Here we will rattle off tons of relevant, everyday things that the Bible teaches, and ways to implement them. How can we manage anxiety, quit porn, make other difficult sacrifices? What are some of the things that God probably wants us to be doing that we're overlooking? We will provide a TON of content like this below (just keep scrolling or hit "control F" and type in some key words from a question you might have/topic you might want to see).

 

Getting closer to God and then growing in your faithSeeking Him from the heartBible readingPraying consistently and with a purposeWe should be going to church consistently and with a purpose like to get something out of itWhat repentance looks like (and just how badly we need it)Living like JesusContinuing in your growth no matter where you areSeeking ways to live for God beyond what you currently know

How we should overcome our struggles with mental healthHow we should overcome our struggles with anxiety and depression specificallyWe need to let go, whether of the past or our pain or sins or whatever it may beYou have to stop holding onOur mindset is important to God, and we don't take it seriously enough

How we should overcome our struggles with sexual temptationsWhat actually defines lust/sexual immorality?

How we should overcome our struggles with bad habits and addictionsBeing disciplinedWaiting for God's plan instead of giving in to feelings/instant gratificationYou are enough in the eyes of God so stop searching

Does living for yourself line up with the Bible, and how should we live when it comes to God and others?Putting God first ahead of other pursuitsPut others ahead of yourselfPut your faith ahead of your hearts desiresDeny your own idea/purpose and instead follow God's in your life (even if you can’t see it or it doesn’t make sense)Following God even when you can't see/understand it

Living for God in the little, daily things that aren't as popular in Christian teachingsControlling your intake of social media/tv/music before it controls you

What does loving others look like in our everyday lives?Putting others ahead of yourselfWho is my “neighbor”?Is serving others really required to go to Heaven?What to do when frustrated with othersWhat do we do when angry/bitter?Showing kindness/grace naturally and not just to those that deserve itBeing patient with othersCorrecting others lovinglyBearing the loss yourself and making things easy for othersVolunteering/serving othersPraying for others

Giving your time to GodIs it ok to spend less time with God when we're busy, and what do we do to find time?Spending the beginning and end of the day with God

God wants us to have true intentions/willingnessMaking sacrifices beyond your comfort zoneTrusting God as a first resort instead of as a backup planIn addition to being willing/believing, we should be living this out in our everyday lives

Prioritizing God from the heart and not from the rules and regulations I think I need to follow to be savedPraying from the heart and not a script

Following God even when you can't see/understand itDeny your own idea/purpose and instead follow God's in your life (even if you can’t see it or it doesn’t make sense)Waiting for God's plan instead of giving in to feelings/instant gratification

Receiving/seeing things with a positive perspective

Not lying about anything

When we speak (or should we be listening instead?)Foul languageListening to othersGossip/talking about others

A work life balance that goes BOTH ways according to the BibleAgainst doing too much workAgainst doing not enough workRest (including but also deeper than just physical rest)

The best ways to truly overcome sins (things like lust and drinking and vaping)Conquer it/submit yourselves to GodPray when temptedReflect on the scriptures that apply to your temptation/issue and live out what the Words sayInvolve GodLean on God when you're not strong enoughFlee from the temptationWaiting for God's plan instead of giving in to feelings/instant gratificationTalk to people that you know will be there for you/at least try to helpPersevere when faced/tempted with these things

How to help others get closer to God and helping them with their strugglesGenuinely caring enough (you probably fall short of this, ESPECIALLY if you didn't think you needed to read it, as it shows that you don't really "care" because you are happy with what you already do and how much you already care, which might work for you but NOT for the people you could be more helpful to)Being a very good listener FIRSTKnowing what to say, and saying itDoing the things you tell them to do

God wants us to act on our beliefs and live this out in our everyday lives

Moving forward from the pastPutting it out of mind: let it GOLift it up to God in prayerPursuing a better future

What does “doing good things for God” look like in our everyday lives?

How do we search the Scriptures deeper for answers to “all” things?

Living with wounds and scarsIdentify your wound and prevent it from spreading to other areas and leaving you hurt in more ways than beforeCOMPLETELY cut off behaviors that deepen your woundRealize your worth in spite of your woundLive your life without things needing to magically get better (living with your wound)Try to find healing through Jesus ChristHelp others (a full circle moment, and you can be at your lowest when you do this by the way so don't overlook it if you're still hurt and feel incapable of helping)

Reflecting Jesus in all that you do (“Christ in me”)

Completely killing off sins in your everyday life

Feeling like you're not enough/not able or good enough on your own

Facing uncertainties

Having voices in your headWhat's a "voice" and what does it look like today to have Satan try to influence you?Distinguishing between the good and bad forces (who's who?)Realize that Satan's power is limited, and fight back against the voicesSubmit to Jesus Christ and find freedom

Handling sickness in a Godly wayRealize the temporary nature of sicknesses here on EarthRemaining gratefulTalk to God about it through prayer and petitionAccept God's will whether or not you find healing here on Earth

Pride: Satan’s sin that we ALL struggle with whether we realize it or notHow pride has secretly snuck into ALL of our everyday lives – Why God is opposed to it – How to drive it out of your everyday life

How to have the heart that God wants you to have – Realizing what your heart is and that God is superior to the negative/sinful thoughts of your heartKeeping your heart “hungry and thirsty for righteousness” instead of becoming content or satisfied – CONSISTENTLY committing yourself to Jesus and His Words – Separating the holy from the common (stop settling for “good enough”), seeking what God desires through His Words – Remain in Him as He remains in you

The roles of a woman in the Christian faithSo that men and women could have each otherTo be EQUAL recipients of God’s promises/lifeAs wivesAs mothersAs friendsAs church members (and what does that look like?)As church leaders (and what does that look like?)What is the difference between men and women in the Christian faith?

Trusting God without getting the results that we want

The next step for both the non-Christian and the Christian when it comes to God/ChristianityThe next step for the non-ChristianThe next step for the Christian

Getting closer to God and then growing in your faith

Psalm 34:8: “Taste and see that the Lord is good; blessed is the one who takes refuge in Him.” - you can't "taste" anything from a distance. So if your relationship with Jesus isn't that advanced - advance it. If you really want to "see" the work of God in your life, then fight temptations that you usually give in to. Trust in Him and make Him your refuge when you usually would have trusted in yourself or tried to control the situation. Do the things you've never done before. Taste and see the work of God in your life today. Don't take your refuge by God or around God - take your refuge "in Him." Again, get closer to God.

Ephesians 5:15-16: "Be very careful, then, how you live - not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil." - we can get closer to God by being "careful" and "wise" in "all" that we do and by living for Christ with "every opportunity" - even in the little things.

Romans 12:2: “Do not conform to the pattern of this world but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is.” - this is how you test and approve and get closer to God. Stop conforming to everyone else, start transforming to everyday Christian living (and dying away of sins) - this all starts with the way you look at things, the "renewing of your mind" - take it a step further than you normally would. Nothing changes if nothing changes.

James 4:8: "Draw near to God and He will draw near to you." - make it your own. Draw far, meaningless prayers, and you'll have a far, meaningless relationship. The closer you draw, the closer He draws. It's all you. Free will. Your choice. Choose God.

Seeking Him from the heart

Jeremiah 29:13: "When you seek me with all your heart you will find me."

Matthew 6:21: “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” So live your life well for God and keep Him at the center of your desires and goals and entertainment, because these things determine where you go ("there your heart will be also," so whether your heart resides in Heaven or Hell is your decision and based on what you pursue in your everyday life with the time that remains). God doesn’t want us to “be saved” - He wants us to live saved. So if you have to follow your heart (“there your heart will be” implying that it controls where you eternally reside), make sure your heart follows Jesus above all else. Proverbs 4:23: “Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.”

Psalm 145:18: "The Lord is near to all who call on him, to all who call on him in truth." - so if you're truly calling on Him and willing to make changes and sacrifices and spend time on this, if there's truth behind your motivations, then He will be near to you as you seek Him.

Matthew 7:7-8: "Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives; the one who seeks finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened." This refers to our relationship with God - think about it: ask, seek, find. Not everything you ask for ("give me 10 wives") will be given, not every door you knock on (the door of a celebrity, and at times the door to certain opportunities that aren't in God's plan) will be opened, and not everything you seek ("I'm looking for a million dollars") will be found, so clearly God isn't referring to any of those things, but rather the one thing that He does guarantee to give us if we are faithful in "asking, seeking, and knocking" (whatever that may look like in your everyday life) - a closer relationship with God. Notice that the verse leaves no room for doubt or uncertainty. If, with your heart you really ask, He WILL answer, and if you really knock (do this with a pure heart, make the sacrifices that He calls us to make), then He WILL open the door, and if you truly seek Him, you WILL (there is no room for doubt, you WILL) find Him.

Bible reading

Psalm 119:105: "Your Word is a lamp for my feet, a light for my path." - lamps aren't for your feet, so clearly this is a figure of speech illustrating that the Bible will show you how to walk with God in your everyday life. In John 17:17 Jesus says that "your Word (He was talking to God) is truth" - so it's not just that the Bible spoke of the truth or was true - it literally IS truth.

John 14:6: "I am the Way and the TRUTH and the Life, and nobody comes to the Father except through me." - 1 Timothy 2:4: "God wants all people to be saved and come to a knowledge of the truth" - so coming to know Jesus ("the truth") is how we are saved. In the same way, come to know and live out the Words of the Bible, which are also truth (this is what Jesus did during His life on Earth) - this is what being saved looks like, coming to a knowledge of the truth in this way.

John 8:31-32: "If you hold to my teaching (like if you actually live it out), you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free."

1 John 2:6: "Whoever claims to live in him must live as Jesus did." - so if you claim to follow Him, this is what that would look like. He sets the standard, not us.

Matthew 24:35: "Heaven and Earth will pass away, but my Words will never pass away." If God's Words never pass away, that means that they are alive today and that they GIVE LIFE today and that we can find life through reading them and living them out.

Hebrews 4:12: "The Word of God (the Bible) is alive and active."

James 1:22: "Do not merely listen to the Word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says." - so it's not about hearing the Word of God, but truly having a committed heart to God and being willing to do what He wants us - to stop giving way to feelings and temptations and to be willing to put the phone down and spend more time in the Word and carrying it out.

Praying consistently and with a purpose

1 Thessalonians 5:17: "Pray continually."

Ephesians 6:18: "Pray on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. With this in mind, be alert and always keep on praying for all the Lord’s people." - so we are praying "continually" and on "all kinds of occasions" with "all kinds of prayers and requests" - this calls for consistency ("always keep on praying" - notice also that the verse tells us to pray for others). This doesn't mean to say one prayer right now and then move on - pray continually and always keep on praying. Having a bad day? A good one? If it's a part of "all kinds of occasions" (gratitude, desperation, and everything in between) then it should be something you pray for. And we are called to keep consistently praying, and not just empty words but words from the heart that help us grow closer to God.

Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - but how can God hear us when we pray silently or in our hearts/minds? So obviously God isn't talking about physically hearing us, but rather that if we are truly invested in praying, whether out loud or not, He will know and will respond by revealing Himself to us - but we have to search with all our hearts, there has to be a purpose, these aren't just empty words.

Psalm 145:18: "The Lord is near to all who call on him, to all who call on him in truth." - so if you're truly calling on Him and willing to make changes and sacrifices and spend time on this, if there's truth behind your motivations, then He will be near to you as you seek Him.

James 4:8: "Draw near to God and He will draw near to you." - make it your own. Draw far, meaningless prayers, and you'll have a far, meaningless relationship. The closer you draw, the closer He draws. It's all you. Free will. Your choice. Choose God.

We should be going to church consistently and with a purpose like to get something out of it

Hebrews 10:24-25: “Let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing.” Notice the wording "meeting together" - this is a reference to church attendance (this passage was literally part of a letter from a pastor to a church), and this verse is the best verse in the Bible to answer the question: "Do I need to go to church?" This becomes even muddier with online services - the answer is still yes because "meeting together" implies congregating, so unless your online service is being watched together in larger groups, you are missing out. If you truly can't make it in person, then remember that Jesus Christ healed the sick on the side of the road - where they were - instead of making them get up or go to a hospital. But that's because they couldn't. If you can't, then there is no guilt because God knows and cares about your needs - He sees you and wants to meet you right where you are. However, if you CAN go to church, but just don't want to, then you should take note of the verse that we "should not give up meeting together." And this isn't just a requirement, something God wants to burden us with - this is to help us grow closer to Him. Look at the rest of the verse - in church and in a (good, as I and others have been hurt by churches that weren't ultimately good for them) community of believers, we may be "spurred on toward love and good deeds" by the people there. It's not impossible to find this, or other forms of good, Godly things outside of church, it's just unlikely. Think about it like this: I live in Minnesota. The Minnesota Twins play at their home stadium, Target Field, 81 times per season. They visit the Milwaukee Brewers at their ballpark (Miller Park) twice each year. So if I wanted to watch the Twins play, it's not impossible to find them at Miller Park, it's just much more likely that they will be at Target Field, their home stadium. Church is like God's home stadium - stop trying to find God at Miller Park, whether that is a bar, or doom scrolling, or whatever has you busy or otherwise wanting to avoid church, or doing the bare minimum - it is hard to find God in these places. Go to church.

Also, it's not a church. Know what it is? It's a building. He's not a pastor. Know what he is? A man. So if your idea of church, of hearing from and connecting with God, is a man in a building for an hour a week you're missing out. On what? Actually connecting with God. It’s fair to define church as “an assembly of people that are there for God.” Whether it’s Bible reading, worship, a sermon, whatever it may be, the people are there for God. So that’s what a church is, a gathering of people for the Lord - but what’s the point? This is where Satan uses confusion to minimize the impact of church, the important thing to remember is the purpose. It’s a gathering of people for the Lord, so the PURPOSE is the Lord. Think of it like this: you have a team of baseball players. So they play baseball, right? Now let’s say you have a group of baseball players that don’t play baseball. What the heck is that? That’s most churches today. They’re there, supposedly for God, but they don’t really get anything out of it. So what’s the point of church, of a gathering of people that are there for God? The point is God. Don’t forget or lose sight of that. It’s not about doing it right, it’s not about the day of week or the format or what you do or anything like that - that stuff doesn’t matter to God. In Colossians 3:23 it says “whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as if working for the Lord.” So whatever it is, it’s with all your heart, and it’s for God. Notice how the verse said “whatever you do”? That’s because it doesn’t really matter what you do, just that you do it for God and do it with all your heart. Don't bring a distracted mind/heart out of church - bring one TO church and surrender to God from the heart and mind while you're there.

What repentance looks like (and just how badly we need it)

Acts 17:30: “In the past God overlooked such ignorance, but now he commands all people everywhere to repent.” - this isn't just for Christians or when we're in church or a religious season in our lives. "All people everywhere." So no matter who you are and no matter where you are in life, God is calling you to repent (which is to confess and take action against your sins).

Proverbs 28:13: "Whoever conceals their sins does not prosper, but the one who confesses and renounces them finds mercy." - so you can't conceal or hide your sins, you have to confess them and be honest. BUT. You also "renounce" them. Stop. Take action. Actually do something. Don't just confess it, that's easy - confess it and address it. This is repentance, and without it we have no share in the Kingdom of God.

Mark 2:17: “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners.” God is gracious enough to meet us where we are in our sicknesses and sins, and He wants to heal us. We "need" a doctor/repentance. He has called us, but we have to respond. A call unanswered isn't a call, it COULD HAVE been one. God doesn't want you to miss out on His purpose for your life and eternity. He has called us to repentance - answer the call and move.

Matthew 3:2: "Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven has come near." - if God's purpose for your life is near, repent. He doesn't want you to miss out. Whether in church, or reading a post like this, or wherever - the Kingdom of Heaven is near in your life. God wants to move in your life. But you have to move too, otherwise you don't go anywhere. You have to actually get on the bus when it comes to your stop. The Kingdom of Heaven is near - repent and hop on the bus.

Matthew 3:8: "Produce fruit in keeping with repentance." - we all fall into sins but KEEP repenting (as often as you sin).

Luke 13:3: "Unless you repent, you will perish."

Living like Jesus

Hebrews 1:3 refers to Jesus as the "exact representation" of God - so Jesus reflected God. This isn't just a physical representation, but in terms of ALL things - Jesus represented God in the way He lived His life. What made the bond between Jesus and the Father so special was the fact that Jesus reflected God perfectly in all that He did - He lived out the Words and commands of God. That's how He was able to represent Him "exactly." So if we want to get closer to God, if we want to get closer to that "exact" representation of Him, then we must do the same, living like Him, like Jesus, quite literally "representing" and reflecting Him "exactly" - "good people" aren't exact representatives of God - Jesus Christ is. Live like Him to get closer to Him.

1 John 3:2: “We shall be like Him.” - being more like Jesus (loving, forgiving, patient, selfless, compassionate, on and on it goes) is literally our calling from the Bible. If we want to get closer to God, it only makes sense to do it His way, according to His instructions.

Ephesians 5:1: “Follow God’s example as dearly loved children.” - Jesus Christ came into this Earth and gave us the example. He was born into a manger (a feeding area for animals, in a crappy town) and died on a cross (a criminal's death). There were sleepless nights, days without food on the road at work, and all He ever did was love others in all that He did. He said "Father, forgive them, they don't know what they're doing." He died loving others. Follow that example. And He's right, by the way - when we don't follow God's example in the way we live, we truly have no idea what we're doing. At that point, we're just living aimlessly for ourselves - this is destined to perish, so why bother? Matthew 24:35: "Heaven and Earth will pass away, but my Words will never pass away." Jesus knew that His life would end, so He didn't live for Himself - He lived for God and others, and He received eternal life. Follow that example and the result will be the same. But if you live for yourself, then as great as that may go, it will end one day and end in the eternal meaninglessness that it was always destined to be.

1 John 2:6: "Whoever claims to live in him must live as Jesus did" - more important than any claim we can make or religious stance we can take is the way we actually live our lives for God and live like Jesus.

Philippians 2:5: "In your relationships with one another, have the same mindset as Christ Jesus." We should approach our daily lives and relationships the same way Jesus did.

John 13:15: "I have set you an example that you should do as I have done for you." - follow His example in how you live.

Continuing in your growth no matter where you are

2 Peter 3:17-18: "Therefore, dear friends, since you have been forewarned, be on your guard so that you may not be carried away by the error of the lawless and fall from your secure position. But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ." -  so it’s possible to fall from Heaven and from a close relationship with God even when you’re "secure" - this isn’t just a one and done where you believe and are saved and get baptized or maybe go to church or whatever - you gotta actually keep growing, like the verse said growing in His grace and growing in knowledge of Him.

In Proverbs 21:2 it says that “a person may think their own ways are right, but the Lord weighs the heart.” So we might think that we are good, but God is the one who decides, not us. So trust in the Lord and in His Words with all your heart, and don't lean on your own understanding of things (Proverbs 3:5). In John 9:41 Jesus says that if we claim we can see, we are guilty of sin because we are blind. So, we wouldn’t even be sinning by admitting that we don’t know the truth, we would just be showcasing our humility and need for God to reveal the truth to us! So what is the truth, especially regarding this topic of being good enough? In John 8:31-32 Jesus says that "if we live out His teaching, then we will know the truth, and the truth will set us free." In John 14:6 Jesus refers to Himself as the Way, the Truth, and the Life, and says that nobody will come to God except through Him. So we don’t get closer to God by being “good people,” but rather by living like Jesus (whom Hebrews 1:3 refers to as the “exact representation of God”), and then when we live like Jesus we learn the truth, including the truth about what is considered good or good enough, and that truth will set us free. “Good people” wouldn’t say “Father forgive them” on the cross, so this isn’t about being a “good person,” but rather it’s about being more like Jesus. When Jesus said that “nobody is good except God alone" in Luke 18:19, that statement didn’t exclude Jesus from being good, it actually included Him because He is the exact representation of God, so Jesus IS good, and being a “good person,” simply consists of being more like Him.

Proverbs 1:32: "The complacency of a person will kill them." - there is no “good enough.” Heaven is eternity, not momentary, so no fixed level of goodness could attain it unless that level was perfection. Keep going, keep growing. You don’t wait for the bus for 24 hours. It comes and goes. So we also have to move and improve in our faith/righteousness.

Philippians 3:13-14: "I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it (his goal for who he should be). But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus." - so even the writers of the Bible had room to improve and they "pressed on" and moved forward in pursuing it - we should do the same.

Seeking ways to live for God beyond what you currently know

This is something I was talking to a friend about recently: some people are really, really good people. Seriously. What type of message could we possibly give them? Some people truly have a "speck" of wood in their eye whereas the rest of us seem to have a log. But then I came across this verse:

Luke 12:48: "From everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked."

The reason I was talking to my friend is because he is one of those people. He's quiet, very introverted and incredibly gentle. He wouldn't hurt a fly, and he's just so shockingly selfless. What do you do? How do you grow? Then I saw that verse and I realized: our goodness, or at least maybe like a trait (for this guy his selflessness/gentleness specifically stands out) is NOT our gift to God ("what a great person I am") - rather it is God's gift to us ("what a great person you have ordained me to become"). At this point, there is no room for arrogance. My friend could never claim supremacy, despite it clearly looking that way. Not that he would. But this is my message to all the religious people, or the people that think they are overall good people: if you feel that God has given you that good character, and if you're comfortable with where you are, then know that more will be expected from you. That's totally fair. Even in sports, the players that make more money and have more abilities receive more pressure and higher expectations - same thing here. It's not "your" talent, it's God's - so take good care of it and always keep on growing and finding new ways to glorify God.

Psalm 139:23-24: "Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me and lead me in the way everlasting." - it's not saying to "see if there are huge sins" or any particular sin. Literally just "any way in me" that is offensive to God. Take care of the little things and they will take care of you eternally.

Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." Thanks for reading.

How we should overcome our struggles with mental health

Exodus 3:7: “I have seen your pain and misery; I know what you have been through, and I am worried about you.”

In Genesis 16:13, a slave woman named Hagar was on the run because she was so overwhelmed by her life and lack of status that she ran away. God appeared to her and comforted her, encouraging her to return and continue on in her journey. He sees you when you are down, so don’t give up now. He did the exact same thing in 1 Kings 19:4-5 when Elijah was ready to end his life, and God specifically told him to “eat” - the Bible is known as the Bread of Life, so read these Words and live by this faith, because your journey is important to God.

Saul (eventually the Apostle Paul) was delusional and thought he was doing the right thing by killing people, but God took the time to appear to him in Acts chapter 9 and in verse 18 it says that when God healed him, something like “scales” fell from his eyes, and he could properly see what was right and wrong. God wants the scales to drop from your mind and heart so that you can truly see Him and overcome these struggles today - but you have to be willing to commit to Him.

Mark 2:17: “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.” - He knows about our sicknesses and He wants us to find healing, but again we have to be willing to commit our daily lives and actions to following His ways - nothing changes if nothing changes. Quit porn, scroll less, be more positive, etc. and more of the things that the Bible teaches. Again, nothing changes if nothing changes.

Psalm 23:4: "Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me." - so even in the deepest hardships and darkness God is with us. But the verse said, "even though I walk," so we must walk through these things, and we know that God walks with us.

Psalm 139:8: "If I ascend to the Heavens, you are there, yet even when I dwell in the depths you are there." - He's there for you no matter what you're going through.

How we should overcome our struggles with anxiety and depression specifically

Deuteronomy 31:8: “The Lord himself goes before you and will be with you; he will NEVER leave you nor forsake you. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged.” So don’t be afraid or anxious, and don't be discouraged or depressed (the terms are interchangeable, the Bible would have meant anxiety and depression by "afraid and discouraged," the language is just older), because no matter where we go and what we go through, God will be with us "wherever" we go, so we have no reason for giving ground to these attacks on our peace in Christ.

Joshua 1:9: "Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you WHEREVER you go.”

Romans 8:31: "If God is for us, who can be against us?" - but if you allow Satan in, then you are against yourself by giving him power through these attacks.

Psalm 46:1: "God is our refuge and strength, an EVER-PRESENT help in times of trouble." God is there for you, ever-present when you're struggling.

1 Peter 5:7 says to cast your anxieties on God because He cares for you. It says cast in a dominating majority of the translations - it’s actually hard to find a version that doesn’t use the word cast. Why does this matter? I’ll show you. Think of it like this: what do we do with demons? We cast them. So why does anxiety get the same treatment? It’s almost as if, thousands of years later, God knew that anxiety would lead to overthinking and sexual sin and vaping and other demons, demons that need to be cast. God knew. God knows. Ancient Words, modern meaning. There’s your proof that the Bible is real and the ultimate authority in our lives. 1 Peter 5:7 is just 1 verse in a Bible consisting of 800,000 words. Stop missing out.

Psalm 42:11: "Why, my soul, are you downcast? Why so disturbed within me? Put your hope in God, for I will yet praise him, my Savior and my God." - this verse is DEEP. This is having a "soul" that is "disturbed" and not only that but also "within" you. This is more than a bad day. This could represent depression, and it could represent all the feelings of doubt and negativity period that we as people will experience in life. So what do you do, in such a hopeless situation? "Put your hope in God." Romans 8:24: "For in this hope we were saved. But hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for what they already have?" - so we don't hope in what we've seen or known - that's not hope it's factual. I don't have "faith" in the laws of gravity - I have easy, confident belief based on facts and on what I can see. It's DIFFERENT here. You CAN'T see it. Whether it's a relationship, or a spark, or things getting better or you getting closer to God, whatever "it" is, truthfully we don't get to see it - we have to believe and have faith. In such hope we are "saved." So you put your hope and faith in God even in long or confusing or anxious/depressing seasons and even when you can't understand or feel hopeless. Then what? "For I will yet praise Him." I love the word "yet." It's not "things are easy/I can see a clear path, so praise God" - it's ok to praise God when things are good, but be carefully not to ONLY praise God when things are good. Sometimes we have to "yet praise" God. Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - wherever the path goes (it didn't mention because we don't get/need to know), keep trusting in Him and living for Him in everything as He establishes your life.

Philippians 4:6-8: "Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. Whatever is true, noble, right, pure, lovely, admirable - if anything is excellent or praiseworthy - think about such things." God knows we struggle with anxiety. That's why there's verses like this, and the Bible talks about it. Because when you're anxious or frozen or overwhelmed or confused - "in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God." It's ok to be anxious - pray. It's ok to have intrusive thoughts - pray. This passage equips us to face anxiety. The first few words are "do not be anxious about anything." So the first thing God wants us to know about fighting anxiety is that it doesn't have to be this way, we don't have to struggle with anxiety. "Do not be anxious." About "ANYTHING!" In "every situation," no matter where you are and what you're going through, pray - by prayer and petition, talking to God and bringing things to Him, we (in gratitude) present our requests to him. But you have to be grateful, you have to do it (even praying over a tough situation) "in gratitude," and when you present your request or petition (whatever it may be) to God in gratitude, it will give you a peace from God that goes beyond ("transcends") all understanding - you'll have peace amidst the chaos, "peace that makes no sense." When you receive peace like this from God, you will have your heart/mind (where anxiety and temptation and other battles are won and lost) guarded in Christ Jesus. Another thing we can do is what it says in verse 8 - manipulate your thoughts to make them healthy. Control your mind and your mental health before it controls you. "Think about such things." What things? Not busyness, or what you don't have, or the things that race throughout our mind - rather, the things that verse 8 talked about. Things that are true, noble, right, pure, lovely, admirable, excellent and praiseworthy. So ask yourself, if you can't figure out when something is a sin or healthy or something like that - think: is it right? Pure? Would God admire this? Is this noble? This, and controlling and guarding your mind and heart in Christ Jesus in this way, this is how we can overcome anxiety.

Exodus 3:7: “I have seen your pain and misery; I know what you have been through, and I am worried about you.”

Mark 2:17: “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.” - He knows about our sicknesses and He wants us to find healing.

Psalm 23:4: "Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me." - so even in the deepest hardships and darkness God is with us. But the verse said, "even though I walk," so we must walk through these things, and we know that God walks with us.

Psalm 139:8: "If I ascend to the Heavens, you are there, yet even when I dwell in the depths you are there." - He's there for you no matter what you're going through.

We need to let go, whether of the past or our pain or sins or whatever it may be

1 Peter 5:7: "Cast your cares on Him because He cares for you." - Notice the word "cast"? These things that we're holding on to are demons. Cast them out. Where? On Him. Give it to God. It doesn't make the problems go away, but it puts them into perspective. Let me use this analogy: I have a full bottle of water, and I hand it to my friend because I trust him to take care of it. The water bottle is still full, but now instead of me holding it my friend is. In the same way, our problems don't go away even one bit when we give them to God, but when we let Him take care of them, it gives us more peace and it is better for us. If I held a bottle of water for a while, no big deal. For a few minutes, still no. A couple hours later I want to set it down. If I hold it forever I will go numb. So set it down, whatever you're holding on to. Your anxiety, depression, addiction, secret, sins, feelings of pain, the ones you've lost - stop holding on. The water isn't going anywhere when you cast it on Jesus, but for your own sake you need to stop holding on. Why is God so kind? "Because He cares for you." He knows and He cares, so reach out in genuine prayer and be willing to respond to God from the heart with changes in your life and mind and heart.

Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - so hold nothing back here today.

Proverbs 17:22: "A cheerful heart is good medicine, but a crushed spirit dries up the bones." - there's a lot of medicine in this world, but positivity and letting things go is "good" medicine - God wants to give you REAL healing.

You have to stop holding on

Again with the full bottle of water. It might not be super heavy, and I can hold it for a long time without even noticing. After going a long time, I still don't care. Eventually, when I hold on for long enough, it begins to wear me down and I become numb. This is what happens when you hold on. Whatever you're holding on to, it doesn't actually get heavier, it just feels heavier. Just like how the same amount of water is in the bottle, it feels heavier in time - so set it down. You don't have to pour it out and never think of your feelings again, but for your own sake it is healthy to set these things down. If I held a bottle of water for a while, no big deal. For a few minutes, still no. A couple hours later I want to set it down. If I hold it forever I will go numb. So set it down, whatever you're holding on to, because truthfully it may be holding on to you... Your anxiety, depression, addiction, secret, feelings of pain, the ones you've lost - stop holding on. The water isn't going anywhere when you set it down, but for your own sake you need to stop holding on.

Proverbs 4:23: "Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it."

Our mindset is important to God, and we don't take it seriously enough

Ephesians 4:23: “Be made new in the attitude of your minds.” - be made "new" - even the strongest Christians have another level to aspire to here today. It's "new." 2 Corinthians 5:17: "If anyone is in Christ then the new creation is here - the old is gone and the new is here." So it's by being more and more in Christ that we're made more and more new. Tomorrow, what was new today is old. So we KEEP growing. That's why even the strongest Christian can be made "new." Maybe you've got a ways to go - cut out massive sins like sexual immorality and violence. Maybe you're farther along - regulate your playlist and your perspective. There's something you can do today to be made new - do it. The verse didn't say "you can be made new" - it said "BE made new." What's new? The attitude of your mind. You don't get a new mind, you don't get any smarter, you get a new ATTITUDE. Like how you receive things. When a kid is misbehaving and rude, they have "an attitude." So let me ask you this: when the situation isn't good, what's your attitude? When she's attractive, is it sexual immorality? When someone dies, is it bitterness? When you're tired and frustrated and tempted, is it selfishness and sins? It's not that the situation is a problem, actually the situation REVEALS your problems. When you hide behind, "I was tired so I gave in," the truth is that being tired didn't cause you to give in - giving in was revealed by being tired. A spotlight was shone on your weakness. Don't make the situation easier - get better in even the toughest situations. So what's your attitude? How do you see people, what's your judgment and temperament like, how do you see situations? Something bad happens to you - what's your response? Make it newer today. Be made new in the attitude of your minds. Thanks for reading.

How we should overcome our struggles with sexual temptations

I first just wanted to say that we look at NINE specific ways in our section "The best ways to truly overcome sins (things like lust and drinking and vaping)."

1 Corinthians 6:12: "I have the right to do anything, but not everything is beneficial - I have the right to do anything, but I will not be mastered by anything." - don't use your free will to enslave yourself to sin.

Matthew 6:21-23: "For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are healthy, your whole body will be full of light. But if your eyes are unhealthy, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light within you is darkness, how great is that darkness!" The Hebrew word for "healthy" implies "generous," and for "unhealthy" it implies "stingy" when translated. So basically, what you desire and treasure (whether lust, purity, or anything in between) - that's where your heart is, and that's where it will be eternally. And Proverbs 4:23 says that "Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it." So you do what's in your heart, and what's in your heart is based on your desires. Look back at the point I made about "generous" and "stingy." This all ties together. "Be careful, little eyes, what you CHOOSE to see." When you look at someone, are you generous (loving as God is loving), or are you stingy and selective and only thinking in terms of how you can gratify our own desires? It all starts with a look. But what were you looking for? When you look for sexual pleasure, as far as God's concerned, you've found it because given the chance you would pursue that instead of Him. So guard your heart, cleanse your perspective, give your desires to God and center them around Him.

1 Thessalonians 4:3-5: "It is God’s will that you should be sanctified: that you should avoid sexual immorality; that each of you should learn to control your own body in a way that is holy and honorable, not in passionate lust like those who do not know God." - this is no small thing - this is "God's will," and when we give into sexual immorality and lust, we "know God" less. That's an everyday walk to the pit of Hell and we have to take a stand right now.

Ephesians 4:27: "Do not give the Devil a foothold."

1 Corinthians 6:18: "Flee from sexual immorality." - leave the room, log out, do what you have to do. Flee.

What actually defines lust/sexual immorality?

Philippians 4:8 says that "Whatever is pure, lovely, admirable - anything that is excellent or praiseworthy - think about such things." So think of this in terms of sexual immorality. The lines are blurry. What's right, what's wrong? This isn't just about having sex - there's fantasies, desires, content (porn), and all kinds of ways to commit sexual immorality that goes beyond the scope of physical sex. Satan knows this, knows that we only take physical sex (and maybe porn) seriously but not the other things, and so he takes advantage of us. Sins are waging war against us - the best tactic they have is to make you believe that it’s not true, and that it’s just crazy stuff from the Bible. Defending against the Devil and his subtleties is important in our everyday lives. He is described as being “full of wisdom and perfect in beauty” in Ezekiel 28:12. So it’s always the perfectly beautiful things, scenarios, and people that we are drawn to, and he is always full of wisdom in using these things to bring us down. There’s a reason for all this brokenness in life. In Ephesians 4:27 it says not to give him a foothold, meaning give him no vulnerability, heartache or weakness that he can use to grab you by the foot and keep you grounded mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. James 4:7-8: "Resist the Devil and he will flee from you, draw near to God and He will draw near to you." - so choose God in your everyday life, including those subtle things. Think back to Philippians 4:8 when judging if something is considered immoral or sinful or not - is it pure? Lovely? Admirable? Excellent? Even praiseworthy? Being a man or woman of God that takes care of the other person and follows them on a faith journey - this fits the description. Instant gratification, taking advantage of someone, pursuing a relationship that only 1 of you wants, etc. - these things are from the Devil, and the notion that it's not sinful because we didn't commit physical sex or rape someone, that notion is ridiculous and we need to do better.

Matthew 5:28: “Anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart.” - Jesus sets the standard here for sexual immorality. It applies to all lustful looking (both genders going both ways, "anyone who looks"). Lust can be defined as "pursuing something God has called you to give up." For example, in Exodus 20:17 one of the Commandments is to "not covet" your neighbors wife or house or anything of his. Why not? Don't I get to desire what I want? Right, but God said it, so would you really still pursue it? You've now put it ahead of God and have MADE IT god in your life - that is lust. Why can't I masturbate to porn? There doesn't seem to be any reason greater than "because there can only be one God in your life."

Matthew 6:21-23: "For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are healthy, your whole body will be full of light. But if your eyes are unhealthy, your whole body will be full of darkness." The Hebrew word for "healthy" implies "generous," and for "unhealthy" it implies "stingy" when translated. So basically, what you desire and treasure (whether lust, purity, or anything in between) - that's where your heart is, and that's where it will be eternally. Proverbs 4:23 says that "Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it." So you do what's in your heart, and what's in your heart is based on your desires. Look back at the point I made about "generous" and "stingy." This all ties together. "Be careful, little eyes, what you CHOOSE to see." When you look at someone/something, are you generous (loving as God is loving), or are you stingy and selective and only thinking in terms of how you can gratify our own desires? It all starts with a look. But what were you looking for? Guard your heart, cleanse your perspective, give your desires to God and center them around Him.

1 Thessalonians 4:3-5: "It is God’s will that you should be sanctified: that you should avoid sexual immorality; that each of you should learn to control your own body in a way that is holy and honorable, not in passionate lust like those who do not know God." - this is no small thing - this is "God's will," and when we give into sexual immorality and lust, we "know God" less. That's an everyday walk to the pit of Hell and we have to take a stand right now. Thanks for reading.

How we should overcome our struggles with bad habits/addictions

I first just wanted to say that we look at NINE specific ways in our section "The best ways to truly overcome sins (things like lust and drinking and vaping)."

Addictions and bad habits are an incredibly challenging thing to deal with. In John 5 at the beginning, there was a man who had been stuck and paralyzed on the ground for almost 40 years. It says in verse 6 that when Jesus saw him, He asked him “do you want to get well?” Jesus saw how he was, and He cared for him. He saw him. In the same way, as God clearly brought you here, consider yourself seen by God. He knows about you and that’s why He brought you here. After Jesus asked him this, the man started making excuses. That’s the reason Jesus asked him the question - because He knows that it’s hard, He knows what it’s like, the Bible literally describes Him as “indignant (pissed off)” when people are captive to things, He understands, but He asked that man this question because He knows that unless you take the steps you need to take, the answer is no. Everyone WANTS to get well, obviously, but who’s gonna do something about it? In verse 9, Jesus told him to get up, to take his mat with him, and to go home. He did. Who wants to get up today? Do you want to get well? Ezra 10:4: “This matter is in your hands, and we are supporting you, so rise up, take courage and do it.” And oh by the way, that mat that he laid on for 40 years, the place he was, his testimony? Jesus asked him to bring it with him. So bring yours with you and reach others for God.

Ephesians 4:27: “Don’t give the Devil a foothold.” - don’t give him a bad habit, a consistent behavior that he can use to grab you by the foot and keep you grounded.

Ecclesiastes 8:8: “As no one is released in times of war, so wickedness will not release those who practice it.” - it won’t release you unless you completely release it.

Psalm 1:1: “The sinner goes from walking, to standing, to sitting.” - you slowly shut down, mistake by mistake, so be careful what you choose to take in today, because what comes in must go out.

Being disciplined

Proverbs 5:23: "For lack of discipline they will die, led astray by their own great folly." - if you aren't disciplined when you're on top, you'll find yourself on the bottom. Don't believe me? The author of this quote, Solomon, wrote it when he was on FIRE for God and doing great work - which he threw away by marrying 700 foreign women. One by one, click by click, thought by thought, and all the sudden he found himself dead - a lack of discipline had killed the man who was alive in Christ. We see this today in many ways, whether lust or TV or social media - for a lack of discipline, even Solomon died, and so will you. You think he married all 700 of them at once? No it was 1 by 1, day by day - the more disciplined you are, the greater a defense you have. 699 later, what was 1 more? But your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:19), so if you wouldn't burn down 700 churches, then don't even burn down 1!

Hebrews 12:11: "No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it." - while it may be hard in the moment, God is training us through everything we go through and every difficult decision that we make. Discipline is unpleasant in the moment but it lasts eternally and gives results that are worth it. So be disciplined with your body, with food, with your phone and what you watch and say and listen to, even with your mindset and how you think. "Endure hardship as discipline" (Hebrews 12:7).

2 Timothy 1:6-7: "Fan into flame the gift of God. The Spirit God gave us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love, and self-discipline." - so don't shrink back, but fan into flame the gifts and abilities that God has given you. God wants you to be powerful in making sacrifices in your everyday life, and God wants you to have self-discipline so you can live for Him by faith in your everyday life with "little things" - don't do what's easy or pleasant in the moment, do what's right and eternally worth it.

Waiting for God's plan instead of giving in to feelings/instant gratification

In Isaiah 60:22 it says that "When the time is right, I, the Lord, will do it." It takes time, and you need that time to become the person that He’s creating you to be. Think of it like this: you’re at a restaurant, and a really good meal is coming your way, you just don’t know when. The easy alternative is to leave and go get fast food. Quick, easy, cheap, immediate. But don’t do it. God is cooking, and I don’t know what He has in mind, just THAT when the time is right He will do it. Don’t give up on God’s plan for fast food, for instant gratification, for porn and overthinking and trying to control and vaping and dating and cultural acceptance and looking like you have it all together, and for attractive people that don’t put God first in their life and won’t put you first either. Fast food is cheap and "fast" and convenient, but ultimately unhealthy. The best meals usually cost a lot and take a long time to cook - that's what this is.

Romans 8:28: “We KNOW that in all things God is working (present tense, there’s a plan even if you can’t see it) for the good of those who love Him and have been called according to His purpose (so live out that calling and love Him and trust His timing).”

Psalm 27:14: "Wait for the Lord, be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord." - the verse both starts AND ends by telling us to wait for God because no matter how frustrating it can get, we know that this is worth it.

Ezekiel 34:26: "There will be showers of blessing in season." - wait on God's timing, we receive blessings on Earth in season, and we live our lives for God regardless of reward and then receive an eternal reward with Him.

Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - it doesn't say an EASY path, but one that God is establishing and making straight, so this may involve hardships. Wherever the path goes, keep trusting in Him and living for Him in everything as He establishes your life. Do this, living for God and submitting to Him "in all your ways" including the little things and what you do behind closed doors/on the phone.

You are enough in the eyes of God so stop searching

A lot of us are living our lives with these substitutions for God and we don’t even know it. Whether it’s a relationship or a hope for one, an aspiration or something you want to do with your life, you might be putting this thing/your own happiness first, and it might be causing a lot of damage in your life with or without you even knowing it. This is what happens when our hearts are longing and we search, but we search apart from God. Check this out. In Genesis 1:27 we hear that we are made in the image of God - 4 verses later God said that when He made us, He made us “very good” (Genesis 1:31). So we are good enough in the image of God. But in Genesis 3:5 Satan convinced Eve to eat from the forbidden tree by saying “it will make you like God.” But the problem is, according to Genesis 1:27, she was already made in the image of God, and in verse 26 it actually uses the word likeness, meaning she was already like God but she just couldn’t see it. She was enough, but she just didn’t know it, and so she acted out, she did something, she tried to be something to fulfill her, and maybe you can relate… In Luke 9:25 Jesus asks the question “What good is it for someone to gain the whole world and yet lose their soul or their very self?” So look, whatever you’re chasing these days, even if it’s the whole world and everyone in it, what “good” (there’s that word again) is it to have these things if it not only costs you your soul, but also your very self because this is who God made you to be, this is who you are - you are made in the image of God and the lie that you aren’t enough and the behaviors that follow, well, they’re no good… Thanks for reading.

Does living for yourself line up with the Bible, and how should we live when it comes to God and others?

Corinthians 5:15: "He died for us so we could live for Him." - so it insults Jesus's death on the cross when we take the life He gifted us and steal it away for ourselves and hold on to what we want with our life.

Proverbs 3:5: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding." - so lean on and live for God instead of yourself.

Luke 9:23-24: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me. For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it.” - so it’s whoever “wants” to be His disciples (by the way, He said this quote TO His disciples, which goes to show that being “saved” is worthless if you’re not doing what He said and denying yourself and living for Him “daily”). If you try to keep things the way you’re comfortable, the way you’re used to, then you lose all of it eternally, but if you’re willing to do this work, to deny yourself and follow Him instead in the daily - if you really want to be His disciple and you bear a cross to show it, then you will have it all eternally, having given it all to Him on this Earth as we are called to.

Mark 10:45: "Jesus did not come to be served, but to serve." - and since Jesus came to serve, we also serve and put others ahead of ourselves (as He did) because this is what it looks like to follow Him. "I have set you an example that you should do as I have done for you" (John 13:15) - therefore do not "be served" by your life and efforts but "serve" others with it instead.

Matthew 19:30: "But many who are first will be last, and many who are last will be first." - keep this in mind and put others ahead of yourself (go outside your comfort zone).

Putting God first ahead of other pursuits

Matthew 24:35: "Heaven and Earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away." - God gives us His purposes through the Bible, His Words. They will never pass away, though all else fades (even Heaven, though for many of us it's the sole reason we pursue God). So pursue Him forever, since He is forever, above all other plans and desires and goals that we could have.

Matthew 6:21: "For where your treasure is (what you desire), there your heart will be also." - so have a heart pursuing God, and living out His Biblical Words, since this and only this will never pass away - your heart goes where you treasure things. If you treasure what fades, you fade. If you serve what reigns (God), then you reign with Him eternally. The things we desire come and go, but God stays the same, from Eden to end - so He is what we need, and if we have desires even if it’s for good things, we need to be honest with ourselves about if those things are sinful or not, if they are distancing us from God, if we need them, and most importantly if we are in control of them or if they are in control of us. When it comes to pornography, we don’t need the gratification - Jesus never got married and yet God loved Him as the Chosen One. When it comes to money, we know that God has a rich eternity in store for us, so we don’t need to take shortcuts and store up treasures on Earth because the point of life isn’t to receive but to give and then in eternity we receive based on how we lived that out - so instead of receiving these temptations and giving into them, rather give your strength and love and energy and literally all that you have and then, when the time is right, you will receive from Him in Heaven.

Isaiah 60:22: "When the time is right, I, the lord, will do it." - so the truth is that we only need Jesus, because He is the One Who reigns.

Hebrews 13:8: "Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever." - so past, present, and future. We can reign with Him eternally by serving Him in all that we do in the time that remains.

Put others ahead of yourself

Galatians 6:2: "Carry each other’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ." To help others literally fulfills the religious law. That's what it does. How? Think about it: it said the law of Christ. What did Christ do? Died for our sins - so he took our burden on Himself. He elevated us and as a result lowered Himself. God made clear throughout the Bible that He sent Christ, and that He was pleased with Him - so behaving like this and putting others first and taking the hit for them when there's a hit to be taken - this satisfies God and results in eternity.

Luke 14:11: "Those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.” - lift yourself up, and you will be lowered. Lower yourself for others, and you will be lifted up with Him forever, having fulfilled God's religious law.

1 Corinthians 13:4-7: "Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres." So loving God, loving your neighbor, THIS is what that looks like. Be patient (both with others and with God's plan for your life). Be kind. Don't envy or be arrogant but be completely humble, gentle, patient and kind. Don't seek your own good, but put God and others first. Don't be easily angered but be patient. Forgive others - He forgives us, so in the same way be kind and compassionate and forgive others. Love "always perseveres" - this stuff is difficult especially when you're busy and irritable - God is calling us to try our best and persevere in living out this love He commands. When people are annoying, persevere. When tempted, persevere. God is love (1 John 4:8), so being more Christlike consists of living out these qualities.

Ephesians 5:1-2: "Follow God’s example and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a sacrifice to God." - give something up and make sacrifices like Christ did on the cross.

