Monthly Archives: January 2025

Continually Renewed

The concept of renewal is found in both the Old and New Testaments. Renewal is about restoring freshness and vigor. It’s about transformation. As a growing believer, God is constantly at work in us renewing our mind and spirit. It’s a constant process we must submit to and allow God to do. Our human nature wants to get stuck in our ways and forego the renewal process. That only stunts our growth. If you’ve been feeling like you’re stuck or that you’re in need of renewal, ask God to renew your mind, your spirit, your body, your thoughts or whatever you need Him to. God transforms us from the inside out. Let Him cause the old to pass away and to make all things new.

Here are some Bible verses on renewal.

1. No one who is born of God [deliberately, knowingly, and habitually] practices sin, because God’s seed [His principle of life, the essence of His righteous character] remains [permanently] in him [who is born again—who is reborn from above—spiritually transformed, renewed, and set apart for His purpose]; and he [who is born again] cannot habitually [live a life characterized by] sin, because he is born of God and longs to please Him.

1 John 3:9 AMP

2. Therefore if anyone is in Christ [that is, grafted in, joined to Him by faith in Him as Savior], he is a new creature [reborn and renewed by the Holy Spirit]; the old things [the previous moral and spiritual condition] have passed away. Behold, new things have come [because spiritual awakening brings a new life].

2 Corinthians 5:17 AMP

3. For you have acquired new creation life which is continually being renewed into the likeness of the One who created you; giving you the full revelation of God.

Colossians 3:10 TPT

4. That is why we never give up. Though our bodies are dying, our spirits are being renewed every day.

2 Corinthians 4:16 NLT

5. And be continually renewed in the spirit of your mind [having a fresh, untarnished mental and spiritual attitude], and put on the new self [the regenerated and renewed nature], created in God’s image, [godlike] in the righteousness and holiness of the truth [living in a way that expresses to God your gratitude for your salvation].

Ephesians 4:23-24 AMP

Photo by Jeremy Bishop on Unsplash

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Work Diligently

One of the moments I remember most from high school was being in a locker room in Waco, Texas before the basketball state championship. Everyone was nervous feeling the weight of the game we were about to play. Coach walked in with The Dallas Morning News newspaper folded up. He said, “I want y’all to hear this article. It says, ‘The State Championship is a mere formality for (our opponent). (Our school) lacks the height and the talent to keep up.’” Something happened in that moment. He said, “Go prove them wrong!” We started banging on the lockers and screaming. We came out of that locker room a force to be reckoned with and won the game. We were all of a sudden motivated to win, but it was the discipline we learned in practice that gave us the victory.

Motivation is a good thing, but it doesn’t keep you going. When we first accept Jesus, find our calling or discover our God given purpose, our motivation is high. When it comes down to working it out, getting things moving or bumping into roadblocks on the way, motivation does very little to keep us on the path. It’s the daily disciplines that do that. Motivation is emotional and depends on success to stick around. Discipline is willpower and depends on determination to move despite how you’re feeling. God gives us the mountain top, emotional experiences because we need the motivation from time to time, but He expects us to be disciplined to continue through the valleys of not being able to hear Him or sense His direction for our lives.

Proverbs 30:25 says, “The feeble ant has little strength, yet look how it diligently gathers its food in the summer to last throughout the winter” (TPT). He keeps working for the future despite the present, and is a good example for us. You may have lost your motivation along the way to doing what God called you to, but let me encourage you to begin small, disciplined steps to move you towards it. Find five things you can do daily that will keep you moving towards the place where God is calling you, and do them no matter what. The ant is considered wise and a hard worker in this Scripture because he does the necessary work before the winter arrives. So you and I need to be working while we can as God moves us towards the place He is leading us. Motivation may give you momentum, but discipline will help you accomplish all God has for you to do.

Photo by Shannon Potter on Unsplash

Throwback Thursday is a feature I’m using to help build some margin into my schedule to pursue other ventures. Each Thursday I’ll be bringing you a previously written devotional that still speaks encouragement to us from God’s Word.

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Understanding Your Value

In Sunday School I held up a $20 bill. Like clockwork one of the students yelled out, “Can I have that?” I then crumbled it up and asked, “Do you still want it?” He looked at me as if I were crazy and said, “Yes!” I threw it on the floor, stomped on it and jumped on it. Do you think he still wanted it? Of course he did. I put it under my arm and held it there. He still wanted it. I asked, “What if I make tears in it?” He said, “I’d still take it because it’s still worth $20.” I then told the group how some of them had been through some tough times. They’ve been stomped on, crumpled up and put through some dark times. The temptation is to look in the mirror and talk bad about yourself as if your value has diminished. I reminded them that they’re made in the image of God, and so are other people. Nothing they do, or that’s been done to them, could change their value.

