This Day Is the Lord's
This Day Is the Lord's emerged from Corrie ten Boom's later years as a traveling speaker and evangelist, when she had settled in California and was reflecting on the daily rhythms of Christian living. Published in 1979 when ten Boom was in her late eighties, the work represents her mature understanding of how ordinary believers can live each day in conscious dependence on God's sovereignty and grace. Drawing from decades of ministry following her wartime experiences, ten Boom crafted this collection as a practical guide for those seeking to integrate their faith into the mundane realities of daily existence.
The book offers meditations organized around the central conviction that each day belongs entirely to the Lord and should be lived in recognition of that truth. Ten Boom argues that believers must begin each morning by surrendering the day to God's control, acknowledging both their own inadequacy and God's sufficient grace for whatever lies ahead. She emphasizes the importance of finding God's presence in ordinary moments rather than waiting for dramatic spiritual experiences, and she demonstrates how scriptural promises can provide anchor points throughout each day's challenges. The work consistently returns to themes of trust, obedience, and the practical outworking of faith in small decisions and daily encounters with others.
This Day Is the Lord's has endured as one of ten Boom's most accessible works on Christian living, appealing to readers who appreciate her characteristic blend of theological depth and practical wisdom without the intense focus on suffering that marks her wartime writings. Her emphasis on daily surrender and moment-by-moment dependence on God resonates across denominational lines, making the book widely useful in Protestant circles. Who should read this: believers seeking guidance on daily spiritual discipline and practical Christian living will find ten Boom's counsel both encouraging and challenging, though those looking for systematic theology or detailed biblical exposition should look elsewhere.