Put your faith ahead of your hearts desires

2 Corinthians 5:7: "For we live by faith and not by sight." - so it's not just that we "have" faith - we live by it. Live, as in your life. The way you think, desire, pursue, act, love, everything - faith isn't something you have, it's something that has you, and that should show in your everyday life. A lot of us have it mixed though. We're living by sight. What we can see and feel, the desires and temptations and pain around us. These things, which are supposed to be something we have but not something we live by, have traded places with faith. Most of us live by sight and feeling and not by faith. If you're busy, time with God and church is the first thing to fall. If you're tempted, purity and righteousness in the sight of God is the first to fall. When it's a situation where someone has to win and someone has to lose, we try to win despite being called to lose as Christ did on the cross (which, in the end, made Him the ultimate eternal winner, and it would do the same for you). So stop leaning on your heart, start living by faith.

Proverbs 3:5: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding." - so instead of leaning/relying on yourself and your own heart ("lean not"), instead you GIVE that heart and life to God ("trust Him with all your heart") and live by faith. Live by Him instead of dying, eternally, by your/another way.

Matthew 5:8: “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God." - a pure heart is submitted to God, not opposing Him.

Matthew 22:37: “Love God with all your heart.”

Hebrews 10:22: "Let us draw near to God with a sincere heart and with the full assurance that faith brings." - instead of having a heart that opposes God and faith, GIVE your heart to God and draw close to Him in your heart, with faith assuring you eternally that this is worth it.

Matthew 6:21: "For where your treasure is (what you pursue), there your heart will be also." - so pursue God and "be there also" eternally.

Jeremiah 29:13: "When you seek me with all your heart you will find me."

Deny your own idea/purpose and instead follow God's in your life (even if you can’t see it or it doesn’t make sense)

Proverbs 19:21: "Many are the plans in a person’s heart, but it is the Lord’s purpose that prevails." - as many different ideas/plans/pursuits as we may have, ultimately only God's will prevail. So don't fight it. If He has you waiting, and you're trying to force that relationship or opportunity or whatever it may be in your life - these plans are "in a person's heart" because even though you had to think them through in your mind, ultimately this is deeper than intellect - this is about your heart, your deepest desires. You want what you want, whether big things or even just little things like snacks (trust me I would know), and you want it SO BADLY that the idea is no longer stored in your mind but in your heart. And as dramatic as that is, it still doesn't change the fact that only God's purpose will prevail. So don't fight it. Instead, submit your heart and life to Him and to what He has in store, whether it is desirable in this moment or not - keep eternity in mind. If you're trying to be serviced by God, then you've got it all wrong.

Romans 8:28: "We KNOW that God is working for the good in all things (EVERYTHING) for those who love Him and have been called according to His purposes." - so choose to love Him and trust Him and pursue/live out His purposes and commands in your everyday life.

Stop rebelling against God's purposes for your life by trying to control things and basing your happiness and purity on the circumstances (meaning you sin and are unhappy when things are difficult, but only show God devotion when it's convenient or easier).

2 Corinthians 5:15: "He died for us so we could live for Him." - so it insults Jesus's death on the cross when we take the life He gifted us and steal it away for ourselves and hold on to what we want with our life.

Proverbs 3:5: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding." - so lean on and live for God instead of yourself.

Following God even when you can't see/understand it

Isaiah 43:18-19: “Forget the former things, do not dwell on the past. See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland." - so even in the wasteland and the wilderness, when it feels hopeless and like there's no way, that's when He's making a way. Follow Him, whether you can perceive it or see it or not. He is "the Way and the Truth and the Life" (John 14:6).

2 Corinthians 5:7: "For we live by faith and not by sight." We don’t need proof, we have faith, and we have assurance in what we can’t see, living by faith even when we can’t see it. That’s why it says in 2 Corinthians 4:18 that we should fix our eyes not on the things we can see, because they are temporary, but rather on the things that we can’t see, because they are eternal. Our pain and the things we go through, it’s all temporary, and it would break my heart to think that our temporary pains blocked us eternally from such a loving God. Even our own knowledge and perspectives and understandings, even that’s temporary, so prioritize God over these, even when you can't see it.

Matthew 3:2: "Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven has come near." - if God's purpose for your life is near, repent. He doesn't want you to miss out. Whether in church, or reading a post like this, or wherever - the Kingdom of Heaven is near in your life. God wants to move in your life. But you have to move too, otherwise you don't go anywhere. You have to actually get on the bus when it comes to your stop. The Kingdom of Heaven is near - repent and hop on the bus.

Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways, submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - so God is the one guiding our direction, making our paths straight. But sometimes that's a path that doesn't go where we wanted. Sometimes it leads straight through hardships. But either way, if you trust Him with ALL your heart and hold nothing back, even in times like these, and if you lean not on what you can understand and how you feel about the setbacks and defeats and waiting, if you submit to Him in all you do, He will establish the path even if it's hard to appreciate where it goes.

Proverbs 19:21: "For many are the plans in a person's heart, but it is the purpose of the Lord that prevails."

John 20:27/29: "Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.” - so even when it doesn't make sense and you can't see it, follow God and keep trusting Him." Thanks for reading.

Living for God in the little, daily things that aren't as popular in Christian teachings

Romans 8:28: "We know that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him and have been called according to His purpose." - in all things, even the little/insignificant things, God has a purpose and is working for the good.

1 Corinthians 10:31: "Whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all to the glory of God." - it said whatever you do, so that includes all things, even the smaller and more unnoticed moments in life. Even little things like eating and drinking - do it with gratitude. It didn't say "in every huge thing and big impact that you make, glorify God" - no, it talked about eating and drinking. Little things.

Colossians 3:23: "Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as if working for God and not for humans." - no matter what we work at. So work, even seemingly irreligious work, is considered for God. Little things. Be like Jesus in those daily things.

Ecclesiastes 3:1/11: "There is a time for everything and a season for every activity. He has made everything beautiful in its time." - so whether we can see it or appreciate it or not, God has a purpose, even in those little things.

Psalm 25:5: "Guide me in your truth and teach me, for you are God my Savior, and my hope is in you all day long." - let your hope be in God all throughout the day, no matter what you go through. Live in a way that shows this, both starting and ending your day by spending time with God.

"For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also" (Matthew 6:21). So be careful to treasure (think about, desire, pursue) God, because whatever you aim for "there your heart will be" - eternally. Is your heart going to Heaven, or Hell? The difference between the 2 is the presence of God. So treasure time with God and live your life wholeheartedly for Him.

Ephesians 5:15-16: "Be very careful, then, how you live not - as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil." - we can get closer to God by being "careful" and "wise" in "all" that we do and by living for Christ with "every opportunity" - even in the little things.

Controlling your intake of social media/tv/music before it controls you

Genesis 4:7: "Sin is crouching at your door - it desires to have you, but you must rule over it." - sin isn't just something "you have in your life" (like with bad habits or whatever people will say it's their struggle) - wrong. It HAS you. It wants to HAVE you - control it before it controls you. Sin is at the door - it is what it is, that's fine - just don't let it in, not even a little, because God is for you and He is willing to help you against your sins, but you have to be willing as well.

Matthew 26:41: “Watch and pray so that you will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.” - the flesh is our body's opposition to God. When we listen to the wrong things, that's our ears. When we look at the wrong things, that's our eyes. When we look FOR the wrong things, that's our heart/mind. There are.... other.... parts of the body, if you know what I mean. So we oppose God through our sinfulness and humanity, but in that moment when we're tempted and the flesh is weak, the Spirit of God is willing to give us our breakthrough, if only we would receive it.

1 Corinthians 6:19-20: "Do you not know that your bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? You are not your own; you were bought at a price (Christ was crucified for you, your body has meaning and it mattered to Him so it should matter to you). Therefore honor God with your bodies." - does the way you live your everyday, little-things life invite the presence of God? Be a good host as you welcome Him in (I struggle with this, whether it's what I watch or listen to or think about or say or do).

1 Corinthians 6:12: "I have the right to do anything, but not everything is beneficial. I have the right to do anything, but I will not be mastered by anything." You can do whatever you want, but remember that everything you do is either building you up or tearing you down. Don't believe me, think I'm being too dramatic? Consider this: the fall of humanity happened when someone ate an apple. Check the little things today. Thanks for reading.

What does loving others look like in our everyday lives?

1 Corinthians 13:4-7: "Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres." So loving God, loving your neighbor, THIS is what that looks like. Be patient (both with others and with God's plan for your life). Be kind (it's not small, God requires it). Don't envy or be arrogant but be completely humble, gentle, patient and kind. Don't seek your own good (self-seeking) but put God and others first. Don't be easily angered but be patient. Forgive others ("keeps no record of wrongs") - He forgives us, so in the same way be kind and compassionate and forgive others. Love "always perseveres" - this stuff is difficult especially when you're busy and irritable - God is calling us to try our best and persevere in living out this love/service He commands. When people are annoying, persevere. When tempted, persevere. God is love (1 John 4:8), so being more Christlike consists of living out these qualities.

Ephesians 5:1-2: "Follow God’s example and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a sacrifice to God." - give something up and make sacrifices like Christ did on the cross.

1 John 3:18: “Don’t love with talk and speech, but with actions and in truth.”

Putting others ahead of yourself

Galatians 6:2: "Carry each other’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ." To help others literally fulfills the religious law. That's what it does. How? Think about it: it said the law of Christ. What did Christ do? Died for our sins - so he took our burden on Himself. He elevated us and as a result lowered Himself. God made clear throughout the Bible that He sent Christ, and that He was pleased with Him - so behaving like this and putting others first and taking the hit for them when there's a hit to be taken - this satisfies God and results in eternity.

Luke 14:11: "Those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.” - lift yourself up, and you will be lowered. Lower yourself for others, and you will be lifted up with Him forever, having fulfilled God's religious law.

Matthew 19:30: "But many who are first will be last, and many who are last will be first." - keep this in mind and put others ahead of yourself (go outside your comfort zone).

1 Corinthians 10:24: “No one should seek their own good, but the good of others.” - this reminds me of Matthew 6:33 where it says to "seek first the Kingdom of God." But it said to seek the "Kingdom" and not just the King, because we're not just seeking God but the welfare of all His servants (the whole Kingdom), even those that don't serve faithfully. So we should be seeking their good and ways that we can be good to them. So actually seek it, be active, pursue it.

Romans 12:10: "Be devoted to one another in love. Honor one another above yourselves."

Philippians 2:3-4: "Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but to the interests of the others." - not looking to yourself, but to them.

In Matthew 22:36 this guy asked Jesus what the most important command in the Bible was - Jesus answered in verse 37 by saying to love God with all your heart and mind and soul - but in verses 38 and 39 He said that the second most important command was to love your neighbor as yourself. The man only asked for one command, but Jesus gave him both - we also don't really keep others and fellowship in mind too much, but clearly these things are important to God.

Who is my “neighbor”?

There was a man who asked Jesus Christ this same question in Luke 10:29. In Luke 10:30-37, Jesus gave His answer. Of course, the Jesus we know and love, He answered the question by telling a story. It goes like this. There was a Jewish man traveling down a road, when suddenly some bandits came and beat him up and stole from him. The Jewish man then lay on the road, half-dead. A priest crossed by him - he did nothing. A temple assistant passed by him - he did nothing. Those 2, despite being men of God, were totally worthless. It didn't matter what they believed or said or what title they held or degree they had or what work they had done in the past - when it mattered, it's not that they weren't there, because they were - they just chose not to deliver. A lot of us are like that when it comes to our temptations and helping others. But then a third man came. A Samaritan. Many of you know the story from here. The Samaritan took care of him and paid for his needs, giving him a night of rest. This is where the term "good Samaritan" came from. Samaritans and Jews HATED each other. They called him a "good Samaritan" because it was honestly surprising to find even ONE "good" Samaritan. But yet, out of 2 men of God and a Samaritan, who was good that day? My friends, THAT is what God means when He says to be a good neighbor. And if you don't know who your neighbor is, consider that the Samaritan took care of his rival - how much less his ally! All people. Love all people with an undying love, just like Christ on the cross.

Is serving others really required to go to Heaven?

Mark 10:45: "For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.” - and since Jesus (the Son of Man) came to serve, we also serve and put others ahead of ourselves (as He did) because this is what it looks like to follow Him. "I have set you an example that you should do as I have done for you" (John 13:15) - therefore do not "be served" by your life and efforts but "serve" others (including God) with it instead.

1 John 2:6: "Whoever claims to live in Him must live as Jesus did." - so this is clearly required. He said we must do as He did, and live as He lived, and we know that He served, so we know that this is required, and we should be willing if we are really His followers.

Matthew 19:30: "But many who are first will be last, and many who are last will be first." - keep this in mind and put others ahead of yourself (go outside your comfort zone).

1 Corinthians 10:24: "No one should seek their own good, but the good of others." - serve others.

James 1:26-27: "Those who consider themselves religious but do not keep a tight rein on their tongues deceive themselves, and their religion is worthless. Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world." - the text says that "religion God accepts is this" - meaning it's possible to be religious and be denied. Because it's not about religion - it's about how we speak to and treat others.

Ephesians 4:29: "Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen." - you can benefit others and build them up and help them with their needs when you speak - this is an example of how we can serve God and others in our everyday lives.

2 Corinthians 4:5: "For what we preach is not ourselves, but Jesus Christ as Lord, and ourselves as your servants for Jesus’ sake." This quote comes from the Apostle Paul, and he said it because there was a lot of controversy at that point in time with him and the other leaders of the Early Christian Church because the people were starting to idolize them and give them more credit than they needed. Paul makes clear here that, even as a great man of faith and Christian leader, he is still a servant of others. So that's what being a leader looks like - not being recognized by others, but rather doing things for God and others.

What to do when frustrated with others

Ephesians 4:26: “In your anger do not sin - do not let the sun go down while you are still angry.” - 2 takeaways. First: It's ok to be frustrated. "In your anger" - so it's ok to be angry. Apply this to other things. It's ok to be sad, to feel hopeless, and to be tempted - the rest of the verse completes it - "in your anger, do not sin." Again it's fine to be angry, and in life your hand will be forced, but don't sin. "Love is patient and kind, not easily angered" (1 Corinthians 13:4-5) - James 1:19: "Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry." So again, "in your anger" it's ok to be angry, but it should take you a while to get there - be patient, be kind, not "easily" angered (so you can have anger, but not easily or instinctively) - rather be "slow" to anger - if you're slow to anger you'll still be angry about things, but slower - this gives you time to react and collect yourself so that instead of frustration, out flows love, patience and kindness. It's fine to be angry/tempted, but once you're on that battlefield don't lose. Second takeaway: Don't let the sun set. Now, hear me: this obviously isn't referring to when the sun physically sets today - the sun sets at different times for different places on Earth, and what if someone angers you WHILE the sun is setting? So, obviously, this is symbolic. When the sun sets and a new season arises, don't carry anger or upset feelings from what happened during the last season. I'll give you an example: I have a lot of church and relationship hurt. But God has called me to make this content, so a new sun has risen. If I brought my anger from the church hurt into this new sunrise, this new season, what would I get? Yesterday's results and bitterness. When God opens the door for a relationship, when He opens the doors and the new sun/season rises in your life, you have to take this approach: let go of your anger after a while, or you'll find that you're not holding it, but rather it is holding you. Let go. Be slow to anger, in your anger don't sin, and don't be frustrated for long.

What do we do when angry/bitter?

Ephesians 4:31: “Get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice.” - so the Bible admits that there IS bitterness and anger and all these other things, but the directive is clear: get rid of it.

We want to get even when we are wronged or insulted/offended. Satan, ever the opportunist, will whisper in your ear "it's only right." And yeah, it probably is only right, but we have to change the way we look at what's "right" because we're not pursuing "good" we're pursuing GOD! So when the opportunity to gossip or slander, to be negative or bitter, or when anger pops up and feelings of hurt cause you to want to externalize and cause pain onto others - all such feelings are "forms of malice." Even sarcasm - what are your intentions? God knows your thoughts. Control them and ground them in Christ. Get rid of these feelings. Control them before they control you. Don't entertain sin in your hearts. 

Ephesians 4:26: “In your anger do not sin, and do not let the sun go down while you are angry.” - notice the wording “in your anger.” So you’re angry! It happens, and God acknowledges that here, but He figuratively says not to let the sun set while you are still angry because He doesn’t want you to hold on to that. In the next verse it says not to give the Devil a foothold. So don’t hold on to anger, or the Devil is really the one holding on to you.

Jonah 4:4: “Is it right for you to be angry?” - this is a rhetorical question, and God was asking the prophet Jonah, who was upset about something in his life. In the same way, recognize that Jesus endured the cross and all He said was “Father forgive them.” So if you have anything to say, even while on a cross, let it not be a complaint and let it not be in anger.

Genesis 4:6-7: “Why are you angry? It wants to have you, but you must rule over it” - try to put things into perspective. Think of what others go through, and think of the willingness Jesus had on the cross, and you’ll realize that there’s nothing left for you to be angry about.

Showing kindness/grace naturally and not just to those that deserve it

Job 6:14: "Anyone who withholds kindness from a friend forsakes the fear of the Almighty." - Withhold kindness, forsake God. Don't check in on that person, forsake God. Talk about yourself instead of listening about them, forsake God. I could do this all day, and it's because I can easily draw from a pool of my own examples as failures. You might object that the verse said "from a friend" - but the Bible teaches that a friend, which you need to be, "loves at all times" (Proverbs 17:17) - and we know that love is patient and kind and not self-seeking (1 Corinthians 13:4-7 I would highly recommend reading the list in full). So for all people, at all times, if there's kindness to give, give it. We know that "it is more blessed to give than to receive" (Acts 20:35) - give kindness to others now, and you will receive it from God later, and eternally. Withhold it or keep it to yourself, and you are forsaking Him eternally. The choice is yours. Choose love, which is patient and kind. Are you? Take a step of improvement today, fully devoting yourself to the welfare of others.

Philippians 2:5: "In your relationships with one another, have the same mindset as Christ Jesus." We should approach our daily lives and relationships the same way Jesus did. He loved others. He didn't just love those that loved Him - He loved strangers, and His enemies, those who mistreated Him (understand I'm not talking about romantic love but the Bible's version of love as "patient and kind" and other things from 1 Corinthians 13:4-7). He didn't just love when it was convenient to love, or be kind when it made sense - He said Father forgive them on the cross.

Luke 6:32: “If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you? Even sinners love those who love them." - love and be kind to all people, especially those that make it difficult to showcase love and kindness - this is what Jesus did on the cross.

Galatians 6:10: "As we have opportunity, let us do good to all people." - all people, no discrimination, just as Christ did not discriminate on the cross.

Being patient with others

James 1:19: "Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry." - we don't always have to speak. When we try, it shows that we have this longing to be heard and seen and noticed and appreciated. But if we do, then so do others, and by always speaking we take their ability to speak and be heard away from them. This doesn't mean complete silence - just be "quick" to listen and "slow" to speak - you can still speak, but the instinct should be to listen and it should take some time before listening turns to talking (it's the same thing with anger and negativity). Remember "love is patient and kind" (1 Corinthians 13:4, verses 4-7 provide a much longer list that I would highly recommend reading, including "love is not easily angered"). So be patient with others and seek to put them first.

Romans 12:10: "Be devoted to one another in love. Honor one another above yourselves."

Philippians 2:3-4: "Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but to the interests of the others." - not looking to yourself, but to them.

Colossians 3:13: “Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you.” - bear with others and be patient with them, just as we know that God is patient with us and forgiving of us.

2 Peter 3:9: “God is patient with you. He doesn’t want you to perish, He wants you to repent.” - the choice is yours.

Correcting others lovingly

Ephesians 4:15: “Speak the truth in love.” - you must correct others with the truth, but if you are harsh and fail to do it in love, you have achieved nothing (in 1 Corinthians 13:1 it says you could literally sound like an angel in what you say, but without love you are just noise).

Ephesians 4:29: "Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen." - so you can "benefit those who listen." You can "help" others and "build them up" and all of this can help them "with their needs." You can genuinely help others to improve with the words you say, but your intentions have to be good and selfless, and you can't be judgmental. Pull the weight you judge others by, lead by example.

Hebrews 10:24-25: “Let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing.”

Proverbs 18:21: "The tongue has the power of life and death, and those who love it will eat its fruit." - basically, if someone loves fruit they eat it, and in the same way those that hear your words will suffer the consequences (positive or negative) of hearing your words - so be fruitful and kind in all that you say.

2 Timothy 4:2: “Preach the word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage - with great patience and careful instruction.” - be prepared even when it's "out of season." Even when it's not Sunday. Even when they're hostile or don't believe what you believe and don't think the way you do. Be prepared. They may ask, why should I believe? How do you know He exists? Why does He allow evil? Be prepared but remember that ultimately you preach God, so it's His strength and not your own that will reach others.

1 Peter 3:15: "But in your hearts revere Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect."

Bearing the loss yourself and making things easy for others

Galatians 6:2: "Carry each other’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ." - to help others literally fulfills the religious law. That's what it does. How?  Think about it: it said the law of Christ. What did Christ do? Died for our sins - so he took our burden on Himself. He elevated us and as a result lowered Himself. God made clear throughout the Bible that He sent Christ, and that He was pleased with Him - so clearly, behaving like this and putting others first and taking the hit for them when there's a hit to be taken - this satisfies God and results in eternity.

Luke 14:11: "Those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.” - lift yourself up, and you will be lowered. Lower yourself for others, and you will be lifted up with Him forever, having fulfilled God's religious law.

1 Corinthians 13:4-7: "Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres." So loving God, loving your neighbor, THIS is what that looks like. Be patient (both with others and with God's plan for your life). Be kind. Don't envy or be arrogant but be completely humble, gentle, patient and kind. Don't seek your own good, but put God and others first. Don't be easily angered but be patient. Forgive others - He forgives us, so in the same way be kind and compassionate and forgive others. Love "always perseveres" - this stuff is difficult especially when you're busy and irritable - God is calling us to try our best and persevere in living out this love He commands. When people are annoying, persevere. When tempted, persevere. God is love (1 John 4:8), so being more Christlike consists of living out these qualities.

Ephesians 5:1-2: "Follow God’s example and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a sacrifice to God." - give something up and make sacrifices like Christ did on the cross.

Volunteering/serving others

Mark 9:35: “Anyone who wants to be first must be the very last, and the servant of all.” - keep this in mind and put others ahead of yourself (go outside your comfort zone).

1 Corinthians 10:24: "No one should seek their own good, but the good of others." - serve others.

Mark 10:45: "For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.” - and since Jesus (the Son of Man) came to serve, we also serve and put others ahead of ourselves (as He did) because this is what it looks like to follow Him. "I have set you an example that you should do as I have done for you" (John 13:15) - therefore do not "be served" by your life and efforts but "serve" others (including God) with it instead.

1 John 2:6: "Whoever claims to live in Him must live as Jesus did." - so this is clearly required. He said we must do as He did, and live as He lived, and we know that He served, so we know that this is required, and we should be willing if we are really His followers.

Matthew 6:33 says to "seek first the Kingdom of God." It said to seek the "Kingdom" and not just the King, because we're not just seeking God but the welfare of all His servants (the whole Kingdom), even those that don't serve faithfully. So we should be seeking their good and ways that we can be good to them. So actually seek it, be active, pursue it.

Romans 12:10: "Be devoted to one another in love. Honor one another above yourselves."

Philippians 2:3-4: "Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but to the interests of the others." - not looking to yourself, but to them.

Galatians 6:10: "As we have opportunity, let us do good to all people." - all people, no discrimination, just as Christ did not discriminate on the cross.

1 Corinthians 13:4-5: "Love is patient, love is kind. It isn't self-seeking." - so be patient, be kind, and don’t be self-seeking (seeking your own interests) - put others first.

Praying for others

James 5:16: "Pray for each other so that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective."

Mark 9:29: "This kind can come out only by prayer." - sometimes it's only through prayer that we and others can truly find healing. When in Mark 9:29 Jesus said that sometimes demons can only be healed through prayer, He was referring to His disciples' failure to get rid of the demon. Sometimes it's not on us to fix things or have the right advice - sometimes truly the greatest and only thing we can do is pray for others.

Ephesians 6:18: "And pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. With this in mind, be alert and always keep on praying for all the Lord’s people." - so it can be any type of request, any type of way - just pray. There's no script or method here - communicate with God. He understands your heart, when you're hurt and you're expressing yourself, that is something that He perfectly understands. So pray. And, like the verse said, pray for others.

Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - but how can God hear us when we pray silently or in our hearts/minds? So obviously God isn't talking about physically hearing us, but rather that if we are truly invested in praying, whether out loud or not, He will know and will respond by revealing Himself to us - but we have to search with all our hearts, there has to be a purpose, these aren't just empty words.

Psalm 145:18: "The Lord is near to all who call on him, to all who call on him in truth." - so if you're truly calling on Him and willing to make changes and sacrifices and spend time on this, if there's truth behind your motivations, then He will be near to you as you seek Him.

James 4:8: "Draw near to God and He will draw near to you." - make it your own. Draw far, meaningless prayers, and you'll have a far, meaningless relationship. The closer you draw, the closer He draws. It's all you. Free will. Your choice. Choose God. Thanks for reading.

Giving your time to God

Luke 9:23-24: "Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themself and take up their cross daily and follow me. Whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it." So look at the wording. Whoever WANTS to be my disciple (He said this to His disciples, so being religious clearly doesn't save you). And it's daily - get into the habit of spending time with God and spending time doing things that will strengthen your foundational relationship in Him. Deny yourself, follow God instead in your everyday life, take up your cross DAILY. If you try to keep life the way you want it here on Earth, then you lose it eternally. If you are willing to give your life up and follow God with it and in all that you do, then you will be saved eternally. So deny yourself. Choose to be His disciple, and take up your cross, whatever it may be, each and every day.

Matthew 4:19: "Follow me." - you can't follow Him where He doesn't go, and if you're following Him then you have to go where He does go. So go where He calls you to. Give up what He calls you to give up. Do what needs to be done and break the habits of living for yourself - live for God and follow Him in all your ways in your everyday life.

Matthew 6:21 “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also” - so if you have to follow your heart ("there it will be"), make sure your heart follows Jesus above all else. - Proverbs 4:23: “Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.”

Joshua 24:15: “Choose this day whom you will serve, whether God or another.” - this day, in your everyday life, not tomorrow or later on.

Titus 2:11-12: "The grace of God has appeared that offers salvation to all people. It teaches us to say “No” to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age." - so right now in your everyday life, in "this present age," we live our lives for Christ by following His Words, saying yes and no to the right and wrong things at the right times as He and His Words guide us.

Is it ok to spend less time with God when we're busy, and what do we do to find time?

Psalm 62:8: "Trust in Him at all times (even through this), pour out your hearts to Him, for God is our refuge." - so take refuge in Him and take the time to pour out your heart to Him even through the busyness "all times." You might say that you're so busy that you honestly can't - again "trust in Him." Is what you're busy with bigger than Him? Don't give Him fake time either where you're multitasking and thinking about all these other things - give the creator of time some of your time today.

Philippians 1:27: "Whatever happens, conduct yourselves in a manner worthy of the gospel of Christ." The verse makes clear that we are called to live for God "whatever happens." Life isn't exactly fair - just ask the man on the cross. He didn't just give God His time, He gave Him His LIFE - and He was so loved by God, His devotion to God as so special. Follow that, and then you follow Him into eternal life.

Mark 2:27: “The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.” - The Sabbath is not supposed to be a rule that we are captive to. It is supposed to be something that belongs to us that we can use to rest. God created us with healthy limitations. Can’t we take some time off here and there to spend time with God? It would help us to grow in our faith. Prioritize. Make that time happen. I know that it isn’t easy, but it’s worth it so it shouldn’t be. You can still find rest in the turmoil. If you wait for a perfect opportunity you’ll die before you find it. Some people are too busy to take a Sabbath, but the thing we’re forgetting is that the goal wasn’t for the people to “not work for a day,” but rather take time away from their work, their striving, and spend that time with God - you could do a significant amount of this by replacing overthinking with Bible reading and prayer. That, in concept, could help you Sabbath and rest. You might be overthinking it. Think of it like this - Jesus had a specific way of asking people to rest. In Matthew 11:28, He says “come to me, all who are weary, and I will give you rest.” Did you notice that? “Come to me”? So you have to do an action, the action of coming to God, in order to rest? Wouldn’t more action be more exhausting? That’s the point: it doesn’t have to be perfect and it doesn’t have to make sense. It could actually be more action here today, the adding into a busy schedule things like Bible reading and prayer, that could actually provide you with rest for your soul. Maybe spending 15 minutes on a busy day is all that you really need… So come to God today, and find your rest in the daily things that you do to grow in your faith in Him. Don’t be judged for your Sabbath choices (Colossians 2:16), but rather let your Sabbath choices reflect the person that you want to be and the life that you want to live - are you really dedicated to God? If you're too busy, then THAT is god in your life.

Proverbs 3:9: "Honor the Lord with your wealth, with the firstfruits of all your crops." This verse completely revitalized my faith. I believed in God - now I serve and follow God. There's a difference. To actually honor God, vs just wanting God to honor you eternally. This seems good, I'm sure you can agree in concept. So how do we honor God? By giving Him our first fruits. What does that mean? Back in the day when this was written, fruit and sacrifices/offerings to God were a huge deal - so give God your FIRST fruit. Your BEST offering. The FIRST few minutes of your day for Bible reading and prayer, lest you run out of time trying to give Him your 6th or 7th fruit and then it just doesn't work out - we all know how that goes, life is chaotic sometimes. Give Him the FIRST 10%, lest the last 90% doesn't work out. Nothing changes if nothing changes. Is God really second? To what? If God isn't first right in your life, then you're not first in the next. Maybe you're in the place I was in - time for change.

Spending the beginning and end of the day with God

Psalm 25:5: "Guide me in your truth and teach me, for you are God my Savior, and my hope is in you all day long." - let your hope be in God all throughout the day, no matter what you go through. Live in a way that shows this, both starting and ending your day by spending time with God.

Deuteronomy 11:19: "Consider the Word of God when you lie down and when you get up." - so you can start your day ("when you get up") and end your day ("when you lie down") by praying and reading the Bible (which is free and easily accessible online). Maybe think about 5 things you are grateful for. Either way, instead of rushing off into our phones and hearts and all the alternatives, we should start and end our day with God, so that this way we can build a foundation for the rest of our day and eternity - for who we are and where we will be. "For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also" (Matthew 6:21). So be careful to treasure (think about, desire, pursue) God, because whatever you aim for "there your heart will be" - eternally. Is your heart going to Heaven, or Hell? The difference between the 2 is the presence of God. So treasure time with God and live your life wholeheartedly for Him.

And there’s nothing wrong with the alternatives in life, just involve God in it. The activities, schools, music, shows, words you say and hear, desires, keep God at the center, treat Him the way He treats you. If He’s above all, would you put Him above what’s easy and desirable, what’s convenient today? If God is One, then could He be involved in everything you do today? There should be no “alternative” to God. Music isn’t an alternative. Just listen to Christian music. God isn’t opposed, unless you let things in your life oppose Him. Make the right choice today… Thanks for reading.

God wants us to have true intentions/willingness

Luke 18:22: "When Jesus heard this, he said to him, 'You still lack one thing. Sell everything you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me.” - in Luke 18:18-21, this man asked Jesus what it takes to earn eternal life. Jesus asked the man if he had kept all the commands and done all the religious things, and the man said that he did, which was probably true because he was raised in a religious society - so He did all the religious stuff, we're good, right? Wrong. Jesus saw him, and he said this: "You still lack one thing. Sell everything you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me.” The passage details that the man was young and rich, so to give away all his possessions probably hit close to home. What hits close to home for you? Do you date a lot? Do you tend to need control or security? Is your time very valuable to you and you would rarely give it away? When Jesus asks you to give up "everything you have" it probably freaks you out - why? Funny thing is, it's not what you think. You may think that Jesus was asking the man to completely give away everything and have nothing left - He wasn't. He was asking the man to give things up in this life so he could have treasures in Heaven, which are eternal. If something in this life is keeping you from the next, then keep the point of this story in mind: it's not commandments, church attendance, right beliefs, or religion that will save you - it's wholehearted devotion to God. Don't believe me? The man from this story had all those religious things, but still missed out on Heaven (the next few verses detail that Jesus rejected him) because he held back - so what are you holding back? What app are you unwilling to uninstall? What music and TV are you unwilling to give up on? Stop holding back - this is more important to God than religion. My favorite part of the verse is where Jesus says "THEN come, follow me." Because you can't follow God until you are willing to give these things up and give God your WHOLE life and heart.

Making sacrifices beyond your comfort zone

Romans 12:1: "I urge you to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God—this is your true and proper worship." - back in the Bible's day, sacrifices and offerings were the way you worshiped God. But here we see clearly that the way we worship God ("true and proper worship") is by offering "yourselves as a living sacrifice" - so we're still living, He's not asking for our lives, but for the way we live it while still alive. It mentioned the body. The heart, mind, hands and eyes are a part of the body. So yield your body to God as your worship. Sexual desires, desires to overthink or be negative or hateful in speech and thought and in what we see and how we choose to see it and in terms of what we're searching for - this is our true and proper worship. God isn't asking you to give up your LIFE for Him - although if that were the calling, that would be the appropriate response like it was with Christ and other heroes from the Bible. Mostly, God is asking you to give up the WAY YOU LIVE - this is what He meant by "life." So yeah, in this way, give up your life, make sacrifices, and it pays off eternally.

Proverbs 3:9: "Honor the Lord with your wealth, with the firstfruits of all your crops." - this verse completely revitalized my faith. I believed in God - now I serve and follow God. There's a difference. To actually honor God, vs just wanting God to honor you eternally. So how do we honor God? By giving Him our first fruits. What does that mean? Back in the day when this was written, fruit and sacrifices/offerings to God were a huge deal - so give God your FIRST fruit. Your BEST offering. The FIRST few minutes of your day for Bible reading and prayer, lest you run out of time trying to give Him your 6th or 7th fruit and then it just doesn't work out. Give Him the FIRST 10%, lest the last 90% doesn't work out. Nothing changes if nothing changes. Is God really second? To what? If God isn't first right in your life, then you're not first in the next. Maybe you're in the place I was in - time for change.

Trusting God as a first resort instead of as a backup plan

Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - wherever the path goes (it didn't mention because we don't get/need to know), keep trusting in Him and living for Him in everything as He establishes your life. But what does it mean to believe or trust in God? What does that look like? "Lean not on your own understanding." Why not? Because you're not leaning on what you can know or understand - that's not faith that's shallow. You're leaning on Him and on what His Words (the Bible) say. Also "In all your ways, submit to Him." So take your ways, like your beliefs and your playlist and your way of everyday life, and make it submit to God. In "all" your ways. HE will make YOUR paths straight, no matter where they go, so just trust Him and lean on Him and submit to Him in all that you do, not like as a requirement but as an instinct. Put God FIRST. And believing in God entails more than just believing in His existence - it means believing in His purposes for your life. Again, trusting in Him and His Words, not just in what you can see/understand.

John 14:1: "Do not let your hearts be troubled. You believe in God; believe also in me." - to the believer I say: you believe in the all-powerful God of all creation. So you believe in this great God, and you should also believe in and PURSUE the great things He wants to do in your life through Jesus Christ the human being that overcame our sins and struggles. Break the habits, go deeper than you have before - you believe in the great God of Heaven, so believe also in that same great, far away God as being close and in your life in this present age. Matthew 1:23: "Jesus Christ is God with us." - this great, distant God is with you. Believe that. Live that.

In addition to being willing/believing, we should be living this out in our everyday lives

What stance does God want us to take, what does it really look like to be of belief/faith? Luke 9:23-24: "Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themself and take up their cross daily and follow me. Whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it." So look at the wording. Whoever WANTS to be my disciple (He said this to His disciples, so being religious clearly doesn't save you). God won't force you to follow Him, it's only if you want to, but you definitely should, and He loves you. And it's daily. Deny yourself, follow God instead in your everyday life, take up your cross DAILY. If you try to keep life the way you want it here on Earth, then you lose it eternally. However, like Jesus, if you are willing to give your life up and follow God with it and in all that you do, then you will be saved eternally. So deny yourself. Want this, want to be His disciple, and take up your cross, whatever it may be, each and every day. John 14:6: “I am the way and the truth and the life, and no one comes to the Father God except through me.” This is how we find fulfilling life, eternal life, and it's only found through Jesus Christ. No other god could compare to this. This is a way of life, and this way of life is life itself. Jesus is the Way and the Truth and the Life. Follow Him in your everyday life.

To have a willingness to do these things is amazing, and what God requires of us. But notice the wording of Philippians 2:13: "It is God who works in you to will and to act in order to fulfill his good purpose." So God not only wills, not only has a will/plan, He actually acts - "will and act." He actually fulfills, He gets it done. So in the same way, instead of JUST being willing but not really living it out, we should be acting on our beliefs and getting the result. This is why it is not said of the fruit tree that "you will recognize it by what it wanted to be" but rather “Make a tree good and its fruit will be good, or make a tree bad and its fruit will be bad, for a tree is recognized by its fruit" (Matthew 12:33). Thanks for reading.

Prioritizing God from the heart and not from the rules and regulations I think I need to follow to be saved

What does it take to be saved? John 14:6: “I am the Way and the Truth and the Life, and no one comes to the Father except through me.” - if Jesus is the truth, then "Know the truth, and the truth will set you free" (John 8:32). And "God wants all people to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth" (1 Timothy 2:4). So in both verses we see that we need to come to know the truth - Jesus is the "Truth." And it will set us free and save us - the standard isn't to believe or whatever, the real standard of being saved is to willingly pursue Jesus in your everyday life as the truth and a true way of living.

Matthew 6:21: “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” So live your life well for God and keep Him at the center of your desires and goals and entertainment, because these things determine where you go ("there your heart will be also"). God doesn’t want us to “be saved” - He wants us to live saved.

Praying from the heart and not a script

Ephesians 6:18: "Pray on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. With this in mind, be alert and always keep on praying for all the Lord’s people." - so we are praying "continually" and on "all kinds of occasions" with "all kinds of prayers and requests." This means that we don't have to pray from a script or say the same words, and we're not doing this out of obligation or because we see it as one of the religious rules, but because it's an opportunity to get closer to God and have Him draw closer to you. And this calls for consistency ("always keep on praying" - notice also that the verse tells us to pray for others). This doesn't mean to say one prayer right now and then move on - pray continually and always keep on praying. Having a bad day? A good one? If it's a part of "all kinds of occasions" (gratitude, desperation, and everything in between) then it should be something you pray for. And we are called to keep consistently praying, and not just empty words but words from the heart that help us grow closer to God.

Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - but how can God hear us when we pray silently or in our hearts/minds? So obviously God isn't talking about physically hearing us, but rather that if we are truly invested in praying, whether out loud or not, He will know and will respond by revealing Himself to us - but we have to search with all our hearts, there has to be a purpose, these aren't just empty words.

Psalm 145:18: "The Lord is near to all who call on him, to all who call on him in truth." - so if you're truly calling on Him and willing to make changes and sacrifices and spend time on this, if there's truth behind your motivations, then He will be near to you as you seek Him.

James 4:8: "Draw near to God and He will draw near to you." - make it your own. Draw far, meaningless prayers, and you'll have a far, meaningless relationship. The closer you draw, the closer He draws. It's all you. Free will. Your choice. Choose God. Thanks for reading.

Following God even when you can't see/understand it

Isaiah 43:18-19: “Forget the former things, do not dwell on the past. See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland." - so even in the wasteland and the wilderness, when it feels hopeless and like there's no way, that's when He's making a way. Follow Him, whether you can perceive it or see it or not. He is "the Way and the Truth and the Life" (John 14:6).

2 Corinthians 5:7: "For we live by faith and not by sight." We don’t need proof, we have faith, and we have assurance in what we can’t see, living by faith even when we can’t see it. That’s why it says in 2 Corinthians 4:18 that we should fix our eyes not on the things we can see, because they are temporary, but rather on the things that we can’t see, because they are eternal. Our pain and the things we go through, it’s all temporary, and it would break my heart to think that our temporary pains blocked us eternally from such a loving God. Even our own knowledge and perspectives and understandings, even that’s temporary, so prioritize God over these, even when you can't see it.

Matthew 3:2: "Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven has come near." - if God's purpose for your life is near, repent. He doesn't want you to miss out. Whether in church, or reading a post like this, or wherever - the Kingdom of Heaven is near in your life. God wants to move in your life. But you have to move too, otherwise you don't go anywhere. You have to actually get on the bus when it comes to your stop. The Kingdom of Heaven is near - repent and hop on the bus.

Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways, submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - so God is the one guiding our direction, making our paths straight. But sometimes that's a path that doesn't go where we wanted. Sometimes it leads straight through hardships. But either way, if you trust Him with ALL your heart and hold nothing back, even in times like these, and if you lean not on what you can understand and how you feel about the setbacks and defeats and waiting, if you submit to Him in all you do, He will establish the path even if it's hard to appreciate where it goes.

Proverbs 19:21: "For many are the plans in a person's heart, but it is the purpose of the Lord that prevails."

John 20:27/29: "Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.” - so even when it doesn't make sense and you can't see it, follow God and keep trusting Him.

Deny your own idea/purpose and instead follow God's in your life (even if you can’t see it or it doesn’t make sense)

Proverbs 19:21: "Many are the plans in a person’s heart, but it is the Lord’s purpose that prevails." - as many different ideas/plans/pursuits as we may have, ultimately only God's will prevail. So don't fight it. If He has you waiting, and you're trying to force that relationship or opportunity or whatever it may be in your life - these plans are "in a person's heart" because even though you had to think them through in your mind, ultimately this is deeper than intellect - this is about your heart, your deepest desires. You want what you want, whether big things or even just little things like snacks (trust me I would know), and you want it SO BADLY that the idea is no longer stored in your mind but in your heart. And as dramatic as that is, it still doesn't change the fact that only God's purpose will prevail. So don't fight it. Instead, submit your heart and life to Him and to what He has in store, whether it is desirable in this moment or not - keep eternity in mind. If you're trying to be serviced by God, then you've got it all wrong.

Romans 8:28: "We KNOW that God is working for the good in all things (EVERYTHING) for those who love Him and have been called according to His purposes." - so choose to love Him and trust Him and pursue/live out His purposes and commands in your everyday life.

Stop rebelling against God's purposes for your life by trying to control things and basing your happiness and purity on the circumstances (meaning you sin and are unhappy when things are difficult, but only show God devotion when it's convenient or easier).

2 Corinthians 5:15: "He died for us so we could live for Him." - so it insults Jesus's death on the cross when we take the life He gifted us and steal it away for ourselves and hold on to what we want with our life.

Proverbs 3:5: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding." - so lean on and live for God instead of yourself.

Waiting for God's plan instead of giving in to feelings/instant gratification

In Isaiah 60:22 it says that "When the time is right, I, the Lord, will do it." It takes time, and you need that time to become the person that He’s creating you to be. Think of it like this: you’re at a restaurant, and a really good meal is coming your way, you just don’t know when. The easy alternative is to leave and go get fast food. Quick, easy, cheap, immediate. But don’t do it. God is cooking, and I don’t know what He has in mind, just THAT when the time is right He will do it. Don’t give up on God’s plan for fast food, for instant gratification, for porn and overthinking and trying to control and vaping and dating and cultural acceptance and looking like you have it all together, and for attractive people that don’t put God first in their life and won’t put you first either. Fast food is cheap and "fast" and convenient, but ultimately unhealthy. The best meals usually cost a lot and take a long time to cook - that's what this is.

Romans 8:28: “We KNOW that in all things God is working (present tense, there’s a plan even if you can’t see it) for the good of those who love Him and have been called according to His purpose (so live out that calling and love Him and trust His timing).”

Psalm 27:14: "Wait for the Lord, be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord." - the verse both starts AND ends by telling us to wait for God because no matter how frustrating it can get, we know that this is worth it.

Ezekiel 34:26: "There will be showers of blessing in season." - wait on God's timing, we receive blessings on Earth in season, and we live our lives for God regardless of reward and then receive an eternal reward with Him.

Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - it doesn't say an EASY path, but one that God is establishing and making straight, so this may involve hardships. Wherever the path goes, keep trusting in Him and living for Him in everything as He establishes your life. Do this, living for God and submitting to Him "in all your ways" including the little things and what you do behind closed doors/on the phone. Thanks for reading.

Receiving/seeing things with a positive perspective

Ephesians 4:23: “Be made new in the attitude of your minds.” - be made "new" - even the strongest Christians have another level to aspire to here today. It's "new." 2 Corinthians 5:17: "If anyone is in Christ then the new creation is here - the old is gone and the new is here." So it's by being more and more in Christ that we're made more and more new. Tomorrow, what was new today is old. So we KEEP growing. That's why even the strongest Christian can be made "new." Maybe you've got a ways to go - cut out massive sins like sexual immorality and violence. Maybe you're farther along - regulate your playlist and your perspective. There's something you can do today to be made new - do it. The verse didn't say "you can be made new" - it said "BE made new." What's new? The attitude of your mind. You don't get a new mind, you don't get any smarter, you get a new ATTITUDE. Like how you receive things. When a kid is misbehaving and rude, they have "an attitude." So let me ask you this: when the situation isn't good, what's your attitude? When she's attractive, is it sexual immorality? When someone dies, is it bitterness? When you're tired and frustrated and tempted, is it selfishness and sins? It's not that the situation is a problem, actually the situation REVEALS your problems. When you hide behind, "I was tired so I gave in," the truth is that being tired didn't cause you to give in - giving in was revealed by being tired. A spotlight was shone on your weakness. Don't make the situation easier - get better in even the toughest situations. So what's your attitude? How do you see people, what's your judgment and temperament like, how do you see situations? Something bad happens to you - what's your response? Make it newer today. Be made new in the attitude of your minds.

Romans 12:2: "Do not conform to the pattern of this world but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve God's will." - want to get a little closer to God? Stop conforming (giving in), and start transforming (changing, which is a daily process). How? The renewing of your mind. Let's do things differently mentally, let's do them for God. Thanks for reading.

Not lying about anything

Psalm 34:13: "Keep your tongue from evil and your lips from telling lies." - so it's considered "evil."

John 14:6: “I am the Way and the Truth and the Life, and no one comes to the Father except through me.” - so if Jesus is the Truth and the only way to get closer to the Father, then honesty is included in the only Way to Heaven.

1 John 2:6: "Whoever claims to live in him must live as Jesus did." - so if you claim to follow Him, this is what that would look like. He sets the standard, not us. And He never lied. If Jesus is the truth, then "Know the truth, and the truth will set you free" (John 8:32). And "God wants all people to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth" (1 Timothy 2:4). So in both verses we see that we need to come to know the truth - Jesus is the "Truth." And it will set us free and save us - the standard isn't to believe or whatever, the real standard of being saved is to willingly pursue Jesus in your everyday life as the truth and a true way of living.

Ok cool, so that's Jesus, what about the Devil, how does he weigh in on this? John 8:44: "He was a murderer from the beginning, not holding to the truth, for there is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks his native language, for he is a liar and the father of lies." - so the lines are clearly drawn here. But why does this matter? You already knew that the truth is greater than lies. So what do you take away? Where do you go from here? Don't tell lies. Not even small ones.

Revelation 21:8: "But the cowardly, the unbelieving, the vile, the murderers, the sexually immoral, those who practice magic arts, the idolaters and all liars—they will be consigned to the fiery lake of burning sulfur. This is the second death.” - all liars. There remains no excuse for any type of lies. It shows an impure heart. Therefore "Whatever is true, noble, right, pure, lovely, admirable - if anything is excellent or praiseworthy - think about such things" (Philippians 4:8 "think about whatever is true" - and we know the Biblical truth about Who God is, who we are, and where we go from here). Thanks for reading.