In John 8, Jesus was teaching in the Temple when a group of religious experts brought Him a woman. They said she had been caught in the act of adultery and that the law said she should be stoned to death. With rocks in their hands, they asked Jesus, “What do you say?” The Lord looked at His creation in love, seeing her value hadn’t changed. He then began drawing in the dirt as He did when He formed Adam and Eve. They insisted that He answer. They had already devalued her. Jesus simply said, “Let he who is without sin throw the first stone.” On that moment, I believe that saw that their sin and past hadn’t affected their value either. They dropped the stones and walked away. The woman stood there and Jesus asked her where were the ones who condemned her. He then told her He didn’t either and that she should go and sin no more.

In Genesis 1:27 it says, “So God created man and woman and shaped them with his image inside them. In his own beautiful image, he created his masterpiece. Yes, male and female he created them” (TPT). When you grasp that you are made in God’s image, it will be difficult to devalue yourself. When you hear the voices in your mind saying you’re not good enough, your past disqualifies you, you’re too far gone or that you’re worthless, I want you to read this verse and tell them to shut up. Remind yourself that your value isn’t based on what you’ve done or been through. Your value can’t be changed because you are made in God’s image. You are a priceless masterpiece that He created. It’s time to drop the rocks of phrases you allow on repeat in your mind. Keep reminding them you’re made in God’s image until they all disappear. You are covered in the righteousness of Jesus and He doesn’t condemn you for what’s been forgiven and forgotten.

Photo by Erriko Boccia on Unsplash

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

The Power Of Listening

I was talking with a group of men from our church when someone shared a traumatic event in their life. We all listened in as he told us his thought processes as he went through it. When he finished, another man began to share his story. One by one we talked about the different events, but found there were some similarities in what we felt, how we thought and how God rescued us. One of the commonalities was that each one of us had at least one another man, who wasn’t in his life before, show up and offer help. These men who helped are still in our lives today because of what they did to rescue us. In all our stories, they took time to listen as we processes the pain and loss.

In the first chapter of Job, we read how Satan went to God accusing Job of being protected by God. He then launched an all out assault on his life taking his kids, his livestock and his livelihood. Chapter one finishes with Job worshipping God and declaring faith in His goodness. In chapter two, Satan went and a used him again. This time he struck Job with disease and boils. Job’s wife told him to curse God and die. It then says three men came to him to sympathize with him and to comfort him. He was so disfigured from the disease and grief that they could hardly recognize him. They cried with him and sat in silence for seven days and seven nights. They didn’t offer platitudes or ways to fix things. They simply listened and mourned with him.

James 1:19 says, “Understand this, my beloved brothers and sisters. Let everyone be quick to hear [be a careful, thoughtful listener], slow to speak [a speaker of carefully chosen words and], slow to anger [patient, reflective, forgiving]” (AMP). If you see someone going through a difficult time, take this verse to heart. Be slow to speak. Sometimes nothing said is better than trite sayings. Let the Holy Spirit guide you if you do so that you can speak carefully chosen words that bring healing. Be quick to listen without offering advice or ideas. Listen with the intent to understand them and to allow them to process what they’re going through. Job’s friends started out doing the right thing. They kept him from feeling isolated and alone in the darkest time of his life. Let God use you to bring healing and strength to someone in a desperate situation by your presence and through your ability to listen. There is great power in listening.

Photo by Quang Vuong on Pexels.

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Trusting God’s Authority

We typically associate peer pressure with school age kids, but honestly, it’s with you at every stage of life. There’s something in us that wants to please the group of people we associate with no matter how old we get. In Proverbs 1:10, Solomon told his son, “When peer pressure compels you to go with the crowd and sinners invite you to join in, you must simply say, ‘No!’” (TPT) He the. Gives as example of how people will try to get us to do something against our morals to be part of the group. In this case he uses the example of murder and then theft. It’s a crazy example, but it shows the power of needing the approval of others over God’s approval in our life. We become more afraid of what people think of us than what God does, so we fall to the pressure.

In Acts 5, the Early Church was starting to get traction and the group of religious leaders at the time didn’t like it. Peter and the others were laying hands on the sick and they recovered. They raised up people who had been lame since birth. The crowds were noticing and began to give their lives to Jesus. The leaders, sensing their loss of power over the group, decided to throw them in jail. An angel set them free in the night and they began preaching again. The leaders arrested them again and told them, “We gave you strict orders not to continue teaching in this name…” Then Peter and the apostles replied, “We must obey God rather than men [we have no other choice]” (AMP). Peter demonstrated what Solomon was trying to teach us. We must give greater weight and authority to what God tells us to do than we do the pressures of men.

