Pulpit to the People: “Work Your Crumb” (Matt. 15:21-28)

Pulpit to the People: “Work Your Crumb” (Matt. 15:21-28)
Pulpit to the People: “Work Your Crumb” (Matt. 15:21-28)

“Work Your Crumb” (Matt. 15:21-28)
Rev. Dr. Isaac Holt, Jr. | Royal Missionary Baptist Church

“It’s not what life gives you that makes you successful. It’s what’s you do with what life gives you that makes you successful.” Today, Rev. Dr. Isaac Holt, Jr. uses the story of Jesus’ interaction with a pleading woman (found in Matt. 15:21-28) to remind us that one word from Jesus can change everything. “If the Lord just gives you a word (a crumb), you can wrap that word up in your faith and, when the problem comes, the Lord will work it out.” Listen as Pastor Holt describes the kind of faith that God gives recognition to. We believe God with you that God is about to speak a word that is especially for you.

Recent Headlines

1 day ago in National

Amazon cloud computing outage disrupts Snapchat, Ring and many other online services

A problem at Amazon's cloud computing service disrupted internet use around the world early Monday, taking down dozens of online services, including social media site Snapchat, the Roblox and Fortnite video games and chat app Signal.

1 day ago in Entertainment

Horror sequel ‘Black Phone 2’ dials up a No. 1 opening

The horror sequel "Black Phone 2" topped the North American box office charts this weekend with $26.5 million in ticket sales, according to studio estimates Sunday.

1 day ago in World

Thieves steal crown jewels in 4 minutes from Louvre Museum

In a minutes-long strike Sunday inside the world's most-visited museum, thieves rode a basket lift up the Louvre 's facade, forced a window, smashed display cases and fled with priceless Napoleonic jewels, officials said.

1 day ago in Lifestyle

Advice to feed babies peanuts early and often helped thousands of kids avoid allergies

A decade after a landmark study proved that feeding peanut products to young babies could prevent development of life-threatening allergies, new research finds the change has made a big difference in the real world.