When we speak (or should we be listening instead?)

Ephesians 4:29: “Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen.” - you can benefit others and build them up and help them with their needs when you speak. Unwholesome isn't just like cuss words or whatever, but when you speak to provoke someone, or out of frustration, or you just talk about yourself and for yourself. Next time, seriously consider: is this "wholesome"? Does it build THEM up? Does it address their needs? Is it loving? Otherwise, does it even have any meaning? Love others.

Ephesians 4:15: "Speaking the truth in love, we will grow." - so even the harshest truth is spoken in love - but hold to the truth.

2 Timothy 2:23: “Don’t have anything to do with foolish and stupid arguments, because you know they produce quarrels.”

James 1:26-27: "Those who consider themselves religious and yet do not keep a tight rein on their tongues deceive themselves, and their religion is worthless. Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world." - the text says that "religion God accepts is this" - it's possible to be religious and be denied. Because it's not about religion - it's about how we speak to and treat others.

James 3:9-10: "With the tongue we praise our Lord and Father, and with it we curse human beings, who have been made in God’s image. Out of the same mouth come praise and cursing. My brothers and sisters, this should not be."

Proverbs 18:21: "The tongue has the power of life and death, and those who love it will eat its fruit." - basically, if someone loves fruit they eat it, and in the same way those that hear your words will suffer the consequences (positive or negative) of hearing your words - so be fruitful and kind in all that you say.

Proverbs 27:17: "As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another." - so build people up when you speak. Iron sharpens iron, it doesn't tear iron down. So build others up instead of tearing them down/building yourself when you speak.

Foul language

Matthew 12:36-37: "But I tell you that everyone will have to give account on the day of judgment for every empty word they have spoken. For by your words you will be acquitted, and by your words you will be condemned.” - every single word. We will give account for every single word. Some of these words will prove us worthy, while others will prove us guilty - the choice is ours. When it comes to swearing, crude jokes, gossip (talking about others, which is really more common than you would think) - every single word will be accounted for. Ask yourself - is it worth it?

Ephesians 5:4: “Nor should there be obscenity, foolish talk or coarse joking, which are out of place, but rather thanksgiving.”

James 3:5-6: "The tongue is a small part of the body, but it makes great boasts. Consider what a great forest is set on fire by a small spark. The tongue also is a fire, a world of evil among the parts of the body. It corrupts the whole body, sets the whole course of one’s life on fire, and is itself set on fire by hell."

Ephesians 4:29: "Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen." - so when you speak, let nothing unwholesome come out of your mouth - the definition of "wholesome" is basically to promote moral well-being. So "speak nothing unwholesome" doesn't just mean the big things like blasphemy and cursing - it also means the little things, like only talking about yourself, talking too much, correcting others harshly or name-calling, talking negatively about others (especially when they aren't there, which is gossip), and words that slip out that shouldn't. Wage war on this. "Let nothing unwholesome out." It's all based on what's within. Only say what helps build others up and help them with their needs, and in this way you can BENEFIT those who listen. Don't disregard this because you have the excuse that "it slips." - God is calling us to do better. Eliminate the need in your heart to be seen and these things won't be an issue. "Change your heart, not your image" (Joel 2:13).

Listening to others

James 1:19: "Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry." - we don't always have to speak. When we try, it shows that we have this longing to be heard and seen and noticed and appreciated. But if we do, then so do others, and by always speaking we take their ability to speak and be heard away from them. This doesn't mean complete silence - just be "quick" to listen and "slow" to speak - you can still speak, but the instinct should be to listen and it should take some time before listening turns to talking (it's the same thing with anger and negativity). Remember "love is patient and kind" (1 Corinthians 13:4, verses 4-7 provide a much longer list that I would highly recommend reading, including "love is not easily angered"). So be patient and let others speak - be patient and hold angry/insulting/instinctive words within before they harm others. And be kind. When you choose to speak, listen, not speak or not listen, and the way in which you choose to speak (what you end up saying and how you put it) and listen (if you really give others your attention) - the driving force behind all of this should be kindness.

Jesus said many interesting things, but perhaps the most interesting was this: In Luke 6:27 He said to the crowd He was preaching to: “To those of you who are listening, I say this.” Why would He say that? Everyone in that crowd could hear Him! No, that’s not what He meant. He was talking to those who were LISTENING to Him not just HEARING Him. You can all READ these words right now, but are you listening? Are you ready to invest in a relationship with Jesus Christ, are you ready to pursue the daily ways of living that God wants? Because that’s going to take time. In Hebrews 4:7 it says that “Today, if you hear my voice, do not harden your hearts.” So again, you can all read these Words and move back on to what's normal - but don’t put this off. Don’t wait, don't harden your heart. This isn’t for next week or next year or later. It says TODAY. TODAY, don’t let your heart be hard. Make a choice, choose to listen and invest in a relationship with Jesus Christ.

Gossip/talking about others

Matthew 12:36-37: "But I tell you that everyone will have to give account on the day of judgment for every empty word they have spoken. For by your words you will be acquitted, and by your words you will be condemned.” - every single word. We will give account for every single word. Some of these words will prove us worthy, while others will prove us guilty - the choice is ours. When it comes to swearing, crude jokes, gossip (talking about others, which is really more common than you would think) - every single word will be accounted for. Ask yourself - is it worth it?

James 3:5-6: "The tongue is a small part of the body, but it makes great boasts. Consider what a great forest is set on fire by a small spark. The tongue also is a fire, a world of evil among the parts of the body. It corrupts the whole body, sets the whole course of one’s life on fire, and is itself set on fire by hell."

Ephesians 4:29: "Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen." - so when you speak, let nothing unwholesome come out of your mouth - the definition of "wholesome" is basically to promote moral well-being. So "speak nothing unwholesome" doesn't just mean the big things like blasphemy and cursing - it also means the little things, like only talking about yourself, talking too much, correcting others harshly or name-calling, talking negatively about others (especially when they aren't there, which is gossip), and words that slip out that shouldn't. Wage war on this. "Let nothing unwholesome out." It's all based on what's within. Only say what helps build others up and help them with their needs, and in this way you can BENEFIT those who listen. Don't disregard this because you have the excuse that "it slips." - God is calling us to do better. Eliminate the need in your heart to be seen and these things won't be an issue. "Change your heart, not your image" (Joel 2:13). Thanks for reading.

A work life balance that goes BOTH ways according to the Bible

Here's what the Bible has to say about a true work-life balance that goes BOTH ways:

Against doing too much work

Colossians 3:23: “Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters.” - work it with all your heart, not with all your self-imposed requirements. And work for God, not for yourself as your own master where you are harsh with yourself if things don’t get done.

Deuteronomy 24:19: “When you are harvesting in your field and you overlook a sheaf, do not go back to get it. Leave it for the foreigner, the fatherless and the widow, so that the Lord your God may bless you in all the work of your hands.” - sometimes you just have to let it go. We work too hard sometimes. I struggle with self-control. If I fall behind on work, I will sacrifice my sleep, and if it gets bad enough, I'll take my Sabbath (Sunday, where I take the day to rest and enjoy the presence of God) and I'll spend that day working. I'll miss church, meals, everything. Why? To get more work done. It sucks. I understand that it's more common to struggle with laziness than being a workaholic, but it still deserves a mention. God calls us to find rest in Him (Matthew 11:28) and He says that if we truly loved Him, we would keep commands like that one (John 14:15). So who is the real God in your life? Work, or God?

Against doing not enough work

Ephesians 2:10: “We are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.” So we’re created to work, to do God’s work that He ALREADY PREPARED for us THAT’S HOW MUCH WE MATTER to Him and THAT’S HOW IMPORTANT OUR WORK IS to Him so go WORK even the simplest tasks (exercise, help others). We weren’t created for nothing, we were created to work. Get up. Be more productive with your time.

Proverbs 14:23: “All hard work leads to a profit, but mere talk leads only to poverty.”

Philippians 2:13: "God works in you to will and to act in order to fulfill his good purpose." - so in order for us to fulfill our purpose from God, we have to act, not just talk or plan or want.

Rest (including but also deeper than just physical rest)

Mark 2:27: “The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.” - The Sabbath is not supposed to be a rule that we are captive to. It is supposed to be something that belongs to us that we can use to rest. God created us with healthy limitations. Can’t we take some time off here and there to spend time with God? It would help us to grow in our faith. Prioritize. Make that time happen. I know that it isn’t easy, but it’s worth it so it shouldn’t be. You can still find rest in the turmoil. If you wait for a perfect opportunity you’ll die before you find it. Some people are too busy to take a Sabbath, but the thing we’re forgetting is that the goal wasn’t for the people to “not work for a day,” but rather take time away from their work, their striving, and spend that time with God - you could do a significant amount of this by replacing overthinking with Bible reading and prayer. That, in concept, could help you Sabbath and rest. You might be overthinking it. Think of it like this - Jesus had a specific way of asking people to rest. In Matthew 11:28, He says “come to me, all who are weary, and I will give you rest.” Did you notice that? “Come to me”? So you have to do an action, the action of coming to God, in order to rest? Wouldn’t more action be more exhausting? That’s the point: it doesn’t have to be perfect and it doesn’t have to make sense. It could actually be more action here today, the adding into a busy schedule things like Bible reading and prayer, that could actually provide you with rest for your soul. Maybe spending 15 minutes on a busy day is all that you really need… So come to God today, and find your rest in the daily things that you do to grow in your faith in Him. Don’t be judged for your Sabbath choices (Colossians 2:16), but rather let your Sabbath choices reflect the person that you want to be and the life that you want to live - are you really dedicated to God? If you're too busy, then THAT is god in your life. Thanks for reading.

The best ways to truly overcome sins (things like lust and drinking and vaping)

We talk about things like this in pretty much everything that we do - whether it's the website, our videos and podcasts, maybe a social media post, or even if you've met me in person - I love to talk about the things we struggle with and encourage people to live for God with all their heart in the little, daily things. But I'll admit this - I don't usually talk about HOW. I'll say something like: "If you're more consistent with lust than you are with God, then lust is the real god in your life and will be your eternal dwelling" - don't get me wrong, it's a powerful statement, but it still leaves you at the square one that none of us ever seem to get out of: wanting but not being able to quit the bad and consistently do the good. We'll talk in this section not about any specific issue but more just the idea of sin as a whole - we will use examples with lust, drinking, and vaping, and I promise you that you will be able to relate whether you're struggling with the largest sin, smallest sin, or anything in between.

Conquer it/submit yourselves to God

James 4:7-8: "Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. Come near to God and he will come near to you. Wash your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you double-minded." - notice the language though? Draw "near" and God draws "near"? That's because you can draw far (you have faith but aren't that close, for example - you still draw something, just not near), and God will respond accordingly (existent, but not close - again He'll draw something, but not near unless you choose this from your heart). A lot of us, despite being Christians, are far. Wearing the cross around your neck, or believing, or going to church - these things don't seem to protect us from sins and temptations in our everyday lives. Make it your own. Draw far, meaningless prayers, and you'll have a far, meaningless relationship. The closer you draw, the closer He draws. It's all you. Free will. Your choice. Choose God. I don't want you to "dislike" Satan and his daily schemes in your life - I want you to resist to the point that he flees. And you have to "submit yourselves to God." When you're "doom scrolling" (scrolling that we know isn't going to lead anywhere good, and yet we still do it) or when you're in an argument and you're letting it get intensified, or any other way where you're getting farther from God and closer to the temptation moment by moment - when we do these things we are "double minded sinners" and we need to "draw near" and "submit ourselves to God" with all our hearts, otherwise we will fail.

Romans 8:37: "In all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us." - we do not have to be beaten by these things. It doesn't have to be "this is how many times I___ today," and we don't have to hide behind excuses like "nobody's perfect" or "Jesus is forgiving." Instead of being weak like this, we can CONQUER like the verse said. In fact, we are MORE than conquerors! Vaping particularly comes to mind because you do it like 100 times a day, it's like checking your phone. So admittedly, on a good day you'll just vape less but still some - no, we are more than conquerors. We can conquer, but again look at the verse it's only "through him who loved us." Just like Philippians 4:13: "I can do all things through Christ who gives me strength." We can conquer, in fact we can do ALL things, but it's only through Him. Romans 8:37 even said that in ALL things we are more conquerors. Again I can do it ALL, we can WIN and CONQUER today, we can be top 2 and not number 2 against our temptations, but remember this is only "through Him."

Pray when tempted

Matthew 26:41: “Watch and pray so that you will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.” - the flesh is our body's opposition to God. When we listen to the wrong things, that's our ears. When we look at the wrong things, that's our eyes. When we look FOR the wrong things, that's our heart/mind. There are.... other.... parts of the body, if you know what I mean. So we oppose God through our sinfulness and humanity, but in that moment when we're tempted and the flesh is weak, the Spirit of God is willing to give us our breakthrough, if only we would receive it.

Psalm 145:18: "The Lord is close to all who call on Him, to all who call on Him in truth." So yes, the Lord is close to those who call on Him - to those who call on Him in truth. So are we being genuine? When tempted, we should pray to God. But are we really willing to submit that temptation to Him, or are we just praying so that we have an excuse to sin and can say that at least we tried? We need to be honest ("in truth") with God and ourselves. Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart."

Reflect on the scriptures that apply to your temptation/issue and live out what the Words say

Psalm 119:105: "Your Word is a lamp for my feet, a light for my path." - lamps aren't for your feet, so clearly this is a figure of speech illustrating that the Bible will show you how to walk with God in your everyday life, what to do in each situation and against each different kind of temptation. Isaiah 26:4: "Trust in the Lord forever, for the Lord, the Lord Himself, is the Rock eternal." Matthew 7:24-27: "Everyone who hears these words of mine (the Words of the Bible) and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock (there it is again, Rock eternal). The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house; yet it did not fall, because it had its foundation on the rock. But everyone who hears these words of mine and does not put them into practice is like a foolish man who built his house on sand. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell with a great crash.” - there will be sins and frustrations and losses and heartaches - these things will beat against you, but if you have the Word of God (and doing what it says) as your foundation and if you build your life upon the Rock eternal, the great foundation of Jesus Christ, then it can storm forever but you'll stand firm. So stand firm in the little things today, because Satan will send a small storm so that you won't take it seriously (music, pride, lust, mindsets, foul language, etc.). Trust in God forever, even when it's storming - He's the rock eternal, He will always be there for you. Proverbs 3:5: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding." - don't lean on yourself, lean on Him with all your heart and in all that you do. Lean on the firm foundation, the rock that God is and wants to be in your everyday life.

Involve God

Acts 2:21: "Everyone who calls on the Name of the Lord will be saved." - so whatever the situation, temptation, whatever it is that you're going through, if you call on God and give it to Him and live in that situation the way He would want you too, then you WILL, not might - "will be saved" both in that moment from sin and also eternally from Hell. Satan is real and he moves in your everyday life in subtle ways, and we must call on God otherwise we will remain stuck in sin. Don't believe me? Then why did he show up in the Garden of Eden as “a snake” to tempt Adam and Eve when he could have just come as a beast and scared them? Because if he did that, they probably would have freaked out and called on God, and God would have delivered them. Instead, in Genesis 3:1 it says that the snake was “crafty,” intelligent, so he used a cute little snake to communicate with them and keep God out of the picture. It was subtle. He does the same thing today. You might not think that he’s in your life, but he is. Maybe Satan’s best, most subtle, crafty weapon of all time is to make people think “oh that’s just crazy Bible stuff it isn’t real.” Small things lead to distance from God. Sometimes Satan doesn’t tempt you with big, massive sins and addictions. Sometimes it’s just a playlist, sometimes it’s just an argument or a video game. It doesn’t matter to Satan how big your sin is, he just wants to keep you distracted from God. This is why Hebrews 12:1-2 says to “throw off the sins that so easily entangle you” (it’s small, addictive, God knows that!) and “fix your eyes on Jesus.” James 4:7-8 says that if you “resist the Devil” (which Adam and Eve failed to do, thinking that it just wasn’t a big deal) then “he will flee from you” and that if you “draw near to God, He will draw near to you.” Do these things. Notice the language though? Draw "near" and God draws "near"? That's because you can draw far, and God will respond accordingly. A lot of us, despite being Christians, are far. Wearing the cross around your neck, or believing, or going to church - these things don't seem to protect us from sins and temptations in our everyday lives. Make it your own. Draw far, meaningless prayers, and you'll have a far, meaningless relationship. The closer you draw, the closer He draws. It's all you. Free will. Your choice. Choose God. I don't want you to "dislike" Satan and his daily schemes in your life - I want you to resist to the point that he flees. Adam and Eve never involved God. Remember that and take a different path in your daily life.

Lean on God when you're not strong enough

2 Corinthians 12:7-9: "I was given a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me. Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. But he said to me, 'My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.' Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me." - the Bible, and writings like these, are God's message. I think it's fair and not arrogant to say that. So when Paul (the author) says he has a "messenger from Satan," I want you to imagine the opposite. It's Satan's influence in Paul's life. Whether that's a nasty thing like self-negativity and harm and addictions, or maybe a more subtle thing like pride and a false sense of security - it's whatever it takes for the Devil to get to you and cause you to sin. Whatever it takes, that's what he'll do (watch for this in your everyday life). And so Paul obviously wants this to go away, and he asks God. God says no. WHAT?!? Yes. God says no, because in life we need to have free will. We need to be tested by the Devil, face the temptations and what we go through, and we need to prove our faith genuine. And God reminds us that His grace is enough, sufficient to cover our sins, so we don't have to be perfect but we have to be willing to live for Him and lean on Him, for He is strong enough for us when we are weak.

1 Peter 5:7: "Cast your cares on Him because He cares for you." - Notice the word "cast"? These things that we're holding on to, these sins and temptations, are demons. What do you do with demons? Cast them out. Where? On Him ("Cast" your cares "on Him"). Give it to God. It doesn't make the temptations go away, but it puts them into perspective. Let me use this analogy: I have a full bottle of water, and I hand it to my friend because I trust him to take care of it. The water bottle is still full, but now instead of me holding it my friend is. In the same way, our temptations don't go away even one bit when we give them to God, but when we surrender to Him (and living the way He has called us to in each situation), and we give God control, it gives us more peace and it is better for us. If I held a bottle of water for a while, no big deal. For a few minutes, still no. A couple hours later I want to set it down. If I hold it forever I will go numb. So set it down, whatever you're holding on to. Your anxiety, depression, addiction, secret, sins and temptations, feelings of pain, the ones you've lost - stop holding on. The water isn't going anywhere when you cast it on Jesus, but for your own sake you need to stop holding on. Why is God so kind? "Because He cares for you." He knows and He cares, so reach out in genuine prayer and be willing to respond to God from the heart with changes in your life and mind and heart.

1 Chronicles 16:11: “Look to the Lord and His strength; seek His face always.” - when you're not strong enough, look to His strength. When you're on the phone or watching TV or even just mindlessly thinking, remember that we can be so much more successful in our faith if we "seek His face always." So the hobbies and interests we pursue, and the way in which we pursue them, do these invite His presence? Seek His face “always” - in everything you do.

Proverbs 3:5: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding." - so lean on and live for God with ALL YOUR HEART instead of yourself. 2 Corinthians 12:9: "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in your weakness." - so when we're weak, we lean on Him. Joel 2:12: "Even now (even after everything and from the depths of temptation), return to the Lord with all your heart." - so you can return, but do it “now” and “with all your heart” (hold nothing back). Mark 2:17: “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.” - God wants you to come as you are, not hide because you’re not who you should be. God is gracious enough to meet us where we are in our sicknesses and sins, and He wants to heal us. But we have to respond. He has called us to repentance - answer the call and move. Wherever you’re at, that’s where He wants to be to meet you. He healed the sick, the weak and the outcast. So it’s ok to not be ok. He met them exactly where they were. He didn’t heal the sick at hospitals, He did it on the side of the road where they had been left for dead. He met them exactly where they were - He feels the same way for you. So lean on Him when you're not strong enough.

"Seek His face always." So the hobbies and interests we pursue, and the way in which we pursue them, do these invite His presence? The little things, like your playlist and your mindset and the way you speak to others - these things aren’t “outside of Christianity” - truthfully, these are the very things God cares about the most because they shape who we are. Proverbs 4:23: “Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.” Matthew 6:21: “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” So live your life well for God and keep Him at the center of your desires and goals and entertainment, because these things determine where you go (both in this life - in terms of overcoming sin and doing the right things - and in eternity as well). Seek His face “always” - in everything you do.

2 Timothy 1:6-7: “Fan into flame the gift of God. The Spirit God has given us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love, and self-discipline.” Sometimes it's hard. There's reasons to be timid or uneasy/weak - sin is easy, temptations hit hard, having the discipline to overcome and do the right thing is often tough, and our feelings push us away from doing what needs to be done. The reason God's Spirit doesn't make us timid is because God knows that sin and the world WILL. That's why He gave us a gift. Romans 6:23: "The wages of (what you earn with) sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus." So with God's gift, avoiding and overcoming sins, we find ourselves no longer timid but bold - willing to fight that temptation, willing to break that habit and addiction and pattern in our life, willing to pick up the Bible (easily accessible online), willing to pray, willing to love others and speak uncomfortable truths - God's Spirit doesn't make you timid, rather it gives you "power, love, and self-discipline." Power. The power to lean on Him when we're not strong enough to break the habit and do the right thing. Love. Love for God and others, and loving ourself enough to want to please God (which stems from loving Him, as love for others pours out because God is love). Self-discipline. The discipline to get out of bed, get off the phone, out of the room when tempted, away from sin when it's right there, out of our feelings, away from the bitterness that consumes, and the discipline to make decisions with the time that remains that will tear away at the distance in between you and finally hitting your breakthrough and beating temptations/feeling content and fulfilled. God loves you. That's why He gave you a gift. Put it to use with power and love, through self-discipline, and don't be timid - break the habit. You know what your habit is - break the habit, fan into flame the Gift and Spirit that God has given you to WIN and see a victory today - it's not easy, but it's worth it. have the self-discipline to crucify your desires and lose with a purpose in your everyday life. Lose the temptations and sins and instant gratifications now, win in eternity later. Break the habit by leaning on God in all that you do.

Flee from the temptation

1 Corinthians 6:18: "Flee from sexual immorality." To "flee" implies to move away from. Like how if we fought in real life (incoming tough guy moment) I would make you flee. So, in the same way, we are called to move away from temptations. "But Ben, it only said sexual immorality." 1 Timothy 6:11: "But you, man of God, flee from all this, and pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, endurance and gentleness." - so we as men and women of God are called to flee (move away from) sins and temptations, and we are also called to "pursue" (move towards) these other Godly things and qualities. This might look like not logging into social media or any electronic - that's where the temptation is, so flee. Don't carry your vape or be around the people that typically lead you into sin - that's where the temptation is, so flee. And, instead of the sins and temptations, pursue "Righteousness, godliness, faith, love, endurance and gentleness." If you have the opportunity to flee your sins, flee them. Be prepared, do things that set you up to succeed. Proverbs 22:3: "The prudent see danger and take refuge, but the simple keep going and pay the penalty."

James 4:7-8: "Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. Come near to God and he will come near to you." - submit to God, resist Satan and he will flee. Draw near to God and He will draw near to you. So you're resisting (moving away from) sins and drawing near to (moving towards) God. Flee from temptations.

Waiting for God's plan instead of giving in to feelings/instant gratification

In Isaiah 60:22 it says that "When the time is right, I, the Lord, will do it." It takes time, and you need that time to become the person that He’s creating you to be. Think of it like this: you’re at a restaurant, and a really good meal is coming your way, you just don’t know when. The easy alternative is to leave and go get fast food. Quick, easy, cheap, immediate. But don’t do it. God is cooking, and I don’t know what He has in mind, just THAT when the time is right He will do it. Don’t give up on God’s plan for fast food, for instant gratification, for porn and overthinking and trying to control and vaping and dating and cultural acceptance and looking like you have it all together, and for attractive people that don’t put God first in their life and won’t put you first either. Fast food is cheap and "fast" and convenient, but ultimately unhealthy. The best meals usually cost a lot and take a long time to cook - that's what this is.

Romans 8:28: “We KNOW that in all things God is working (present tense, there’s a plan even if you can’t see it) for the good of those who love Him and have been called according to His purpose (so live out that calling and love Him and trust His timing).”

Psalm 27:14: "Wait for the Lord, be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord." - the verse both starts AND ends by telling us to wait for God because no matter how frustrating it can get, we know that this is worth it.

Ezekiel 34:26: "There will be showers of blessing in season." - wait on God's timing, we receive blessings on Earth in season, and we live our lives for God regardless of reward and then receive an eternal reward with Him.

Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - it doesn't say an EASY path, but one that God is establishing and making straight, so this may involve hardships. Wherever the path goes, keep trusting in Him and living for Him in everything as He establishes your life. Do this, living for God and submitting to Him "in all your ways" including the little things and what you do behind closed doors/on the phone.

Talk to people that you know will be there for you/at least try to help

Hebrews 10:24-25: “Let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing.” Who is "us" in this verse? For them it represented the church that the author was writing to, and for us it will represent us, the modern day Christian Church (consisting, simply, of people like you and me that are just trying to live for Christ in the daily - don't let big phrases like "the Church" throw you off - the passage means YOU). So WE spur (encourage/push towards) each other towards LOVE (1 Corinthians 13:8 "Love never fails" - so we should never fail to persevere in these things in our daily lives, and so obviously having accountability from others will be helpful). We push each other towards love and "good deeds," which will undoubtedly help us in the battle against our temptations. This involves "meeting together." Now the author was definitely referring to in-person meetings, and it's not always possible to be there for someone face to face - but think about it: the author was ALREADY not face to face in that, when he wrote this passage, it wasn't while in church, it was a LETTER to that church - he was virtual, and we can do the same. "Meeting together" via text when you're about to give into lust. Meeting together by getting on the phone and talking/praying your way out of that situation.

Ecclesiastes 4:12: “Though one may be overpowered, two may defend themselves.” - so walk with others and be a part of their journey and have them be a part of yours. Form groups if needed, and hold yourself accountable with the things that you struggle with.

Persevere when faced/tempted with these things

Genesis 4:7: "Sin is crouching at your door - it desires to have you, but you must rule over it." - sin isn't just something "you have in your life" (like with bad habits or whatever people will say it's just their personal struggle and so it isn't a big deal) - wrong. It HAS you. It wants to HAVE you - control it before it controls you. Sin is at the door - it is what it is, that's fine - just don't let it in, not even a little, because God is for you ("If God is for us, who can be against us?" Romans 8:31) and He is willing to help you against your sins, but you have to be willing as well. It's ok to face temptations. In Matthew 18:7 Jesus says that "such things must come." So sin can sit out at your door, but don't let it in. Let me give you an example:

Genesis 39:10: "And though she spoke to Joseph day after day, he refused to go to bed with her or even be with her." Joseph was faced with the temptations of sleeping with his master's wife day after day. If he reported the woman's behavior of trying to sleep with him, nobody would have believed him because she had power (he was just a slave, and she was the master's wife, who would possibly believe him?) - he was left with no choice but to see her and be tempted day after day, as we are in these days with sexual temptations and other things like substances and instant gratifications. But Genesis 39:10 teaches that not only did Joseph not sleep with her, but he didn't even spend time with her. That was his key to success. He knew she was no good, so he didn't give her his time and attention. This is what the Bible means in 1 Corinthians 6:18 when it says to flee sexual immorality. If you know that logging in to social media or a website, or bringing your phone to private places will cause temptations, then not only am I asking you to stand firm against sexual immorality, I'm asking you to cut the temptation down at the root (same thing with vaping, just don't have it with you - and all other sins). She still existed in Joseph's world, and so does sexual immorality in ours - but Joseph didn't give her any attention. Learn from that.

Ephesians 4:26 says "in your anger do not sin" - so the Bible admits that you are "in your anger" and yet can still avoid sin. In this same way, you can be in that headspace, in that heart space, in your room, and in your temptation, but still endure and not give in to sin - but don't use this as an excuse to mess around and not PURGE temptation out of your life - "flee from." 1 Corinthians 6:12: "I have the right to do anything, but not everything is beneficial. I have the right to do anything, but I will not be mastered by anything." - you have free will and can choose sin in both big and small ways in your heart and mind, but it's not always beneficial. It desires to have you, but don't be mastered by it. You must rule over it. Thanks for reading.

How to help others get closer to God and helping them with their struggles

If you've come here, chances are you're running out of ideas, or at least are curious and are maybe looking for help. From the time I believed in God, the very first time I tried to spread His Word and His message, I realized something: I can't. Wait, what do I do? I know the Bible up and down, why won't they listen? What am I doing wrong? It's honestly shocking how much you can know and how little it can mean. That's why we're going to break this section down into 4 parts. Note that we mean both "helping them get closer to God" and "helping them with their struggles" in all that we say in all 4 sections, so that there is a faith heavy and life heavy fit for all the sections, because I know that at different times we are experiencing different things. In the first section, we will look at how to genuinely care - people always skip this, which is why no matter how much they know they never seem to get it right (because they don't know what they NEED to know, they don't want to know more than what they do or learn about other people's issues in a way that offers them nothing, etc.). In the second section, we'll look at listening, because there is no denial of the fact that it is more important than talking, especially when it comes to others and trying to help them. Then, after (and only after) looking at those 2 sections, we will look at speaking to others (giving them advice, knowing what to say and what the Bible says, etc.). We will conclude with a fourth section that encourages you to live out the things that you teach (because if you don't, then it completely discredits your other efforts, almost like it did for the Pharisees).

Genuinely caring enough (you probably fall short of this, ESPECIALLY if you didn't think you needed to read it, as it shows that you don't really "care" because you are happy with what you already do and how much you already care, which might work for you but NOT for the people you could be more helpful to)

The chances are very little that you actually care enough about the other person to be there for them in the appropriate capacity (at the appropriate level) - I can make an exception for most parents, who would usually die for their kids if needed, and there are some others, but chances are you just don't care enough, and that has to change. Let's say you're in a hurry, and you're in the middle of something very important, and a message from them comes in - you only have time for one of the two. Check the message later, right? Exactly - the "very important" thing is more important to you than them. This is one of a thousand examples, whether it be time, money, or any other way that we get spread thin and are forced to make difficult decisions that make it hard to be a Christian. Oftentimes, despite being a "good person" and wanting the best for others, you just won't go far enough. My favorite example is this: it's Judgment Day, and you and this individual are both at the throne of God. It's YOUR decision (in this example) - 1 to Heaven, the other to Hell. You would obviously save yourself. And that's what's wrong. We put ourselves first. Jesus Christ was already first when He came down from Heaven and gave up perfection to DIE on the cross to forgive our sins - in fact, He actually spent 3 days in Hell (Matthew 12:40). So clearly Jesus would give us a different answer than we have given to how we would handle these 2 situations. Why does this matter? Isn't that intense? Do I really have to go that far to help others? YES. Here's why: if you just "want them to succeed," and are "rooting for them" but nothing more, then you are like a cheerleader or maybe the fans in the stands. They need a TEAMMATE, and a good one. So until you're ready to get on the field with them and be there with them and get hit by opposing players to help them, helping them through what they go through every step of the way, you've got nothing to talk about and should reevaluate whether you really care about them enough to try to be a part of ministering to them and helping them or not. If you're not willing to take it deeper like this, you won't be very helpful. You have to start by caring. Jesus died on the cross to forgive our sins, and we see in 1 Peter 5:7 that we can "cast our cares on the Lord" (bring all your problems to Him in prayer, seeking guidance - likely in the same way that the people you are trying to help will be seeking your guidance), and we can do this "because He cares for you" (1 Peter 5:7). You have to care. Care like Jesus, love like Jesus. Put others ahead of you. John 13:15: "I have set you an example that you should do as I have done for you." 1 Corinthians 10:24: “No one should seek their own good, but the good of others.” - this reminds me of Matthew 6:33 where it says to "seek first the Kingdom of God." But it said to seek the "Kingdom" and not just the King, because we're not just seeking God but the welfare of all His servants (the whole Kingdom), even those that don't serve faithfully. So we should be seeking their good and ways that we can be good to them. So actually seek it, be active, pursue it. Romans 12:10: "Be devoted to one another in love. Honor one another above yourselves." Philippians 2:3-4: "Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but to the interests of the others." - not looking to yourself, but to them.

Being a very good listener FIRST

Once you find a way, in your heart, to care enough to do what needs to be done for them (no matter what it might look like, no matter when), then you can move forward in actually helping them. Whether it's them talking about their faith (and doubts or questions they may have) or their life, it is important that you listen. Think back to the analogy I used earlier about being on the field and truly being there for your teammate and taking hits from opponents instead of just being in the stands cheering - it's obvious that the sport I was talking about is football. In football, the players communicate not only with one another, but also with their coaching staff on the sidelines through hearing devices - without listening to the play, the play will probably fail. And that's just the thing, isn't it? We don't particularly care to listen, we just want FOOTBALL ARRR, we want action, wanna throw and catch the ball without all the listening and planning, right? It doesn't work. If you try to be the doctor, diagnose (determine) someone's sickness and then go ahead and cure it (who needs God when they have you!), and you do this without listening, all sorts of things can go wrong. You will probably end up incorrectly diagnosing them (you won't have your facts straight, again because you're more invested in talking than listening), you'll give the incorrect cure (because you don't know what you're talking about, having not listened), and most importantly, you'll show you don't care (which, as we've discussed, is the total root of all this). I probably sound like some uber-sensitive sociologist when I say these things, but truth is, I'm just a dude. I've screwed up by not doing these things, and God has revealed it to me. Trust me, I could care less about your feelings, but God cares, and in the work He's doing in my heart each day, He's leading me towards that path as well. I understand that it's more exciting/desirable to speak than it is to listen, but genuinely think about this for a second: the person you're talking to feels the same way. Again, we've established that the absolute foundation of helping others is showing that you actually care - if you don't, they'll disdain your seemingly obligated, religious effort to "do the right thing" and take them up as a charity case - they don't want a doctor to fix they want a friend, a teammate to be in the trenches of life with them, not on a lecture podium. Even if you have great advice, your instinct should be to listen - "Let the wise listen, and ADD to their learning" (Proverbs 1:5).

James 1:19: "Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry." - we don't always have to speak. When we try, it shows that we have this longing to be heard and seen and noticed and appreciated. But if we do, then so do others, and by always speaking we take their ability to speak and be heard away from them. This doesn't mean complete silence - just be "quick" to listen and "slow" to speak - you can still speak, but the instinct should be to listen and it should take some time before listening turns to talking (it's the same thing with anger and negativity). Remember "love is patient and kind" (1 Corinthians 13:4, verses 4-7 provide a much longer list that I would highly recommend reading, including "love is not easily angered"). So be patient and let others speak - be patient and hold angry/insulting/instinctive words within before they harm others. And be kind. When you choose to speak, listen, not speak or not listen, and the way in which you choose to speak (what you end up saying and how you put it) and listen (if you really give others your attention) - the driving force behind all of this should be kindness.

Jesus said many interesting things, but perhaps the most interesting was this: In Luke 6:27 He said to the crowd He was preaching to: “To those of you who are listening, I say this.” Why would He say that? Everyone in that crowd could hear Him! No, that’s not what He meant. He was talking to those who were LISTENING to Him not just HEARING Him. There is a difference and other people need to feel valued, otherwise they won't open up to you (and even if they did, you won't know what to say because again you didn't listen). Sometimes others won't talk as much, which can make all of this seem challenging. Ask them questions. Even if they talk a lot, ask them engaging questions that show you are interested - you're not doing this to pacify them or trick them into opening up, but rather because, as we've discussed, you care. Now comes the fun.

Knowing what to say, and saying it

Whether they bring you challenges in their faith, or maybe they are really struggling with something in their everyday life like a smoking addiction or their relationships, either way you need to be an engaged listener - you have to be the best possible version of yourself that you can be FOR them instead of FOR YOU. After you have really, truly heard them, you speak. This is now the opportunity to change lives - that's why it's so hard to get this far. That's why you have to take those first 2 steps seriously, because if you don't, then it doesn't matter what you say, all they will hear is noise even if you speak like an angel and have all the knowledge out there (1 Corinthians 13:1-2). If you cut people off and interrupt them, you are speaking more, and this lessens the value of your words. Like I just said, you could quite literally change lives with those words, so what you say is pretty important.

Mark 16:15: "Go into all the world and preach the gospel to all creation." Matthew 5:16: “Let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in Heaven.” But why? So that others may "see" the pattern you set for them and "glorify God" by following it. You can't walk in a dark house, so you turn the light on. In the same way, how will those who don't understand come to Christ unless you give them a light? Romans 10:14: "How can they hear without someone preaching to them?" People won't hear unless you preach to them. But remember this: a lamp never talks, it just shines. I don't want you to just preach verbally, I want your light to shine through your ACTIONS and in your everyday life, habits, thoughts, feelings and all. Let your light shine, so they may glorify God. A lamp doesn't absorb the heat for itself, but rather it uses the heat to give light to those in the room. In the same way, we don't hold back on what's inconvenient - no, burn it all. Get uncomfortable, do the difficult things that God wants you to do. Put your light to use so others may be saved and so God may be glorified. However, in order to say all these right words, we have to know them. What does the Bible say about drug addictions, lust, how to get better, God's mercy over their mistakes, or whatever else this person may be struggling with? Why does God allow evil? Read the curriculum to teach it.

2 Timothy 4:2: “Preach the word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage - with great patience and careful instruction.” - be prepared even when it's "out of season." Even when it's not Sunday. Even when they're hostile or don't believe what you believe and don't think the way you do. Be prepared. They may ask, why should I believe? How do you know He exists? Why does He allow evil? Be prepared but remember that ultimately you preach God, so it's His strength and not your own that will reach others. Psalm 78:1: “Hear my teachings, listen to the Words of my mouth.” - learn from God in order to teach others about Him. Ephesians 4:15: “Speak the truth in love.” - you must correct others with the truth, but if you are harsh and fail to do it in love, you have achieved nothing (in 1 Corinthians 13:1 it says you could literally sound like an angel in what you say, but without love you are just noise). Ephesians 4:29: "Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen." - so you can "benefit those who listen." You can "help" others and "build them up" and all of this can help them "with their needs." You can genuinely help others to improve with the words you say, but your intentions have to be good and selfless, and you can't be judgmental. Pull the weight you judge others by, lead by example. Proverbs 18:21: "The tongue has the power of life and death, and those who love it will eat its fruit." - basically, if someone loves fruit they eat it, and in the same way those that hear your words will suffer the consequences (positive or negative) of hearing your words - so be fruitful and kind in all that you say. 1 Peter 3:15: "But in your hearts revere Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect."

Doing the things you tell them to do

So we've taken a look at it all - caring, listening, being knowledgeable and speaking (doing these things in this order will help others). But now what? Are we just done? No. There will be more opportunities to help others, whether that involves them getting closer to God or anything else. You could realistically just walk through these steps again though, of caring then listening then being qualified to help then actually taking action and helping. So what's left? Do what you preach. If you give advice, you gotta follow it. Matthew 5:16: “Let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in Heaven.”

But remember this: a lamp never talks, it just shines. I don't want you to just preach verbally, I want your light to shine through your ACTIONS and in your everyday life, habits, thoughts, feelings and all. Let your light shine, so they may glorify God. Romans 2:21: “You, then, who teach others, do you not teach yourself? You who preach against stealing, do you steal?” - if you don’t practice what you preach, even if you preach a good thing, then you have become a Pharisee and are blocking others from God. If you give the greatest advice, but you yourself aren't faithful in what you say, then you are discrediting whatever you may have said, even if it's the words of God, so be careful. If you don't like porn in the lives of others, then keep it out of your life. In 1 Corinthians 13:1 it says you could literally sound like an angel in what you say, but without love you are just noise, and we know according to 1 Corinthians 13:8 that love "never fails" - so we would never fail to persevere in these things to help those around us, not just through what we say, but through the example that we set. In my experience as a student, and in this ministry (which is a sort of "teaching" opportunity I guess), I can tell you that as a student (and people that have learned from me as a "teacher" have said the same thing/had the same experience), I can honestly tell you that the best teachers teach through example. This is why the Pharisees were in the wrong - despite being the most knowledgeable, religious "good people" of that time, they didn't fully live in the Godliness they proclaimed - and Jesus was the greatest teacher of them all because He not only taught and was a religious "good person" who believed the right things, but also showed Himself to be faithful to the teaching in all that He did and on the cross. Thanks for reading.

God wants us to act on our beliefs and live this out in our everyday lives

What stance does God want us to take, what does it really look like to be of belief/faith? Luke 9:23-24: "Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themself and take up their cross daily and follow me. Whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it." So look at the wording. Whoever WANTS to be my disciple (He said this to His disciples, so being religious clearly doesn't save you). God won't force you to follow Him, it's only if you want to, but you definitely should, and He loves you. And it's daily. Deny yourself, follow God instead in your everyday life, take up your cross DAILY. If you try to keep life the way you want it here on Earth, then you lose it eternally. However, like Jesus, if you are willing to give your life up and follow God with it and in all that you do, then you will be saved eternally. So deny yourself. Want this, want to be His disciple, and take up your cross, whatever it may be, each and every day. John 14:6: “I am the way and the truth and the life, and no one comes to the Father God except through me.” This is how we find fulfilling life, eternal life, and it's only found through Jesus Christ. No other god could compare to this. This is a way of life, and this way of life is life itself. Jesus is the Way and the Truth and the Life. Follow Him in your everyday life.

To have a willingness to do these things is amazing, and what God requires of us. But notice the wording of Philippians 2:13: "It is God who works in you to will and to act in order to fulfill his good purpose." So God not only wills, not only has a will/plan, He actually acts - "will and act." He actually fulfills, He gets it done. So in the same way, instead of JUST being willing but not really living it out, we should be acting on our beliefs and getting the result. This is why it is not said of the fruit tree that "you will recognize it by what it wanted to be" but rather “Make a tree good and its fruit will be good, or make a tree bad and its fruit will be bad, for a tree is recognized by its fruit" (Matthew 12:33). Thanks for reading.

Moving forward from the past

The first thing that needs to be said here, and this is VERY important, is that this will NOT be a stereotypical "I'm a terrible person now give me Jesus" guide to overcoming the past - that's narrow. Your past may look like that, but it also may look different. The Apostle Paul (then known as Saul) was full of religious passion as a Pharisee - when he was persecuting the Christian Church and at the low point of his journey. Moses was Egyptian royalty BEFORE leading the Israelites out of Egypt. Joseph enjoyed living in his own country with his family (his 11 brothers and father) BEFORE being sold into slavery and saving the nation of Egypt from famine. My point is that not every person has a terrible past - maybe it honestly wasn't that bad, but you still need to move forward and embrace whatever's next. That's why in this section I will try to address things in a way that everyone can relate to - whether your past isn't that bad, or maybe it's so bad that God has saved you from an overdose or suicide attempt that SHOULD have killed you - wherever you come from, wherever the Lord has called you from, welcome. We will look at three stages of moving forward from the past - first, we will look at putting it out of your mind (truly letting it go so that it stops making an impact on the present and the future), then we will look at lifting up to the Lord in deeply personal and consistent prayer (since the first step is hardly ever perfected, this second step sort of follows it up) - at that point, having moved out of the past, we will finish by looking at pursuing a better future - the "forward" part.

Putting it out of mind - let it GO

Isaiah 41:9: "I took you from the ends of the earth, from its farthest corners I called you. I said, ‘You are my servant’; I have chosen you and have not rejected you." - God makes clear with this verse that He has chosen us. Immediately, you might think "God is only talking to His people, the Christians that have accepted Him" - but notice how it FIRST said they were distant, "from the farthest corners"? He said they were distant and THEN chose them. So know that God has chosen you, even if it feels like a longshot, if you feel distant and don't think God is talking to you, or again maybe you're not that far away (again "ends of the Earth" so wherever you are and whatever "ends of the Earth" you're on in your life/faith, God is clearly talking to ALL OF US). It's great that He has chosen us, but don't overlook the fact that He has also "not rejected" us. A key strategy to finally moving forward from whatever your past may have consisted of will be that you "not reject" it. I'll give you a big and small example, starting small: Tonight I had 10 hours to work on things, and (it's hard to admit this) I lost 7 of them playing video games. I then spent the other 3 trying to figure out what happened and being negative - my rejection of the first 7 hours led me to fail in the last 3. Here's the bigger example: Someone who has regrets in life and keeps dwelling on them, causing them to never escape them. Ironically, despite my change in attitude from playing video games to HATING MYSELF FOR IT, despite that change of heart, the last 3 hours were just as useless. You DON'T have a time machine, so when you lose time thinking about the past and wishing you did things you can't do (or didn't do things you can't undo), the irony is that despite wanting to move forward, you're actually preventing yourself from being able to.

Jesus asks a question in Matthew 6:27, and it's not really a question He needs an answer to, but more of a rhetorical question that makes a point: "Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life?" The word "worrying" doesn't mean stereotypical fear - it can represent anything. It's a "worry" whether that's just you evaluating the past, being afraid of your mistakes, having regrets, fantasizing about having done things differently when you can't - whatever it looks like for you, the past is on your mind and so you are "worrying." And when you do this, despite doing it to try to be better, you "can't add a single hour to your life." So by worrying about being busy, you actually lose MORE precious time by worrying. By thinking about the past, you're losing the present by sacrificing it at the altar of "What if?" and you don't have the time machine it requires to find out. You, by trying to add an hour to your life (fix the past) actually end up LOSING time (ruining the present and future, as it's only a moment away and you're still lost in the past). By now you probably understand what I'm trying to say - and yet we all do it. What do we do? Well, look back at Isaiah 41:9 - not only are we supposed to devote our present/future to God ("I have chosen you"), but we also let the past go and stop letting it control us when we clearly can't control it ("I have chosen you AND have not rejected you") - He has chosen us to live for Him in the present/future, with ALL of the time that remains, but He has also "not rejected" us because of our past, but while we're still rejecting ourselves and "worrying," we won't go anywhere, despite God wanting us to - He won't force us to, we have to choose His ways, and His ways include forgiveness and moving FORWARD to become the best version of yourself which happened in the lives of my 3 examples from earlier, Paul and Moses and Joseph (that means MOVE an ACTUAL DISTANCE away from your past, including mentally MOVE FORWARD). So forgive yourself and move forward.