Proverbs 29:25 says, “The fear of man brings a snare, But whoever trusts in and puts his confidence in the Lord will be exalted and safe.” Think about the areas of your life where you’re tempted to follow the pressures of others over what is right. These are the areas where Satan tries to get a foothold in your life. Ask the Holy Spirit to give you the courage, strength and boldness to obey God the way Peter did. Because he had given God full authority in his life, he wasn’t afraid of the group that would try to get Him to do something different than God had told him. Sometimes the group tries to get you to outright sin, and other times they keep you from stepping into your calling. Give God the authority in your life that He deserves so you can follow where He leads despite the pressure of the crowd.

Photo by Tima Miroshnichenko on Pexels.

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Spiritual Abundance

When God blesses, He does it abundantly. When I looked up the meaning of abundantly, it said it was more than you need or an overflow. God’s blessings are more than we need so that we can bless others. I’ve met people who are overflowing with joy, peace, goodness and other things God blesses with. Our minds want to think of material things when we think of blessings, but mostly what God blesses us with is spiritual things because they are eternal. Our prayers are even centered around material blessings. Try changing your prayers to asking to bless you abundantly in spiritual matters. Ask Him to give you an overflow of grace and mercy to give to others. When we focus on spiritual abundance We will truly live an abundant life.

Here are some Bible verses on abundance:

1. The thief comes only in order to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it in abundance [to the full, till it overflows].

John 10:10 AMP

2. So above all, constantly seek God’s kingdom and his righteousness, then all these less important things will be given to you abundantly.

Matthew 6:33 TPT

3. And God is able to make all grace [every favor and earthly blessing] come in abundance to you, so that you may always [under all circumstances, regardless of the need] have complete sufficiency in everything [being completely self-sufficient in Him], and have an abundance for every good work and act of charity.

2 Corinthians 9:8 AMP

4. Now to Him who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that works in us.

Ephesians 3:20 NKJV

5. I admit that I haven’t yet acquired the absolute fullness that I’m pursuing, but I run with passion into his abundance so that I may reach the purpose for which Christ Jesus laid hold of me to make me his own.

Philippians 3:12 TPT

Photo by Aliane Schwartzhaupt on Unsplash

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Playing Peekaboo

One of the best things to do around a baby is to play peekaboo. You know the game where you get the baby’s attention and then cover your face. When you open your hands to reveal you’re there, the baby sighs relief and often laughs which is contagious and starts the cycle over. Science has shown that this is good for babies. You’re teaching them gross motor skills, social skills, visual tracking and most importantly permanence. When you cover your face, the baby thinks you’re gone, and when you uncover it you suddenly reappear. By playing peekaboo, you’re teaching the baby that even though they don’t see you, you’re still around and can show up at any time. In essence, you’re even laying the groundwork for faith teaching them to believe even when they can’t see.

All throughout Jesus’ ministry, He kept telling the disciples that He was going to be crucified and go away. He told them not to let their hearts be troubled when that happens. He even told them that He would send the Comforter that they wouldn’t be able to see, but He would still guide them into all truths. After His death, He started playing peekaboo with the disciples if you will. He would show up, then disappear over 40 days. Thomas missed out on the first time and famously said, “Unless I see the holes in His hands and put my finger in them, I won’t believe.” Then Jesus showed up again in John 20:29 and said, “Do you believe because you see me? How happy are those who believe without seeing me!” (GNT)

There are times in our lives where it feels like Jesus is still playing peekaboo with us. At moments He feels so close that you can touch the hem of His garment. Then there are times when you feel like He’s gone and your prayers aren’t heard. The truth is He has never left you and He’s teaching you to believe even when you can’t see or feel Him. Hebrews 11:1 says, “To have faith is to be sure of the things we hope for, to be certain of the things we cannot see.” Jesus is working on building up your permanence of belief in Him so that even when you can’t see Him or feel Him, you can be certain that He’s there and be sure that He hears you. We still have the Comforter with us today who is guiding us and growing our faith in the unseen. Continue to have faith and it won’t be long until He shows His face again.

Photo by KTMD ENTERTAINMENT on Unsplash

Throwback Thursday is a feature I’m using to help build some margin into my schedule to pursue other ventures. Each Thursday I’ll be bringing you a previously written devotional that still speaks encouragement to us from God’s Word.

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

First Things First

I’ve talked with two different people this week that had felt like God had asked them to make a change to their morning routine. One said that when they wake up, they go into a room by themselves and play worship music for 15 minutes. They sing along and spend the first few moments worshiping God. The other said that they have made it a point to not open any apps on their phone until they have done their daily Bible reading. Both have shared what a difference it has made in their day. Instead of checking the weather, opening social media, checking emails or texts, they have decided to seek God first. It’s a small change in their day that isn’t easy to do because of previous habits, but it’s paying big dividends in the faith.

