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Devotionals

Cry If You Need To, Be Honest About How You Feel, Then With A Joyful Heart Believe God Will Work It Out

It’s okay to cry and it’s certainly okay to cry out to God. In Psalm 142, David, a powerful leader, a king, a father, a fighter and psalmist, a man described as one after God’s own heart, cries out to God: unashamed, sincere, and pure…

To Every Thing There Is A Season And A Time

You can want something your whole life, but it’s not the right time, it just won’t happen. You could force it, but that’s another story. Notice that the greatest blessings and ideas come into fruition at the right time? Somehow it never comes earlier or later than it needs to; it’s always right on time…

God’s Protection Provides What Human Effort Cannot: A Refuge and Fortress

Everyone around the world is being ask to protect themselves: social distance, quarantine, work from home, stand six feet apart, wear masks, gloves, eat and drink nutritiously. Though all these measures have and will help us to combat the coronavirus, in Psalms 91 King David points out something human effort cannot provide: a refuge and fortress…

Fear Not. I Will Be With You – 8 Bible Verses About Fear That Reminds Us of God’s Promises

During times of uncertainty many people can become fearful. As the coronavirus creates global panic around the world, let us remind ourselves of the words and promises of God…

Stop Rationalizing. Just Apologize.

When we owe someone an apology and we rationalize it, we are justifying our questionable behavior and avoiding the truth…

Everything Belongs to God

Before the start of a new year, we typically reflect on what happened during the current year…

A Biblical Grammar Lesson on Selflessness

When we use the word then, it’s usually sandwiched in between two phrases or sentences. Ex. _ then _. Typically whatever comes before then has to be “completed” first and then the following phrase or sentence proceeds. Does that mean God will only answer us after we’ve done something first…

Psalms 23

There are many meaningful lines in this Psalms. The words behind or in front of each semicolon (;), colon (:), or comma (,), tells a unique story. If each line were separated into their own mini Psalms 23, “The Lord is my shepherd,” “I shall not want,” “I will fear no evil,” “For thou art with me,” “My cup runneth over,” we could still understand the essential meaning behind the entire Psalms 23…