Lift it up to God in prayer

You can probably agree with what I just said, but it might not stop you from "worrying" about the past, or basically keeping it in mind as if it weren't really the past but the present (and then it becomes the future). Maybe, despite liking what I wrote, it's still a struggle (this happens all the time, especially with porn - of course it's bad but you still fail). So what do we do if this is persistent? We have to give it to God. The only action God had in that first section was "choosing and not rejecting us." Isaiah 41:9 was written a long time ago, so nothing happened in live time - we only reflected on already existent truths. If the issue persists, we need to bring it to God in LIVE TIME. Pray to Him, lift it up to Him TODAY, with NEW words - do this everyday. Isaiah 41:9 is the same as it was yesterday, and nothing will change tomorrow either, so if you fall down once more that means Satan has made an adjustment - your turn. Make a change. Get vulnerable in prayer. Whatever specifically is bothering you (a mistake you made, a way you were wronged, an opportunity that fell through, etc.) life THAT up to God. Expose the wound. The other day, since I'm an idiot, I scraped open my knee by running through the crosswalk (I didn't want to wait, like I said it was stupid). My knee was bleeding and it hurt. So naturally, I wanted to do... NOTHING. Leave it be! It hurts to touch it. But if you do that, it will get worse - the more time I went without doing something, I was risking a very serious knee infection. Same thing with porn - the more days go by where you fail and fail, the worse and worse it gets. Same thing with worrying about/being owned by the past. Sure, it felt nice to NOT treat my knee that was in pain, but as time went on I was risking infection, which comes about when something is "contaminated" - basically, if I had an exposed (the flesh was open) knee, it gets "contaminated" every time I take a step and the fabric of my pants dip into the flesh - EVERY step you take without taking action you're basically striking your own weakness. What's the solution? The solution to my knee problem was to open it up and let the nurse put all kinds of disinfectant crap on there - it hurt in the moment but ultimately brought healing. By doing nothing, nothing hurts, but the pain you are building up for yourself (again, each step that you take) is going to be truly unbearable (even eternal, if you want to get deep). I'll give you an example: In 2 Kings 19, Jerusalem was about to be destroyed by this opposing nation. They knew that the other nation (the Assyrians) had a long history of mercilessly crushing people and nations stronger than they, and they also knew that they had no realistic defense. The King of Jerusalem could have NOT admitted this or tried to avoid it (after all, it's embarrassing to admit it and honestly what difference did it make they had no chance either way) - this is what "not treating the knee" looks like. Or, he could rip open the wound and treat it. That's what he did.

In 2 Kings 19:17-19 he prays these words: “It is true, Lord, that the Assyrian kings have laid waste these nations and their lands. They have thrown their gods into the fire and destroyed them, for they were not gods but only wood and stone, fashioned by human hands. Now, Lord our God, deliver us from his hand (the Assyrian commander that was threatening them), so that all the kingdoms of the earth may know that you alone, Lord, are God.” Notice something right away - "it is true." That's like saying "yes, my knee is injured, now let's take care of it." The king is ripping open the wound with his very first words - take notice of this. So what is it that's true? That the Assyrians had a history of crushing other nations. That strikes a nerve for Jerusalem. They don't want to talk about it. Maybe for you, you don't want to talk about your trauma, mistakes, whatever the past is. You'd rather avoid it. But treat the knee. "It is true, the Assyrians have laid these other nations waste." He specifically lifted his fear up to the Lord. It was deeply personal - get personal like this. "It is true, God, that I made this mistake" or "that this was done to me" or "that this is still hurting me" or WHATEVER IT MAY BE, take the part that hurts the most and lift it up to God in a brand new prayer. Isaiah 41:9 isn't new - pray a new prayer, each day until healing, to God in order to find healing - and after you are healed, keep praying everyday but this time a prayer of gratitude for having found healing. Here's the best part - after lifting his specific wound up to the Lord in prayer, the king asks for deliverance. After saying "it is true, they are greater," he finishes his prayer by saying "now deliver us from his hand." So lifts up the wound and SEEKS HEALING. It's not just "It is true, God, that I made this mistake" or "that this was done to me" or "that this is still hurting me" or WHATEVER IT MAY BE, but you now add "deliver me" - whether that means "help me to move forward" or "forgive them" or "find healing" or "process this" - whatever being delivered looks like, you need to pray for it in live time. Lift your wounds up to the Lord and let Him heal them. Like I said, Isaiah 41:9 (and what we wrote about it) is a truth that already exists, and knowing that truth won't just heal you. In the same way, the solution to my knee injury was well known even by me, but that knowledge was worthless until I actually acted on it and treated the wound - I know you know, but DO SOMETHING. Pray to God. Lift it up to Him. The context of this prayer is that in 2 Kings 19:14 (just a few verses earlier), the king "spread out the letter (with which the Assyrians had threatened them) before the Lord (presumably by spreading it out in the temple and praying)." That letter was his greatest fear, his knee injury, his wound, and he "spread it out before God." Basically "God, here it is." He lifted it up to God in prayer - do the same. The story ends with the Assyrians never attacking them, but being slaughtered by them (which was a miracle given the difference in strength between these nations). God granted them a victory over their wound and worry, and He wants to do the same for you - lift it up to Him in prayer.

Pursuing a better future

We've looked so far at 2 things, and we'll look at one more. We've looked at just letting the past go, and if that doesn't work lift it up to the Lord in prayer - we will now look at pursuing a better future. If you've truly put the first two sections (and the Biblical truths/activities involved in them) into practice, then you are at least somewhat able to not be stuck in the past. But now what? The future. You can't "move forward from the past" by just getting over the past - you still have to "move forward" otherwise it's as if nothing has happened. A great defense, in any sport, might give up 0 points, but if the offense can't score the game will still be tied  0-0. We need to actually WIN this battle. Earlier when we looked at Isaiah 41:9 I was making the point that in addition to God choosing us, He has also not rejected us - I will now make the same point the other way around. With these first 2 sections, we've moved on from the past - but to what? God has not rejected us, and we are not rejected because of our past, but now what? Now we are chosen - for what? To move forward. Your past (whether it was what you did, what was done to you, something else, and any combination of these and other things) - your past might be as heavy, or light, as it is, but whatever that looks like, something has to actually change. Like I said, you can't win a game 0-0, so even if you COMPLETELY move on from your past, if you give Satan 0 "worrying" or feelings of rejection - even then you still need to go on offense and score. And so we will.

Acts 17:28: "For in Him we live and move and have our being." - we don't have to be defined by our past whether good or bad - we "have our being" in Christ instead - so it's about how you live for Him in THIS moment, not the past. We don't have to "live" in our past either, because we can "live in Him." And "in Him we move." We can move forward and receive forgiveness, and we can do better than before - God has called us forwards, not backwards. We are not defined by the good or bad person that we have been, or the things that have been done to us, or anything like that - we are defined by God and by how we live for Him in this moment and moving forward. In this passage we are called to "live" and "move" - but not aimlessly - notice that we are called to do both "in Him." So that's the big reveal. I want you to move forward - in Him. I want you to live your life - in Him. To use the other phrase from the sentence, I want you to have/become a new being - in Him. It's just like Philippians 4:13: "I can do all things through Christ who gives me strength." So yes, you can "do all things," but it has to be "through Christ" as HE is the one who "gives you strength."

1 Corinthians 10:31 says that "Whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all to the glory of God." Colossians 3:23 says "Whatever you work at, work at it with all your heart, as if working for the Lord." So think about it - no matter what you do in moving forward, no matter how you approach this ("whatever you work at"), even just when you EAT AND DRINK (having manners, discipline, etc.) - do ALL of this "through Him" and "to the glory of God" and "as if working for the Lord." Moving forward has many different looks - you might join a group, maybe you try to talk to the person (if there is one) that is a source of your past/trauma/regret - maybe you get a new hairstyle and try to embrace a new persona. Really doesn't matter - just make sure that what you do is of God. It said "whatever" you do and "whatever" you work at, because it really doesn't matter, you can do what you want, but make sure that you "do it ALL to the glory of God." Follow the Words of the Bible, Words like these, in all that you do. Pursuing a "better" future means that your new pursuit is better than the previous one, better than what you had been doing in your everyday life before this. So if we want to be "better," we must remember that "no one is good except God alone" (Mark 10:18, Luke 18:19). So being "better" and finding healing and moving "forward" (not just moving but actually moving FORWARD) - this consists of God, and only God ("no one" else is good). This isn't to say that 24 hours of your day are spent in a Bible, the real point being made here is that "only God" is good - only God can really fulfill you - every other person or desire will leave you with a past to recover from (I'm sure you can relate). So make sure that, in moving forward, this consists of your new life putting God closer to the center. Like the verses were saying, "whatever you do," make it all be "for Him." How? By following His instructions. Words from the Bible, like the ones we have looked at, are "good" and will guide you - moving forward looks like living for God in all that you do in the time that remains - the Bible is free online, and to pursue God is to pursue healing. Thanks for reading.

What does “doing good things for God” look like in our everyday lives?

Ephesians 2:10: “For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.” - we aren't JUST His specific creation and totally unique (which is already amazing) - we are also "fearfully and wonderfully made" (Psalm 139:13-14) - His "handiwork." God doesn't care about physical appearances, He cares about your heart (1 Samuel 16:7). So we are His handiwork - "created to." Created to. There is a purpose, a reason for His creating us: "to do the good works He has prepared for us" - these are things He foresaw. He has "prepared" these good works just like how He knew us and had plans for us even "before the womb" (Jeremiah 1:5). So whether it's abstaining from sins, holding a door and being positive, giving a sermon, and everything in between - do the good works He has for you today. Don't try to force these things and try to unintentionally play the role of God in your life, eliminating His grace by basing salvation on your own good works - rather, "It is by grace that you have been saved, and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God, so that no one may boast" (Ephesians 2:8-9). So, instead of trying to do too much and being too forceful/placing too great an emphasis on personal righteousness, simply do the good works that God has for you in your everyday life. Whatever each situation calls for. Temped? Ask yourself what the Bible says to do and live it out. Having a conversation with someone, getting impatient? "Love is patient and kind" (1 Corinthians 13:4). You could apply this to EVERYTHING you do in your everyday life. This isn't always about flying around the world to be this great preacher - we are simply called to do the works He has for us as it's available in all that we do. Galatians 6:10: "Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all people."

And we know that, more than a certain number of good works, God wants us to be willing to follow Him. 2 Corinthians 8:12: “If the willingness is there, the gift is acceptable according to what one has, not according to what one does not have.” - if you’re willing, God will accept you. It’s according to what you have, not what you don’t. God will accept you for who you are, for the past you do have, not for who you think you should be or for the perfection that you don’t have. You just need to be willing. I'm reminded of the story from Matthew 25:14-30: a master goes on vacation and gives 3 servants some coins before he leaves. He gives one of them 5 coins, another one 2, and the final servant just 1. The servant with 1 coin just buries it and gives it back when he returns. The other two servants multiplied their earnings, from 5 to 10 and from 2 to 4, respectively. The master was furious with the servant who buried the coin because he had made no earnings with his money, but the other two servants he was very happy with. Notice how he was happy with the servant that went from 2 to 4? 2 is less than 5, and 4 is less than 10 - because the size of your gift (how righteous you are/what your life has looked like up to this point) does not matter - 2 is just as fine as 5, but what does matter is that you just be sure to put it to work for the glory of God instead of burying it in the sand, whether that's because sin is stopping spiritual growth/movement in your life, or maybe you're afraid to step out onto the waters with your gift and take a leap of faith - whatever the case may be, don't bury it in the sand.

Luke 9:23-24: "Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themself and take up their cross daily and follow me. Whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it." So look at the wording. Whoever WANTS to be my disciple (He said this to His disciples, so being religious clearly doesn't save you). God won't force you to follow Him, it's only if you want to, but you definitely should, and He loves you. And it's daily. Deny yourself, follow God instead in your everyday life, take up your cross DAILY. If you try to keep life the way you want it here on Earth, then you lose it eternally. However, like Jesus, if you are willing to give your life up and follow God with it and in all that you do, then you will be saved eternally. So deny yourself. Want this, want to be His disciple, and take up your cross, whatever it may be, each and every day. John 14:6: “I am the way and the truth and the life, and no one comes to the Father God except through me.” This is how we find fulfilling life, eternal life, and it's only found through Jesus Christ. No other god could compare to this. This is a way of life, and this way of life is life itself. Jesus is the Way and the Truth and the Life. Follow Him in your everyday life.

To have a willingness to do these things is amazing, and what God requires of us. But notice the wording of Philippians 2:13: "It is God who works in you to will and to act in order to fulfill his good purpose." So God not only wills, not only has a will/plan, He actually acts - "will and act." He actually fulfills, He gets it done. So in the same way, instead of JUST being willing but not really living it out, we should be acting on our beliefs and getting the result. This is why it is not said of the fruit tree that "you will recognize it by what it wanted to be" but rather “Make a tree good and its fruit will be good, or make a tree bad and its fruit will be bad, for a tree is recognized by its fruit" (Matthew 12:33). Thanks for reading.

How do we search the Scriptures deeper for answers to “all” things?

2 Timothy 3:16-17: "All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work." - that's what this is. God's Word, the Bible/Scriptures are USEFUL. There is a purpose here. It helps us teach/rebuke/correct others, but more importantly it helps us to train OURSELVES in righteousness and be prepared to do EVERY good work that God has in store for us in this life, according to what the Words say and how we live them out. The fact that we are "thoroughly equipped" to do "every" good work, just goes to show that there is nothing that the Bible doesn't cover, if we search deep enough.

Many people, for example, will say that the Bible doesn't talk about the Trinity. It's false. In Genesis 1:26, God says "Let us make mankind in our image" - and then verse 27 says that "God created mankind in His own image" - so "God" and "His own" image is an "us" and an "our image." The only way that God could possibly refer to Himself ("His own image" indicates that God is only one) as "us" and "our image" - the only this is possible is if God is more than 1 ("us, our image" while also only Himself "He, His own image") - multiple yet one. Multiple IN one. This is in the first chapter of the Bible, and there are hundreds, probably gazillions (again, of you search deep enough) of other passages that cover ALL things in the Bible, including the doctrine of the Trinity - other passages in the Bible go on to show that the "multiple" is the "three in one" that we often hear about: "Father, Spirit, and Son."

Looking back at 2 Timothy 3:16-17, I like that it said "the servant of God," because it makes clear that a real servant of God would do this (training, rebuking, searching deeply and living out the Words of the Bible, etc.) otherwise they are not a "servant of God" (because a servant does their duties, so to avoid the duty clearly means you are not serving, and we know that when it comes to God, with eternity and His love in mind, we want to be in good standing with Him). So read the Word of God, do what it says, train yourself and train others, do the good works that God has created you specifically to do (Ephesians 2:10). The greatest preaching is not verbal, but through actions, so live these Words out in your everyday life. John 8:31-32: "If you hold to my teaching (if you actually live it out), you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free." James 1:22: "Do not merely listen to the Word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says." In John 17:17 Jesus says that "your Word (He was talking to God) is truth" - so it's not just that the Bible spoke of the truth or was true - it literally IS truth. John 14:6: "I am the Way and the TRUTH and the Life, and nobody comes to the Father except through me." - 1 Timothy 2:4: "God wants all people to be saved and come to a knowledge of the truth" - so coming to know Jesus ("the truth") is how we are saved. In the same way, come to know and live out the Words of the Bible, which are also truth (this is what Jesus did during His life on Earth) - this is how we are "saved."

Psalm 119:105: "Your Word is a lamp for my feet, a light for my path." - lamps aren't for your feet, so this is a figure of speech illustrating that the Bible will show you how to walk with God in your everyday life, again "in all things" (Philippians 4:13) because we know that we have been "thoroughly equipped" to do "every" good work that He wants us to (2 Timothy 3:16-17) and we know that we "do not lack any spiritual gift" (1 Corinthians 1:7, again implying that if we search deep enough we will find it).

So what does that searching look like? You saw the result earlier, when I showed you something from Genesis 1:26-27 that you had probably never seen before, but that's not searching it was something I already found. How? What does the searching look like? Take it up with God. That is the only way. Daniel, who is known as incredibly wise, shows us how to search (Ezekiel 28:3, and all throughout the book of Daniel he is portrayed as incredibly wise and skillful - if anyone could search it would be Daniel). Daniel was presented with a situation that required searching: In Daniel chapter 2, King Nebuchadnezzar (who was in very tight control of the power of the nation where Daniel lived at the time) had bad dreams, and they terrified him. They were visions from the Lord. He called for the astrologers, magicians, wise men of his nation (again, all of this in Daniel chapter 2) - and he asked them to search for him. WITHOUT telling them his dream, he asked them to tell him the meaning. They couldn't do it. If they're magic was real, and their wisdom enough, they would be able to interpret the dream without knowing what it was. But the fact that they couldn't shows us 2 things - that we shouldn't rely on some "spiritual" or magical power apart from God Almighty (the "universe" for example) - and also that we should never rely on our own wisdom or our own strength in this life - again "I can do all things" but only "through Christ who gives me strength" (Philippians 4:13). So what DO we do? What Daniel did. What did he do? I'm getting there. The king, angered by the failure of the men he had called on, ordered that they all be put to death - Daniel, not wanting to lose his life (he was a "wise man" and so were some of his Jewish friends) went to the king and interpreted the dream (again without being told). How? The first thing he did was ask for time (Daniel 2:16) - this isn't always the case, but it tends to take a while. Whether it does or doesn't, don't jump to the conclusion that "God's not answering me" if it just takes a while. He may be answering you and blessing you in all things, but only "in time" (Ezekiel 34:26). The second significant thing Daniel does is plead to God for the answer, admitting that God is in power and that the human wisdom that he (Daniel) contained would not be able to give him the answer, only God could do that - Daniel admits these things to God in prayer as he asks God for the answers (Daniel 2:17-23). Daniel even says, when given the opportunity to brag in front of the king and make a good name for himself, the following words: "No wise man, enchanter, magician or diviner can explain to the king the mystery he has asked about (again, this is where Daniel COULD HAVE taken credit), but there is a God in heaven who reveals mysteries. He has shown King Nebuchadnezzar what will happen in days to come. Your dream and the visions that passed through your mind as you were lying in bed are these:" (Daniel 2:27-28 and then starting from verse 29 he correctly interpreted the dream).

So clearly Daniel takes this "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding" (Proverbs 3:5) approach. But notice that you don't lean on your own "understanding"? So then why would you trust God with your "heart" - wouldn't it be with your mind, your understanding? See, these things aren't intellectual - that would be leaning on your own strength. Rather, this is from the heart, and God can enable even the dullest mind if they have a heart for Jesus, for "I CAN do ALL things THROUGH Christ who gives me strength" (Philippians 4:13).

So again, trust in God, do this with all your heart, and He will give you the answers, on His time. Matthew 4:4: "Man shall not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God." - notice that the Words, whether you think they are in the Bible or not (as you may not have known about our Genesis 1:26-27 secret from earlier) - all such things "come from the mouth of God" as He speaks them to your heart. The work of the pen is done - now is the time when God reveals the writing to your heart, whether it's a scream (to give up a sin, and you feel convicted) or a whisper (a deep, hidden teaching like what we looked at earlier) - you have to receive with your heart. Proverbs 3:5: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding of things." James 1:5: "If any of you lacks wisdom, you should pray to God and ask for answers, and He will not find fault but will give generously to those who ask of Him." - so God won't find fault, He won't judge you for not having the answers - He will communicate with you and put the message that you need on your heart. Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you search with all your heart." Thanks for reading.

Living with wounds and scars

We're going to take a look at living with wounds and scars. What does that mean? Let me tell you a story as we get going. In 1 Chronicles chapter 10, there is a war taking place, and King Saul is killed. It takes place like this - 1 Chronicles 10:3-4: "The fighting grew fierce around Saul, and when the archers overtook him, they wounded him. Saul said to his armor-bearer, 'Draw your sword and run me through, or these uncircumcised fellows will come and abuse me.' But his armor-bearer was terrified and would not do it; so Saul took his own sword and fell on it." - now, for context, the "uncircumcised fellows" were the Philistines (their enemies) and Saul's armor bearer was with him carrying his armor. So what do I mean when I say that we'll be talking about living with wounds and scars? Well, sometimes in life, "the fighting grows fierce." Things happen, whatever "things" might mean in your life... And sometimes we are "overtaken" by these things, and we are wounded. Whether it's a breakup, getting cut from the team, someone dying, losing an opportunity, a mistake you've made or something that was done to you - whatever it may be in your life, it's a wound. If you don't have one yet, know that you will at some point in your life, and so keep our words today in mind. So things happen, it gets to be too much, and then the dagger - a wound. Saul was "overtaken" by "archers." You might have imagined him being shot by like ONE arrow and then just dying - no. He was "overtaken" by "archers" (which is plural, basically implying he was surrounded and shot at until it was simply overwhelming and he was wounded) - THIS is how we get wounds and scars. For me, it wasn't JUST moving out for the first time in my life to go to college (and I had lived with just my mom in the same house for my whole life, so this was TOUGH) - it was ALSO being dumped, removed from my church , cut from the baseball team, and losing potentially life changing opportunities all in the same MONTH as when I moved out. Many arrows. Could probably have survived the breakup, being cut - but when you throw everything together and it all happens at the same time, that's just a nightmare. But it's what happened. Maybe for you it's different, maybe it really was just one deadly dagger, one scar in your life - that's still being "overtaken" and "wounded" so when we say what we're going to say today, know that this, these wounds and scars in life, is what I'm going to be referring to. Saul, knowing that his enemies would come and torture him, told his armor-bearer to kill him ("run me through" referring to his sword, which he eventually fell on in order to die). Saul didn't want to live through that hardship. Now, realistically, they wouldn't have killed him, they probably just would have taxed him and enslaved his nation and made his life miserable - hardships. Saul didn't want the hardships so he took the coward's way out. This is VERY tempting to do with wounds and scars, and it comes in different forms - obviously the first thing to come to mind is suicide, but also in subtler ways like with self harm/giving into sinful habits and searching for fulfillment apart from God to try to numb yourself - it's an action that God doesn't want for you, all just to avoid the hardships. But we'll look today not at "getting over your scars," but "living with them." For Saul, "getting over his wounds" would have looked like winning. They would have beaten the Philistines. In life, you don't always get to win. When that person dies, they don't come back. When you lose that opportunity, the next one doesn't always just fall out of the sky. When someone takes advantage of you, you don't always get the dream partner to swoop in and save the day. Sometimes we lose. Badly. Today, here's the approach we will take: You are Saul. Instead of falling on your sword or trying to numb the pain, you are going to live with it. The Philistines will rule you, life will be hard. Your wounds and scars won't magically disappear - you'll learn to live with them. Admittedly, this is more realistic than just killing yourself or your life magically getting better - it's a good, realistic, mature thing to do to try to live with your wounds and scars. We'll take a look at this in 6 different stages. Here they are listed below in order:

1. You'll Identify your wound and prevent it from spreading to other areas and leaving you hurt in more ways than before.

2. COMPLETELY cut off behaviors that deepen your wound (which is different than "spreading" to other areas).

3. Realize your worth in spite of your wound.

4. Live your life without things needing to magically get better (living with your wound).

5. Try to find healing through Jesus Christ.

6. Help others (a full-circle moment, and you can be at your lowest when you do this by the way so don't overlook it if you're still hurt and feel incapable of helping).

Identify your wound and prevent it from spreading to other areas and leaving you hurt in more ways than before

Obviously the first step to any of this is identifying your wound. Now I know that sounds super psychological and you think I'm going to give some speech - I'm not. I can't. I'm not a psychologist. I'm just a dude with a wound that Jesus Christ loves and uses to write messages like these. That's it... And from my experience, you need to identify your wound. Even before that, you need to identify that you actually have one. How are you going to know? You don't always magically wake up with a broken heart and mental health struggle. This is the case many times, don't get me wrong - when I was dumped, I didn't even make it back to my dorm room before KNOWING I was hurt. But there are times when it's going to be more subtle - you slowly, over time, find yourself feeling either really sad or really anxious, maybe really numb - you feel off, like you're struggling and it's not normal, but unlike me with my relationship you might not have anything to point to and say "this is why." So how do you know? Things will change. You'll feel sad more often, you'll take an unusual displeasure in things (for example work sucks but now you hate it even more than usual), you take up sinful habits (like porn or abusing/being abused by social media and substances), you have less self-control than usual - these are all pointers, but here is easily the number one way to identify that something is wrong: you just want to be alone.

Why is that? Think about it: it's almost impossible to have gotten your wounds and scars from being alone. Chances are, it was other people, opportunities (which involves you and that opportunity, so not just you being alone) - chances are you didn't get hurt sitting in your room on your phone thinking and feeling through things. And, better yet, the chances (you feel, based on the fact that you've been hurt) are that you WON'T get hurt by being isolated. Can't get dumped by nobody! Can't get cut from a team you don't tryout for! At the very beginning of the human race when Adam was alone, God said “It is not good for the man to be alone" (Genesis 2:18). And that's true today, isn't it? We go to school - classmates. Work - bosses and coworkers. The store - other shoppers and workers. Even when you go to a sporting event and all you want to see is the action on the field, even then you're surrounded by a stadium full of fans (other people). I'll do you one even better than that: when you're alone, you'll often think about yourself with others, or you'll go on social media or watch something (which I can almost guarantee will have someone in it, a character or influencer of some sort). As we saw in that passage and all the examples I used, we are clearly hard-wired to be social. So to isolate, to want to be alone, indicates that something is wrong. Now, like I showed when I used all those "other pointers," there are other ways to know that you have a wound. Either way, you now know THAT you have a wound.

But what is it? The quickest way to figure that out is to calculate what it motivating the behavior that you believe makes you wounded. I'm not a doctor this is just common sense. "It's broken" because "it doesn't work like normal" - so then "who broke it" will be "whoever made it stop working like normal." Why are you isolating? Are you afraid of time with others? Maybe your wound is that you value the others see you, and you feel either unseen or seen negatively or at least you have a fear of these things. Why are you watching porn? Maybe your wound is either a breakup or a LACK of relationship or at least a lack of the (temporary) instant sexual and emotional gratifications that porn offers. Why do you use substances so often? Because you want to feel differently, either more or less - what was wrong with what you felt before? Who or what made it wrong to be yourself the way God made you? THAT is your wound - oftentimes, there's nothing wrong, and the wound IS your wound. You're not watching porn because of a breakup, but because of temptations. You're not using drugs to avoid feeling pain, but simply because you prefer the high - in this way, the wound itself can be your true wound. Use common sense like this to identify (1) that you're wounded and (2) what your wound is.

If everything said so far is not enough for you or isn't "working" (which is a really poor way of looking at these gradual processes), then pray (actually, do that first, and I'm serious when I say that because talking to God is way more effective than listening to me, if that makes sense). Proverbs 3:5: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding of things." James 1:5: "If any of you lacks wisdom, you should pray to God and ask for answers, and He will not find fault but will give generously to those who ask of Him." - so God won't find fault, He won't judge you for not having the answers - He will communicate with you and put the message that you need on your heart. Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you search with all your heart." If that doesn't "work" either, then seek the professional help that I cannot offer - again I'm just a dude - find someone who isn't and pay that individual a visit.

So now we've identified your state of woundedness and your actual wound - now we need to prevent it from spreading. Understand that this is NOT the same as your wound deepening, which we will look at next. Think of a knee injury, like when you fall on the ground and scrape your knee - "spreading" that wound would be like scraping your arm - this is when your wound with relationships, for example, becomes your wound with alcohol. "Deepening" that knee injury would be further and deeper injuring your knee - your relationship wound just gets worse. So that's sort of the difference between spreading and deepening, and this is sort of what we mean by them. You need to prevent your wound from spreading to other areas, otherwise you will have more issues and be more hurt than you were at first. I'll give you an example from my life: when I was removed from my church, I felt judged (which was true, I was, but only by the people that did what they did). That obviously impacted me mentally and emotionally, and it made me feel judged not just that night or in that way or by those people - it made me "feel" judged, as if it was a constant state of being. It didn't entirely make me change my behaviors so that others would see me in a positive light, but it certainly made that impacted a little bit, and I felt the need to justify myself in my own mind ALL THE TIME. Early on in one of my classes a few semesters later, I had this obnoxious professor tell me that he didn't "feel I was very committed to the class" because I didn't go to an optional field trip that didn't have a ride to get to - on the third day of class. So early on into the course and into my relationship with him, I felt so judged. I saw those church leaders when I looked at him (not literally, but figuratively). Throughout the rest of the semester I didn't engage in the class as much and often felt that, being less experienced in media (it was a cinematography class) and more of a blue-collar "throw it together on free software" kind of guy, I just felt judged. It felt like the church all over again. All the other students had in home studios and have been editing since they were 9, and I'm just a failed baseball player that barely knows how to use free software that I learned AFTER getting here. I felt judged. I used stereotypes to identify myself and others, and it guided how I saw things. It was me against the world. Here's the problem: it wasn't. It was me against myself. What happened at church was done - it already happened. Don't get me wrong, this professor was a jerk, and these students had advantages before they had compassion, but still - my church hurt had become my school hurt. They didn't say or do anything nearly as bad as the church leaders had - but in my mind they did. I made myself face the world as a hero, when truthfully it was just me against the real villain (myself, my perspective). This can't happen. Your knee injury can't become your arm injury. Think about it like this: you get hurt in a relationship, and so you pursue another one (keep in mind that "relationship" is just an example that you could apply to anything). You start drinking. If you hurt your arm badly enough, you now no longer have to worry about your knee. Here's the problem with that: your arm. So if you're feeling hurt, if something's been done to you, if you've made some sort of mistake, whatever the case may be - do NOT start doing things in your everyday life that are different in an unhealthy way, because this will spread your wound. And it starts small - staying up later, eating unhealthier, feeling judged like I did - over time it gets worse and leads to deadly addictions and numbing feelings, like the ones I've had and still deal with. I'm not speaking from diploma, I'm speaking from experience, which is so, so much more valuable (plus my therapy is free, but anyways). Do not start fighting your battle in more than one battlefield, if that makes sense. If you're struggling from a breakup, the last thing you need is to take up newer things like dating apps and social media and "personal branding" (like when you try to improve yourself but accidentally become the center of your universe) - the diploma would tell you to do everything I just said not to do. "Find yourself, search within." No. What comes in must go out, so it's not what's "already within" but rather what you TAKE IN, and when you "search yourself" you basically become God and take yourself in - the more and more you do this, the more and more it will hurt that you (in all your newfound inner greatness) are doing it alone, still no partner - the expensive diploma guy just made your wound worse and now you, in addition to being heartbroken, are a narcissist.

What alternatives do you have? Jesus Christ. It's that simple. "I am the way" (John 14:6). Acts 17:28 teaches us that "In Him we live and move and have our being." So this idea of "searching inwardly" is stupid - don't search the fallen creation, search the flawless creator (He doesn't have a diploma either and His therapy is also free, which is why I highly recommend praying often, which is His therapy). "I can do all things through Christ who gives me strength" (Philippians 4:13). So yes, "I can do all things" but it's only "through Christ who gives me strength." All our searchings and changes in this time of woundedness need to be "in Christ." It is only "in Him" that we truly live (feel, have life again after being wounded) and move (moving forward from this) and have our being (He is our true identity, not any of these other things that can leave us wounded). And so any "new ventures" will just be distractions, and not only that - you're not ready for them. YOU'RE WOUNDED! It's like an injured fighter signing up for another fight - you'll lose again. You don't have the right mindset or energy or state of mental health to take anything new right now - the self-help gurus, if they aren't so offended that they're still reading, are by this point plotting my death for saying these things. But what they teach isn't the truth. "I am the truth" (John 14:6). The only way to truly live and move, to have our being and find life after being wounded, it's only through Jesus Christ. "I am the life" (John 14:6). You may have noticed that I've cited the verse 3 different times. Here it is in full. John 14:6: "I am the way and the truth and the life, and no one comes to the Father except through me." - so it's only through Jesus Christ that we can truly come to God and find healing. Instead of trying to look to other things to find happiness or fulfillment - isolate and address your wound. You don't need a new relationship - you need to heal from the old one. If you seriously believe that the answer is a new relationship, then this is proof of just how badly hurt you still are by the relationship that you claim to have healed from (keep in mind that "relationship" is just an example that you could apply to anything). So don't spread your wound. Know what it is and keep it there, ultimately healing it day by day through Jesus Christ (which we will talk about later). But it's not just that your wound will spread - Satan will also try to deepen it.

COMPLETELY cut off behaviors that deepen your wound

Understand that this is NOT the same as your wound spreading to other areas, which we just looked at. Think of a knee injury, like when you fall on the ground and scrape your knee - "spreading" that wound would be like scraping your arm - this is when your wound with relationships, for example, becomes your wound with alcohol. "Deepening" that knee injury would be further and deeper injuring your knee - your relationship wound just gets worse. So that's sort of the difference between spreading and deepening, and this is sort of what we mean by them. You need to prevent your wound from deepening and becoming even more intense and painful than ever before.

Sometimes we'll try to numb out our specific pain - if you're broke, you'll play the lottery to be distracted by the ongoing, eternal hope of becoming rich - and when you lose at least there's the next chance, and so instead of feeling your original pain and your new pain from losing you just distract yourself with another chance to win, but at a price (whatever that "soul" thing is that Jesus talked about...) - all the while you're just making the original problem worse by spending money on losing lottery tickets. It's like this with relationships. Out of spite towards the person who hurt me, I pursued a new relationship, and admittedly it was stupid from the beginning given who she was and what the situation was - I own that it was destined to fail. But, for that reason, out of spite, I did it because I wanted to prove that even in that I could find more happiness than I had before, with her. And it worked, in the moment - that was the happiest season in my entire life - that few months. Led to years of pain. This is what deepening your wound looks like. This is why we have to completely hit the switch when it comes to lust, social media, selfishness, and other things. If we give into these things a little bit, we become tempted to give into them a lot, or at least they TAKE a lot whether we like it or not. They make us feel so good in the moment, but in the long run they cause more pain - this is almost the exact definition of what alcohol and substances do to us, so don't turn to or even glance at these things when you're wounded. Hebrews 12:11: "No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it." - while it may be hard in the moment, God is training us through everything we go through and every difficult decision that we make. Discipline is unpleasant in the moment but it lasts eternally and gives results that are worth it. So be disciplined with your body, with food, with your phone, even with your mindset and how you think. "Endure hardship as discipline" (Hebrews 12:7). With these things that we are tempted to turn to when hurt, there's a negative. It's kill or be killed. So have discipline - either you turn these things off and completely, cold-turkey drop them, or they will (over time, and don't let the slow process deceive you into thinking it's ok) have that same impact on your heart and on your faith.

One big misunderstanding you might come to when we look at it like this, is that you'll feel that you're NOT deepening your wound just because you're not doing any of the bad or negative things I've described. That's false. EVERY step that isn't directly and urgently towards healing is a step towards pain. Sounds dramatic, don't believe me? Think back to the example with the knee injury - you scrape your knee on the ground and it gets infected. Moment by moment, that infection is getting worse, and EVERY single step you take will hurt more and more. Even (and PLEASE remember this) steps towards healing will hurt when YOU'RE hurt. Don't blame God or the healing process, just recognize that a knee injury means painful steps, and that EVERY step that isn't a head first dive towards the feet of Jesus, every such action of not fully taking action by submitting all your actions to Him in all that you do on EVERY step of this life and faith journey - every step, whether terrible or not, that you take outside of this will only cause more and more pain. EVERY step you take without taking action you're basically striking your own weakness.

What's the solution? The solution to my knee problem was to open it up and let the nurse put all kinds of disinfectant crap on there - it hurt in the moment but ultimately brought healing. By doing nothing, nothing hurts, but the pain you are building up for yourself (again, each step that you take) is going to be truly unbearable (even eternal, if you want to get deep). I'll give you an example: In 2 Kings 19, Jerusalem was about to be destroyed by this opposing nation. They knew that the other nation (the Assyrians) had a long history of mercilessly crushing people and nations stronger than they, and they also knew that they had no realistic defense. The King of Jerusalem could have NOT admitted this or tried to avoid it (after all, it's embarrassing to admit it and honestly what difference did it make they had no chance either way) - this is what "not treating the knee" looks like. Or, he could rip open the wound and treat it. That's what he did. In 2 Kings 19:17-19 he prays these words: “It is true, Lord, that the Assyrian kings have laid waste these nations and their lands. They have thrown their gods into the fire and destroyed them, for they were not gods but only wood and stone, fashioned by human hands. Now, Lord our God, deliver us from his hand (the Assyrian commander that was threatening them), so that all the kingdoms of the earth may know that you alone, Lord, are God.” Notice something right away - "it is true." That's like saying "yes, my knee is injured, now let's take care of it." The king is ripping open the wound with his very first words - take notice of this. So what is it that's true? That the Assyrians had a history of crushing other nations. That strikes a nerve for Jerusalem. They don't want to talk about it. Maybe for you, you don't want to talk about your trauma, mistakes, whatever the past is. You'd rather avoid it. But it's deepening your wound - treat the knee. "It is true, the Assyrians have laid these other nations waste." He specifically lifted his fear up to the Lord. It was deeply personal - get personal like this. "It is true, God, that I made this mistake" or "that this was done to me" or "that this is still hurting me" or WHATEVER IT MAY BE, take the part that hurts the most and lift it up to God in prayer. Pray a new prayer, each day until healing, to God in order to find healing - and after you are healed, keep praying everyday but this time a prayer of gratitude for having found healing. Here's the best part - after lifting his specific wound up to the Lord in prayer, the king asks for deliverance. After saying "it is true, they are greater," he finishes his prayer by saying "now deliver us from his hand." So lifts up the wound and SEEKS HEALING. It's not just "It is true, God, that I made this mistake" or "that this was done to me" or "that this is still hurting me" or WHATEVER IT MAY BE, but you now add "deliver me" - whether that means "help me to move forward" or "forgive them" or "find healing" or "process this" - whatever being delivered looks like, you need to pray for it and live for Christ as you wait and in all things. Lift your wounds up to the Lord and let Him heal them. The solution to my knee injury was well known even by me, but that knowledge was worthless until I actually acted on it and treated the wound - I know you know, but DO SOMETHING. Pray to God. Lift it up to Him. The context of this prayer is that in 2 Kings 19:14 (just a few verses earlier), the king "spread out the letter (with which the Assyrians had threatened them) before the Lord (presumably by spreading it out in the temple and praying)." That letter was his greatest fear, his knee injury, his wound, and he "spread it out before God." Basically "God, here it is." He lifted it up to God in prayer - do the same. The story ends with the Assyrians never attacking them, but being slaughtered by them (which was a miracle given the difference in strength between these nations). God granted them a victory over their wound and worry, and He wants to do the same for you - lift it up to Him in prayer, but if you don't, and if you turn to other things during this time of pain, then all your are doing is deepening your wound.

Hebrews 12:1-2: "Therefore, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on Jesus." - throw EVERYTHING off, even if "doing nothing" is a part of that everything when you're wounded. Most of the time though it's those "sinful things" that "so easily entangle us" when we're wounded - the Devil tempts us to turn to these things instead of turning to Jesus. That's why we have to "persevere" especially when wounded, and not only do we "fix our eyes" on Jesus (basically focus your perspective on Him, make Him what you focus on and look to) - not only that, but in this race we call life and in this marathon we call healing, we are "running" to Jesus. So turn to Him instead of deepening your wound. The next thing you need to do is realize your value, even though you live with this wound you still have incredible value both to God and this world, and you need to realize it.

Realize your worth in spite of your wound

You have to realize that, despite these wounds that we live with, you still have immense value to God and to this world. Again, despite our wounds and what we go through, these are the Lord's words to us: John 15:3: “You are already clean because of the word I have spoken to you.” 1 John 4:8: “God is love.” - God loves you immeasurably. Jeremiah 29:11: “I know the plans I have for you: plans to prosper you and not harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.” 1 Samuel 16:7: “Do not consider height or appearances. The Lord does not look at the things that people look at, for the Lord looks at the heart.” - you are made in the image of God (Genesis 1:27) and everything He made was made very good (Genesis 1:31, everything including you just the way you are), and He specifically formed you in your mothers womb (Jeremiah 1:5) just the way you are. Jeremiah 1:5: "Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart and appointed you as a prophet to the nations." So before you're even born or even in the womb God loves you! He has plans for you. Job 7:17 (paraphrase): “God thinks very highly of you and pays attention to your life because you matter to Him.”

Psalm 139:13-14: “For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well.” - God created our inmost being. He knows our thoughts, our longings and what we've been through. It was the same thing for the Israelites, which is why He could say "I have seen your misery and heard your despair and I am concerned for you" (Exodus 3:7). God knows about our bad habits, what specifically clicks and doesn't click with us - it's personal, it's our inmost being, and He created it. Satan attacks it. Whether with selfish pursuits, false humility and imaging, sexual pleasures or desires, alcohol or substances - Satan is always attacking from the mind and heart, the inmost being. But God made us "fearfully and wonderfully" so I say that today we take a stand and praise God for this work, and honor it by doing the best we can and taking care of it, again all from the inmost being. The rest of this verse means that we know, no matter how addicted or unattractive or messy or dirty we may feel, we know that God created us fearfully and wonderfully and that we are enough. We don't have to compare, or cut, or drink, or smoke, or dress more or less or differently - there is nothing you have to do - you are enough because He made you perfectly the way you are. Honor that by living for Him and taking a stand against the Devil's work in your life. No matter what your wound may be, you are incredibly valuable to God.

Psalm 103:10: “He does not treat us as our sins deserve or repay us according to our iniquities." - this has bothered me for a long time. Why is God so forgiving, why doesn't He judge sins immediately and have no mercy? Love isn't free and easy - that's affection, infatuation, or sometimes lust, and it's usually based off of what a person can do for you. That's why all these kids in my hopeless generation run around falling in love all the time - it's usually just a crush, get over it. But God doesn't take this approach with us. He doesn't love and forgive because of how great and attractive we are and what we can do for Him - it's based on what He can do for us, especially when it comes to our wounds. That's why "He does not treat us as our sins deserve" - not because you have earned being passed over and given a new opportunity, as the words "sins deserve" imply that we deserve judgment - so why does God hold back? Because when He looks at you, He doesn't see "sins," He sees you. That's why He won't treat you as your sins deserve - because you are not your sins. You are not your mistakes. God sees so much more than that when He looks at you. You are not defined by the past. God sees the difference that He can make in your life by helping you to move forward, and so He went up to the cross so that there could be a difference between what "we" and "our sins" deserve - that's love. As for us, our debt was paid by Him on the cross, so we don't have to live in these sins anymore. We can move forward and find healing from our wounds, and even if we don't, we can know that we are so valuable to God that when He looks at us, He doesn't see us for our wounds - He sees us. He sees you. You are loved by God and you matter to Him.

1 Corinthians 15:10: "But by the grace of God I am what I am, and his grace to me was not without effect." - His grace given to you, no matter who you are or what you've done, "was not without effect." God's grace HAS impacted you, it has changed you, and He sees you as clean, again no matter who you are and what you've done. The author can say that "I am what I am" because no matter who you are or what your wound looks like, the grace of God is freely offered to you to redeem your sins (Romans 3:24) and the image of God, which you were created in (Genesis 1:27) will not be tarnished in His sight. He sees you as valuable, and He wants to forgive every sin and heal every wound so that you can move forward in life and in eternity.

John 8:11: “I do not condemn you; go and sin no more.” - He does not condemn you, He forgives you SO THAT you go and sin no more. Acts 17:28: "For in Him we live and move and have our being." - so we don't have to be defined by our past - we can "have our being" in Christ instead. We don't have to live in our past either, because we can "live in Him." And "in Him we move." We can move forward and receive forgiveness as He totally changes our lives.

Acts 10:15: “Do not call anything impure if I have made it clean.” - He’s talking about you and your past. When He looks at your wound, He sees right through it all the way through to you, because He cares and He loves you, and you are valuable in His sight even if you remain wounded. 1 Corinthians 6:11: “This is what you used to be, but now God has washed you clean and justified your past.” - He has forgiven the past so that the burden can be gone and you can live out a better future for Him. This is why He says “come to me you who are weary” in Matthew 11:28, because He wants you to accept His forgiveness and move forward. Joel 2:12-13: “Even now (even after everything), return to the Lord with all your heart. Change your heart, not your image.” - so you can return to God, but you have to do it even "now" and not later on, and you have to do it "with all your heart" - hold nothing back, and be willing to learn to live with your wounds - He sees you as valuable and lovable either way, and life will go on either way, so this is something that we should learn to live with.

Live your life without things needing to magically get better (living with your wound)

What do we do when things aren’t getting better? An easy hack would be for things to get better and for us to stop being in pain. In pain from a breakup? Just date again. Struggling financially? Just win the lottery. On and on I could go, things can get better, but what if they don’t? Chances are, you’re not in control of your situation. You know what I mean. We’re all going through things that we didn’t ask for, and those things have much greater control of us than we do of them. So what do we do when it’s not getting any better?

We often want to see our wounds get better, but I think that learning to live with them is a better approach. Psalm 27:14: “Wait for the Lord. Be strong, take heart, and wait for the Lord.” So it starts and ends with telling us to wait for the Lord. "When the time is right, I the Lord will do it" (Isaiah 60:22, regardless of what "it" may be in your life, whether finding healing or happiness or fulfillment or something else). Wait for Him. Maybe it doesn't have to get better. Maybe we just get better. I believe we should learn to live with our wounds without needing them to get better. If our situations define who we are, like if we’re happy when things are good and sad when things aren’t, if we win when it’s easy and lose when it’s hard, even if it’s only to a degree if we’re controlled by the situation then we’ve lost ourself. We’re not ourselves anymore, because at best we’re just whatever the situation is. It takes away the ability, it limits us - it's as if the wound, only a scab on your knee, has now become your very heart and soul, and it's infecting and killing you that you have your priorities wrong and you want temporary joy and your own preferred "healing" on this Earth more than the true healing that an eternal, everyday relationship with Jesus Christ can offer you even while you're still in pain. Ephesians 3:20 says that God’s power is at work in us and He is able to do more than we can ask or imagine. So His power is in us, whether we see it or not. The Bible also says that our bodies are Temples of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:18-20), like a container for the Holy Spirit, and it tells us that all things are possible with God (Matthew 19:26, Philippians 4:13). So we are meant to have God’s power, His limitless power in us. I would rather have things rough and face these wounds everyday but have God’s power in me than have things easy or be happy but without God in my life (and, more dangerously, eternity). This is why Jesus said “don’t gain the world yet lose your soul” - ironically, in the NIV version of Luke 9:25, He actually says you would “lose your very self.” So if you throw the towel in, if you need things to be a certain way, if you try to gain things or have things a certain way in this world at the expense of patience and faith, then you lose yourself and you submit to the wound as if it were God. You’re supposed to have God’s power in you, you’re supposed to trust Him when things are difficult, no matter how long they’re difficult for. You’re not supposed to give up or lose heart - Hebrews 12:1-2 encourages us to throw off ALL other distractions and sins, and to keep persevering and focusing our perception and our sight (our pursuit, what we see and strive for) on Jesus - this is better than healing itself when it comes to living with these wounds.

That’s why Galatians 6:9 says to never grow weary of doing what is right, and that if you don’t give up you will be rewarded by God when the time is right. So at what point is it ok to give up? Never! At what point will God reward me (when will the wound go away)? When the time is right. If you’re just looking for the reward (for the wound to go away), then you’re missing out on God’s power in your life. 2 Corinthians 12:9: “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” - I'm not meaning to attack finding healing - it's a great thing to do, but remember that "I can do all things" only if I do them "through Christ who gives me strength" (Philippians 4:13, and it only says that you CAN do them, not that you WILL or WHEN you will, so be patient with the process). This all points to the fact that God needs to be the true priority. Again, I fully understand that healing is good, and we could realistically be healed (or even never wounded at all) and also have God's power at the same time, but if it doesn't work out that way then we must live with our wounds and make God our number 1 priority. God wants His power to be at work within you, that’s why we’re called containers for the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:18-20). Because God’s power lasts longer than money, relationships, our dreams, and anything else that we might pursue. Those things are nice, and having them painfully ripped away from us is why we made this, so trust me when I say that ultimately, those things are not your number 1 identity. If they are, you’re missing out on God’s power in your life.