Exodus 16 starts out telling us how israel had been set free from slavery in Egypt for a month. They were traveling to the Promised Land being led by the Shekinah glory of God. In that journey of following a physical manifestation of His presence, they began to complain He wasn’t doing enough for their appetites. That evening, God provided quail for them to eat. The next morning, there was dew on the ground. When it evaporated, it became manna for them to eat. They had to pick up just enough for them for that day, and they had to get it before the sun got high in the sky or it would melt and disappear. God was literally giving them their daily bread, but they had to get it first thing or they would miss out on it. God was teaching them that He would care for their needs each morning and evening.

In Matthew 6, Jesus was giving the Sermon on the Mount. He taught about fasting and prayer, and then He taught about their physical needs of money, food and possessions. He told them not to let these thought dominate their mind because the Father knows their needs. Then in verse 33 He said, “But first and most importantly seek (aim at, strive after) His kingdom and His righteousness [His way of doing and being right—the attitude and character of God], and all these things will be given to you also” (AMP). When we seek our needs first, it leads to complaining. When we seek Him first, it leads to trust. Do you find yourself complaining about your needs or trusting Him for them? The difference might be in what you’re seeking first.

Photo by Terry Tan De Hao on Unsplash

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Half Built Towers

I like to make plans and then to execute those plans. When things aren’t going according to plan, I can be irritable and short tempered. My wife is usually quick to remind me that God may have other plans. In those moments I usually will seek God to see if it’s Him redirecting me or if it’s the enemy trying to stop me. There have also been times I’ve made plans without seeking His guidance. I knew what I wanted to do and decided to move forward with them with or without His blessing. On rare occasions, I’ve known what has God asked me to do, and made other plans. I don’t recommend this at all because one way or another, God’s plan will prevail. The sooner I submit to His plan, the better things are.

In Genesis 6-9 we read the account of the flood, Noah building the Ark and the year that he spent inside it. In Genesis 9:1 God told Noah and his family to repopulate the earth and to scatter abroad. Things were going well until Genesis 11 when a group of people decided to build a tower to the sky. In verse 4 they said, “Come, let’s begin work to build ourselves a city with a lofty tower that rises into the heavens. We’ll make a name for ourselves, a monument to us, instead of being scattered all over the earth” (TPT). They knew what God’s plan was and decided to enact their own. They decided the glory for their achievement was greater than obedience. In the middle of building the tower, God confused their languages, they separated and scattered abroad. The unfinished tower became a reminder to follow God’s plan.

Proverbs 19:21 says, “You can make many plans, but the Lord’s purpose will prevail” (NLT). Take a moment to reflect on the goals and plans you’ve made for this year. Did you seek God to see what He wanted you to accomplish? He has a personalized plan for your life and wants to work with you in accomplishing it. Don’t allow selfish ambition to sidetrack you. Follow God’s plan and do it with all your might. You will still face struggles and the enemy will try to thwart your efforts, but God will be right there with you through it. I’m sure you have some half finished towers in your life that you can look at to help you remember that God’s plan is the best plan and His will always prevail.

Photo by Abbie Bernet on Unsplash

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Learning To Meditate

For many years, my son and I planted a small garden behind our house. We read each packet of seeds to see how far apart each seed needed to be planted as well as their depth. We planted different types of vegetables and marked the rows to help us remember. I wanted to teach him a few things by doing this. One is the law of sowing and reaping so he would know that he will only get what he plants. Another is the importance of planting seeds in the different gardens of his life. One of the most important gardens all of us need to tend is our mind. The seeds we plant there not only determine our thoughts, but also the direction of our life.

Psalm 1:1-3 says, “Oh, the joys of those who do not follow the advice of the wicked, or stand around with sinners, or join in with mockers. But they delight in the law of the Lord, meditating on it day and night. They are like trees planted along the riverbank, bearing fruit each season. Their leaves never wither, and they prosper in all they do” (NLT). I love these verses because they directly show the correlation between those who plant seeds of God’s Word in their mind and those who don’t. We plant the seeds by meditating on it. Meditating is simply working it into the soil of your mind, thinking about it, how to apply it, and growing it. When we do that, the psalmist reminds us later that it will keep us from sinning. More than that, it will produce harvest in our lives throughout life’s seasons.

Joshua 1:8 says, “Study this Book of Instruction continually. Meditate on it day and night so you will be sure to obey everything written in it. Only then will you prosper and succeed in all you do.” If you’re struggling to defeat the enemy in certain areas of your life, meditate on God’s Word. If you’re looking to grow closer to the Lord, meditate on His Word. The difference between success and failure in so many areas of your life depends on you taking the time to go deeper into the Bible. Don’t just read it, think about it. Let words jump off the page and look them up. Look at the historical and cultural implications of what God says. Ask the Holy Spirit to open your eyes and to show you how to apply it. When you’re reading, give yourself time to pause and reflect throughout each passage. That’s how you plant it in your mind and find success.

Photo by Worshae on Unsplash

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized