism doesn't just sting in the moment — it resurrects voices from childhood, parents who were too harsh, or seasons when we were made to feel we could never do anything right. Vivian names that pain with grace and invites us to bring it to God. Our mistakes do not define us, and constructive criticism from someone who genuinely wants to help us grow is not an indictment of our worth. With the Lord's help, we can learn to take correction in stride — not because it stops hurting, but because we trust that the path of wisdom is always worth walking. Today's Bible Verse "Whoever heeds life-giving correction will be at home among the wise. Those who disregard discipline despise themselves, but the one who heeds correction gains understanding." — Proverbs 15:31-32, NIV Ponder Today Constructive criticism is a gift, even when it doesn't feel like one. The Bible calls it "life-giving correction" — and those who receive it wisely find themselves growing in understanding and walking among the wise. Criticism often hurts most where old wounds already exist. When feedback triggers painful memories or childhood voices, that's not weakness — it's human. Bring those deeper wounds to God, not just the surface sting. Your mistakes do not define you. We all fall short, produce imperfect work, and have room to grow. What matters is not that we failed, but that we remain willing to learn and keep moving forward. Choose to hear the intention behind the correction. When criticism comes from someone genuinely trying to help you improve, receiving it well is an act of humility and wisdom — not surrender or shame. A Prayer for You Today Father,  Criticism is not something I enjoy. Like many people, it makes me feel bad about myself and stirs up painful memories from the past. Please help me learn to accept correction and grow from it. Equip my heart to remain strong when others offer feedback that is hard to hear. While I know it may still hurt at times, I trust that You can guide me toward wisdom and help me overcome the pain and disappointment. Thank You for always hearing my prayers. In Your Son's name, Amen. Don't Miss an Episode If today's prayer encouraged you to grow through the hard things, we'd love to stay connected. Subscribe to the LifeAudio newsletter at LifeAudio.com for daily prayers, devotionals, and more content to strengthen and mature your faith every day. If you like this podcast, be sure to check out our sister podcast, Your Nightly Prayer - an evening Christian prayer podcast to help you end your day in conversation with God. https://www.lifeaudio.com/your-nightly-prayer/ Discover more Christian podcasts at lifeaudio.com and inquire about advertising opportunities at lifeaudio.com/contact-us.

    6 min

About

Every morning, the team of women behind iBelieve.com bring you a devotional and prayer to help you start your day in conversation with God. The Bible tells us to bring our prayers and petitions before God and He WILL give us peace! May these daily prayers help you find the words to pray and focus your heart and mind on the love of God today.

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