It’s the power to live a painful life without things getting better. It’s the power to believe God when He says that when the time is right He will do it (Isaiah 60:22, regardless of what "it" may be in your life, whether finding healing or happiness or fulfillment or something else). It’s the power to wait for the Lord, to be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord (Psalm 27:14). That’s the power of God - stop missing out. Let me give you an example of things not getting better, but ultimately there was a purpose for it. The example is of a young boy named Joseph, who becomes an old man through this story of his struggles as he learns to live with his wounds. In Genesis 37 we kind of get the context: Joseph has a ton of brothers, but his brothers hate him. It’s a difficult thing for him. I know some of you have siblings, and you might fight or whatever, but that’s not what this is. He had a ton of brothers, and every single one of them absolutely despised him. It was rough. Life at home was rough. Joseph had one thing going his way though: his father loved him more than his brothers. So Joseph was living a painful life, but he was clinging to this one thing that made him happy. A lot of us do this, we go on dating sites or drink or try to make money, because we want that one thing to make us happy. Here’s the thing though: Joseph’s story isn’t special because of that one thing that he had going for him, but rather because of how things turned out after he lost that one thing and things kept getting worse. As time went on, Joseph’s painful life didn’t get any better - his brothers began to hate him all the more, eventually faking his accidental death and selling him into slavery. So now Joseph is a slave in this distant land, and everyone who knew him thinks he’s dead, and probably wishes he was. He doesn’t have his dad anymore. That one thing he had, yeah even that’s gone now. He’s in a totally new place, with new people, and he’s starting over. Maybe you can relate. Not only did the pain Joseph had not get better, but it actually ended up getting worse and totally hopeless. But God. Remember those 2 words, because they’ll come up later. But God stepped in, blessing Joseph in Egypt, eventually turning him into an influential figure who saved many lives through his wisdom during famines. Now it might look like I’ve ruined the whole point, right? Things weren’t supposed to get better, yet now they have? No, that’s not what happened. Things didn’t get better. Joseph still doesn’t have his dad, actually he’s not even happy in Egypt, he’s just successful. And if you look at it, Joseph didn’t even do anything for himself, it was the saving of OTHER people that made him special and successful. So he’s still in pain and wounded, things haven't gotten better magically, he's still without what he once knew, and yet he can make an impact and help others. That’s the truth here today, that even when we’re down we can help others. Here’s what makes the end of Joseph’s story so cool: he meets up with his family in Egypt and they all move there, and this is how the Israelites ended up in Egypt.

Eventually, Joseph dies and the Israelites are enslaved in Egypt for 430 years. So Joseph is literally dead and yet the pain hasn’t stopped. But don’t look at the pain, look at the purpose. Joseph had a purpose, and he served it without things getting better because they didn’t need to. Things didn’t get better for the Israelites in Egypt, but there was a purpose. The purpose was for freedom. God eventually freed them from the Egyptians, but that’s not the freedom I’m talking about, I’m not talking about things getting better or whatever we might have in mind. I’m talking about being free from needing things to get better. If you’re focused on the pain, you’re missing out on the purpose. Romans 8:28 says that in all things God is working for the good of those who love Him. Look at the wording. In all things. In every pain and everything we go through. Whatever the problem is, if it’s a part of all things, then God is doing what? He’s working. Working. Present tense. It’s not done, it’s not finished, it’s still a work in progress. We’re not healed, we’re healing. It’s ok to not be ok. God is working. It’s ok to still be in pain. God is working. It’s ok if things haven’t gotten better, it’s ok if you’re in pain, it’s ok if you feel like God’s work and plan for your life isn’t what you wanted it to be because GOD IS STILL WORKING! One more time, look at the wording. Who’s He working for? Those who love Him. Joseph chose to love God during his painful life. He chose to love God even after things got worse and worse. Joseph never gave up on loving God, he learned to live with his wounds, and look what happened. God was working in Joseph’s life and He’s working in yours. Joseph loved God through the pain, even when things didn’t get better. Will you? That’s the art of living a painful life without needing things to get better - that's what it looks like to live with your wounds.

Hebrews 11:1 says that "Faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see." So we can’t see it, we don’t actually have the breakthrough yet, we’re still in pain and wounded, we just have the hope that things will get better. All we have is hope in something we can’t even see (breakthrough, things getting better, etc.) - but God. I can’t see deliverance, things haven’t gotten better - but faith. I have nothing the way I planned or wanted it to be, but I have faith that God is at work. I’m still in pain, I wish things were different, I wish the past was different or I wish I was different - but God. He has a plan, He has a purpose for my life, and I’m choosing to believe in what I can’t personally see. But God. I’m going to love God, even when the things I’m going through don’t make sense. I’m going to stop basing my life around myself and the things I have, and I’m going to start basing it around God. That’s why it says in Proverbs 3:5 to "Trust God with all your heart and not lean on your own understanding" - it’s easy to trust Him when things are easy, but when things get tough we tend to lean on ourselves. But God. God is still working, so don’t lean on your own opinions or understanding of things, rather lean on Him even in the most painful seasons, and trust His plan all the way, living your life for Him, even if that means living with your wounds. Romans 8:18 says that "our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us" - learn to live for God and live out His Words in the Bible in ALL that you do in your everyday life, even if that means living with your wounds, and know that you will live forever. with Him in a place where "He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away” (Revelation 21:4). Learn to live with your wounds on Earth and you will live with Jesus forever.

Acts 17:28 teaches that "In Him we live and move and have our being." So it's only "in Him" that we live. We must live with these wounds. "Live." Not every prayer will be answered before you say amen - it took the Israelites 400 years to get out of slavery and hopelessness (which our wounds represent) in Egypt, but if you've ever heard the names "Jesus" or "Moses" or "King David" then you would know that, those names having come from that story, the waiting was worth it.

Hebrews 10:38: "The righteous one will live by faith, and I take no pleasure in the one who shrinks back." - so don't shrink back into merely "believing" - actually LIVE by your faith, and in this way you will learn to live with your wounds in ALL things (Philippians 4:13). 2 Corinthians 4:17-18: “Our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal.” - It’s so easy to focus on the brokenness and pain that we face in our lives and on the things that we don’t have, but it’s important to not lose sight of God, who will never give up on us. If we live our lives in this world trying to get what we can see - success, fame, and comfort - then we will miss out on what we can’t see - a stronger faith, character, and willingness and discipline to do what’s right instead of what’s easy. So don’t pursue or focus on what you can see - the pain you’re in right now, the false riches and comforts of this world - rather focus on the unseen benefit that enduring pain and discipline in this life will bring you. You can’t see God, but He’s there, and the unseen is eternal, while these things we can see (pain/feelings and conditions/wounds, sins and false riches, etc.) - the seen things are temporary and they fade away, and we don't want to fade away with them. Live for Him, doing what’s right, not what’s easy or what you're tempted to do in the moment, and live your visible life for the invisible benefit for those that live for Jesus (the unseen but eternal) and for those who embrace His healing.

1 Corinthians 7:17: "Each person should live as a believer in whatever situation the Lord has assigned to them, just as God has called them." - so learn to live your everyday life, wounded or not, for Jesus Christ in all that you do. It's going to be ok. If it doesn't go away, remember that neither does Jesus. Learn to live with your wounds. However, there is no denying that we can find healing in Jesus Christ, and so, willing to live with our wounds, it is also wise to pursue healing that comes through Him.

Try to find healing through Jesus Christ

We're talking today about living with our wounds and scars because it's not always guaranteed that we will find instant healing, or even healing at all on Earth - Jesus's life on Earth ended on the cross, His greatest pain. He died in His greatest pain. Who's to say the same won't go for His followers? You may bring your pain to the grave, but you won't have to bring it to Heaven, for "He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away" (Revelation 21:4). That being said, just as our Earthly healing isn't guaranteed, there's also no guarantee that we WON'T find healing. So it's not a bad idea to pursue it.

So where do we find healing, then? How should we search? Jesus Christ. It's that simple. "I am the way" (John 14:6). "By His wounds we are healed" (Isaiah 53:5) - He, His wounds on the cross (endured by Him out of His love for us), this is "the way" to "healing." Funny thing is, you already have it. The crucifixion already happened. How then could any teaching of that ancient event make an impact RIGHT NOW in your life and in your heart? Hebrews 4:12 "For the Word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart." - so the Words that God spoke in the Bible are "alive" - of course literature could never physically live, so the point being made is that these Words can be "alive" and "active" in your everyday life and in your heart, and that they can change your "life" in "live time" (in this "present age" Titus 2:11-13 basically "today" no matter where you're at in your life). To say this about the Words of the Bible is very similar to the teaching that, though physically dead in His human body, Jesus is our "living hope" (1 Peter 1:3). So this is all about the LIFE that you can have in Christ, the life that your heart can experience after being so numb and wounded and dead inside. John 10:10: "I (Jesus speaking) have come that they may have life, and life to the full." So we don't have to be dead anymore, our hearts can come back to life. Even to the one who is dead in this way, so wounded and so far from God, it is said in Romans 4:17 that "God gives life to the dead and calls into being things that were not." - maybe your heart is a "not" right now, maybe your healing is  "not" - God can raise it from the depths of hopelessness and call it into being BAM JUST LIKE THAT! if it's what He has planned. But notice that it's "God" who "gives life to the dead" - so only He can call our healing into being, and it's only through God that we will find the life in Christ that we need to really, truly find healing. This is why it's important that we turn to God when wounded instead of to other things. "Look to the Lord and His strength, seek His face always" (1 Chronicles 16:11). So look to Him, not to other things, and don't just do this when you're hurt or in need but "always" - if you only every come to God when you're in need, then you are letting yourself form the habit of distancing yourself from God that you ONLY ever turn to Him in times of need - this isn't true life, it's eternal death, and we need to have the boldness and the discipline to do what it takes in our everyday lives to get closer to Jesus as we pursue healing through Him. Thinking back to Hebrews 4:12, notice that the Word of God "is sharper than any sword" - you don't need "professional help" any more than you need "creational help." God created you and your innermost being and all that is attached to it (Psalm 139:13-14), and He alone knows just what you need (Matthew 6:32). This isn't a shot at therapy, which is great - I'm just making the point that God is your creator and sustainer, so you should "look to Him and seek His strength always" FIRST. He, prayer and reflecting on the Words of the Bible to find healing, should be your first choice in trying to find healing. Again in Hebrews 4:12, the Bible "penetrates" (meaning it makes it's way into) your "soul and spirit" and it "divides them" - it makes changes. Maybe you have an arrogant spirit. Maybe you have a spirit that is convincing you that lust or some other sin is ok. When you read the Words of the Bible, they will make your way into your soul and spirit and they will divide what must be divided and multiply what must be multiplied - God will work in you, within your heart, to do the things that He wants to do. Know that this also applies to the "soul" - maybe your soul is damned to eternal death, but imagine the divisions to that temporary standing that this verse would make "You are already clean because of the Word I have spoken to you" (John 15:3). 1 verse later, in verse 4, Jesus says to remain in His love - it's not just the Words of the Bible that we heal you, but truly leaning on God and remaining "in" His love, in submission to His Words in all that you do. Perhaps your spirit and soul seem crushed and you don't think you can find healing. Remember that the Word of God penetrates and divides our souls and spirits, and His Words are "alive and active" and are at work in your life and heart even in this moment. Psalm 34:18: "The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit." - so when your heart is broken and your spirit is weak, cry out to God and take your strength in Him because He wants to help you find healing. Psalm 62:8: "Trust in Him at all times (even through this), pour out your hearts to Him, for God is our refuge." - so take refuge in Him and cry out to Him as you find healing. Acts 17:28: "In Him we live and move and have our being." - you have to live. You have to move, and move forward. You aren't defined by loss - you have your being in Him. So go. Live. Move. He loves you. Find healing in Him. It takes time. Pray.

Again, Acts 17:28 teaches us that "In Him we live and move and have our being." So this idea of "searching inwardly" is stupid - don't search the fallen creation, search the flawless creator (He also doesn't have a diploma and His therapy is also free, which is why I highly recommend praying often, which is His therapy). "I can do all things through Christ who gives me strength" (Philippians 4:13). So yes, "I can do all things" but it's only "through Christ who gives me strength." All our searchings and changes in this time of woundedness need to be "in Christ." It is only "in Him" that we truly live (feel, have life again after being wounded) and move (moving forward from this) and have our being (He is our true identity). And so any "new ventures" will just be distractions, and not only that - you're not ready for them. YOU'RE WOUNDED! It's like an injured fighter signing up for another fight - you'll lose again. You don't have the right mindset or energy or state of mental health to take anything new right now - the self-help gurus, if they aren't so offended that they're still reading, are by this point plotting my death for saying these things. But what they teach isn't the truth. "I am the truth" (John 14:6). The only way to truly live and move, to have our being and find life after being wounded, it's only through Jesus Christ. "I am the life" (John 14:6). You may have noticed that I've cited the verse 3 different times. Here it is in full. John 14:6: "I am the way and the truth and the life, and no one comes to the Father except through me." - so it's only through Jesus Christ that we can truly come to God and find healing.

Jeremiah 17:13-14: "Lord, you are the hope of Israel; all who forsake you will be put to shame. Those who turn away from you will be written in the dust because they have forsaken the Lord, the spring of living water. Heal me, Lord, and I will be healed; save me and I will be saved, for you are the one I praise." - we know in the Bible that those going to Heaven are "written in the book of Life" (Revelation 21:27). So then, to be "written in the dust" like this passage says, likely implies the opposite - and it's for those who "forsake God and turn away from Him." This is why, even when we're not hurt, it's so important to lean on God and His love and His teachings as our number 1, to "look to the Lord and His strength, and seek His face always" (1 Chronicles 16:11). It's only when we "turn away" like the passage said, only when a relationship (for example) becomes more important than our faith, only then do wounds come in. You might object to that, hear me out. I had convinced myself that God was still my number 1 when I was with her, and I was probably right I was a pretty good kid back then (much better than now, I confess). But if losing that relationship made me lose my mind that badly, and if the seasons that followed included me compromising the faith and the Words of the Bible so badly, then at the very least God wasn't ENOUGH of a priority - He is constant, we can always count on Him, so it naturally becomes tempting to dispose of Him. He'll always forgive you, but your longings for instant pleasure want to be met with lust in THAT EXACT moment, and so you sin (apply this example to all things). If we want to find healing, we have to take a totally different view of things. We have to see and TREAT (in our everyday lives, in how we live including in the little things) God like He's GOD, like we CAN'T lose Him - because truth be told, we can't. And if we have Him, we have all that we need. So "heal me, and I will be healed, save me, and I will be saved, for YOU are the one I praise." - see, it's only "through Christ who gives me strength" that "I can do all things" (Philippians 4:13). Only God can really, truly heal your heart and save your soul for eternity. But how do we achieve this? We search for Him in all things, we lean on Him in all things, and we make sure that HE is the one that we really, truly praise and prioritize. Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - so He DOES hear you when you pray, and you WILL find Him and find healing through Him, whether that's just in Heaven or even on Earth as well - but are you really, truly seeking after Him with all your heart? Are you really willing to submit to Him in all that you do, again from the heart in your everyday life? Bring Him your broken heart, follow Him with all of it, and He will heal you (Psalm 34:18). Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways, submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - so God is the one guiding our direction, making our paths straight. But sometimes that's a path that doesn't go where we wanted. Sometimes it leads straight through hardships and wounds. But either way, if you trust Him with ALL your heart and hold nothing back, even in times like these, and if you lean not on what you can understand and how you feel about the setbacks and defeats and waiting and times of not finding healing, if you submit to Him in all you do in all things (living your daily life according to the Words of the Bible), He will establish the path even if it's hard to appreciate where it goes - and the path leads straight to His eternal healing (Revelation 21:4) regardless of how long it takes us to get there (again remember that Jesus died in His greatest pain but now sits at the right hand of God, and follow His example by putting God first and following Him and living for Him in all that you do).

Remember earlier that I said that God is truly all that we need. Psalm 23:1: "The Lord is my Shepherd, I lack nothing. He leads me besides green pastures." - if God is the leader and the shepherd and you follow as His sheep, then you lack nothing. Nothing you're busy or tempted with or longing for is greater than Him. You can lie down in a sheep's favorite meal, green pastures, yet eat nothing - because He is all that matters. Pursue Him as the shepherd and leader of your life. In Luke 9:25 Jesus asks the question “What good is it for someone to gain the whole world and yet lose their soul or their very self?” So look, whatever you’re chasing these days, even if it’s the whole world and everyone in it, what good is it to have these things if it not only costs you your soul, but also your very self because this is who God made you to be, this is who you are, so when you gain other things and lose God, you don't just lose your soul, you also lose your "very self" because this is who He made you to be. Isaiah 53:5: "By His wounds we are healed." - we have already found healing from our sins and mistakes, and we are no able to come to God in Heaven and receive His life (John 14:6, if you think about it) - this should be enough for us, even when our wounds hurt the most. Keep the perspective that God is all that we need and that when we have Him, we have all that we need, no matter how painful things are, and no matter how long.

A lot of us feel like something is missing, like we just have a hole and we're trying to fill it in. A lot of us are trying to fill in that hole with a relationship or with pornography or at least a desire for a relationship, maybe for others it's trying to find friends and fit in and have good standing within the community. For others it's all about making money or having a good job. These are pursuits. And yet, having pursued them and chased them, somehow it is never enough? This is why in John 4:13-14 Jesus says "Anyone who drinks from this water will be thirsty again. Whoever drinks the water that I give them will never thirst. The water that I give them will become in them a spring of water welling up to eternal life." So these things that we pursue, some of them are good, but ultimately none of them can fulfill us. They will all leave us thirsty again. Only God can fulfill us. The water, the reason behind this baptism, the way of life that He wants to offer us, this is all that we need, and it wells up like water in a well, it wells up to eternal life. So whether we rise or fall here on Earth, we know that by following God we will find eternal life and find our fulfillment. When Jesus Christ was crucified, it meant He lost on Earth. He never got married, He wasn't rich, people didn't like Him (they actually crucified Him) - so all these things that we pursue, he found none of them - and yet He received eternal life because He followed God. So this is what it looks like to follow God, even up to the cross, where "by His wounds we are healed" (Isaiah 53:5). Luke 9:23: "Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themself and take up their cross daily and follow me." Whoever WANTS to be my disciple. God won't force you to follow Him. And it's daily. Deny yourself, follow God instead, take up your cross DAILY. So deny yourself and your habits/desires - they can't fulfill you. Choose to be His disciple, take up your cross, whatever it may be, each and every day. This is how we find fulfilling, eternal life, and it's only found through Jesus Christ. No other god could compare to this. This is a way of life, and this way of life is life itself, and it is how we will find healing through God.

Psalm 30:5: “Weeping may stay for the night, but rejoicing comes in the morning.” I read this passage figuratively - it doesn't literally mean that tomorrow morning your pain will go away and you will be happy. It says that this will occur "in the morning" - what makes it morning? A sunrise. A new day. Eventually, when the time is right (and this is more than a literal day of course), God will set the sun into motion in your life. New things will come, the pain of the past will wash away, and there will be "showers of blessing, in season" Ezekiel 34:26. In season. "When the time is right, I the Lord will do it" (Isaiah 60:22). This can be painful. Sometimes our pain lasts an entire lifetime - but this is nothing in the face of eternity. And "blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted" (Matthew 5:4). Romans 8:18: "Our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us." - so if the pain that we face now (emotionally, mentally, physically, in terms of loss, in terms of fighting temptation, heartache, whatever it may be) - if these things are nothing in the face of eternity, then we can't fall when faced with these things, otherwise our eternity becomes them. Give into depression, and you become depressed - it's that simple. Stand firm, knowing that you are blessed for going through and growing through these things in this lifetime. 1 Peter 1:6-7: "In all this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. These have come so that the proven genuineness of your faith - of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire - may result in praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed." - so by going through and growing these things, it proves your faith to be genuine, and it reveals Christ in you (and glorifies Him). Want to play football? You get hit. Want to follow Christ eternally? Stuff happens, and if you fall because of this then you were never standing or walking with Christ to begin with - but that's the beauty of God - His message to you is not one of failure, but of the opportunity to succeed. So get back up, take step one, and follow God in all things forever. Find healing through Him.

Psalm 23:4: “Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I will fear no evil, because God walks with me.” - it says “even though I walk,” and “God walks with me” because God KNOWS that you go through things and He wants to BE THERE WITH YOU! Water often represented anxiety or depression or turmoil in the Bible because there were anxious storms, depressing droughts, and unnerving floods - yet Jesus told Peter to walk on the water. He knows you go through these things, and He wants to guide you through them. Let Him. Search for Him in the things that you watch and listen to and think about and pursue. Proverbs 17:22: "A cheerful heart is good medicine, but a crushed spirit dries up the bones." - there's a lot of medicine in this world, but positivity and letting things go is "good" medicine - God wants to give you REAL healing. Psalm 42:11: "Why, my soul, are you downcast? Why so disturbed within me? Put your hope in God, for I will yet praise him, my Savior and my God." - this is DEEP, having a "soul" that is "disturbed" and not only that but also "within" you. This could represent depression, and it could represent all the feelings of doubt and negativity period that we as people will experience in life. So what do you do? "Yet" praise - things aren't easy, but you praise Him through that storm, as you pursue finding healing through Him.

Psalm 40:2: "He lifted me out of the slimy pit, out of the mud and mire; he set my feet on a rock and gave me a firm place to stand." What stands out to me about this verse is the details. Slime. Mud. This isn't a stereotypical way of describing what God has saved us from. Christians often talk about being saved from Hell and all this other stuff, but slime? Mud? Why? Because those things are very easy to get caught in, like quicksand. And in this life, many of us are stuck. That's why the verse said that God gives us a firm place to stand - He wants to give us the foundation that we lack. When it comes to our addictions and bad habits and mistakes and even just our mental and emotional problems, He doesn't want us to be stuck in these things and going back and forth, but rather He wants to place us on the rock that is Jesus Christ so that we are out of the pit ALTOGETHER! That's why He sets your feet on the rock like it says in Psalm 40:2, and He gives you a firm place to stand. But you have to act on this, He won't make you. Joshua 24:15: "Choose this day whom you will serve, whether God or another." - so make a decision TODAY: lust, or God? Put yourself first, or God? Choose this day who you will serve. Proverbs 4:23: “Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it" - God wants to protect you from the things that leave us hurt and wounded. Matthew 6:21: “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” So live your life well for God and keep Him at the center of your desires and goals and entertainment, because these things determine where you go ("there your heart will be" - is your heart going to Heaven, or Hell? - how you live during the time that remains will be a massive indicator of this). Luke 9:23-24: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me. For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it.” - so if you try to keep things the way you’re comfortable, the way you’re used to, then you lose all of it eternally, but if you’re willing to do this work, to deny yourself and follow Him instead in the daily - if you really want to be His disciple and you bear a cross to show it, then you will have it all eternally, having given it all to Him on this Earth as we are called to.

Psalm 103:2-3: "Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits, who forgives all your iniquity, who heals all your diseases." - he heals us. Psalm 147:3: "He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds." Proverbs 4:20-22: "My son, pay attention to what I say; turn your ear to my words. Do not let them out of your sight, keep them within your heart; for they are life to those who find them and health to one’s whole body." - so again with life, if we listen to the Words of God (the Bible) and if we are intentional to live them out as we pursue healing through Jesus Christ, then we know that these Words "are life to those who find them" - so seek them out (read the Bible, pray, etc.) as you pursue healing here today. Jeremiah 29:13: "You WILL find me when you seek me with all your heart." And so we do this, we make this pursuit of the Lord "with all our heart" - we "pay attention" (think back to the Proverbs 4 passage), and so we "turn our ear to His Words" and we "do not let them out of our sight," we "keep them within our hearts" because we know that they "bring health" to one's "whole body" of which your heart and mind are a part. So the Bible, Jesus Christ, will bring healing to you. Psalm 119:9: "How can a young person stay on the path of purity? By living according to your word." Psalm 119:105: "Your Word is a lamp for my feet, a light for my path." - lamps aren't for your feet, so clearly this is a figure of speech illustrating that the Bible will show you how to walk with God in your everyday life. In John 17:17 Jesus says that "your Word (He was talking to God) is truth" - so it's not just that the Bible spoke of the truth or was true - it literally IS truth. John 14:6: "I am the Way and the TRUTH and the Life, and nobody comes to the Father except through me." - 1 Timothy 2:4: "God wants all people to be saved and come to a knowledge of the truth" - so coming to know Jesus ("the truth") is how we are saved. In the same way, come to know and live out the Words of the Bible, which are also truth (this is what Jesus did during His life on Earth) - this is how we are "saved." John 8:31-32: "If you hold to my teaching (like if you actually live it out), you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free." - healing is available here today.

Isaiah 40:29: "He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak." - so when you're not strong enough, when you can't live through or get rid of the wound on your own, know that we have a great God who watches over us and loves us and will take care of us. He wants to help you to find healing today. That's why, when we're not strong enough, He gives us grace (on the cross and in our everyday lives for our sins). He increases your power and gives you the strength. That's why, day by day by the grace of God, we can keep going, and we can keep fighting through our pain and fighting for a better future, even when we're not strong enough. 2 Corinthians 12:9: "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in your weakness." - so when we're weak, we lean on Him. Joel 2:12: "Even now (even after everything and from the depths of temptation), return to the Lord with all your heart." - so you can return, but do it “now” and “with all your heart” (hold nothing back). Mark 2:17: “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.” - God wants you to come as you are, not hide because you’re not who you should be. God is gracious enough to meet us where we are in our sicknesses and sins, and He wants to heal us. But we have to respond. He has called us to repentance - answer the call and move. Wherever you’re at, that’s where He wants to be to meet you. He healed the sick, the weak and the outcast. So it’s ok to not be ok. He met them exactly where they were. He didn’t heal the sick at hospitals, He did it on the side of the road where they had been left for dead. He met them exactly where they were - He feels the same way for you. So lean on Him when you're not strong enough.

1 Peter 2:24: “He Himself bore our sins in his body on the cross, so that we might die to sins and live for righteousness; by his wounds you have been healed.” - so Jesus Himself went up to the cross to take that specific wound of sin away from us. What makes you think He doesn't want to take this wound away too? No matter what healing you might look like, understand that "Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever" (Hebrews 13:8). He was there for the Israelites and Jews and all people back then, He's there for us right now and, as we try to find healing through Him, He will always be there for us "forever" no matter what we go through and no matter what it looks like, we know that God is "with us, our refuge and strength, ever-present during our times of trouble (Psalm 46:1). "And so we know and rely on the love God has for us. God is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in them" (1 John 4:16). God lives in us, He can truly bring us the healing that we need, and He can bring us to that promised land, just as He did for the Israelites. "When the time is right, I the Lord will do it" (Isaiah 60:22). Ezekiel 34:26: "There WILL (not we believe, there WILL, we KNOW that there WILL) be showers of blessing, in season." And so we trust God's timing and His provision, because we know that He can bring us healing. Philippians 4:19: "And my God will meet all your needs according to the riches of his glory in Christ Jesus." - only God can really truly meet our needs. I love how it said "all" your needs - only God can and WILL fulfill you. Allow Him to bring you healing, as our time draws near to a close today.

Here's the most important verse that you'll read in this entire piece - Psalm 73:26: "My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever." Your "flesh" represents your skin, basically your humanity (elsewhere in the Bible it represents the sinful work Satan does in our everyday lives, but I do not think this is one of those times). So if your flesh "fails," if you remain wounded and scarred, consider this: wounds and scars physically take place on our "flesh." So God is trying to send us a message here. What is it? That "Your flesh and your heart may fail, but God is the strength of your heart and your portion forever" (Psalm 73:26). So you "may fail." God admits it right there, your flesh may fail (meaning you still may be wounded, for a time), and your heart also "may fail" - you might still struggle and face heartbreak. But even then, even when you fail and ae hurt and can't seem to overcome, you have to realize that the strength of your heart isn't based on how strong YOU feel, or on if YOU feel wounded - "God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever" (Psalm 73:26). It's not about finding a new relationship or new job or whatever it is that hurt you, it's not about unmaking a mistake that either you or someone else made - the true strength of your heart isn't based on the things that we as humans would see and pursue (for "my ways and thoughts are higher than your ways and thoughts" Isaiah 55:9 and we know that Jesus is "the way" in John 14:6) - it's based on God. How's your faith? I'd rather be wounded with God than healthy without Him, because that health will perish, and not only am I referencing eternity, but also this world - what if you DID get hurt? It's much harder to navigate without faith. Again, like I said, it is better (when the 2 are in opposition, which is NOT always the case) to have God than to have the temporary things/people/statuses/feelings of this world that we like to gratify ourselves with in order to be "happy." Remember that Jesus, the greatest man ever, died bloody red on the cross while sinners surrounded him in joy. Outward and temporary happiness isn't the way to Heaven - "I am the Way" (John 14:6, the words of Jesus). This is why the Apostle Paul (a man who gave up everything he knew and all the respect he once had to endanger himself for the sake of ministering for Christ) describes himself in 2 Corinthians 6:10 as “having nothing, yet possessing everything.” And he’s right. It’s better to have nothing, to be alone and have shattered dreams, yet in your heart, your character, your faith you have everything, because you have God and when you have Him he is everything. Lamentations 3:24: “The Lord is my portion; therefore I will wait for Him.” - if you have God, you have everything, and it is worth waiting for Him because even if you have a broken heart, even if you have wounds, we know that when Jesus comes back and rewards us (if we choose to follow Him from this point on in our everyday lives), we know that it will have been worth it. Psalm 27:14: “Wait on the Lord; be strong, take heart, and wait on the Lord.” - the verse both begins and ends with “wait on the Lord.” So be strong, take heart, wait for Him. Whether it's a relationship, or an opportunity, or whatever it is in life - wait for Him. If your relationship with God and your trust in Him was authentic, the delay would not get in the way. Porn because you were tired of waiting for God's plan wouldn't get in the way. If it did, and you fell along the way, then truthfully you were never standing to begin with... But that's ok. Get back up and take step one. Be strong. Take heart. Wait for God. He is what we need, He's the Shepherd, the Portion. If something else causes us to stumble, then we have made that thing to be god in our everyday lives. This is idolatry in the 21st century. We're no better than the ancients, who worshiped cows and wood and stone. But like I said, it doesn't have to be this way. Make the adjustment and prioritize God, because if He is ALL THAT WE HAVE, like when Job had EVERYTHING you could want and then LOST IT ALL - Job was alright, because he had God. God is our "portion," and thought that might not feel like much as we live with wounds and try to pursue healing - we know that, eternally, this portion is worth it. So, if the time calls for it, leave out all the rest and take pride in the Lord Jesus Christ being your portion.

Isaiah 53:5: “He was crushed for our sins, and by His wounds we are healed.” - 2 Corinthians 5:15: “He died for us so that we can live for Him.” so find life through Jesus Christ today, find healing through Him, for He says "I am the Life" and "the only way" (John 14:6).

John 1:4: "In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind." - John 10:10: "The thief (Satan) comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I have come so that they may have life, and life to the full." - so Satan is trying to steal from us, whether it be our purity or happiness or purpose, and he is destroying and killing us - causing death. But Jesus came so that we would have life - mission accomplished we're all alive - but now life to the full. Not just alive, but really truly living, no longer dead inside. Not just a pulse, but a purpose. True life. Life to the full. And it lights up the darkness. This is why in Psalm 23:4 it says that "Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you walk with me." So God walks with you in the darkness. The real, true life that Jesus Christ has for you, no matter where you are at, this is what will light up the darkness. This next step, this purpose, is literally the light of all mankind. That's why, to the person living for Jesus in all that they do, Jesus says in Matthew 5:14-16: "You are the light of the world. Let your light shine, so that others may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in Heaven." So shine that light, live that new life for Christ, because it can also save those around you. Deuteronomy 30:15: "See, I have set before you today life and prosperity, death and destruction." - the table is set "today" in every little thing that you do or don't do - don't miss out on truly finding life in Christ by living for Him. - Joshua 24:15: "Choose this day whom you will serve, whether God or another." - and now we are that part of the process where we come full circle to help others with these things, even if we're still struggling in them.

Help others (a full-circle moment, and you can be at your lowest when you do this by the way so don't overlook it if you're still hurt and feel incapable of helping)

John 13:34: "As I have loved you, so you must love one another." Matthew 10:8: "Freely you have received; freely give." - at this point, you may still be wounded and in immense pain - know that it is still possible to help others from that position of weakness (though obviously much less likely, and you should continue to seek growth, help, and your own healing through Jesus Christ). The point is that, having learned what you've learned here, and having experienced God in the way that you have, you are now better equipped to help others with their similar (or even same) struggles with their wounds and with all else that they face - we all struggle in this life. Being wounded probably wasn't helped by the fact that your support system (or lack of support system) couldn't protect you from that wound (or, at least, couldn't prevent it). So go out into the world and be that support system for someone else.

Mark 16:15: "Go into all the world and preach the gospel to all creation." - "all" the world, including supporting people just by sending them a message and checking in on them and being there for them even when you're busy. Matthew 5:16: “Let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in Heaven.” But why? So that others may "see" the pattern you set for them and "glorify God" by following it. You can't walk in a dark house, so you turn the light on. In the same way, how will those who don't understand come to Christ unless you give them a light? Romans 10:14: "How can they hear without someone preaching to them?" People won't hear unless you preach to them. Remember this: a lamp never talks, it just shines. Let your light shine through your ACTIONS and in your everyday life, habits, thoughts, feelings and all. Let your light shine, so they may glorify God. A lamp doesn't absorb the heat for itself, rather it uses the heat to give light to those in the room. In the same way, we don't hold back when it's hard - no, burn it all. Get uncomfortable, do the difficult things that God wants you to do. Put your light to use so others may be saved and so God may be glorified. And remember that the verse said "all the world." Galatians 6:10: "As we have opportunity, let us do good to all people." - all people, no discrimination, just as Christ did not discriminate on the cross. 2 Timothy 4:2: “Preach the word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage - with great patience and careful instruction.” - be prepared even when it's "out of season." Even when it's not Sunday. Even when they're hostile or don't believe what you believe and don't think the way you do. Be prepared. They may ask, why should I believe? How do you know He exists? Why does He allow evil? Be prepared but remember that ultimately you preach God, so it's His strength and not your own that will reach others. Romans 2:21: “You, then, who teach others, do you not teach yourself? You who preach against stealing, do you steal?” - if you don’t practice what you preach, even if you preach a good thing, then you're a Pharisee and are blocking others from God. Psalm 78:1: “Hear my teachings, listen to my Words.” - learn from God in order to teach about Him.

1 Corinthians 13:4-7: "Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres." So loving God, loving your neighbor, THIS is what that looks like. Be patient (both with others and with God's plan for your life). Be kind. Don't envy or be arrogant but be completely humble, gentle, patient and kind. Don't seek your own good, but put God and others first. Don't be easily angered but be patient. Forgive others - He forgives us, so in the same way be kind and compassionate and forgive others. Love "always perseveres" - this stuff is difficult especially when you're busy and irritable - God is calling us to try our best and persevere in living out this love He commands. When people are annoying, persevere. When tempted, persevere. God is love (1 John 4:8), so being more Christlike consists of living out these qualities. Ephesians 5:1-2: "Follow God’s example and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a sacrifice to God." - give something up and make sacrifices like Christ did on the cross. Hebrews 10:24-25: “Let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing.” Daniel 12:3: "Those who are wise will shine like the brightness of the heavens, and those who lead many to righteousness, like the stars for ever and ever." - we will shine eternally if we do these things, helping others and living for God in all that we do. Thanks for reading.

Reflecting Jesus in all that you do ("Christ in me")

1 John 4:12: "No one has ever seen God; but if we love one another, God lives in us and His love is made complete in us." - when we live for God and keep Him within our hearts and at the center of our actions and intentions, when we "love one another," then even though no one has ever seen Him before, they will see Him through your actions. Be the change. "Christ in me." Let your light shine. After all, you're made in the image of God (Genesis 1:27), so reflect that image.

So then, what does loving others look like? 1 Corinthians 13:4-7: "Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres." So loving God, loving your neighbor, THIS is what that looks like. Be patient (both with others and with God's plan for your life). Be kind (it's not small, God requires it). Don't envy or be arrogant but be completely humble, gentle, patient and kind. Don't seek your own good (self-seeking) but put God and others first. Don't be easily angered but be patient. Forgive others ("keeps no record of wrongs") - He forgives us, so in the same way be kind and compassionate and forgive others. Love "always perseveres" - this stuff is difficult especially when you're busy and irritable - God is calling us to try our best and persevere in living out this love/service He commands. When people are annoying, persevere. When tempted, persevere. God is love (1 John 4:8), so being more Christlike consists of living out these qualities.

Ephesians 5:1-2: "Follow God’s example and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a sacrifice to God." - give something up and make sacrifices like Christ did on the cross.

1 John 3:18: “Don’t love with talk and speech, but with actions and in truth.” - reflect God in your actions. "Christ in me." Thanks for reading.

Completely killing sins in our everyday lives

Romans 6:23: "For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord."

Many have wondered what the exact costs of sin really are. In Romans 6:23 we see it laid out. The "wages" (something you earn, like if your wages were a certain rate per hour) of sin is death. So with sin, you earn death. It doesn't say how much death, which has caused some to believe that it isn't a big deal, but I would caution against that way of thinking because it DID say that the sins earn death, so this WILL be costly and isn't something to overlook or skip past. I also believe that the Bible is clear: each sin is just as costly as the other sins. James 2:10: "For whoever keeps the whole law and yet stumbles at just one point is guilty of breaking all of it." - this should discourage us against that "smaller sins" mentality that we use to justify things like swearing and selfishness and not giving 10% to the church and other sins that we incorrectly label as "smaller" and "not that big of a deal."

So if sin earns death, then we know that "the gift of God is eternal life in Jesus." Basically, where with sin we have death, with God we have life - and so clearly the 2 are opposites. In regards to this, Luke 16:13 says: "No one can serve two masters." This is why, as Christians, it is impossible to have both. 1 John 3:6: "No one who lives in him keeps on sinning. No one who continues to sin has either seen him or known him." - so the objectives and facts are made very clear here. What then are we called to do? Colossians 3:5: "Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature." We are called to KILL these sins ("put to death" and "Earthly nature" make clear that the author was talking about totally killing off sins). And God gives us choices, free will.

God loves you so much that He doesn't force you to follow Him - He loves you enough to give you the choice. Just as it says in Philippians 4:13: "I can do all things through Him who strengthens me." So I can do all things, but what will I choose to do? Choices, choices, and more choices - we see it in the Bible, and we see it in our everyday lives. That's why it says in Joshua 24:15 to "choose this day whom you will serve." THIS DAY, not tomorrow or next week or year or later down the road. Today. These aren't ancient verses to the Israelites, this is God's message to you today. It says in 1 Corinthians 6:12 that “I have the right to do anything, but not everything is beneficial; I have the right to do anything, but I will not be mastered by anything.” If you want to look at that, click that, think that, drink that, smoke that, say that, and be that, then that's your choice. But not everything is beneficial. Be careful. And God doesn't want you to be mastered, addicted. And maybe you are. But it's not too late. God cares about your addiction. In Mark 1:41 it says that Jesus was "indignant" (or basically "pissed off or upset") because someone was sick, helpless. And in Mark 10:14 it uses the same word when Jesus sees people being held back. He hates that you're addicted, and He wants to bring you back. This is why it says in Deuteronomy 30:4 that even from the farthest distance, God wants to bring you back, and in Joel 2:12 it says even now, even after everything, return to the Lord with all your heart - so you can return, but do it “now” and “with all your heart” (hold nothing back). In Psalm 1:1 it talks about the sinner, who goes from walking, to standing, to sitting. You slowly shut down, and that bad habit that you wanted to stop, well it becomes an addiction, and it ends up stopping you. This is why in Luke 9:25 Jesus says "don't lose yourself." So yeah, you can do anything you want. But it's not all beneficial, and please, if you take anything away from this, please don't be mastered by anything.

So if we want to be "born again" then something must die. I believe, in our case, the sins in our lives must die - we must crucify them in our everyday lives. Galatians 2:20: "I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me." Romans 6:8: “Now if we died with Christ, we believe that we will also live with him." - this means if we, like Christ, die to sins and put off that old way of living/doing things, not if we just die - everyone dies, but not everyone spends their eternity with Jesus. This is deeper than "everyone wins no matter what." Romans 6:1-2, right before this, says: "Shall we go on sinning so that grace may increase? By no means! We are those who have died to sin; how can we live in it any longer?" - so this idea that we can just keep sinning and hide behind God's forgiveness is wrong. God does forgive, and there's no distance He won't bring you back from, but He only heals those who are willing (and it was the same thing with Jesus). Convincing yourself that God will forgive, and then moving into sin, it just doesn't work. It doesn't show a willingness because there's no willingness there. Christ didn't just "dislike" sins - He steered clear of them and killed them on the cross. He died. He lost something. He was never rich, never in a relationship, and never received the recognition that He deserved (people hated and crucified Him). In the same way, we must "die." Lose. Lose with a purpose. When Jesus said "Father forgive them," instead of coming down from the cross and crushing His opponents, it made Jesus the loser - temporarily. He died so He would live eternally. So what has to die today? A searching? A playlist? Certain language, maybe feelings? It's between you and God - but put it to death so you can truly live. Colossians 3:5: "Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature: sexual immorality, impurity, lust, evil desires and greed, which is idolatry." - I'm not asking you to "try" because nothing will happen. KILL THESE THINGS! Die to sins, live for Christ. Philippians 1:21: "For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain." - so put personal gain and sins to death and truly, wholeheartedly and willingly live for God. And if you die having lived this way, you will live forever.

Revelation 3:20: "Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with that person, and they with me." Jesus stands at the door of our hearts - will we let Him in? Everyday, we have opportunities. Deuteronomy 30:15: "See, today I set before you life and prosperity, death and destruction." - Joshua 24:15: "Choose this day whom you will serve, whether God or another." - just like how for Adam, the Garden of Eden was already prepared for Him, in the same way we have opportunities put in front of us "today," and must make a choice between God and alternatives "this day." We know that "the wages of (what we earn with) sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal LIFE in Christ Jesus" (Romans 6:23). So when God says that He has "set life and death before us today and we must choose" - He basically means this. Sin. You open your phone, now what? Choose this day. You are talking to someone and it's tempting to talk about yourself instead of listening, or the temptation to badmouth or slander someone pops up, or any type of temptation that we face in our everyday lives - choose this day. God stands at the door of our hearts. Therefore “Above all else, guard your heart (be watchful of what you desire and take in), for everything you do flows from it (Proverbs 4:23).” Matthew 6:21 "Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also." So be careful what you pursue/treasure, because this will determine where your heart stays during this life and forevermore (there your heart will be). Pursue the Bible and living out the Words and God's plan for your life instead of things that will fade away. Matthew 24:35: "Heaven and Earth will pass away, but my Words will never pass away." This all stems from the person that you are in your everyday life, in the daily and the common, when nobody is there, when you're on your phone, when you're watching TV or listening to music, just that everyday life and there's usually a choice to be made between God/what's right and an alternative. Proverbs 27:19: "As water reflects the face, so one’s life reflects the heart." So live for God and pursue Him in all things. Thanks for reading.

Feeling like you're not enough/not able or good enough on your own

This comes in many forms: insecurities about your abilities, looks, or even insecurities about if God will really accept you for who you are, or if you can really overcome the things you now struggle with on your own - in what is written here today, it is my goal to speak to all of these and more, though I admit that will be difficult.

The first thing that we absolutely have to get right when we look at this is: who are "we"? Who am "I"? It's confusing, because Romans 3:23 teaches that "all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God," but Philippians 4:13 also teaches that "I can do all things (including overcoming sins as a part of 'all things') through Christ who gives me strength." Don't these verses then contradict each other? No. In Philippians 4:13, "I" can only do all things when it's "through Christ," whereas with Romans 3:23, when only "I" am mentioned and not Christ - then I fall short. So Christ gives the victory, whereas "I" on my own am not enough. So who am "I"? I am a creation. The first human being, Adam, came from God's command - "let us create mankind in our image" (Genesis 1:26). And so it follows that, given the benefit (and also curse) of free will, the creation would fall short of the perfect (Matthew 5:48) creator. Think of it like this: I write a paper for my college class. That paper isn't better than me, and even a really good paper probably won't receive a perfect score - the paper isn't enough on it's own. It needs a writer. The paper is nothing without a writer. And this is also our identity. Acts 17:28: "For in Him we live and move and have our being." - so it's only "through Him" (much like Philippians 4:13) that we are truly able to live and move and have our being as humans. "We" live "through Him." No writer, no paper. No creator, no creation. So we are basically God's subservient - and this isn't a bad thing. The very first thing God says to the human being in Genesis 1:28, before even introducing Himself, is a word of blessing (encouraging the human to do well and prosper) - from this, all the way to His sacrificial love on the cross and to today with God's love through His forgiveness, in all these things we see that being God's subservient is not a bad or toxic thing, but a loving thing. If you take issue with this description, consider this: would you care if your paper was offended that you saw it in this way? Absolutely not - that being said, you would still take great care of your paper. "And so we know and rely on the love God has for us. God is love." (1 John 4:16). In short: we are nothing without God. So, naturally, our insecurities are CORRECT: we are not enough on our own. But that's the thing: we are not on our own, we are never alone, and so it's ok to fall short because we can lean on God.

Psalm 46:1: "God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in times of trouble." - so no matter what we're going through and no matter what we face, we know that God is with us and is "ever-present" when we need Him. Joshua 1:9: "Do not be afraid and do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go." - so no matter what you go through, no matter where God leads you and no matter where your path goes, know that there's nothing to be "afraid" or anxious about, and that we don't have to be "discouraged" or depressed either, because we know that God is with us on our path. There's probably no better verse to wrap together what I'm trying to say than this one right here: Psalm 23:4: "Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil because you walk with me." - the point I'm trying to make is that YES, on our own we fall short and are not enough - not enough to overcome our habits, not enough to make a difference, and not enough to make it to Heaven. Not enough. But here's the thing. We are NOT on our own. No matter what valley we walk through, no matter what we face or what has you worried and facing these insecurities right now - no matter what it is, we know that "I will fear no evil because you walk with me." - so we KNOW that God is "with us" - in Matthew 1:23 it's made clear that one of Jesus's Names, Immanuel, actually translates to "God with us." We "will fear no evil." Basically, there's no reason to have these insecurities. Why not? Are things easy? No. It is "the valley of the shadow of death" - we have all sorts of reasons to fear and have insecurities. The reason that we don't fear isn't because things are easy or even manageable or because we're enough on our own, but simply because "He walks with us." We "can do all things" - "through Christ" (Philippians 4:13). We can "fear no evil" - "because He walks with us" (Psalm 23:4). And so we face the reality that being insufficient on our own isn't the worst thing. 2 Corinthians 12:9: “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”

So then, when it comes to these insecurities and when it comes to the things that we're insecure about (the things that need to be addressed), what do we do? If you're looking at it like this, you've got it wrong. "We" don't move "He" does. Exodus 14:14: "The Lord will fight for you; you need only to be still.” - this doesn't mean we just sit still and do nothing - it means that when God moves, we follow. He calls us in the Bible to overcome lust - we follow. I don't quit lust through my own strength, but through Him when He "makes His power perfect in my weakness" (2 Corinthians 12:9). It's that prayer, that heartfelt connection to God when you're going to fail - this is what delivers us. To "be still" doesn't mean nothing. It means stop moving in a way God doesn't. Psalm 46:10: "Be still and know that I am God." - so even here, to "be still" implies doing something - "know that He is God." Follow HIS way, for He is "the way" (John 14:6, the same passage that refers to Him as the only way to Heaven). So "we" don't "do all things" unless it's following Him, "through Christ who gives me strength" (Philippians 4:13). And so we know that we truly can do all things, we can even move mountains, but we have to have faith, and we have to call on God from the heart and submit to Him in all that we do.

Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - but how can God hear us when we pray silently or in our hearts/minds? So obviously God isn't talking about physically hearing us, but rather that if we are truly invested in praying, whether out loud or not, He will know and will respond by revealing Himself to us - but we have to search with all our hearts, there has to be a purpose, these aren't just empty words. Psalm 145:18: “The Lord is near to all who call on Him, to all who call on Him in truth.” There's a difference between calling on God and calling on Him in truth. So yes, the Lord is close to those who call on Him - to those who call on Him in truth. So are we being genuine? When tempted, we should pray to God. But are we really willing to submit that temptation to Him, or are we just praying so that we have an excuse to sin and can say that at least we tried? We need to be honest ("in truth") with God and ourselves. When you pray, is it genuine? Are you grateful? Striving for more and more will make your gratitude turn to empty words from a bitter heart that just wants more and more - and one too many is never enough, so learn to quit striving and be grateful before it's too late. When we pray to God, do we mean it? Jesus didn't want to be crucified, and so He prayed “My Father, if it is possible, may this cup be taken from me. Yet not as I will, but as you will" (Matthew 26:39). Did Jesus really mean it when He said "not my will but yours be done, lead me where you want me God"? Yes, and here's how I know: Jesus prayed not to be crucified, said "your will, not mine" - and then got crucified. He wanted something from God but He didn't NEED it that way - He was willing to follow God if the answer wasn't what He would have chosen. That's what it looks like to "call on Him in truth." So do that when you're tempted and He'll be near - it won't be instant and magical freedom from temptation (again not my will but yours be done), but God will be near, and He is right there with you as you fight - but are you even fighting? Are you even calling on Him in your life - in truth? Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - so seek God with all your heart. Hold nothing back. Flee from sexual immorality (1 Corinthians 6:18). Center your desires and your entertainment around God. Break the habits, submit the temptations to Him. Hold nothing back - do this "with all your heart, and you'll find Him." Call on Him in truth, and He'll be near.

And so we understand that our insecurities are justified: on our own, living apart from Christ in what we do, we are not enough. But we are not called to live this way. Romans 8:8-10: "Those who are in the realm of the flesh cannot please God. You, however, are not in the realm of the flesh but are in the realm of the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God lives in you. And if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, they do not belong to Christ. But if Christ is in you, then even though your body is subject to death because of sin, the Spirit gives life because of righteousness." - so if you live in your sinful flesh on your own, apart from God's commands in what you do, you are not enough - but it doesn't have to be that way. You can live in the realm of the Spirit, not the flesh. The Spirit of God can dwell in you, for Jesus Christ in our hearts is "God with us" (Matthew 1:23). In reference to the fact that he is not enough on his own, the Apostle Paul writes: "What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body that is subject to death? Thanks be to God, who delivers me through Jesus Christ our Lord!" (Romans 7:24-25). So "what a wretch" we are without God. We'll never make it on our own, but we are also fully confident that with Him we will never fail because "love never fails" (1 Corinthians 13:8) and "God is love" (1 John 4:8).

Philippians 3:8-9: "What is more, I consider everything a loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them garbage, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ - the righteousness that comes from God on the basis of faith." - so we can consider these things that we are insecure about to be nothing more than "a loss" because we know that the pursuit of Jesus Christ is far more important, and that with Him we ARE enough, through Christ we CAN DO ALL THINGS (Philippians 4:13), and we know that with Him all things are possible (Matthew 19:26). So we, like Philippians 3:8-9 makes clear to us, do not need to have our own righteousness, we need to have faith in Jesus Christ, faith the size of a mustard seed to move the mountains in our lives (Matthew 17:20). If we are "found in Him" then we know that it's only "through Him" that we get to live and move and have our being (Acts 17:28) and it's only through Him that we will overcome. Apart from Him, we have reason to fear and be insecure. But we don't have to be, because God is enough FOR US and He doesn't need us to be great or good enough, but simply to have hearts that are willing to pursue Him in what we do in our everyday lives.

2 Corinthians 8:12: “If the willingness is there, the gift is acceptable according to what one has, not according to what one does not have.” - if you’re willing, God will accept you. It’s according to what you have, not what you don’t. God will accept you for who you are, for the past you do have, not for who you think you should be or for the perfection that you don’t have. You just need to be willing. God doesn't want you to wait until you're that perfect version of yourself and the timing is right - He'll take your gifts and respond with mercy and eternal acknowledgement right now if you're willing. Draw close today. Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart."

So God's love for us is perfect and through Him we are enough, but we can't turn away from Him and reject Him. Jonah 2:8: "Those who cling to worthless idols turn away from God’s love for them." We know that God's love for us is perfect, but we can (and do in our everyday lives) still push it away. Romans 8:38-39: "Neither death nor life, angels nor demons, present nor the future, nor any powers, height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Jesus." - no sins or addictions or anything in the past can keep you from God. Romans 8:31: "If God is for us, who can be against us?" - so I'm sure by now you've seen the pattern - there's nothing that can overcome God. His love is inseparable from us, and nothing could stand between us, but here's the thing... nothing has to. You can also "turn away" from God's love in pursuit of idols (Jonah 2:8), and then you forsake Him. Idols were like alternatives to God in Bible times - we have our own versions of them today, whether through lust, the music industry, putting ourselves first, or depriving God of our time for other things, or something else. Nothing can stop God's love, but if we turn away, then we no longer see it. So be intentional and look for it. 1 Chronicles 16:11: “Look to the Lord and His strength; seek His face always.” - I love that the verse tells us to actually look. I mean, we all know good and evil, we get the whole God thing, but really - do we look? Do we seek? I feel like a lot of us are just kind of rolling by everyday, and if something pops up, it pops up - but this is not how faith should work. It's hard to find something when you're not looking. A lot of us are looking for our own things. But relationships, money, comfort, security and success are all destined to perish at one point or another, so instead of seeking these things we should be seeking God. Matthew 24:35: "Heaven and Earth will pass away, but my Words will never pass away." - even Heaven will pass away, so don't seek Heaven as a reward and don't seek the things of this Earth as a pleasure - seek God's purposes by reading and living out His Words.

No matter how far away we are, we know that we can return to God and that with Him we can find forgiveness and be enough. Deuteronomy 4:29: "But if from there you seek the Lord your God, you will find him if you seek him with all your heart and with all your soul." - God wants you to return and have fulfillment in Him, but are you holding anything back? A habit, addiction, feeling? You can return to God, He is forgiving, but you have to do this "with all your heart." He doesn't need you to be good enough - He needs you to be willing enough to let Him be your main pursuit with the time that remains. Psalm 46:1: “God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in times of trouble.” - He doesn’t leave when things get tough, He’s “ever-present,” meaning He’s always there for you. Mark 2:17: “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners.” God is gracious enough to meet us where we are in our sicknesses and sins, and He wants to heal us. He has called us, but we have to respond. A call unanswered isn't a call, it COULD HAVE been one. God doesn't want you to miss out on His purpose for your life and eternity. He has called us to repentance - answer the call and move.

Jeremiah 29:13: “You will find me when you seek me with all your heart.” We are enough through Jesus Christ, so we should call on Him from our hearts and lean on His power in all that we do in our everyday lives. Thanks for reading.

Facing uncertainties

Whether you are of the Christian faith or not, I believe that what is said here about facing uncertainties will be of help to you - though we will, unapologetically, view this through the lens of the Christian faith. In John 16:33, Jesus makes a claim: “I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.” - this is the verse that people always use to make the point that "God promised us we would face hardships on Earth." In this world, we will face trouble. So then why on Earth would He be so daring as to say that "I have told you these things so that in me you may have peace"? Look at the wording - "in me" and "but take heart, I have overcome the world." So even when things are a mess in this world, we know that Jesus lived in it and lived a sinless life - He overcame the world. He was poor, never had romance, faced temptations - pretty much any worry or desire that we face, He faced (Hebrews 2:18). And He overcame (Hebrews 2:18). So even though things are a mess and we face uncertainties in this world, we know that He overcame. Even though the things we face and think about in this life have a tendency to take away our peace, we can "have peace in Him." So that in me you can have peace, He said. I believe this taps directly into the meaning of Psalm 46:1-3: "God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam and the mountains quake with their surging." It also reminds me of Psalm 23:4, which says that "Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you walk with me." - so the uncertainties don't go away. In this world, we DO face trouble. The mountains and the waters, they DO quake and surge. The valley IS dark. Things aren't easy. We're not comforted "because the Bible said so" - no it's the darkest valley, it's the world falling apart, it's troubles and hardships in our everyday lives. The reason we have peace is because we have it "in me" - in Christ. Remember that "I can do all things" but only "through Christ who gives me strength" (Philippians 4:13). When we have faith in Christ, things can remain uncertain. We can walk through the darkest valley, and fear no evil - not needing things to become lighter, but rather finding our comfort in the fact that "He walks with us." God is "our refuge and strength" and is "ever-present" in our times of need, like Psalm 46:1 said - He is the one we lean on in times of uncertainties, not ourselves or some sort of quick fix for our circumstances - we lean on Him.

Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways, submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - so trust God with "all your heart" meaning that we don't need to control the timing of things and we won't lean on our own understanding and desire of things - we are willing to wait for Him and submit to Him "in all our ways," including in the little things like trusting His timing and being grateful and trusting Him with sincerity and positivity. He will "make your paths straight." It doesn't say where the path is going, but only that God is establishing it. He will do it on His timing and according to His own plan. A true Christian would accept following Christ instead of needing Christ to follow them. Proverbs 16:9: “In their hearts humans plan their course, but the Lord establishes their steps.” - and again, we don't need to see these things, we just need to believe. They can remain uncertain, we just need a faith that believes through the storm, through the uncertainty. John 20:27/29: "Stop doubting and believe. Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.” - Hebrews 11:6: "And without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him." Psalm 42:11: "Why, my soul, are you downcast? Why so disturbed within me? Put your hope in God, for I will yet praise him, my Savior and my God." - this verse is DEEP. This isn't just a bad day - this is having a "soul" that is "disturbed" and not only that but also "within" you. This is more than a bad day. This could represent depression, and it could represent all the feelings of doubt and negativity period that we as people will experience in life. So what do you do, in such a hopeless situation? "Put your hope in God." Romans 8:24: "For in this hope we were saved. But hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for what they already have?" - so we don't hope in what we've seen or known - that's not hope it's factual. I don't have "faith" in the laws of gravity - I have easy, confident belief based on facts and on what I can see. It's DIFFERENT here. You CAN'T see it. Whether it's a relationship, or a spark, or things getting better or you getting closer to God, whatever "it" is, truthfully we don't get to see it - we have to believe and have faith. In such hope we are "saved." So you put your hope and faith in God even in long or confusing or anxious seasons and even when you can't understand or feel hopeless. Then what? "For I will yet praise Him." I love the word "yet." It's not "things are easy/I can see a clear path, so praise God" - it's ok to praise God when things are good, but be carefully not to ONLY praise God when things are good. Sometimes we have to "yet praise" God. I can't see it, it's been so long, whatever the case may be - yet I will praise Him. Without this type of faith or trust or belief in God and His plan, we show that what we have is fake and, at best, based on us being materially blessed. Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - wherever the path goes (it didn't mention because we don't get/need to know), keep trusting in Him and living for Him in everything as He establishes your life.

Psalm 139:23: "Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts." - submit the uncertainties to Him.

1 Kings 20:28: "Because the Arameans think the Lord is a god of the hills and not a god of the valleys, I will deliver this vast army into your hands, and you will know that I am the Lord." He's not just God when things are easy - He's God through the difficulties and uncertainties. He's God when you're going through it. He's God when you can't understand, when you feel hopeless. He's not just God when you're on the hills up top celebrating, He's also God when you're in the valley struggling. Psalm 23:4: "Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me." - so even in the deepest hardships and darkness God is with us. But the verse said, "even though I walk," so we must walk through these things, and we know that God walks with us. This is why He said "and you will know that I am the Lord" and it's always why Psalm 46:10, a great verse for anxiety AND uncertainty, says "be still and know that I am God." - in the midst of our uncertainties, we KNOW that He is God, even if everything here on Earth falls apart we know that we will ultimately be ok. That’s why it says in 2 Corinthians 4:18 that we should "fix our eyes (basically, focus or turn your attention) not on the things we can see, because they are temporary, but rather on the things that we can’t see (a reference to God and the spiritual realm), because they are eternal." So in the face of "troubles" of "dark valleys" of "uncertainty" - faced by all these things, we KNOW that He is God. "And if God is for us, who can be against us?" (Romans 8:31).

Psalm 46:10: "Be still, and know that I am God." We all have an excessive amount of worry in our lives. Even strong believers that don't have anxiety, rare as they are, still have these things that hinder them. There's uncertainties, confusion, a lack of clarity, and honestly we just don't know sometimes. Why things are the way they are, what will happen, when, if we will be ok - whatever the case may be, the mind races and there are a lot more Maybe's than we would prefer. One of them is that we wonder if we really belong to God. Another is if things will be ok. There are many more, and our minds tend to overthink and waver back and forth - be still. Look at the passage. Be STILL. If you were fighting a battle, why would you be still? Because the battle isn't yours to fight, it's God's, and He will WIN, whatever that may look like according to His will (which DOESN'T always line up with ours, though His plan is to eternally prosper us Jeremiah 29:11). Exodus 14:14: "The Lord will fight for you; you need only to be still.” The battle is God's. It's not just that we are confident - look at the passage. We KNOW that He is God. Trust Him. Be still. When you overthink or try to move too much (whatever that may mean in your life, maybe you date or trust or scroll or think or drink or worry too much) - your wild moving and living does not help. God is God, and we KNOW that it is what it is, so why get in the way? Matthew 6:27: "Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life?" Another thing we worry about is time - yet we actually LOSE time when we worry! Jesus is right: whether you worry or not, you can't impact the outcome, so stop thinking when you should be trusting, stop thinking when you should be doing. Time, life, relationships, faith, money, whatever - it is what it is, and thinking about it won't change it, at least not for the better.

Another thing that we "know." - Romans 8:28: "And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him and have been called according to His purposes." - so we KNOW, we can have uncertainties in this life but still we KNOW. What do we know? That God will take care of everything and give us the result that we're looking for? No, we know that "God works." Pay attention to that wording. Not "He worked" or "He will work" - though both would have been accurate. It specifically said "He works" to make the point that not only has He done great things in the past (creating everything, splitting the seas and bringing the Israelites to the promised land, walking on water, dying on the cross to forgive all our sins, etc.) and not only will He do great things in the future, but "He works" and so we trust that He is CURRENTLY at work and in control, even if we can't see it or aren't in the position that we want to be in whatever it is that we're worried or uncertain about. And it's not just that He works, but He works "for the good," and so we can trust that even if His plan includes a lot of waiting or setbacks, even then it is "for the good." Again "in all things God works" - in all things, even the little/insignificant things, God has a purpose and is working for the good. But God is the one working. So these things come from Him. But not ALL things - Jeremiah 29:11: "I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." Understand that going through totally dark things is NOT "God's plans" because "my plan is not to harm you." But if His plan is to "prosper" you eternally, then this might involve going through the required hardships here on Earth. But nothing "harmful." Suicide, murder, rape - it's hard for good things to come from this, it's just straight up harmful. But breakups? Firings? Never getting what you wanted? It happens, and sometimes you need it for eternal prosperity. Aside from this distinction, which is really important, we can safely say that everything is "from" God and that He "works" (present moment) "for the good" - so we can trust that, even in the face of uncertainties, God is constant, and constantly at work for the good, even in those smaller or less talked about things. Again we KNOW this - uncertainty is laid to rest when we lay it at the feet of Jesus.

Philippians 4:6-7: "Do not be anxious about anything, but in all situations, pray, and the peace of God, which is beyond understanding, will guard your hearts and minds in Christ." - so again, remember that earlier passage where Jesus said that He has told us these things so that "in me you may have peace." (John 16:33). We see here that the peace of God will guard our hearts and minds "in Christ." This is all "in Him." Matthew 19:26: "With God all things are possible." - but remember that it has to be "with God," so it has to align with His plan and we must involve Him in our everyday lives and situations, leaning not on ourselves but on Him.

Uncertainty seems to be the only certainty in this life, so there's no need to try to change it. At this point, knowing that we are guaranteed to face hardships and uncertainties (John 16:33, also just common sense), having accepted this, we are left with the better alternative to trying to control everything: change the way that your mind and heart respond to the uncertainties and hardships that we face in this life. Colossians 3:1-2: "Set your hearts on things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things." - think back to Philippians 4:6-7. It tells us not to be anxious - implying that there are reasons to be anxious. God knows that we face this, and He admits it here by saying "don't be anxious." He understand us. That's why Psalm 23:4 says "even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil because you walk with me." It very easily could have just said "I will fear no evil because you walk with me" - but there was an emphasis: He KNOWS that we walk through the darkest valley, and we STILL don't have to fear - not because things are easy, but because He is with us. In the same way, He KNOWS that we have reasons to be anxious and uncertain, but even then in all those different situations - "in all situations, pray, and the peace of God, which is beyond understanding, will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus" (Philippians 4:6-7).

He says in 1 Peter 5:7 that you can "cast your cares on Him because He cares for you." - Notice the word "cast"? These things that we're holding on to, that we care about and are so uncertain about - these things are demons in our minds sometimes, it becomes too much. They are literally demons - what do you do with demons? Cast them out. Where? "On Him." Give it to God (whether through prayer, reflection, trust, whatever it may look like for you). It doesn't make the problems go away, but it puts them into perspective. Let me use this analogy: I have a full bottle of water, and I hand it to my friend because I trust him to take care of it. The water bottle is still full, but now instead of me holding it my friend is. In the same way, our problems don't go away even one bit when we give them to God, but when we let Him take care of them, it gives us more peace and it is better for us. If I held a bottle of water for a while, no big deal. For a few minutes, still no. A couple hours later I want to set it down. If I hold it forever I will go numb. So set it down, whatever you're holding on to. Whether it's the uncertainty, or maybe it's your anxiety, depression, addiction, secret, sins, feelings of pain, the ones you've lost - stop holding on. The water isn't going anywhere when you cast it on Jesus, things in this life will remain just as uncertain and difficult (John 16:33 but we can find peace in Him), but for your own sake you need to stop holding on. Why is God so kind, so willing to have us cast our cares and burdens on Him? "Because He cares for you." He knows and He cares, so reach out in genuine prayer and be willing to respond to God from the heart with changes in your life and mind and heart. Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - so hold nothing back here today as you cast your cares, your uncertainties and all other things, at the feet of Jesus, and lean on Him.

Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways, submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - so God is the one guiding our direction, making our paths straight. But sometimes that's a path that doesn't go where we wanted. Sometimes it leads straight through hardships. But either way, if you trust Him with ALL your heart and hold nothing back, even in times like these, and if you lean not on what you can understand and how you feel about the setbacks and defeats and waiting, if you submit to Him in all you do, He will establish the path even if it's hard to appreciate where it goes, and so we can give our uncertainties to Him. Thanks for reading.

Having voices in your head

The first thing I want to say is that this shouldn't be overlooked. A lot of people hear that it's "voices" and they write this off as crazy. I can assure you that what we are talking about today, the specific way that we will define and look at "voices" in our everyday lives, will be very realistic and relatable even to those outside the faith. We'll first, since it might be different than you would have expected, identify what a "voice" is and really what it looks like in general to have Satan trying to influence you today in your daily life, and then after that we will look at distinguishing between good and bad forces or "voices"/influences, and then we will look at realizing that Satan's power is limited/fighting back against the voices, and finally we will conclude by looking at submitting to Christ and finding freedom.

What's a "voice" and what does it look like today to have Satan try to influence you?

One of the variations of the definition of the word "voice" is "a particular opinion or attitude expressed." At this point, you may realize that this doesn't have to be an actual audible voice. When people say they "have voices in their head," very rarely does it mean that Satan actually spoke to them and told them to do something - often times they just "feel it" or somehow feel compelled to do something, as if by a voice, but with no sound. Any method through which an opinion is expressed is considered a voice. So social media, so full of porn and Satan's narrative, could quite literally be the voice in your head. That temptation. Maybe even another person. Anything that functions in your life to push a narrative - voices can be good, bad, neutral, and anything beyond/in between. That being said, typically voices are from demonic forces and they compel you to do wicked or at least wrong/selfish things.

There are a few examples of this, believe it or not, in both the Old and New Testaments. In Mark chapter 5, Jesus is talking to a demon possessed man that He is in the process of healing (I make it sound like a casual conversation, but I imagine his possession made it chaotic to even be there, for what it's worth). In Mark 5:3-5 we learn that this man's demons made him violent, and they even made him cut (self-harm) himself - these are not the things that God wants for our lives. So naturally, this is from demons and it's a symbol of Satan's narrative for our lives. In Mark 5:9 the demons speak on BEHALF of the man, answering Jesus when He asked what his name is (to which they replied "legion, for we are many" - making clear that it was not a man speaking to Jesus, but demons through the body of a man). So we see, with this man, a literal, audible voice. But here's the takeaway from that: they caused him to sin and harm himself, and they suppressed him from encountering Jesus - we should expect the same today when we examine this topic - Satan's influence in our everyday lives will be much like this.

We also see in the book of Job, specifically chapter 1 verses 6-12 and chapter 2 verses 1-6, Satan speaking to God. He basically makes the claim, with his voice, that Job was only a faithful follower of God because he did not have enough hardships in his life - and so Satan asks God to be able to torture and tempt Job. So this is Satan's influence in our lives, to try to bring down hardships and temptations on us and to try to disrupt our relationship with God and our following of His commands - this is what Satan was doing in the life of Job. So anything that pushes you in this direction, whether it's social media, temptation, insecurity, or any type of feeling or force at all - anything that moves you in this direction is from the devil and could be considered a voice.

Another example comes from the Old Testament - this time, instead of a demon speaking THROUGH a man, we will now see the much more common form of voices: the Devil spoke TO a man named Joshua and spread his narrative in his life through that. Zechariah chapter 3 tells the story of this guy named Joshua. Joshua was the high priest, he was like the ultimate religious leader from his day. So he loved God, didn’t sin that often, right? Wrong. In Zechariah 3, Joshua wasn’t at church - he was at the throne of God, and he was wearing crimson red, and the Devil was standing there accusing him to God. Here’s what that all basically means: Joshua died and was at the throne for judgment day, was wearing crimson red because he had lived a life of sin, and Satan was there to present the case to God to condemn him to Hell. Game over, right? God’s angry, right? Wrong. Here’s what God says to the Devil in Zechariah 3:2: “The Lord rebuke you, Satan! This man is a burning stick snatched from the fire.” Here’s what that means: God rejected Satan’s case, pulled Joshua out from Hell (though he was certainly doomed), and God sent Joshua back to Earth with a second chance, and obviously with one heck of a message to send the world about the importance of sin. Hear me on this: this doesn’t happen every time someone dies. This isn’t an invitation to sin and be forgiven automatically. It’s just a one time story showing God’s forgiveness. But Joshua received that forgiveness, and went and made the impact that God told him to make in the world by living for God. We have to do the same. If we say “God will forgive,” and keep sinning, then we are abusing God’s grace, and that’s hard to explain when our time at the throne comes. But here’s the takeaway: God knows that we feel guilt, and He knows that we have that voice, that Satan in our head. And that voice will do what Satan did - not only tempt you and make you feel a plethora of things (whether pride, depression, or anything beyond and in between) - not only that, but Satan made this man feel guilty for the mistakes that he had made, as if God had rejected him because of it and more sins were inevitable and acceptable. So when Satan convinces you that it's ok to "just do it once more" because you're already so guilty, or because it's not that big of a deal, or whatever the case may be - anything that leads you into sin and guilt and farther from God and His commands in your everyday life - this, not always some raging demon from a movie, is what it's like to have voices in your head. They make you feel like you're not good enough. They make you feel like you're TOO good. They make you misinterpret the Scriptures and what God wants for us. On and on it goes, and so it's very important that we make the distinction between the good and evil forces that we will encounter in our everyday lives.

Distinguishing between the good and bad forces (who's who?)

Not every voice is bad. Not every influence is bad. This is an important distinction to make. However, you will also hear things like "follow your heart" and "search within" - it's important to remember that not every voice and influence is GOOD, either - sometimes your heart is misled, and what's within is influenced in the wrong way. So it's important to not just blindly accept or reject anything - we need to make the discernment between good and evil.

1 John 4:1-3: "Dear friends, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God, because many false prophets have gone out into the world. This is how you can recognize the Spirit of God: Every spirit that acknowledges that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is from God, but every spirit that does not acknowledge Jesus is not from God. This is the spirit of the antichrist, which you have heard is coming and even now is already in the world." - so we see it right away: "do not believe every spirit." What I like about that most is that doesn't say what to believe or not believe. It could have said "don't believe them all as good" and it also could have said "don't believe them all as bad." But it didn't. God knows that we need to be able to make the discernment between good and evil. This is why He simply says "do not believe them" - because, regardless of the supposed belief or claim, these forces need to be tested and identified - "but test the spirits to see whether they are from God."

So how do we know the difference between good voices/forces and bad ones? Well, 1 John 4:1-3 lays it out very plainly: "This is how you can recognize the Spirit of God: Every spirit that acknowledges that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is from God, but every spirit that does not acknowledge Jesus is not from God. This is the spirit of the antichrist." - so basically, acknowledge God = good, does not acknowledge God = bad. But what does it really mean to acknowledge God? Well, to acknowledge Him of course means to admit and even proclaim His presence, but think about it like this: if I were "acknowledge" the president, it wouldn't just mean shaking his hand and calling him the president - it would also include submitting to his authority as president, unless I find something wrong with him and no longer acknowledge his power. In the same way, "If you love me, keep my commands" (John 14:15). So if we are truly acknowledging God, we would do the things that He calls us to do in the Bible. THIS is where our answer comes in: do the forces/spirits/voices (whether social media, a person in your life, etc.) draw you closer to God and to keeping His commands, or do they pull you away? There is no in between, because the Bible is so deep that it calls us to "basic decency" (Philippians 4:8), and so even secular sources will go one way or the other (likely the hell bound way if they do not "acknowledge" God). Do the forces/voices/things in question call you acknowledge God in the way that you live your everyday life, or do they guide you to spend that devotion elsewhere? This is why it is not said of the fruit tree that "you will recognize it by what it wanted to be" but rather “Make a tree good and its fruit will be good, or make a tree bad and its fruit will be bad, for a tree is recognized by its fruit" (Matthew 12:33). So what's the fruit? What grows from the tree in question? Does it bring you closer to God or farther from Him? Closer to decency or farther from it? Reflect on this when considering which voices/influences (again whether feelings, social media, or ANYTHING in your life) to empower and which to work against. Have an honest reflection and act on it. If anything is good or from God, you should be able to realize it, as God will reveal Himself, whether through a message that He puts on our hearts or through something else. Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with ALL your heart." - this is why God is able to say: "Taste and see that the Lord is good." - because if the voice or influence in question were really a good thing or something from the Lord, we would be able to taste that, to see that, and to test it. It would be noticeable. Take the same approach when it comes to Christians - are they really following Christ? Taste and see. Remember that the tree is recognized by the fruit that it produces. And we know that with God, He wants to give us the answers that we are searching for. James 1:5: "If any of you lacks wisdom, you should pray to God and ask for answers, and He will not find fault but will give generously to those who ask of Him." - so God won't find fault, He won't judge you for not having the answers or knowing what the next step is - He will communicate with you and put the message that you need on your heart. And when we do empower Satan's voices/forces, we know that we are protected by God and will be ok - but we have to make the conscious decision to fight back.

Realize that Satan's power is limited, and fight back against the voices

Knowing the difference between good and evil when it comes to these forces is hugely important, and assuming that you do have that discernment - now what? I know what's right and wrong, but now what? This is the question that Christians and others often ask themselves as they fall into behaviors that they know are wrong, yet shy away from the things that they know are good (possibly things that are morally good but require discipline and sacrifice and selflessness in the moment). So what do we do? Fight the bad, embrace the good. We'll talk about submitting to Christ and His forces next (embracing the good), but for now we'll look at "fighting the bad" - fighting back against Satan's forces/voices in our lives. Again remember the formula: fight the bad, embrace the good. Romans 12:21: "Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good." James 4:7-8: "Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. Draw near to God and he will draw near to you."

It says in James 4:7-8 that if you resist the Devil he will flee from you, and that if you draw near to God He will draw near to you - again, fighting the bad and embracing the good. If you truly resist Satan, try to fight back against your sins and habits, and if from the heart you are willing to make whatever sacrifice it takes to draw closer to God (whatever this may look like, maybe stepping out of the room or putting the phone down when tempted, hitting pause or praying when frustrated, etc.), then Satan will fail ("and he will flee from you"), and God will respond to your willingness by drawing near to your heart. So resist today. The closer you draw, the closer God draws. It's all completely up to you. Almost 3 billion people identify as Christians - they have "a relationship" with Christ. But many of them aren't very close at all. They neither know nor care to know or act on words like these from the Bible - they still have a relationship with Christ, but it's not very close. That's why the verse said that if we draw near, God will draw near to us - you have to be the one to move. You have to "resist the Devil" if you want to see him flee. You have to fight back against the voices in your head, against the dark forces that try to pull you in to do the wrong things in your everyday life. Once you resist, don't just sit around expecting the temptation to go away. That's not what it meant by "and he will flee from you." The verse didn't mention HOW MUCH we would have to resist the Devil, how much he would flee, how much we had to draw near to God, or how much He would draw near to us - the point is that the choice is yours. If you resist Satan only a little, then your reprieve from temptation and darkness will be very short. If you only barely know Christ and never try to get closer, then you may still "know Him" but you won't be close, and He's not going to force you to move you have to be the one to choose. The more and more you resist, even if life gets harder and harder and it feels like it's not working - if you keep going (the verse also didn't say how LONG you would have to resist the Devil or draw near to God or how LONG it would take for the Devil to flee or God to draw near) - if you just keep going, then you can trust that the Devil and his evil forces and voices WILL flee, and God WILL draw near to you with His goodness and the good forces that are of His side. Isaiah 60:22: "When the time is right, I, the Lord, will do it." - so we know that we must have a willing heart and put in an effort, but that ultimately only GOD is the one who can do anything, including bringing us healing. "I can do all things" but only "through Christ who gives me strength" (Philippians 4:13). And doing all things includes overcoming even the darkest, most consistent forces and habits/addictions in our lives. For "With man (by the power of humanity) this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.” - again it's only with God, only through Christ that we can win these battles. But here's the thing: WE CAN! That should be a huge focus and takeaway when we look at these voices, theses forces in our everyday lives. We know that all things are possible, we know that we can overcome the enemy (fight the bad) - and one of the most important parts of overcoming the enemy is realizing just how limited his power is.

Satan's power is limited. We have to know this and act on it. NOTHING can separate us from God's love - God is the ultimate power, and so by submitting to Him we are perfectly safe - but, in submitting to Him and His commands in our everyday lives, this is where we fall short - nonetheless, Satan's power is limited and nothing can separate us from God's love. Romans 8:38-39: "Neither death nor life, angels nor demons, present nor the future, nor any powers, height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Jesus." - no sins or addictions or anything in the past can keep you from God. So if Satan's power is limited, if "no demons or powers or anything at all" can separate us form God, then we are given a choice, and we must choose God in all that we do. Revelation 3:20: "Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with that person, and they with me." - Jesus stands at the door of our hearts - will we let Him in? Everyday, we have opportunities. Deuteronomy 30:15: "See, today I set before you life and prosperity, death and destruction." - Joshua 24:15: "Choose this day whom you will serve, whether God or another." - just like how for Adam, the Garden of Eden was already prepared for Him, in the same way we have opportunities put in front of us "today," and must make a choice between God and alternatives "this day." We know that "the wages of (what we earn with) sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal LIFE in Christ Jesus" (Romans 6:23). So when God says that He has "set life and death before us today and we must choose" - He basically means this. Sin. You open your phone, now what? Choose this day. You are talking to someone and it's tempting to talk about yourself instead of listening, or the temptation to badmouth or slander someone pops up, or any type of temptation that we face in our everyday lives - choose this day. God stands at the door of our hearts. Therefore “Above all else, guard your heart (be watchful of what you desire and take in), for everything you do flows from it (Proverbs 4:23).” Matthew 6:21 "Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also." So be careful what you pursue/treasure, because this will determine where your heart stays during this life and forevermore (there your heart will be). Pursue the Bible and living out the Words and God's plan for your life instead of things that will fade away. This all stems from the person that you are in your everyday life, in the daily and the common, when nobody is there, when you're on your phone, when you're watching TV or listening to music, just that everyday life and there's usually a choice to be made between God/what's right and an alternative. Proverbs 27:19: "As water reflects the face, so one’s life reflects the heart." So live for God and pursue Him in all things.

Matthew 26:41: “Watch and pray so that you will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.” - so when we, through even our best efforts, our best flesh, are weak and unable to overcome sins, God’s Holy Spirit is willing. He is willing to give you your breakthrough today against these things, these feelings - are you willing to receive it? Give your heart and your desires to God and simply watch what happens. Again, you have to resist the Devil, fight back against temptations and immorality, and this will help you as you draw near to God and fight back against these voices and forces in your life. 

2 Timothy 3:12: "In fact, everyone who wants to live a Godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted." - so if you want to live a Godly life and eternity, you have to face and overcome the temptations. That's what makes it genuine. Make the distinctions, break the habits, repent, do what's right - not only do we fight the bad by resisting the Devil and his forces and voices in our everyday lives, but we also (as we will now look at) embrace the good by submitting to Jesus, drawing near to Him and finding freedom.

Submit to Jesus Christ and find freedom

In the words of famous theologian CM Punk, "don't listen to the voices in your head, Randy (Orton), listen to my voice." As funny as that is, it's the truth - the voices in our head and heart, the feelings and inclinations that we have, do NOT always need to be listened to - oftentimes they are influenced by darkness, or by others and the culture around us. The whole notion of "follow your heart" is only valid if your heart actually deserves to be followed in that moment. A lot of people could follow their heart to become serial killers and mass murderers and rapists and billionaires through unethical means - too harsh? Maybe this is more accurate: a lot of us could follow our hearts to become porn addicts and hooked on junk food and video games and more selfish with our time and, ultimately, farther from God. Only through the Holy Spirit does someone choose the things that God wants for them - you never randomly in your heart, unless prompted by the Spirit, choose to be Godly and Holy. Nobody every rolls out of bed after masturbating and reads the Bible and prays and does all the right and selfless things - it's just not in our hearts by default. Just isn't. So no, don't listen to the voices and feelings. Listen to God's voice, His influence (the Bible, GOOD churches and Christians, etc.) as He forms your heart to desire the right things and be worth following. Ezekiel 36:26: "I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh." - a heart of stone is solid, cold, unwilling to change or do the right things - flesh is like your skin, you could cut it or burn it because it's subject to change - in the same way, God will give us a heart that does the right things, but is ultimately still subject to change and so we must STAY diligent in our faiths and we must KEEP submitting our hearts to God. Proverbs 4:23: "Above all, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it." - it says "guard" and not "guarded" because our submission to God in our everyday lives is an ongoing thing as we pursue freedom in Him (freedom from dark voices and influences in our lives). Joshua 24:15: "Choose this day whom you will serve, whether God or another." - so we aren't just saved one time and then secure forever (it is possible to fall from being secure/saved), and we also aren't disqualified because of the past, we have to actually choose God "this day" and every day the call still stands to choose God in that new day, no matter what the circumstance or season that you face. 2 Peter 3:17-18: "Therefore, dear friends, since you have been forewarned, be on your guard so that you may not be carried away by the error of the lawless and fall from your secure position. But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ." -  so it’s possible to fall even when you’re "secure" - this isn’t just a one and done where you believe and are saved and get baptized or maybe go to church or whatever - you gotta actually keep growing.

So then, if we're listening to God's voice, then what does that look like? Hebrews 4:7: "Today, if you hear my voice, do not harden your hearts." - so there it is again with the "heart of stone" - if you hear "God's voice" then do nor harden your heart like stone, but rather choose Him. Again though, what is God's voice? 2 Timothy 3:16: "All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness." - if something is "God-breathed" it means that it came out of God's mouth ("breathed") - like a voice? So what is it that came out of God's mouth, what am I talking about that represents God's voice and influence in this world? "Scripture." Another affirmation of this is that, 5 verses after talking about God's voice in Hebrews 4:7, it says in Hebrews 4:12 that "the Word of God (also known as the Scriptures/Bible) is alive and active." - this not only affirms that Scripture is God's voice, but that the Words are "alive and active" meaning that they, though ancient, carry current meaning as God's CURRENT voice and as agents of His CURRENT agenda in this CURRENT world - if you were to open up the Bible, you would find teachings that are "alive" and "active" - things that you are called to do, or not do (like sins) - the verses will help you find God in your everyday life as we are searching for Him and searching for freedom from these voices and forces that we've faced off against for so long. Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all you heart." I'll give you 2 examples of scripture being God's voice, and how we can find freedom through Him: Psalm 139:24 and Proverbs 28:13.

Psalm 139:24: "See if there is any offensive way in me and lead me in the way everlasting." - the verse didn't say "see if I have huge sins" or any certain type of sin - it said see if there is ANYTHING offensive to God within me, and lead me in what way? The Way "Everlasting" - because it's an everlasting road of improvements that we take with the time that remains as we pursue the eternal road to glory with Christ. Perspective, playlist, choice of words, mindset, how we treat others, even just how we think of these things - it's an eternal road and the journey starts now.

Proverbs 28:13: "Whoever conceals their sins does not prosper, but the one who confesses and renounces them finds mercy." - so you can't conceal or hide your sins, you have to confess them and be honest. BUT. You also "renounce" them. Stop. Take action. Actually do something. Don't just confess it, that's easy - confess it and address it. This is repentance, and without it we have no share in the Kingdom of God.

And so, with these 2 examples, we see what the voice of God looks like - what God's influence looks like in our everyday lives. Keep in mind that these are just TWO examples from a seemingly endless pool of examples that can be found in the Scriptures (be careful to read and understand the Scriptures in the right context in order to understand what God meant and not come to any incorrect conclusions/opinions).

2 Corinthians 12:7-9: "I was given a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me. Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. But he said to me, 'My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.' Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me." - the Bible, and writings like these, are God's "message" - His voice, His input in this world. So when Paul (the author) says he has a "messenger from Satan," I want you to imagine the opposite. It's Satan's influence in Paul's life. Whether that's a nasty thing like self-negativity and harm and addictions, or maybe a more subtle thing like pride and a false sense of security - it's whatever it takes for the Devil to get to you and cause you to sin. Whatever it takes, that's what he'll do (watch for this in your everyday life). And so Paul obviously wants this to go away, and he asks God. God says no. WHAT?!? Yes. God says no, because in life we need to have free will. We need to be tested by the Devil, face the temptations and what we go through, and we need to prove our faith genuine. And God reminds us that His grace is enough, sufficient to cover our sins, so we don't have to be perfect but we have to be willing to live for Him and lean on Him, for He is strong enough for us when we are weak.

God wants us to be free. Galatians 5:1: “Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be slaves to sin.” But how can we find freedom from these voices and forces today? Through reaching God. Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - it's often when we pray to God for the Holy Spirit, or when we seek Him with all our hearts (making whatever changes needed) that the Holy Spirit will enter us and set us free. 2 Corinthians 3:17: "Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom." - 2 Timothy 1:6-7: "Fan into flame the gift of God. The Spirit God gave us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love, and self-discipline." - don't shrink back. God wants you to be powerful in making sacrifices, and to have self-discipline so you can live for Him in your everyday life - don't do what's easy or pleasant in the moment, do what's right and eternally worth it. The Spirit that He gives us, which we "will find" if we seek it with all our hearts in how we live our everyday lives, will give us freedom - the Spirit He gave us doesn't make us timid or weak. Fan this gift into flame as you break free and find freedom here today.

1 Peter 5:7: "Cast your cares on Him because He cares for you." - Notice the word "cast"? These things that we're holding on to are demons. Cast them out. Where? On Him. Give it to God. It doesn't make the problems go away, but it puts them into perspective. Let me use this analogy: I have a full bottle of water, and I hand it to my friend because I trust him to take care of it. The water bottle is still full, but now instead of me holding it my friend is. In the same way, our problems don't go away even one bit when we give them to God, but when we let Him take care of them, it gives us more peace and it is better for us. If I held a bottle of water for a while, no big deal. For a few minutes, still no. A couple hours later I want to set it down. If I hold it forever I will go numb. So set it down, whatever you're holding on to. Your anxiety, depression, addiction, secret, sins, feelings of pain, the ones you've lost - stop holding on. The water isn't going anywhere when you cast it on Jesus, but for your own sake you need to stop holding on. Why is God so kind? "Because He cares for you." He knows and He cares, so reach out in genuine prayer and be willing to respond to God from the heart with changes in your life and mind and heart. Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - so hold nothing back here today.

Genesis 4:7: "Sin is crouching at your door; it desires to have you, but you must rule over it." - so the sins that you struggle with aren't just something you have in your life, it’s something that HAS your life ("it desires to have you" so you must control it or at least admit that you ARE controlled by it and find freedom in Jesus from there). 1 Corinthians 6:12: "I have the right to do anything, but not everything is beneficial. I have the right to do anything, but I will not be mastered by anything." - you have free will and can choose sin in both big and small ways in your heart and mind, but it's not always beneficial. It desires to have you, but don't be mastered by it. You must rule over it. Isaiah 61:1: "The Spirit of the Lord is on me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to bind up (heal) the brokenhearted, to proclaim freedom for captives and release from darkness for the prisoners." - this was a prophecy about what Jesus would eventually come into the world to do. And He did everything He promised then, and He's willing to do it in your life now - for "Jesus Christ is the same yesterday (past) and today (present) and forever (future)" - Hebrews 13:8. Jesus is willing to be found by you - seek Him with all your heart and find freedom from the voices and forces in your head, heart, and life here today. Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - so hold nothing back here today. Thanks for reading.

Handling sickness in a Godly way

One of the more rarer things that doesn't often get talked about when it comes to the faith is physical sicknesses - Jesus healed the sick, and we face sicknesses today. I think the reason it gets so often overlooked is because 1. we're not sick all that often so we don't really care, and even when we are it usually doesn't take an act of God or anything crazy for us to easily recover (or accept the sickness as a permanent or long-standing part of our lives whether we pray or not) and 2. because we know that even if we die from that sickness, at least we have Heaven. But I think we should look at sicknesses. We WILL face things like that in this world. John 16:33: "In this world you will have troubles." So it's "in this world," and God has an eternal plan where "He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death’ or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away" (Revelation 21:4, right at the end of the Bible where it describes Heaven). So, this eternal to plan to "prosper us and not harm us, to give us hope and a future" (Jeremiah 29:11) and to "take away all pain and death" (Revelation 21:4) is PAIRED with God's plan to train us through hardships. We can have both hardships in this life and eternal blessing with God - it's not a double standard to have both. That would be like saying "you can't eat and have a healthy body" - you actually NEED the food. So in this life we know that we need the hardships to train us and help us become the overcoming people, the spiritually strong Christians that God calls us to be - we don't go through things because God hates us or is evil: we go through harmful things (suicide, murder, rape, etc.) because of humanity being evil, and we go through other types of hardships (getting fired, facing breakups, being poor, etc.) because God is strengthening us. It's as simple as that.

Realize the temporary nature of sicknesses here on Earth

It's very important, before we even look at how to manage our sicknesses and how to bring this to God, it's very important that we recognize the FACT that these conditions are temporary. Jesus speaks of a day when "He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death’ or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away" (Revelation 21:4, right at the end of the Bible where it describes Heaven). So we know that "He will" - we just don't know when. But it's clearly temporary, the pain and suffering and human imperfections - these are temporary conditions and God will heal us. "When the time is right, I the Lord will do it" (Isaiah 60:22). Philippians 3;20-21: "But our citizenship is in heaven. And we eagerly await a Savior from there, the Lord Jesus Christ, who, by the power that enables him to bring everything under his control, will transform our lowly bodies so that they will be like his glorious body." - Jesus is perfect, so when this passage and 1 John 3:2 teach that "we shall be like Him," it is quite literally to claim that we will have perfect bodies (again, as we've looked at, free of pain and suffering and sickness and all imperfections - we just don't know when, but we do know THAT it will happen when the time is right, meaning that these conditions and sicknesses are temporary). Ezekiel 34:26: "There will be showers of blessing, in season." - so we KNOW that there WILL be showers of blessing, we just don't know when. In the same way, we KNOW that we will find healing, and that these pains and sicknesses are only temporary, we just don't know WHEN Jesus will return and take our pain away. 1 John 4:16: "And so we know and rely on the love God has for us. God is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in them." - if you live a Godly life, allowing Jesus to reside in your heart, then it doesn't matter which temporary disease also resides in your body - you will be saved for eternity. 2 Corinthians 4:17-18: “Our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal.” - It’s so easy to focus on the brokenness and pain that we face in our lives and on the things that we don’t have, but it’s important to not lose sight of God, who will never give up on us. If we live our lives in this world trying to get what we can see - success, fame, and comfort - then we will miss out on what we can’t see - a stronger faith, character, and willingness and discipline to do what’s right instead of what’s easy. So don’t pursue or focus on what you can see - the pain you’re in right now, the false riches and comforts of this world - rather focus on the unseen benefit that enduring pain and discipline in this life will bring you. You can’t see God, but He’s there. Live for Him, doing what’s right, not what’s easy, and living your visible life for the invisible benefit for those that find themselves on a cross in the daily. Hebrews 12:1: “Let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.” - we’re running, not walking - there’s a sense of urgency, we don’t put this off for later or wait until tomorrow. We make meaningful changes to be more like God right now. So throw off the distractions around you, the temporary things of this world, and keep going, because there’s a purpose for your pain and God is going to do great things with your life. Persevere.

Remaining grateful

1 Thessalonians 5:18: "Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus." - give thanks in "all" circumstances. This isn't some small thing: "this is God's will for you." Start taking it more seriously. Find something, maybe even just a pulse, to be thankful for, especially when you're down. Again remember that in "all" circumstances, including when we're sick. 1 Thessalonians 5:16: "Rejoice always." Proverbs 17:22: "A cheerful heart is good medicine, but a crushed spirit dries up the bones." - there's a lot of medicine in this world (self-help, living for yourself, etc.), but positivity and letting things go is "good" medicine - God wants to give you REAL healing. But a crushed up spirit, like negativity or depression or seeing things as a victim or pessimistically, like when your spirit is crushed? That "dries up the bones." When we're down in life, we have to get back up. How are we going up with crushed bones? Nonsense. Stay positive, stay selfless, stay humble, stay one with God in spirit, with gratitude and a Christ-like mindset. This is real healing and real guidance in a life that will pull you down from time to time, and sometimes seemingly forever. I, at the young age of 20, faced a sickness that seemed to last forever. But I can tell you that, whether or not you find the physical healing that you are looking for, there is nothing more valuable than keeping your faith and remaining grateful on a spiritual level during this time.

Talk to God about it through prayer and petition

Acts 2:21: “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.” - we know that if we have a personal relationship with Jesus, if we accept Him in our hearts and live our lives for Him, "calling on His Name" both in prayer and in how we live our everyday lives, we know that "everyone who calls on the Name of the Lord will be saved" (Acts 2:21). Whether that means we are saved from our sickness here on Earth or not, we know that we are "saved." How could you possibly say that we are saved if people die of cancer and other sicknesses - good, Godly people that called on His Name? Because they WERE saved - they ARE saved, just not in the way that you may think (and this is no downgrade either it's better). Again, as we looked at earlier, God's promises in these verses are not based on time - it doesn't say "will be saved within a week" - or even at all on this Earth. It's very possible to die here on Earth and still be saved from our sicknesses and imperfections in Heaven - they are temporary as we looked at earlier. This is why the Apostle Paul can describe himself in 2 Corinthians 6:10 as “having nothing, yet possessing everything.” - it's possible to die on Earth and still, eternally (which is obviously much more important) be saved from sins and sicknesses. So, regardless of whether God grants you physical healing here on Earth (which we will look at later on), it is hugely important that we "call on His Name" and bring our struggles to Him in prayer.

We hear in Psalm 62:8 to "trust the Lord at all times and pour out your hearts to Him." So even if it's storming in your life, you're sick or gong through something whether physically or mentally or emotionally or WHATEVER it may be ("at all times"), and even if you feel overwhelmed - pour out your broken heart to Him, for He is "close to the brokenhearted" (Psalm 34:18) and wants to give rest to the weary (Matthew 11:28). Again, we are called to "pour out our hearts" to God at "all times" - this includes when you're sick and can't understand why. To "pour out your heart" is to do more than just angrily and quickly ask for healing - pour out your heart. Yell at God. Get angry. Let it all out. "Pour out" your heart - many of you may see this is a bad thing to teach, but think about it like this: the verse said to pour out your heart - the verse does not say "but if your heart isn't totally pure or whatever, you can hold back" - no. Pour out your heart. Take your broken, sinful, tired heart and bring it to God so that He can fix it - don't hide it because it's broken, EXPOSE that brokenness and God will "guard your heart and mind in Jesus" as we'll look at in a moment (Philippians 4:6-7). So, whether that prayer is a rage session ("why God why"), or simply asking for healing, or anything in between or beyond - whatever it looks like, we are called "at all times" (Psalm 62:8) to "lift up all kinds of prayers" (Ephesians 6:18).

Philippians 4:6-7: "Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus." - first notice that the verse calls us (as we looked at earlier) to be grateful ("with thanksgiving"). No matter what the situation is, anxious or depressed or sick or "anything" like the verse said (also "in every situation") - no matter what's happening or NOT (healing, breakthrough, etc.) happening, pray to God and submit to Him in all that you do, and He will give you peace - it will "transcend understanding" (to have peace in such sicknesses and situations doesn't even make sense, and yet we know that "with God all things are possible" (Matthew 19:26) - also notice that when you pray to God, when you submit your anxieties and situations and everything to Him, notice that this will "guard your heart and mind in Christ" - the heart and mind, the mental and emotional side, is often where these physical battles are won and lost. Mental and emotional things like anxiety and changes in focus or sleep or eating or ANYTHING at all - this has a clear impact on the physical side of things, so we are called to be guarded in Christ. Ephesians 6:18: "Pray on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. With this in mind, be alert and always keep on praying for all the Lord’s people." - so we are praying "continually" and on "all kinds of occasions" with "all kinds of prayers and requests" - this calls for consistency ("always keep on praying" - notice also that the verse tells us to pray for others). This doesn't mean to say one prayer right now and then move on - pray continually and always keep on praying. Having a bad day? A good one? If it's a part of "all kinds of occasions" then it should be something you pray for. And we are called to keep consistently praying, and not just empty words but words from the heart that help us grow closer to God. Jeremiah 29:12-13: "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - but how can God hear us when we pray silently or in our hearts/minds? So obviously God isn't talking about physically hearing us, but rather that if we are truly invested in praying, whether out loud or not, He will know and will respond by revealing Himself to us - but we have to search with all our hearts, there has to be a purpose, these aren't just empty words. Psalm 145:18: "The Lord is near to all who call on him, to all who call on him in truth." - so if you're truly calling on Him and willing to make changes and sacrifices and spend time on this, if there's truth behind your motivations, then He will be near to you as you seek Him. James 4:8: "Draw near to God and He will draw near to you." - make it your own. Draw far, meaningless prayers, and you'll have a far, meaningless relationship. The closer you draw, whether in prayer or Bible reading or reflection or in trying to fight lust - whatever it may be, the closer you draw, the closer He draws. Free will. Your choice. Choose God, live a life that actually proves you want to get closer to Him, in the little, everyday things.

James 1:12: "Blessed is the one who perseveres under trial because, having stood the test, that person will receive the crown of life that the Lord has promised to those who love him." - so persevere through the sickness, persevere by remaining grateful, by continuing to pray, and by not becoming a victim or making excuses and leading yourself into sin as a result of the condition and the circumstances - persevere under trial, stand strong through the temporary test so that you can have life with Christ for eternity. James 1:2-5: "Consider it pure joy whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance. Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything. If any of you lacks wisdom, you should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to you." - talk to God when things become too much to bear, and persevere through these things because it's building who you are - many people look at this verse for why we face temptations, and that's great, but remember that the wording specifically states that we should consider it joy and persevere ("let perseverance finish its work") specifically "whenever you face trials of many kinds" - and this can include physical sicknesses. "Ask God," and He will not judge you for not having the answers - He will speak to your heart and honor your willingness to connect with Him.

Exodus 3:7: "I have seen your misery and heard your cries, and I am concerned for you." - He wants you to talk to Him, to reach out to Him in prayer. That's why He says that "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." - He wants to hear you, He "cares" (1 Peter 5:7, which we'll look at in a moment), He "is concerned" (Exodus 3:7), and so He chooses to hear your prayers as you lift these and all things up to Him (Jeremiah 29:12-13). But notice something about that verse - God's not going to force you to communicate with Him. You have to be willing. "I hear you" but "when you pray to me." - so you have to be the one to pray to Him, you have to be willing to connect with Him, He won't force you, He gave us free will. That's why, though He loves us so much and wishes to fix all our pains and problems, He will only be "found" by us when we "seek Him with all our heart" (Jeremiah 29:12-13). So you have to be willing to reach out to Him in prayer. God is good and loving, and He wants to help you, but whether He does or doesn't here on Earth give us what we want and what would be ideal (whether healing, blessings and prosperity, or anything else) - either way we must be willing to reach for Him, not expecting or demanding that He reaches for us. He does reach for us, but He won't drag us - on our walk with Christ, we must be willing to actually "walk with God" (Micah 6:8). Don't expect to be dragged, rather walk with Him. This is why Psalm 23:4 says that "Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you walk with me." - so it's not that we choose not to fear evil because we're healed and things are better - it's the darkest valley. The only reason we fear no evil is because, no matter how dark the valley or what we're going through, we know that "He walks with us." And this is why the verse starts by saying "Even though I walk" - because we must be willing to walk with God, to be guided by Him and to turn to Him in prayer in all situations. 1 Chronicles 16:11: “Look to the Lord and His strength; seek His face always.” - I love that the verse tells us to actually look. I mean, we all know good and evil, we get the whole God thing, but really - do we look? Do we seek? I feel like a lot of us are just kind of rolling by everyday, and if something pops up, it pops up - but this is not how faith should work. It's hard to find something when you're not looking. A lot of us are looking for our own things. But relationships, money, comfort, security and success are all destined to perish at one point or another, so instead of seeking these things we should be seeking God. Matthew 24:35: "Heaven and Earth will pass away, but my Words will never pass away." - even Heaven will pass away, so don't seek Heaven as a reward and don't seek the things of this Earth as a pleasure - seek God's purposes by reading and living out His Words.

Psalm 46:1: "God is our refuge and strength, an EVER-PRESENT help in times of trouble." God is there for you, ever-present when you're struggling. But again, we have to be the ones to choose to tap into His power, He won't force us. 1 Peter 5:7: "Cast your cares on Him because He cares for you." - Notice the word "cast"? These things that we're holding on to are demons. Cast them out. Where? On Him. Give it to God. It doesn't make the problems go away, but it puts them into perspective. Let me use this analogy: I have a full bottle of water, and I hand it to my friend because I trust him to take care of it. The water bottle is still full, but now instead of me holding it my friend is. In the same way, our problems don't go away even one bit when we give them to God, but when we let Him take care of them, it gives us more peace and it is better for us. If I held a bottle of water for a while, no big deal. For a few minutes, still no. A couple hours later I want to set it down. If I hold it forever I will go numb. So set it down, whatever you're holding on to. Your anxiety, depression, addiction, secret, sins, feelings of pain, the ones you've lost - stop holding on. The water isn't going anywhere when you cast it on Jesus, but for your own sake you need to stop holding on. Why is God so kind? "Because He cares for you." He knows and He cares, so reach out in genuine prayer and be willing to respond to God from the heart with changes in your life and mind and heart. Continue to pray like this. Continue to reach out to God, and to lean on Him in all situations, regardless of if you find the healing or whatever it is that you're looking for here on Earth.

Accept God's will whether or not you find healing here on Earth

Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways, submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - so trust God with "all your heart" meaning that we don't need to control the timing or result of things and we won't lean on our own understanding and desire of things - we are willing to wait for Him and submit to Him "in all our ways," including in the little things like trusting His timing and being grateful and trusting Him with sincerity and positivity, even if we don't find healing here on Earth. He will "make your paths straight." It doesn't say where the path is going, but only that God is establishing it. He will do it on His timing and according to His own plan. A true Christian would accept following Christ instead of needing Christ to follow them with their desires and what they want - this is often found in the person who says "I need this" in regards to anything besides Jesus, which is all that we need in our everyday lives to approach God the Father in Heaven (John 14:6). Proverbs 16:9: “In their hearts humans plan their course, but the Lord establishes their steps.” - we as humans might not get our way, especially when it comes to finding physical healing here on this Earth.

.Matthew 26:39: “Not my will but yours be done.” - what makes this so special is how real it was. One verse earlier Jesus describes His soul as “overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death.” He did not want to be crucified, but He submitted to God's will. Jesus didn’t just say “trust God” - Jesus actually trusted God on the cross. Jesus did not want to be crucified - He was very clear. He prayed 3 times that God would take it away - we bring our hardships to God, and sometimes fixing everything the way we wanted it is NOT the answer. Jesus dying on the cross seemed like nothing but loss at that point in time - looking back it achieved the forgiveness of our sins. Not my will, but yours be done. Whatever you’re going through, even the cross itself, God has a purpose and He has a plan, just like He did on that cross - you have to trust Him and choose His will in your everyday life. Romans 8:28: “We know that in all things God is working for the good of those who love Him and have been called according to His purpose.” - "working" implies present tense, not that GD "worked" or "will work," though both are true, but limiting. This statement and wording makes it clear: God IS working - there’s a plan even if you can’t see it or agree with it (wondering, "why am I sick" - God is working whether you agree with it or not). Also, notice the word "know." We KNOW, not just we think or believe or hope - we KNOW that God IS working for our good, for the good of those who love Him and have been called according to His purpose (so live out that calling and love Him and trust His timing). There is a purpose for your pain. God is working and I need you to trust that, to trust Him with all your heart, not leaning on your own understanding or desire of things (Proverbs 3:5-6).

We know that God will bring an end to all pain and suffering and sickness and hardship (Revelation 21:4) - we just don't know when. And as we've looked at today, we don't actually know which side of Heaven our healing will be on - most people find healing from diseases here on Earth, and very few of them have their lives considerable altered by physical illness. But in the case that this does happen, and the answer to our prayer is "no," then we know that in Heaven we will be reunited with those we've lost and we will be free of our sicknesses. We will find healing. Isaiah 60:22: "When the time is right, I, the Lord, will do it." - Ezekiel 34:26: "There will be showers of blessings, in season." - we just don't know when "the right time" or "season" is - but we DO know that there WILL be showers of blessings, and that God WILL do "it" in our lives (whether finding healing or breakthrough or something else), whether here or in Heaven. This is why we can confidently trust in the Lord with all your heart, not leaning on your own understanding or desire of things (Proverbs 3:5-6). So regardless of when, we DO know that we will find healing. "And so we know and rely on the love God has for us" (1 John 4:16).

The best example of accepting God's plan even if it doesn't benefit us (just like how it's hard for us to fight temptations and wait for God in the familiar, it's not personally pleasing to us) - the example of this is Jesus on the cross. I think a close second is the story of the Apostle Paul when he had a demon and God wasn't willing to instantly take it away.

2 Corinthians 12:7-9: "I was given a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me. Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. But he said to me, 'My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.' Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me." - the Bible, and writings like these, are God's message. I think it's fair and not arrogant to say that. So when Paul (the author) says he has a "messenger from Satan," I want you to imagine the opposite. It's Satan's influence in Paul's life (whether through physical sickness or lust or pride or depression or anything else). Whether that's a nasty thing like self-negativity and harm and addictions, or maybe a more subtle thing like pride and a false sense of security (pride/arrogance that isn't justified - it's whatever it takes for the Devil to get to you and cause you to sin. Whatever it takes, that's what he'll do (watch for this in your everyday life). And so Paul obviously wants this to go away, and he asks God. God says no. WHAT?!? Yes. God says no, because in life we need to have free will. We need to be tested by the Devil, face the temptations and what we go through, and we need to prove our faith genuine. And God reminds us that His grace is enough, sufficient to cover our sins, so we don't have to be perfect but we have to be willing to live for Him and lean on Him, for He is strong enough for us when we are weak. So it's ok to be weak. It's ok to be sick. We know that in the end our savior will be waiting for us, and we know that if we give our lives to Him, He will always take care of us in eternity."

Keep in mind that Jesus healed the sick in the New Testament. For many of them He would "forgive their sins" or "heal their sins" instead of or in addition to healing their physical sicknesses - and so we see that, despite wanting physical healing and not getting it, we know that these people are covered by Jesus in a way that they didn't actually realize they needed to be covered - it's the same thing that we see with the Jews when Jesus came: the Jews wanted a Messiah that would overthrow Rome, and Jesus was unwilling to do this - they were missing out on the fact that indeed they needed a revival, someone to forgive their sins - but they, in their short-sightedness - all they could see was Rome. And yet they never achieved it. In the same way, when we overlook the time of testing and strengthening that Jesus is putting us through with this sickness, or whatever God's plan is - we shouldn't just get caught up on what we can't have - we have to retain a healthy mindset where we accept God's decisions and embrace the plans that He for us.

Psalm 22:24: “He has not despised or scorned the suffering of the afflicted one; He has not hidden His face from him but has listened to his cry for help.” Ever wondered why Jesus said "my God, my God, why have you forsaken me"? It seems like a contradiction if God is always with us. Here's why Jesus said that. Those Words originate from Psalm 22:1 when King David, out of emotion and feeling hopeless, was asking God why He had given up on him. Jesus cited this passage while on the cross to prove to His crucifiers and fellow Jews that they had no idea what they were doing - that, just like with King David (who now sits in Heaven), God hadn't "given up" on Jesus, but was temporarily allowing Him to through this hardship for a greater purpose, and that those responsible would have to pay in the end for what they did to Jesus on the cross. Read Psalm 22:24 again. Just like with Jesus, just like with King David, when we are afflicted and going through it, and when we feel hopeless, God doesn't despise our suffering - He doesn't hate it, He doesn't take it away and make things magically better. Jesus needed to die on the cross for the forgiveness of our sins, and in the same way we need to go through these things to become the person that God is forming us to be. So we aren't "forsaken" but we are committed to these hardships - "not my will, but yours be done God." But look at the other half of Psalm 22:24 - God hears you. He knows, and He cares. Despite allowing the hardship, God's not distant, He's not unknowing or uncaring. He hears every word of sorrow, He hears every cry and He knows what you're going through. That's why He wants to lead you through it. Jesus's life didn't end on the cross - what a sad ending that would have been. Jesus now reigns with God in eternity. In the same way, I know that whatever you're going through, it will not be the end. Even if it does take this life away from you, if you dedicate what's left of this life to God then you will never lose the eternal life and glory that He has promised you. Sometimes it just takes a cross to get there. So do it. Crucify your guilt and shame and temptations and self-sorrow - go up to the cross and live forever. He hears you and He loves you. Reach out to Him in prayer. Thanks for reading.

Pride: Satan’s sin that we ALL struggle with whether we realize it or not

Most Christians believe that sin started with Adam and Eve - wrong. It started with the serpent, the one who tempted them. In fact, Satan had a deep history with sin even before that. In Ezekiel 28, we hear the story of Satan. While Genesis came before Ezekiel, we know that the story in Ezekiel 28 happened first because it is a story that God is telling through the prophet Ezekiel - meaning that it is not a story that happened in live time, but rather in the time before humanity existed, which explains why only God knows the story and has to relay it to the prophet Ezekiel - it is a story from the past, the story of Satan's fall from Heaven. In Ezekiel 28:12-13 God says to Satan "You were the seal of perfection, full of wisdom and perfect in beauty. You were in Eden, the garden of God" - so we see that God created Satan to be perfect, without sin, and that Satan was in the same Garden of Eden that Adam and Eve were in - this goes to show that the serpent truly did sin first, Satan sinning when he fell from Heaven. So what brought this about? Pride. Ezekiel 28:15: "You were blameless in your ways from the day you were created till wickedness was found in you." But what did it look like when wickedness was found in Satan and it was revealed that he was truly evil? Again, this all happened through pride. Ezekiel 28:17: "Your heart became proud on account of your beauty, and you corrupted your wisdom because of your splendor. So I threw you to the earth; I made a spectacle of you before kings." Again remember that verse 12 described Satan as "perfect in beauty" - he had beauty, and when he continued to pursue his own agenda ahead of God he ended up becoming a slave to it. And we have all become slaves of pride. And so we see in verse 17 that it was "on account of his beauty" that Satan not only became proud, but that his "heart became proud" - so we see that it is in our hearts that we reject God and choose our own ways. We all struggle with pride like this, and today we will talk about overcoming it. We will look at how pride has secretly snuck into ALL of our everyday lives, why God is opposed to it, and how to drive it out of your everyday life.

How pride has secretly snuck into ALL of our everyday lives

So how exactly has pride made its way into our everyday lives? It's a huge accusation that I made, to say that pride is a part of ALL of our everyday lives, but it is something that I truly believe, and I think that denying it is a form of pride in itself. To see how pride enters our everyday lives, we have to look back at Satan and how it entered his. Ezekiel 28:17: "Your heart became proud on account of your beauty, and you corrupted your wisdom because of your splendor." So it was because of the beauty of Satan, the splendor, and his widespread trade (Ezekiel 28:16). It was because of the things that Satan did that he fell into pride, and the same thing can happen to us. Again, notice that it was Satan's "heart" that was prideful - this means that, before committing any of the many sins that the Devil committed, we know that his heart was prideful - in the same way, our hearts will lead us into sin if we are prideful. The reason that Satan's heart was lead into sin was because he placed too great an emphasis on himself (his beauty, splendor, and widespread trade), and too small an emphasis on God (Satan was created to be God's second in command, but he became less concerned with the plans that God had for his life and more concerned with what was gratifying to him in that specific moment) - it's the same thing with sin, and it's this exact way of operating that causes us to have prideful hearts. When, for example, our careers or relationships or how much money that we have or what we listen to, or anything like that in our everyday lives - when any of these things gain too much focus in our lives, and we lose focus on God, then we will become prideful in that these things, which are supposed to be secondary, have now become primary and have taken away from the role that we are supposed to let God play in our hearts. In this way, in our everyday lives, we become our own sort of gods - if we become too busy on Sunday, we don't go to church or take a Sabbath day. Whatever it is that we are busy with, contributing to our lives, has become god in our lives, and ironically our lives have become god in this way. This is what Satan did. Being the second greatest and honoring God (something you and I would PRAY for) just wasn't enough, he needed more. In the same way, the married man watches porn, the obese man eats more, and the thug commits more violence. You might not be the most arrogant person, but clearly Satan has a hold of your heart and he has made you a prideful human being.

Why God is opposed to it

God is opposed to this for a variety of reasons. The main reason is that "The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want" (Psalm 23:1). In verse 2 it says that "He makes me lie down in green pastures." Think about it - verse 1 described Him as a shepherd, and we know that sheep love to eat grass, especially green and fresh pastures. So if God can "make us LIE DOWN (consuming nothing) in green pastures" this means that we can be surrounded by opportunities, surrounded by porn and food and money and cheating opportunities - we could be SURROUNDED by these opportunities to sin, as we are in this world, and we could simply lie down and consume none of it. THIS is the discipline that God wants us to have, that we would submit to Him as our Shepherd and show that our heart isn't the "prideful heart" that Satan is described as having, but rather that our heart is committed to Him, and that instead of being fixated/dependent on these things that we pursue, we are instead looking to the Lord. Even when it comes to your phone, to think that you would prioritize God over it, to prioritize God in all things, over the materials and gratifications, this is to take the exact opposite route that Satan took - this is submission to God, and it is better than submission to sins. For, as addiction would agree, Jesus says that "everyone who sins is a slave to sin" (John 8:34). Another reason that God is so opposed to pride is that pride leads to the sins that the Bible teaches us to avoid. In one of the examples that I've already used, we know that in Matthew 5:28 Jesus teaches that "any man who even LOOKS at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart" - and we know that adultery is one of the worst sins in the Bible and one of the Ten Commandments. But notice that, while not physically committing adultery by being lustful, you are still doing it "in your heart" just as Satan "had a prideful heart" - because ultimately, this all boils down to you heart and the condition in which you operate. Does your heart chase lust? The Bible teaches against it, and a prideful/sinful heart will pull you into it - it's not the lust that you would imagine killing you, but rather the adultery - truthfully, as shown in Matthew 5:28, it actually IS the lust that leads to adultery (even just adultery in heart, which Jesus sees as equally sinful) - in the same way, a prideful heart will lead you into sin even if you don't realize it (just as "looking lustfully at a woman" wouldn't be recognized as adultery, in the same way a prideful heart wouldn't be recognized as a sinful heart, but it should be). And not only IS it sinful, but it also leaves you prone to sin, more likely to commit the sins that God teaches us to avoid (lust, swearing, watching/listening to the wrong things, dishonest gain, self-centeredness, etc.). Finally, I think that the main reason that God is opposed to pride is because it shows that we have a heart that is CLOSED to Him, and not opened. In Matthew 11:28-30, Jesus declares this: “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” - and we know that humility is the exact opposite of pride. So then, in the same passage that Jesus declares Himself as open to being our God and providing rest for our souls and loving us and helping us, in that same passage He declares that He is "humble in heart." His declaration in that passage that He is humble would have otherwise seemed random or out of place, but it makes sense now: Jesus was illustrating that in order for Him to be our God, He needs to be humble and not prideful - this is why Satan can't be our God, he can only be our enemy that leads us away from God (the Hebrew term for Satan means "adversary" which affirms this), and Satan is held to this because of his pride. So God knows that, in order to be our God, He must be humble and open to leading us. In the same way, in order to truly follow Him, we must be humble and have a heart that is open to following Him.

How to drive it out of your everyday life

The easiest way to drive pride out of your everyday life is to have a heart that submits to Jesus. In the same way that He is "humble in heart" (Matthew 11:28-30), in that same way we must also have a humble heart that is receptive to Him and His teachings and submissive to the plans that He has for our lives. By having a humble heart, the opposite of the wanting, prideful heart that Satan was described as having earlier, if we have the opposite type of heart and submit to God and His Words in the Bible in all that we do, then we will avoid pride and all the sins that come from it. Psalm 119:9: "How can a young person stay on the path of purity? By living according to your word." In Matthew 22:36, somebody asked Jesus what the most important command in the Bible is. He answers in the verse 37 by saying to "love the Lord your God with all your heart and all your soul and all your mind." - did you catch that? To "love God with all your heart." Not just to love God, but to do it with your heart - and not just that, but "ALL" of your heart. THIS is the most important command in the entire Bible, according to Jesus. So then, it is important that we have a heart that is submissive to Him and the plans and Biblical teachings that He has for our everyday lives - this, to do THIS and focus specifically on God with all your heart, THIS is how we drive out pride in our everyday lives. "For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also" (Matthew 6:21). So be careful to treasure (think about, desire, pursue) God, because whatever you aim for "there your heart will be" - eternally. Is your heart going to Heaven, or Hell? The difference between the 2 is the presence of God. So treasure time with God and live your life wholeheartedly for Him. Ephesians 5:15-16: "Be very careful, then, how you live not - as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil." - we can get closer to God by being "careful" and "wise" in "all" that we do and by living for Christ with "every opportunity" - even in the little things. Colossians 3:1-3: "Since you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things. For you died, and your life is now hidden with Christ in God." - Christ is raising us into a new and higher way of life, to be where He is not only eternally but in our everyday lives. So how do we get there? Set your mind and heart on Christ. If you don't die to the old way of life, you can't live in the new. If you set your alarm clock for the wrong time, you don't wake up. A lot of us need to set our hearts and minds differently, or we won't like what we wake up to eternally. Deuteronomy 11:18: "Fix these words of mine in your hearts and minds; tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads." - heart and mind. Give your heart and mind to the Word of God. Keep it as the number one priority - this is what you think about, and this is what you love. Heart and mind. Matthew 6:21: "Where your treasure is (what your mind/heart think about/long for and pursue, basically what you treasure), there your heart will be (for eternity) also." Matthew 24:35: "Heaven and Earth will pass away, but my Words will never pass away." - so keep His Words on your heart and mind, because your heart will follow what you treasure, and all else fades away - don't fade away with it. In this way, focusing on and prioritizing and being intentional about these things on a consistent basis, we will drive pride out of our everyday lives. Thanks for reading.

How to have the heart that God wants you to have

Belief in God is essential if we want to have eternal life, but what gets overlooked is this: what now? Now that we believe in God, now that we want to be "good people" (whatever that looks like), now that we attend church, what does God actually want from us? We're not here for nothing, and the Bible teaches that every action will be judged in the end (Ecclesiastes 12:14, Matthew 12:36), so what does God want us to do with the time that remains? Micah 6:8: "He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God." - this verse spells out the fact that God has shown us what is good (things like justice and mercy and humility), and that what He requires of us is that we "walk with" Him - "walk" implying PRESENT TENSE, not just something we commit to and then receive eternal life, but something we CONTINUE to walk in every day, and "with" implies that we aren't doing this on OUR terms, but on God's. Many people believe in God, but live their lives the way that they want to, imagining that since they believe they will be saved - but every deed will be judged in the end, so we shouldn't live life on our terms, but rather walk "with" God - going where He calls you to go, waiting and abstaining when He calls you to, keeping up with Him (whether that means fast, slow, or anything in between). We are called to "walk" "with" God. But what are "His terms"? What does walking with Him actually look like?

In Matthew 22:36, a man asks Jesus a question, and His response will show us how to walk with God. Matthew 22:36-40: “'Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?' Jesus replied: ‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.”

The "Law and Prophets" that Jesus (and the man, when asking about the "greatest commandment in the Law") refers to are the Old Testament Scriptures, both the religious Law of Moses (including the Ten Commandments and the other religious Laws that God gave His people the Israelites) and the Prophetic Scriptures in the Old Testament in which God revealed Words to His people through prophets like Isaiah and Jeremiah and Daniel and others. So, basically, the "Law and Prophets" are the Words of God, the Bible. So when Jesus says that "All the Law and Prophets hang on these two commandments," He is saying that "all" (the entirety of, and nothing less) the Bible, EVERYTHING that God instructs for us, is fulfilled by keeping these two commandments - over 600 religious commands boiled down to 2. Walking with Jesus looks like living out these 2 things that He commanded - it's not that the other roughly 600 commands are dismissed, but rather that they are basically fulfilled when you live out these 2 - for example, when it says in Micah 6:8 to "act justly and love mercy," it's not that this command is dismissed, but rather that if you did these other 2 commands you would ALSO being acting justly and loving mercy. This is not to say the other roughly 600 commands aren't necessary, but rather that they are each only 1 concept, whereas the remaining 2 commands are so broad, so general, and so hard to live out, that by living out these 2 VERY difficult commands, you would be living out all 600. This is the absolute only explanation for God only requiring us to follow 2 commands. So what are these 2 commands?

The first one, involving God and your heart, will be the majority of what we write here, so I will address it second. First, I will look at what Jesus said SECOND when asked what the greatest commandment was - after His first answer, He says this - Matthew 22:38-39: "This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: Love your neighbor as yourself." - so to love others. And not just to love them, but to love them "as yourself." You may object that Jesus said "your neighbor" and not "others," but it is obvious that "others" is what He meant by "your neighbor" because of the fact that He often taught in smaller towns where not everybody had a nearby neighbor, and also there is a story in the Bible (Luke 10:29-37) in which Jesus illustrates that it's not just your neighbor, or Israelites and religious people that are your "neighbors", but also Samaritans (who were HATED by people in Jesus's nation and time, and this is where the "Good Samaritan" comes from) - all this to say that it is also the irreligious, those who believe in other religions, and "all people" (Acts 2:17/1 Timothy 2:4) that are our neighbors. So basically, others. And again, not only to love them, but to love them "as yourself" - as hard as you fight for yourself, as much as you love yourself, as badly as you seek your own welfare and well-being, so it is to be for others. You should put the same effort you put towards yourself towards others - who does that?!?!? Nobody, but it's what God commands. This is one of those 2 commandments. And what does it mean to love them?

1 Corinthians 13:4-7: "Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres." So loving God, loving your neighbor, THIS is what that looks like. Be patient (both with others and with God's plan for your life). Be kind (it's not small, God requires it). Don't envy or be arrogant but be completely humble, gentle, patient and kind. Don't seek your own good (self-seeking) but put God and others first. Don't be easily angered but be patient. Forgive others ("keeps no record of wrongs") - He forgives us, so in the same way be kind and compassionate and forgive others. Love "always perseveres" - this stuff is difficult especially when you're busy and irritable - God is calling us to try our best and persevere in living out this love/service He commands. When people are annoying, persevere. When tempted, persevere. God is love (1 John 4:8), so being more Christlike consists of living out these qualities. Ephesians 5:1-2: "Follow God’s example and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a sacrifice to God." - give something up and make sacrifices like Christ did on the cross. 1 John 3:18: “Don’t love with talk and speech, but with actions and in truth.” So then, this is what it looks like to love, and we are called to love our neighbors "as ourself" - so do these things in your everyday life. This is that 2nd commandment Jesus was talking about, and notice that in Matthew 22:36 Jesus was only asked for one commandment, and while loving others isn't the most important commandment, it was still so important to Jesus that he decided to mention it as a 2nd most important commandment in a list of 1.

So then, what was that first thing Jesus said after being asked which commandment was the greatest? Matthew 22:37: "Jesus replied: ‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’" - so to love God. These are the two commandments: to love God, and to love others. However, we just looked at what "loving others" would really look like in our everyday lives, and we're about to do the same with what it means to "love God" (it's not as simple as it seems) - this is where we will get to discussing "having the heart that God wants us to." The verse didn't just say to "love God" but rather to "love God with all your heart and soul and mind." So to love God with all your mind would mean to think God honoring thoughts, to have a perspective (mindset) that is humble and selfless and puts God and others first, to commit your intellect and your motor/mental skills towards a Godly cause, to love God with "all" your mind. To love God with all your soul means to dedicate your spirit to Him, to give Him your life and trust Him with your eternity - to truly make Him your God in your everyday life - again, "all" your soul. These things that we are being called to do are clearly present tense, and so we see that this is what it truly looks like to "walk with" God in our everyday lives. But what about loving God "with all your heart"? We earlier established what love is and what it looks like in our everyday lives, and so we know that when we are called to love God, it means the same things that we were talking about earlier from 1 Corinthians 13:4-7. And we just looked at loving others, and now loving God with your mind and soul - but what about your heart?

Realizing what your heart is and that God is superior to the negative/sinful thoughts of your heart

Your heart, physically, is simply an organ that pumps blood throughout your body - it doesn't think or feel, like we believe when we say "heart." That's the SYMBOLIC version of the word heart - obviously, the Bible is talking about this, that symbolic/emotional heart, and not simply an organ within your body that pumps blood throughout your body. So then, what does it mean to love God with all your heart? Another definition of the word heart, probably the most appropriate here, is "the central or innermost part of something." Your heart is that central, center piece of you. "Guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it" (Proverbs 4:23). "For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also" (Matthew 6:21). So basically, every single thing that you do is a reflection of your heart (Proverbs 4:23), of that innermost piece of you - so guard it, whether that means guarding it from lust, a victim mentality, harmful or negative thoughts, sin in general, or anything in between. Guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it. And wherever your treasure is, whatever it is that you think about and pursue in life (including your simple thoughts and desires in your everyday life), "where your treasure is" - "there your heart will be also" (Matthew 6:21). There your heart will be - physically. If you treasure and desire and think about and pursue sinful things, those things perish and are deserving of Hell, and so in Hell "there your heart will be." On the other hand, if you treasure the things of God, if you don't just act mercifully but truly "love mercy" (Micah 6:8), if you are intentional about pursuing the Lord and the things of Heaven, there in Heaven "your heart will be also" - this is all about having a heart for God. And not just to love Him with your heart, but with ALL your heart - anything less is unacceptable. And we earlier defined the heart as being that "innermost part" of you - "For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well" (Psalm 139:13-14). God created your heart, that inmost being, He formed you in your mothers womb - just as He started the human race in perfection in the Garden of Eden, so also He started your heart in His perfectly, wonderfully created version. He made it perfect - that's why the verse says that His works are wonderful right after saying that YOU are His works, that inmost being was formed by Him (it is His work) - if God created your heart perfect, to pursue Him, all that He asks of you is that you love Him with it (all of it, just as He created ALL of it - anything less is to slip down the slippery slope of sin) - and to walk humbly with Him. After all, He gave you legs - walk with Him. He gave you your heart - love Him with all of it. So we know what God is after with these 2 commandments, but how can we pursue loving Him with all our heart? What does it look like to have the heart that God wants us to have? This is what we will talk about with the rest of our time.

So now that we understand what our heart is, before we look at what it looks like to truly have the heart that God wants us to, we have to understand that God is ABOVE our hearts. This means that if we have negative or harmful thoughts in our hearts, they aren't automatically true - God is greater. Also, if we have sinful intentions in our heart to rule the world and destroy God's plan - God is greater. If we have a self-righteous heart and believe we are comfortably saved on Judgment Day, and we lose sight of the fact that every deed will be judged, and our heart tells us that we are good enough - God is greater. See, no matter what it is that our heart does, God will always be greater. So keep this in mind when you have these harmful, or negative, or prideful, or sinful thoughts and feelings in your heart. Remember that God is greater, and submit to Him in all that you do. John 8:31-32: “If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” 1 John 3:20: "If our hearts condemn us, we know that God is greater than our hearts, and he knows everything." Romans 8:39: "Nothing in all creation will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord." - nothing, not even the sinful or harmful or prideful thoughts and feelings in your heart, will be able to separate you from God's love. If you chose to submit to God, then even the most sinful or numb or broken heart can be fixed - nothing, in itself, can separate you from God's love - but those things don't need to separate you, Satan simply needs you to stop tapping into God's power and then those things will separate you from God's love, not because they were able to, but because you enabled them to by turning away from God. Jonah 2:8: “Those who cling to worthless idols (things that compete with God in your everyday life) turn away from God’s love for them." - so remember that God is greater than your heart, and submit to Him in all that you do in your everyday life.

Keeping your heart “hungry and thirsty for righteousness” instead of becoming content or satisfied

Remember that earlier we were told to "walk with" God. This means that the walk would continue - one way that we can have the heart that God wants us to have is by being consistent with it, to CONTINUE in our everyday walk with God, not settling for simply believing in Him and having been baptized or for going to church - we don't settle for these or any other things, we continue to push forward in faith. If at any point your heart has settled and is no longer pushing forward, then you no longer have a heart that is right with God, because our relationship with God is described as a "walk," implying that we are GOING somewhere and always moving forward. Jesus describes it like this: "Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled" (Matthew 5:6). The word righteousness means right standing with God - "The fear of the Lord is pure, enduring forever. The decrees of the Lord are firm, and all of them are righteous" (Psalm 19:9). So basically, to fear or respect and honor God with your life, and to pursue His Biblical Words (decrees) is righteous - to pursue Him is righteous. And so Jesus can tell us that if we hunger and thirst for righteousness, we can be completely assured that we will be filled. We WILL find God if we look for Him. "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart" (Jeremiah 29:12-13). But that begs the question - what happens if we don't look for God? What if we do settle for belief, for baptism, for church, for religion - what if our heart no longer hungers and thirsts after righteousness and after God? Then we will not be filled. It is truly that simple - if you seek Him "with all your heart" you WILL (not might, not hope, not maybe - WILL) find Him, whatever that may look like in your everyday life according to His purpose (whether through a verse, a vision, a song, or anything). God wants to be found by you, but He wants you to search for Him - if you are unwilling to put forth such an effort, it makes clear that you do not have a heart that hungers and thirsts for the Lord, and if you don't have a heart that hungers and thirsts for God, then your heart is not right by God. So remain constantly pursuing Him in all that you do, again with "all your heart" - loving Him and seeking Him with all your heart. Psalm 42:1: "As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for you, my God." - keep your focus on God, treasure and pursue Him, and there your heart will be. Keep Him in mind, and keep Him on your heart. "Remember your Creator in the days of your youth, before the days of trouble come" (Ecclesiastes 12:1). "These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts" (Deuteronomy 6:6). "Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things" (Colossians 3:1-2).

CONSISTENTLY committing yourself to Jesus and His Words

At this point, you might be able to agree with what I am saying, but consistency is key - to continue in this is key. Many of Jesus's followers in His time departed from Him as He taught things that were unpopular and stirred unwanted change - people liked their sins, they lived in comfort and never really challenged or disciplined themselves - in this way Jesus and His teachings were an enemy to them. But what about you? When the Bible restricts lust, when it calls you to make sacrifices you don't usually make, when it encourages you to do things that you don't feel you have the strength to do, will you fade away? "Blessed is the one who perseveres under trial because, having stood the test, that person will receive the crown of life that the Lord has promised to those who love him" (James 1:12). And the Bible teaches that if we truly love Jesus, we would keep His commands (John 14:15), so we must persevere no matter how tempted or how hard it is to see - we are called to remain consistent in our faith and follow God through the difficulty - it didn't say WHERE we were going when it said to "walk with" God. Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways, submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight." - so we are told not just to trust God, but to do so "with all your heart" (which is becoming a bit of a pattern, I'm sure you've noticed, as we're looking at having the heart that God wants us to have). And we are called not lean on our own understanding (don't trust or instinctively turn to the way that you feel about or interpret or understand things) - rather we trust God, even when it is hard to do so. In ALL your ways, in everything that you do and in regards to every Word that God has spoken, in ALL your ways we are called to submit to God in all that we do, and it says that He will make our paths straight - it doesn't say where the path is going, it simply says that God is the one forming it and that eventually things will be straightened out and we will be ok. Water often represented hardships in the Bible, whether anxious floods or depressing droughts or anything in between - this is possibly the reason that we are baptized into water, because we are accepting that life will be hard and that we are committing to living through those hardships by trusting God in all that we do. This is probably why Jesus asked His lead disciple Peter to walk on water - Peter was walking with Jesus on the stormy and out of control waters in Matthew 14:29. It's a symbol for our everyday lives, that God walks with us and that we can go through the anxieties of life, the depressions of life, wherever the path is going, and that if we submit to Him and walk with Him "at all times" (Psalm 62:8) and "no matter what happens" (no matter what the circumstances are - Philippians 1:27). So as we "walk with" God, don't be afraid of whatever may happen, just follow God and live out all of His Words in all that you do in your everyday life - this can be inconvenient, and the difficulty is staggering. Sometimes, when we are tempted, we simply just want to give in to the temptation, and if we are bitter we want to give way to our negative thoughts (there are many other examples). But Jesus calls us to persevere, to be consistent and to never give up. When Jesus's teachings are unpopular like this, remain faithful to Him. "Remain in me, as I remain in you" (John 15:4). Luke 6:60-61: "On hearing it, many of his disciples said, 'This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it?' Aware that his disciples were grumbling about this, Jesus said to them, 'Does this offend you?'" - in this passage we see what we are talking about actually taking place. It's John chapter 6, the beginning of Jesus's ministry (as told in the Gospel of John, a 21 chapter account). And so when Jesus begins to teach the things that He teaches the early followers begin to wander from the faith (which we all tend to do in our everyday lives), and Jesus calls them out for being offended. Purity when tempted is an offensive teaching. Selflessness is offensive. Letting it go and forgiving someone that has wronged you, again this is all offensive to our human hearts - it's not what we want. But it's what God calls us to, and so if we want to have the hearts that He has called for us to have, then we need to be more consistent when it comes to following the Words that God has written to us no matter how difficult and no matter what the situation is. Psalm 119:9: "How can a young person stay on the path of purity? By living according to your word." - so we should stay on this path as we "walk with" God in our everyday lives. "Your word is a lamp for my feet, a light on my path" (Psalm 119:105) - obviously the Bible ("your Word") isn't a literal lamp, and we would never use a lamp for our feet, so this is clearly a figure of symbolic speech that is trying to say that God's Word will show you where to go and how to act in your everyday lives as you follow Jesus (it is a "light on your path") - so remain consistent when it comes to reading and living out God's Words (found in the Bible) if you want to have the heart that God calls us to have.

Separating the holy from the common (stop settling for “good enough”), seek what God desires through His Words

As we look at having the heart that God wants us to have, we must make a distinction between the Holy and the common. Between good enough and God. Many religious people have strong belief that they will enter Heaven because of their beliefs, and that what happens with the time that remains is irrelevant. We have already established the importance of us continuing to walk faithfully with God, we now look at how: make that distinction. The first verse that addresses this is Leviticus 11:47: "You must distinguish between the unclean and the clean, between living creatures that may be eaten and those that may not be eaten." - this command was directed to the Israelites, and it was regarding the "clean and unclean foods" of the Old Testament - certain foods were acceptable, while others were unholy (all according to God's design and commands). I find that it is the exact same way today - though in Mark 7:19 Jesus declared all foods clean, it is obvious that instead of food regulations we now have LIFE regulations - there are certain things in our LIVES that are unholy and that will distance us from God. We "must distinguish between" these things. Take for example scrolling through social media feed and video games and other stimulating things that we do in our spare time to occupy our minds - these things aren't "evil" per se, but they obviously have very little chance of growing us as people or as Christians, so we have to make the distinction, and make difficult sacrifices and decisions. This is where many will walk away, believing me to be strict and wrong - you expected God to let you into Heaven for what YOU thought was good enough, not for what He truly calls us to. Truthfully, nobody is going to Hell for time on Instagram, that's not what this is. But think about it like this: what does that time on YouTube do to you? Who do you become? Happy, jealous, lustful, intrigued, hateful? What? It usually doesn't have a positive impact on you. So no, you won't go to Hell for time on the internet, but if you are formed by the internet, that you will form you into the type of person that certainly does go to Hell. So, in this way, when it comes to scrolling and video games, you have to make a distinction: Holy, or common? Who are you becoming? It's just like driving a car: where you steer is where you go. Are you even aiming for God? If not, and if there is too much of the common and not enough of the Holy in your life, then it will be impossible to truly have a heart that pursues Him. In Matthew 6:21 Jesus says that "where your treasure is, there your heart will be also." - so what you treasure, the things you think about and desire and pursue (often lust and jealousy online), whatever it is that you treasure - "there your heart will be also." So if your heart will physically reside with your treasures, then what do you treasure? Instant gratification? Money? Winning, putting yourself and your own comfort and happiness first? These are all sins that lead to Hell, and so if you treasure them, there in Hell your heart will he. On the other hand, if you pursue patience and effort and love and Godliness in your everyday life, abstaining from the wrong and sacrificing to do the right (making that distinction between Holt and common), then there in Heaven (that is what those treasures/pursuits leads to) your heart will be. So where is your heart going? What do you pursue in your everyday life? This is why it is so important that we pursue having the heart that God wants us to have in our everyday lives - after all, it is YOUR HEART that will reside where your treasures and deeds/pursuits do. And so it is obviously important to make such a distinction - again, I'm not here to ban every fun thing in your life, I'm just asking you to ask yourself, when it comes to things like Instagram, what is it doing to your soul, who is it forming you to be, and what impact is it having? Holy, or common? Apply this logic to EVERYTHING in your life - video games and social media were only an example, but the Bible calls us to make these distinctions in ALL things. Remember, we are pursuing the heart that God wants us to have - not the heart that we think is good enough for God - so make the distinction between God enough and GODLY in your everyday life. If you truly search for God with your heart like this, then you will know Him and He will reveal Himself to you - "When you seek me with all my heart, you will find me" (Jeremiah 29:12). Some Christians lack the spiritual maturity that is required to take this next step. This humanity is often justified, even celebrated - "I'm only human!" But this is not the stance that God calls us to take, He calls us to take the next steps. Of course we are human and fall into sins, and of course we have room for growth, but this distance isn't a good thing - it's a thing to be changed, and if we pursue spiritual maturity and a heart that is acceptable in God's sight, then we will find Him (if we truly do this with all our heart). Hebrews 5:14: "But solid food is for the mature, who by constant use have trained themselves to distinguish good from evil." - notice that it is by "constant" use that the spiritually mature will do this, and so we CONSTANTLY, unwavering seek God in our everyday lives "with all our heart," truly and constantly making that distinction between Holy and common. But constant use of what? The food, the "solid milk" that the verse was talking about (the food by which the body grows and matures is a reference to the spiritual food, the Bible [the "bread of life"] that we consume as we grow spiritually. So by using the Words of the Bible we will be able to make that distinction between Holy and common. 2 Timothy 3:16: "All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness." - that word "training" was also used in the verse claiming that we would "constantly" use the Bible to grow more like the people that God wants us to be. And so we train ourselves with the Bible, reading and living out the Words as we make this distinction between Holy and common. And not just "the Bible" generally, but "all Scripture" - just as we "constantly" improve ourselves, we do so with ALL Scriptures, constantly training ourselves in our everyday lives to make those distinctions. Here are some examples of things that the Bible says that we should carry out (and there are many more, which can be found through reading the Bible and "seeking the Lord with all your heart" as far as living these things our is concerned):

"Do not lust after beauty" (Proverbs 6:25).

"Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you" (Matthew 5:44).

"These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts" (Deuteronomy 6:6).

"Let us behave decently, as in the daytime, not in carousing and drunkenness, not in sexual immorality and debauchery, not in dissension and jealousy. Rather, clothe yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ, and do not think about how to gratify the desires of the flesh" (Romans 13:13-14).

"When the time is right, I, the Lord, will do it" (Isaiah 60:22).

"Truly I tell you, anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it" (Mark 10:15).

There are thousands of verses like this that will guide us into having the heart that God wants us to have, as we continue to make that distinction between Holy and common. In reference to the priests in the Old Testament, God says this: Ezekiel 44:23: "They are to teach my people the difference between the holy and the common and show them how to distinguish between the unclean and the clean." - so not only are we to "distinguish between the unclean and the clean," we are even called to TEACH the difference between the Holy and the common - we see that God doubles down on this stance that we must make the distinction between the good and the bad in our everyday lives if we want to have the heart that He wants us to have. We have seen verses all throughout the Bible (in Leviticus near the very beginning, and in Hebrews near the very end) that discuss the Holy and the common, and these verses have encouraged us not to settle for what seems religiously good enough, but rather to pursue God's desires for our everyday lives through His Words in the Bible. In John 14:15 Jesus says that "if you love me, you will keep my commands." Possibly the most clarity on the topic of the Holy and the common comes from 2 Timothy 2:20-22: "In a large house there are articles not only of gold and silver, but also of wood and clay; some are for special purposes and some for common use. Those who cleanse themselves from the latter will be instruments for special purposes, made holy, useful to the Master and prepared to do any good work. Flee the evil desires of youth and pursue righteousness, faith, love and peace, along with those who call on the Lord out of a pure heart." - some are for common uses, and some for Holy. But here's the thing: you have the choice. In the verse, it said that we have the power to "cleanse ourselves" from the latter (the common), and that if you do so you will be prepared to do the good works that God has in store for us. So cleanse yourself, make these decisions in your everyday life, and prepare yourself for the everyday works that God has for your life.

Remain in Him as He remains in you

Now that we have looked at pursuing the heart that God wants us to have, equally important is to CONTINUE in that pursuit, and to remain in the way. Jesus says "I am the way and the truth and the life, and nobody comes to Father in Heaven except through me" (John 14:6). So if Jesus is the way, then we are to remain in that way, walking with Him in our everyday lives. "God is love" (1 John 4:8) - "Walk in the way of love" (Ephesians 5:2) - "Walk humbly with your God" (Micah 6:8) - "For we LIVE by faith and not by sight" (2 Corinthians 5:7). So then, we know the importance of our walk with God (not just our belief in Him, but that we continue to walk with Him in all that we do in our everyday lives). In 1 John 3:1 it says that "We are children of God, that is what we are." A few verses later, it says this: "No one who is born of God will continue to sin, because God’s seed remains in them; they cannot go on sinning, because they have been born of God. This is how we know who the children of God are and who the children of the devil are: Anyone who does not do what is right is not God’s child, nor is anyone who does not love their brother and sister" (1 John 3:9-10). So those that do not continue in their walk with the Lord, those that turn to both inner and outer wrongs, those that turn from the wholehearted way in their everyday lives, anyone like this "is not God's child." If they were truly "born of God" then they "would not continue to sin." If they fall, they were not truly born of God, or His children. This is not a popular teaching, but it will stand on the Day of Judgment. So what do we do? If we are turned from God like this, then we must TRULY be "born again," turning to the Lord with all our heart, TRULY being "born of God" and becoming "His children." - "Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of Heaven" (Matthew18:3). We must change, and if we do, and if we truly do put our heart into this, then we know that God Himself has said "If you seek me with all your heart, you WILL find me" (Jeremiah 29:13). So it's not that we MIGHT be forgiven and born again, but we KNOW that we WILL find Jesus and enter into Heaven with Him, again so long as we truly remain in Him. "Remain in me, as I remain in you" (John 15:4). "Even now, return to me with all your heart" (Joel 2:12). So even now, even after every sin that we have committed, we can return to the Lord. But we have to do it "with all our heart" otherwise it isn't genuine and we won't find Him (Jeremiah 29:13), and not only that but we have to do it "even now" and not put anything off or wait. In this way, with a heart that God would accept, pursue Him in all that you do in your everyday life. Thanks for reading.

The roles of a woman in the Christian faith

One of the most controversial and unpopular teachings in the Christian faith is the role of women in the Christian faith. Understanding just how challenging it will be to understand this, especially considering all the popular misconceptions and false beliefs, I believe that it is important to "go there." So we will address this topic, and we will discuss not only what the many purposes are of women in the Christian faith, but we will also breakdown what exactly are the differences between men and women in the Christian faith. We will start by discussing the many different purposes for women and then we will dive into the differences between men and women in the Christian faith.

So that men and women could have each other

The first purpose (literally, in terms of when it happened in the Bible) of women in the Christian faith is so that men and women could have each other. Very early on in the Bible, a problem is observed: Adam (the only living man at this point) has no human companion. "It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a suitable helper for him" (Genesis 2:18). Many people take issue with the usage of the word "helper," and the fact that it appears to make women lesser than men, but they fail to realize more than a few things. Firstly, God is the creator of all, and since He created Adam first and then proceeded to create Eve from Adam's rib (Genesis 2:22), God makes clear that woman is created from man and comes second in the creation order of men and women. In Genesis 1:27, it makes clear that we are all "made in the image of God, male and female." - this implies that both men and women are EQUALLY made in the image of God. 1 Corinthians 11:7: "he is the image and glory of God; but woman is the glory of man." - so man is the glory of God, woman is the glory of God - notice how when it said that man is the image of God, it did NOT say that woman is the image of man? That's because we are ALL made in the image of God. But man is the "glory" of God and woman is the "glory" of man - that word glory possibly means "reflection." This is possibly why 1 Corinthians 10:31 says that "whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all to the glory of God." - basically, glorify God in all that you do in your everyday life - could this be an encouragement to REFLECT God, to show the world what "Christ in me" looks like in our everyday lives? In any event, that word glory possibly means reflection, so that the man is the "reflection of God," while the woman is only the "reflection of man" - because the woman is from the man. This is not to say that the woman is less than the man, but simply that she came second. The biggest misconception with the "helper" verse is that this means that the woman is only a helper, and WHAT she helps the man with is also very often misunderstood. The raging feminist will jump to conclusions and believe that God has assigned the woman to be a dishwasher and cooker and cleaner forever - that's not what the verse said. The verse said that she will be his "helper" - the verse said this in response to it being "not good for the man to be alone." This, based on what the text ACTUALLY SAYS, implies that the woman's first purpose is to help the man with his loneliness - they have each other. Any man in a healthy relationship will agree with this, and they are grateful for what they have - any woman in a healthy relationship will also be grateful for the fellowship that they have with their man - they have each other. It wasn't good for Adam to be alone, so God made it so that Eve would be there with him. In this way, she helped him with his loneliness. They had each other, this was the first purpose for God to bring Eve into the world, and to continue the flourishing existence of the female gender in this world as we know it (women make up a majority of the world's population, so it is obvious that God loves them) - God first, 2 chapters into the Bible, created the woman so that men and women would have each other.

To be EQUAL recipients of God’s promises/life

Men and women were created equal by God - this is undeniable. The Bible teaches that God created mankind "male and female" in the image of God (Genesis 1:27). The text did not say that God made men to be greater or more important. When people hear that the Bible teaches that "the wife must submit to the husband," and that women are not to lead churches as pastors, when people hear these things they mistakenly believe that God is elevating men above women - that's not what this is. The wife does not submit to the husband because he is greater - she does it because God told her to. She doesn't refrain from pastoral ministry because she isn't capable of it and only men are - she refrains and uses her gifts in other ways to glorify God simply because God has declared it to be so. If God "created them male and female," then how could one be more favored by God than the other? How could one be more impressive to God? Truthfully, He created us all in His image, and so we ALL reflect Him, and none of us could be all that impressive to the one that created us - this is why the strongest and weakest man, the prettiest and ugliest woman, and all that fall in between, are all completely equal in the sight of God - nothing that we could achieve or fail to achieve could possibly change how He feels about us. This is why Romans 8:38-39 makes clear that "nothing in all creation, neither height nor depth nor angels nor demons nor anything else, can separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus." - so nothing can separate us from God's love, including our gender - He loves them both equally, not one more or less than the other. And this love that God has for us is found "In Christ Jesus." - "There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28). - so we are loved by God "In Christ Jesus," and we are all united together in equality "In Christ Jesus" (in fact, Romans 8:1 declares that for the one who is "In Christ Jesus," there is now no longer any condemnation for their sins). Looking back at Galatians 3:28, know that Jews and Gentiles both represented ancient people groups, one opposing the other. The Jews were the original Hebrews and Israelites, "God's chosen people." The Gentiles were people like Samaritans who had their own gods - they were the "other," the irreligious or otherly religious people of the time. And yet "There is neither Jew nor Gentile" because "you are all one in Christ Jesus." The same claim is made for slaves and free people - they no longer exist in those groups, because they are all one in Christ Jesus. I believe that by comparing slaves to free people, the passage was talking about your life and achievements - if you've made it, if you're religious, or if you have had very little success and feel chained down like a slave by sins and loss and addictions and failures - while those things are what they are, you no longer have to exist as "a slave," and the religious man no longer arrogantly lives on as "free," because we are all in fact held together in Christ Jesus. In the same way, the final comparison was made between "male and female." By saying, "there is no longer male or female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus," this verse obviously wasn't written to be taken literally, but symbolically. Of course you're still a man or woman, still a Jew or Gentile, still a slave or free person - these things DO still exist, but in a sense they no longer exist because we are no longer defined by them or seen as more OR less because of them - our identity is that, no matter who we are (including your gender) and no matter we've done, we are ALL one in Christ Jesus. And so in this way we understand that men and women are seen as equals in the sight of God, though the purposes God had for each of them was different. So then, if they are equals, then we know that the next purpose for women in the Christian faith is that they would be EQUAL recipients along with men of the things that God has promised them and has written about - of the very life that He offers us. The first purpose for Eve was so that she and Adam would have each other - the second purpose, as the story of the Bible began to unfold and begin, was that they would both receive life from God and then the human race began to receive and wait on His promises - we are all equals in this wait. Women are prepared for eternal life just as men are, and so we can confidently say that this is another purpose for women in the Christian faith. When God speaks to the prophet Jeremiah, His message is delivered equally to the men and women that are willing to listen. And so we understand that God's promises then apply to both genders. Some of them are found in Jeremiah 29:11-13: "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord: plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future. I hear you when you pray to me, and when you seek me with all your heart you will find me." - a few promises are made here: God's plans for us are good (which doesn't mean prosperous or blessed, in fact it could mean hardships that lead to goodness, but either way God's plans are for our good and NOT our harm, and so any harmful thing does not come from Him). Another promise that God makes is to give us "hope and a future" (a reference to Heaven and a call to the weary and hopeless to carry on). God also promises us that He DOES hear us when we pray, and that if we are willing to seek Him with all our heart, if and only if we do this, we WILL (not might, not should) - we will find Him, whether that's an answer, a verse, healing, hardship, clarity, whatever it may be. God didn't promise when, He simply promised that. Anyways, my point is this: as far as these and the other promises in the Bible go, we understand that women are EQUALLY to receive and wait for these promises, and so this is another reason for women in the Christian faith. We also understand that (obviously) women have received life as equals with men. In the same way that "The Lord God formed a man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being" (Genesis 2:7) - in the same way that God had already created (formed) Adam's body and made plans for His life ("before the womb I knew you and set you apart" Jeremiah 1:5) - in the same way that God blew the breathe of life into his body and brought him to life, in the same way God also formed Eve's body (out of Adam's rib), but that does not mean that Eve belongs to Adam, as it was the breathe of life from God that would have enabled Eve to begin truly living. And so we understand that women are also equal recipients of this things we call "life." To live, and to have God's promises that we can both receive and wait on, this is certainly the second purpose for women in the Christian faith, and we know that they will receive these things EQUALLY with men.

As wives

The next two purposes for women in the Christian faith are highlighted in Genesis 3:20 (this is right after they have sinned against God by eating the forbidden tree): "Adam named his wife Eve, because she would become the mother of all the living (which is what Eve means in Hebrew, "living one")." - notice that "Adam named his WIFE," because they were married BEFORE Eve became a mother. That is why it is crucially important that Christians understand the importance of remaining pure until married, because Adam did not become the father to his girlfriend's children, but to his WIFE'S children. And so we can say that the next purpose of women in the Christian faith is that they are to be given in marriage as wives, and they are to receive husbands (the next purpose AFTER this involves motherhood). After all, it is possible to get married, but it is not always possible to have kids - what are we to say to those less fortunate? That they have somehow sinned against God by not having kids, and that He has closed their womb in hatred? Of course not. The reality is that not everyone finds a partner, and certainly not everyone has kids - so if you miss out on these purposes, know that it does not define you as a Christian or as a purpose, because God has plans for your life either way. The same could be said for fellowship: while this was the original purpose that God brought women into the world, it can NOT be said of women that they are somehow sinful or unloved if they do not have fellowship or any of these other purposes (except the promises and life of God) that we talk about here today - the reality is that a daily fellowship with God is much more important. In any event, the next purpose is in fact marriage related. The first purpose that we discussed was "so that men and women could have each other," and while having friends and coworkers and family members/others is great, there is usually a great deal of fulfillment to be found in a healthy marriage. Not just to find fellowship, but to truly find YOUR Adam, YOUR Eve. It is very specific and very unique. And so, in reference to physical sex, God says this in Genesis 2:24: "That is why a man leaves his father and mother and is united to his wife, and they become one flesh." - to be "united" to her is a reference to sex (use your imagination, the uniting of parts), and so we see that the "man" (not boy, not boyfriend, the MAN) is united to his "wife" (not his girlfriend, his WIFE) - only with his wife would the man physically unite himself (this is to say that he wouldn't unite with anyone else, and he would WAIT until she was his WIFE in order to do this. Proverbs 18:22: "He who finds a wife finds what is good and receives favor from the Lord." - this is not to say that someone who has no kids or no spouse is not loved by God, it is simply to say that the one who has has clearly been blessed with those things, and has found favor in that specific way. So we see that husbands and wives are meant to go together. This is why the Bible makes clear that just as Christ clearly was a man, He led the church and was a husband to her. Ephesians 5:23: "For the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church, his body, of which he is the Savior." - just as the church belongs to Christ and He leads it, we also believe as Christians that men will lead their women - not because they are superior, but simply because that is the specific role that God has assigned to them. Again, remember that it is said of man that "he is the image and glory of God; but woman is the glory of man." Ephesians 5:21-22: "Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ. Wives, submit yourselves to your own husbands as you do to the Lord." - so not only does the wife submit to the husband, but it is taught that we must all submit to each other "out of reverence" (simply because we respect each other). Do the things for others that you know would benefit them (submitting to them by letting them have their preferences). And so we see that "just as you do to the Lord," the wife is called to submit to the husband - this is very serious, and it makes clear the importance of finding the right husband to commit yourself to (if he isn't a Godly man that is worth submitting to, then do not marry him, because the Bible makes clear that wives should submit to their husbands just as they submit to the Lord). What people overlook about the whole "wives, submit" teaching is that just a few verses later, in Ephesians 5:25 it says "Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church and gave Himself up for her." - so the husband is also called to do something, to love and lead his wife "just as Christ loved the church and gave Himself up for her." - do you notice the Godliness in this? The wife submits "as you would to the Lord," and the husband loves and sacrifices "as Christ did for the church." - and so in the same way that the husband should not marry unless He is completely sure that He can love and lead His wife and make sacrifices just like Christ did, in the same way the wife should not marry unless it is a man that she is willing to submit to just as she is willing to submit to Christ.

As mothers

We earlier established that being a wife comes before being a mother - "Adam named his wife Eve, because she would become the mother of all the living" (Genesis 3:20). Eve was established as "his wive" before "the mother of all the living" - the fact that her marriage to one man come before her motherhood of the human race is a deep reminder that marriage comes first. In any event, she was still the mother of all the living, and without motherhood the human race would die in 1 single generation. "For as woman came from man, so also man is born of woman. But everything comes from God" (1 Corinthians 11:12). Even our savior, Jesus Christ, was born of the virgin Mary, though there was no biologically HUMAN father (though He had a Heavenly Father and was born of the Spirit). So, despite modern confusion, it is not man that gives birth, but woman, and without motherhood there would be no fatherhood or childhood, as every single human being EVER has a biological mother (except for Eve, who was the first woman and created from Adam's rib, and Adam, who was created from dust by the Lord God in the Garden of Eden). So we see exactly how important motherhood is. Now, not much is said of Adam and Eve except that they sinned against God by rebelling - this is what they are remembered for. So I'm not sure what type of people they were AFTER that happened, but I'm sure it's relatively safe to assume they remained sinful, as this wicked human race is a pattern of them and is obviously itself very sinful. And many also know the famous story of Cain and Abel (the first and second children ever, born of Adam and Eve). So obviously, Cain murdered Abel, and Adam and Eve essentially lost BOTH of their kids (one was murdered, the other was no longer the son they knew). So I think it is fair to say that if Eve was a less sinful, more attentive mother, Cain may have been a different MAN (not just child, but MAN, as these are the effects of parenting into the DYING STAGES of life). And I'm not just talking about the apple. I'm not just talking about big sins, like adultery and divorce and other things that a parent can do to truly traumatize and ruin their children - I'm talking about the little, everyday things that go into parenting as well. Maybe if Eve had sworn less, had been more patient and kind ("love is patient and kind" 1 Corinthians 13:4), if Eve had been more selfless, less interested in her own work or phone and more interested in her son, etc. - if Eve had been a better mother on a DAILY basis, she would have raised 2 Abel's (Abel was a GREAT man) and 0 Cain's. So it is obvious that motherhood is a VERY important role of women in the Christian faith, as without good parenting and without the raising of children, we would all cease to exist. Think about that - every time a woman does anything, even scrolling on her phone, she is setting the stage for all of humanity, in all that she does in her everyday life. Anyone that believes the woman has been subjugated to a lesser role or that the man is somehow more favored by God, that person either now stands corrected or falls insane. Perhaps the greatest story about motherhood comes from Genesis chapter 16: there was a woman named Hagar, a new mother and a foreign slave woman (to be any of those things, let alone all four of them, made it hard to live and find acceptance in her time and place). She was on the run, sent away with her very young child. She felt so hopeless and afraid, lost and concerned and confused. She knew of absolutely no place to turn, nothing to do to get things right. A lot of mothers and fathers will experience this or are afraid of it. At the climax of her struggles, the Lord sends her an angel to comfort her and encourage her to return to her life that she had been on the run from. He reminded her that God had promised to de great things with her son (Esau), and that the blessings would take place despite the initial (and long lasting) feelings of hopelessness. And that is my encouragement to you: that God is in control, that he has plans for your child even before he or she is crafted by God (who is in control) in the womb (Jeremiah 1:5), and that He will be with you. After receiving this message, Hagar proclaims to God in Genesis 16:13: "You are the God who sees me. I have now seen the God who sees me." - Hagar felt so overwhelmed with love and favor and care in that moment, all things that she had NOT been shown before, and she simply had no idea what to do with it so she overflowed with gratitude and the happiness of these feelings. Though the initial feelings may fade away, the truth is that this is the love that is available to us all in Jesus Christ, through God Almighty. This is the love that God has always carried out towards mothers and all people (1 Timothy 2:4 ALL PEOPLE), and so we know that as mothers this is what women are called to. Motherhood is one of the main purposes for women in the Christian faith.

As friends

At this point, we no longer go in chronological order. Eve (woman)'s first purpose in the Christian faith is so that men and women could have each other, then so that men and women could both be equal recipients of God's love and promises and life, then as wives to their husbands, and THEN as mothers (emphasis on being a wife to your husband BEFORE being having kids, not only in terms of time like when you have the baby but also in terms of your everyday relationship and the type of life that you live. At this point, being a believer and receiving blessings from God, being a (potential, as there is no penalty for not engaging in these things) wife and mother, and the man and woman having each other, there is not much left, and certainly nothing in order. So at this point I will hit a few more topics (purposes) that I believe women serve in the Christian faith, though none of them are in order. I will look at women as friends, as church members (and what that looks like), as church leaders (and what that looks like), and then I will conclude by looking at the differences between men and women in the Christian faith. So, beyond being wives and mothers, women can also be friends (though most girlfriends would disagree). There are over 8 billion people on planet Earth, and over 4 billion of them are women, so obviously not EVERY one of those women will be your wife or mother or other relative - you're going to need some friends. The Bible's most clear verse on friendship is Proverbs 17:17: "A friend loves at all times, and a brother is born for a time of adversity." - this is EXACTLY what Eve was to Adam (and though she was his wife and the mother of his children, and probably not the best example, she is the first woman and the symbol of womanhood, so I will use her as an example). This is not just a fellowship that a wife will share with her husband, or that a mother would share with her children - this is a fellowship that we ALL have with each other. Again, Proverbs 17:17: "A friend loves at all times, and a brother is born for a time of adversity." The Bible teaches that love is patient and kind, and many other things. So a friend would love ALL PEOPLE (1 Timothy 2:4 "all people") at "all times" (Proverbs 17:17). And a brother (probably referring to the term often used of a close friend, "he is my brother" or "she is my sister"), a brother would be BORN (brought in, the ENTIRE PURPOSE IS FOR) a time of adversity, for times of trouble. A friend would never give up on you, there's no sacrifice that a friend wouldn't make, unless their friendship was not truly Biblical and it needed to be "born again." - remember that Eve was STILL with Adam after she sinned, after Cain (his son) killed Abel (his other son), and after the world PLUNGED into sin in Genesis 6. Everything fell apart, and she was there for him as a friend. That is a HUGE purpose that BOTH women and men serve in the Christian faith. Perhaps this is a calling to you, to reach out to someone, that lunch is on you to catch up, etc. Be that friend that Proverbs 17:17 talks about.

As church members (and what does that look like?)

As we continue to look at purposes for women in the Christian faith, we are nearing the end - one of the things that we have not yet discussed is the Church. We earlier established that one of the main purposes of women in the Christian faith is to be EQUAL recipients along with men of the promises and blessings and life that God has in store for us all - in the same way, woman are called to be equal recipients of the Church and the membership that comes along with it - service/leadership in the church is different, and we will talk about that next, but we will take time here to specifically talk about church membership as being one of the purposes of women in the Christian faith. Hebrews 10:24-25: "And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another - and all the more as you see the Day approaching." - this verse highlights the meaning of church. The reason that we "meet together" is to encourage one another and spur each other on towards "love and good deeds" (and we know that "God is love" 1 John 4:8, and that we are called to love our neighbors). So the entire purpose of us meeting, and making a "habit" of doing this, is to be in community with people that will encourage us and move us towards those Christian truths and values and actions in our everyday lives. Love is described in the Bible as "patient and kind" and forgiving ("keeps no record of wrongs") and MANY other things in 1 Corinthians 13:4-8, and so when we go to church we are there to be pushed towards this type of love, these and many other good deeds in our everyday lives, by a family of believers. This is the whole point of church: that God's people would gather and honor Him there. In Matthew 18:20 Jesus teaches that wherever the believers gather in His Name, "there I am with them." - so it's not just that we are called to gather, called to be with one another - we are called to do it in His Name, with Jesus being the main purpose. Whether this is church, or some other event or even just a gathering or phone call that we create, we are to pursue this, and this includes women in the Christian faith. And we know that when we gather like this as a church, if we are truly gathered in His Name and for His glory, that "He will be there with us." That's why Jesus is described as "God with us" (Matthew 1:23). And we also hear in the Bible that when we are trying to pursue God and have more of Him and His answers and truths in our everyday lives that "if you seek Him with all your heart, you will find Him" (Jeremiah 29:13). So to truly seek God like this, and to make a HABIT of doing so in a community of believers that will push you towards Jesus and towards these good things, this is what we as Christians are certainly called to, and this includes women. So obviously another one of the purposes of women in the Christian faith is to attend church like this. Men and women are both called to attend church in this way. Just as they are equal recipients of God's love and promises and life (as we established earlier), so we also know that they are BOTH called to attend church. This is why, in 2 Corinthians 6:14, men and women are called to marry and be yoked only to believers, implying that they are to be "equally yoked" - which goes to show that we are ALL equally called to devoting ourselves to Christ in this and in many other ways. And so obviously, consistent and productive (go with the right intentions and try to seek God with all your heart and get something out of it) church attendance is one of the purposes for women in the Christian faith.

As church leaders (and what does that look like?)

So we have covered that one of the purposes of women in the Christian faith is as church members/attendees, but what about church leadership? Are women called to partake in the operation of church services, as men are? This is where things get interesting, as the Bible takes a controversial stance on such matters. 1 Corinthians 14:34-35: "Women should remain silent in the churches. They are not allowed to speak, but must be in submission, as the law says. If they want to inquire about something, they should ask their own husbands at home; for it is disgraceful for a woman to speak in the church." 1 Timothy 2:11-15: "A woman should learn in quietness and full submission. I do not permit a woman to teach or to assume authority over a man; she must be quiet. For Adam was formed first, then Eve. And Adam was not the one deceived; it was the woman who was deceived and became a sinner. But women will be saved through childbearing - if they continue in faith, love and holiness with propriety." - the first thing I will say is that verse 15 of the most recent passage probably does not literally mean that women will be saved through childbearing, as obviously many wombs are unable to conceive, and if anybody is insensitive to each of our specific troubles, I guarantee you it is NOT God. What that verse probably meant was that, Mary (a woman) having given birth to Jesus is what enabled us to be saved by Jesus (He had to actually be born first), and so the verse is highlighting the NEED and the importance of women in the Christian faith, while also encouraging them to remain in faith, love, and holiness. As far as the rest of what was taught, it is indeed very controversial. I will first say that there is a huge difference between "Bible study" and church - women are NOT called to be silent in Bible studies OR worship sessions, which are distinct and different from church, even if they take place in church or during a church service. But why would God call women to be silent?  “As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts" (Isaiah 55:9). So we clearly cannot possibly come into this or any other situation expecting to "figure out" God and what He meant. But I will say this: the fact that the verses encouraged women to "inquire only of their husbands at home" is likely a sign that this only applies to married women (who have married men, if there was any confusion), and it is a powerful reminder of the importance of choosing the right partner. Is the man you plan on marrying the type of man that you can trust to give you a good answer to the questions that you won't ask at church? Is he there at church with you? Is he able to discern what certain things mean? These are the types of things that you must work out before committing to marrying someone - again remember that in our earlier discussions we established (from the Bible) that you should only marry a man that you can trust is WORTH submitting to, and worth being submitted to in the same way that you submit to God Himself. So first thing's first: marry a man that you would be comfortable living out these commands with. These verses make clear that there are 2, and only 2, bans on female leadership in the church: as speakers ("A woman must be silent" 1 Corinthians 14:34) and as teachers ("I do not permit a woman to teach or to assume authority over a man" 1 Timothy 2:12). So women are encouraged to be church leaders, and this is another purpose for women in the Christian faith, but clearly just not as teachers and speakers - aside from this, they are considered EQUALS to men in church leadership. So we have established their leadership in ALL OTHER ROLES and ways as one of the time purposes for women in the Christian Church, but why would God advocate for silence, and for women not to teach? When Moses's brother Aaron was appointed priest over the ancient Israelite community, it was made clear that only Aaron and his sons would serve as priests (Exodus 28:1), and not his daughters or any other relatives of Aaron's. But again, why? The author, the Apostle Paul, spells out a few reasons: "For Adam was formed first, then Eve. And Adam was not the one deceived; it was the woman who was deceived and became a sinner" (1 Timothy 2:13-14). This ties in with the story of the Garden of Eden, when Eve convinced Adam to sin along with her by eating from the forbidden tree. When God cursed Adam and Eve for this, He said to Eve that "Your desire will be for your husband, and he will rule over you" (Genesis 3:16) - this implies that the woman will long for her man, and that the man will be in a position of authority over her. Eve was sinful and earned this punishment, and since we all sin today, I suppose this curse still stands (Adam had his own curses as well, but none of them related to Eve, again God's ways and thoughts are higher than ours). The Apostle Paul also says this in 1 Corinthians 11:12: "For as woman came from man, so also man is born of woman. But everything comes from God." So the woman came from the man (Adam came first, and Eve came from Adam's rib), and all things come from God. 5 verses earlier, in 1 Corinthians 11:7, Paul says of the man that "he is the image and glory of God; but woman is the glory of man." - so it could be that since Adam came directly from God, and Eve only from Adam, only Adam was truly equipped to preach and minister for the Lord. It could also be said that God fills men and women with the Holy Spirit for different purposes, and that the purposes of men are sometimes to preach and speak, while women will not be filled with the Holy Spirit for this purpose (remember, I said this COULD be the case, but I would never SAY it is and disregard someone's potential calling). Remember that the verses are only referring to in person attendance in the church - many women do great ministry work on social media platforms, using the gifts that God has given them to speak and teach, and to do so in a way that honors God and honors the Bible. It could also be said that in ancient times, in the specific church that Paul was writing to, there were MANY sinful and irreligious women who were sneaking in among the ranks and destroying the church - it COULD be said that these verses only applied to that church, as Paul (the author)'s letters weren't just general Gospels, but specific letters written to each specific church (the Corinthian church, for example), addressing their SPECIFIC issues, issues that we may not have today. Out of these many explanations, I imagine one or more of them being correct. But God tells us in James 1:5 that if we lack wisdom or don't understand something, that if we pray to Him with a heart that we set on Him, that He will not judge us but will reveal to us the answers that we seek. And in Jeremiah 29:13 it specifically says that when we seek God with (and only with) all our hearts, we WILL find Him, so I would encourage you to pray to God about this and ask Him what the answer is, whether it was none or one or more than one of the things that I recommended from the scriptures.

What is the difference between men and women in the Christian faith?

So as our time here comes to an end, I wanted to summarize the differences between men and women in the Christian faith. We have already looked at tons of different purposes for women in the Christian faith, but that begs the question: why are we looking at that? Is there some sort of differences between men and women in the Christian faith that would so distinguish them to the point that we wonder if they are even similar? Many different stereotypes are believed, typically ones that portray Christian in a negative, male favoring, "traditional" light - but this is not the true Christian faith. In reality, in the Christian faith, there are actually very few differences between men and women - all of the purposes we discussed for women are either shared or paralleled: they have each other, they have God's promises and love and life, they attend church, they (in different ways, as we just discussed) lead church, and they have each other as friends. The only differences are that where women are wives and mothers, men are husbands and fathers - but neither has more purpose than the other, just a DIFFERENT purpose. So then, what are the differences between men and women in the Christian faith? As we just discussed, the Bible does teach that women do not speak or teach in the church, but no other bans on female church leadership are made - no bans at all exist for males. 1 Corinthians 14:34-35: "Women should remain silent in the churches. They are not allowed to speak, but must be in submission, as the law says. If they want to inquire about something, they should ask their own husbands at home; for it is disgraceful for a woman to speak in the church." 1 Timothy 2:11-15: "A woman should learn in quietness and full submission. I do not permit a woman to teach or to assume authority over a man; she must be quiet. For Adam was formed first, then Eve. And Adam was not the one deceived; it was the woman who was deceived and became a sinner. But women will be saved through childbearing - if they continue in faith, love and holiness with propriety." - the first thing I will say is that verse 15 of the most recent passage probably does not literally mean that women will be saved through childbearing, as obviously many wombs are unable to conceive, and if anybody is insensitive to each of our specific troubles, I guarantee you it is NOT God. What that verse probably meant was that, Mary (a woman) having given birth to Jesus is what enabled us to be saved by Jesus (He had to actually be born first), and so the verse is highlighting the NEED and the importance of women in the Christian faith, while also encouraging them to remain in faith, love, and holiness. Remember that the verses are only referring to in person attendance in the church - many women do great ministry work on social media platforms, using the gifts that God has given them to speak and teach, and to do so in a way that honors God and honors the Bible. It could also be said that in ancient times, in the specific church that Paul was writing to, there were MANY sinful and irreligious women who were sneaking in among the ranks and destroying the church - it COULD be said that these verses only applied to that church, as Paul (the author)'s letters weren't just general Gospels, but specific letters written to each specific church (the Corinthian church, for example), addressing their SPECIFIC issues, issues that we may not have today. So obviously there is a difference between men and women in church leadership. Another difference between men and women in the Christian faith is that men are to lead their households, while women are to follow such lead - remember that we earlier established that you should not marry a man unless you have no doubt at all that you are comfortable submitting to him as you would to the Lord, as the Bible calls. Ephesians 5:22-25: "Wives, submit yourselves to your own husbands as you do to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church, his body, of which he is the Savior. Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit to their husbands in everything. Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her." - so the man leads, and protects the woman, while the woman follows. There is a difference there - if anyone takes issue with this command, here is a very simple command: do not marry a woman you won't lead and protect, and do not marry a man that will not lead/protect you or is not someone worth submitting to. If the Bible says to submit to your husband in the SAME WAY that you submit to God, then it is obviously very important that you marry a man that is Godly and worth submitting to in the same way that you submit to God, to the point that submitting to Him would be JUST LIKE submitting to God, because his leadership is Godly and he pursues Godliness, so submitting to him should lead to more Godliness - if this is not the case, instead of complaining, have more discernment and find someone that is worthy of the command, or make the difficult decision to NOT pursue marriage. Another difference between men and women in the Christian faith is that being a husband, father, son, brother, and man is different from being a wife, mother, daughter, sister, and woman - I believe that the differences here are best found between motherhood and fatherhood, it is incredible. Men are typically stronger and (as we just looked at) called to protect their wives and family, and women (and this was present in the Old and New Testaments) typically provide for their families - the Bible does NOT explicitly support the "gender roles" that we know in modern times, because those are recently adapted stereotypes - nowhere does the Bible say "men gather, women prepare." However, I do find that men are typically more naturally/genetically suited as gatherers (the term used for someone that would gather food by going out and hunting it down), and women are typically more naturally/genetically suited as those who prepare (cook that food, clean, parent at home while the man works, etc.). These things are NOT taught in the Bible, but the Bible does tell the wife to submit to the man, and God typically makes the man more of the gatherer. This is another difference between men and women in the Christian faith. Specifically in ministry, the man is the preacher because he is from Adam, who came DIRECTLY from God, while the woman comes from Eve, who came from Adam. So man is God's direct representative while woman is humanity's representative, and so only man would preach in the church. "For as woman came from man, so also man is born of woman. But everything comes from God" (1 Corinthians 11:12). 1 Corinthians 11:7: "he is the image and glory of God; but woman is the glory of man." - the man is described as being made in God's image, and it is said that he is the glory (probably meaning "reflection," since Adam CAME FROM God), while woman is referred to as the glory (reflection) of man - though it is not specified that she is not made in the image of God, because that is untrue - all of, "male and female" (Genesis 1:27) are made in the image of God. In this way, the differences between men and women in the Christian faith are very, very few. When you heard that I would be discussing the differences between men and women in the Christian faith, you probably imagined that we would be here all day, but that would be incorrect because the differences between men and women in the Christian faith are very few - both men AND women have purposes in the Christian faith, and God loves them ALL. Thanks for reading. "Even on my servants, both men and women, I will pour out my Spirit in those days" (Joel 2:29). In the days of the future, which we are currently living in given how long ago that passage was - God promised us that BOTH men and women would be filled with the Holy Spirit, because that is what enables us to walk with God. "This is how we know that we live in him and he in us: He has given us of his Spirit" (1 John 4:13). So this Holy Spirit is needed in the Christian faith, which is why God has given it to both men and women, because He loves us all and "wants all people to be saved and come to a knowledge of the truth" (1 Timothy 2:4), and we know that Jesus is "the truth" (John 14:6), and that if you know Jesus and live out His commands "then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free" (John 8:31). God wants this for us all, because He truly loves us all and has purposes for both men AND women in the Christian faith. Thanks for reading.

Trusting God even without getting the results that we want

I'm writing about this because I can't stop thinking about a friend of mine, who lives a very difficult life. At the age of 40, he continues to struggle finding employment, finding a girlfriend, any sort of stability - and his car was just stolen and he's about to lose the apartment he lives in. So then, Mr. Bible guy, what do you say to a guy like THAT? It's a good question, and I've given it a lot of thought, and I can honestly tell you that I don't know. I don't. Only GOD can help in times like that. Perhaps this is why Jesus says “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible: (Matthew 19:26). So then, it is possible for God, and He may grant me the right Words here today: how can we keep trusting God even when we aren't getting the results that we want, or when the situation is down? In Proverbs 3:5-6 it says to "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your understanding. In all your ways, submit to God, and He will make your paths straight." - so the passage tells us to "trust God with ALL your heart." If you aren't fully trusting God, but only partly while also caring more about if the situation is improving (prioritizing results over faith), then you are not trusting in God with all your heart, and it is impossible to sit here wondering "how can I trust God when everything in my life is bad?" You must first start by truly trusting Him, and doing so with all your heart, because apart from this the effort is less than full, and God makes clear in the Bible that He does not like a lukewarm faith. So you must start by actually trusting God (who would've thought?) and doing so with all your heart. Naturally, the next step is paralyzing: lean not on your own understanding. That is to say: don't rely on yourself, rely on God instead. Your "understanding" is sort of like the answers - I'm currently without a job, and my personal understanding of that situation is that I want a job, want one now, and that most people my age don't have this problem. So my understanding will be negative, and I will wonder if God (with whom ALL things are possible) isn't maybe the villain for having the ability to help me and NOT doing it - this is my limited, human, sinful understanding. Don't lean on it. Trust in God instead. For example, when someone says to you "what would Jesus do?", instead of personally answering that question with what YOU think JESUS would have done, instead of that your answer should be Scripture based, based on what Jesus actually DID DO. In this way you are trusting God with your answer to that question, and not yourself. Many of us, too many of us if you ask me, are relying on ourselves far before God. We love God, don't get me wrong we really do, but it's just more important to get a job, to have pleasures, to have the answers and to have things figured out. We might not say it, but our heart feels it, and we live by that disappointing set of words. "As water reflects the face, so one’s life reflects the heart." (Proverbs 27:19), that is to say that God cannot be fooled as He understands, based on our heart and if we truly lives our everyday lives for Him - He understands whether or not we are devoted to Him, if we really trust Him with ALL our heart, or if we are leaning on our own understanding. And the rest of the passage teaches that we must submit to God "in all our ways, and He will make your paths straight." Notice that the passage did NOT tell us where the path was going, whether easy or difficult or something in between? The only thing that we learn about our path in life is that God is the one who is establishing it and making it straight. This leaves room for hardships - sometimes the path is a difficult one, but even then we are called to follow God and submit to Him "in all our ways." Submitting to God in all your ways, specifically "all" of them, implies that even when we are at our lowest and doing the most losing, we are called to trust God regardless of whether or not we get the answers that we want. Honor God when the results aren't what you want, when the circumstances are undesirable. In "all" your ways and "at all times." This is why the Bible says that "there is a time for everything" (Ecclesiastes 3), a clear reference to the fact that you will both succeed AND fail in this life. If there is a time for everything, then at all times we are called to trust in God instead of leaning on our own understanding and trying to change the fortunes or force a result and circumstance in our lives that we would be more happy with. And if there is a time for everything, then we are called to pursue God at all times. Psalm 62:8: "Trust in Him at all times, you people; pour out your hearts to him, for God is our refuge." - We as people are called to trust in God "at all times," and we are told to pour out our hearts to Him. This is a powerful reminder that even at our worst, God hears our prayers and loves us, and even if our lives and our circumstances aren't what we want them to be, we are still able to choose God, to choose being able to trust in Him with ALL of our hearts instead of leaning on our own understanding, to be able to trust Him "at all times" and to POUR out our hearts to Him even when the results in our lives are difficult or uneasy. This is greater than having control, than having things together. This is why the verse says to trust in the Lord with "all" your heart, and not to "lean" on your own understanding. It's ok to lean, to be tired and need to lean on something - but don't lean on your own understanding, lean on God and the Words that He has for us. Philippians 4:6-7: "Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus." This passage encourages us not to be anxious or worried about things (things like the situations in our lives not going our way), but instead to pray. This is why it says "in every situation, by prayer, present your request to God." I want you to try that this week. Whenever overthinking or overanalyzing or anxiety or depression comes - stop those thoughts at the moment they take place and reach out to God in prayer. So then, at "all times" and in "all ways," we know that God is watching us, is looking out for us, and that we decide for Him whether we like Him or have a good faith in Him or not. This is why the passage is clear that if you do partake in the prayer, if you do naturally reach out to God and submit to Him, leaning on Him instead of on some result - if you do these things then "the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus." - your heart and mind is typically where these battles with anxiety and depression take place, so if our hearts and minds and guarded, then we will be safe from the turmoil of being obsessed with our circumstances needing to improve. This is why we are told that "the peace of God transcends all understanding." So it is better to trust in the Lord, and to have peace from Him NO MATTER WHAT happens or what the situation is - it is better to have this than it is to have the understanding, to have the situation in your favor, etc. It is better to trust God even when the results of life aren't going your way. "Be still, and know that I am God" (Psalm 46:10). When it says to "be still," this is a reference to an anxious heart and mind, one that is always worrying and obsessing and analyzing things, trying to make sure every last uncontrollable detail is controlled - be still. KNOW that He is God. The only "understanding" that we get, the only time that we need to understand the situation or have the answers all figured out - the only thing we need to know is that HE is God, and that He will take care of us, all of this according to His timing. This is why it says to be still - there is no need for the heart and mind to race around, all that we need to understand is that GOD is God. We have no need to be God, to understand and control the situation. Isaiah 60:22: "When the time is right, I, the Lord, will do it." Ezekiel 34:26: "There will be showers of blessing, in season." So we know, from what God says, that there WILL be blessings and that He WILL move, but it takes time - only when the time is right, only in season. It takes time, but the Lord will move when He is ready to. This is why it says in Jeremiah 29:11 that "I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord - plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." - so God's plans are to prosper us, and this can be so hard to see or understand while things aren't going our way, but it is important to see that the verse only offered these things as plans that God "has" and that these things for us as plans, as futuristic things. So if things aren't going well right now, remember that this is not forever. And when the verse discusses "prosperity" and "not harm," remember that sometimes negative experiences like breakups and joblessness and hunger - sometimes these build your character and help to prosper you, and so sometimes these things are part of God's plans right here. But never anything "harmful" - things like rape and murder and torture, "harmful" and abusive things (including verbal abuse) is NOT God's plan - "my plan is not to harm you." And so we can know that God is good, but that it may take time, and that His timing and His plans are what is best for us. This is why the Bible teaches that "we live by faith and not by sight" (2 Corinthians 5:7). The meaning of this is to say that it doesn't matter what we can see or feel or understand, how things are right now - faith is what matters more. This is why people say that "faith sees best in the dark" - because it's when you can't see, can't believe, when things aren't going your way - THAT is when you live by faith and not by sight. "Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see" (Hebrews 11:1). So just like we talked about earlier, "hope and a future." This is something that we hope for, not something that we have, and the assurance that faith brings us is "assurance about what we do not see." Because we don't need to see, we don't need to lean on our own understanding. Trust in God with all your heart even when things don't go your way. Thanks for reading.

The next step for both the non-Christian and the Christian when it comes to Christianity

Many have wondered what the next steps would be for them to take when it comes to God, when it comes to Christianity. Today, we are going to answer that question. That being said, in order to keep the writing as specific and to the point as possible, there are certain things that we will assume, so that we don't have to write about them. For example: we will assume that you DO have to take the next steps, and that there are in fact next steps to take - some religious people don't believe this, they simply believe you need to be baptized or saved or something like that. We believe that, according to the Words of Jesus and other speakers in the Bible, we are called to continue living lives of love and lives that honor and glorify God - we will not be debating the fact that there are steps to be taken. We also will not be debating that Jesus Christ is God and that Christianity is the One True religion - if you came here to find out what "the next steps with Allah" are, then you will be disappointed. Also, we will assume that people fall into 1 of 2 groups: non-Christian (whether atheist or following another religion) and Christian. So to summarize: there are next steps to take, they need to be taken, they need to be taken with Jesus Christ/Christianity and NO OTHER god or religion, and you are either a non-Christian or a Christian. This is the last of these things that we will say.

The next step for the non-Christian

The next step for the non-Christian is this: relationship with the Father. "The Father" refers to our Heavenly Father, God. Some people will be upset that I didn't say "a relationship with Jesus," but truth be told, it is the same thing - “If you knew me, you would know my Father also" (the Words of Jesus in John 8:19, referring to the Heavenly Father). So to know one is to know the other - this is why Jesus is able to say "I and the Father are One" (John 10:30). They are the same, yet also different - the same in nature, the same God, but each plays a different role (this is the doctrine of the Trinity, and we will assume it without writing further at this time, though it is easily explained online and elsewhere on this website). And the relationship we have with God is a unique relationship - there is no romance, this isn't just a friendship, this relationship is the type of relationship that you would have with the center of your life. Let me explain. If the center of your life is money, then you will work your hardest to make as much money as possible, and every action that you take should be towards this. If the center of your life is women, then you will have as much sex as possible. On and on I could go. The Christian faith teaches that Jesus is to be the center of our lives, that He is the one we should obey and glorify (John 6:35 teaches that Jesus is literally the bread and water of life, and that with Him we will no longer hunger or thirst, and in 1 Corinthians 10:31 we are taught to glorify God in all that we do). So clearly Jesus is the center of a Christian life, and so in the same way you would pursue money or women if those were your goals, in the same way you now pursue Jesus. Everything you do should be catered toward Him. This doesn't mean you sit in church for 24 hours a day - it means everything is for Jesus. When you speak? For Jesus (speaking about Him, and speaking kindly and being a good listener even when the conversation is irreligious). Your career? For Jesus (even irreligious work can be for Jesus if you show gratitude for it and shine the light of a good Christian example to your coworkers and all that you interact with). In this way, everything is for Jesus. So the "next steps" are simply this: Christians must pursue Jesus like this, and non-Christians must become Christian. In this way, everyone eventually gets to the point that they are obeying God's Word (which says to put Him first and live your life for Him). It is possible to be a "Christian" without living like this, which is why I have included Christians as also having a next step to take. But for the non-Christian, what does becoming a Christian actually look like? "Well I went to church growi" - stop. That's not what this is. This isn't about what you did growing up. Trust me: if you're unsure about whether or not you were a Christian at one point in your life, then you were not a Christian. If you are truly "following Christ," which is the basic requirement of being a Christian (it's what the Disciples, the first Christians, did - they followed Jesus around and helped Him minister during His life on Earth) - if you truly follow Christ with your LIFE (which is our goal here), then it will be obvious to you. So if you think I'm asking you to go back to attending a church and simply doing whatever you think it means to be religious or whatever you might have done growing up, know that I am absolutely not asking for that. If it didn't work then, it won't work now. The mission of Jesus Christ is that He came down to Earth and lived amidst a very religious Jewish society, a culture of people who wanted victory over their Roman oppressors. Instead of giving them that, He called them out on their sins and helped to guide them towards TRUE freedom - He challenged their ways so intensely that they had Him crucified to get rid of Him. In the same way, as you try to simply use God when you want help in life (like how the Jews just wanted freedom from Rome), He may or may not give you that help, but freedom from sins and a relationship with God is what He will ultimately do for you. And notice that Jesus came into the World IN A RELIGIOUS society, and not in a godless society? Why? Because there was a need amongst the religious to take a next step - their religiousness didn't actually include the closeness, the devotion, the relationship to God that we need. That's why Jesus corrected, of all people, the religious. Because they are the only people on Earth that actually think they are going to faith through Jesus, but aren't. The irreligious and other-religious would admit that if Jesus is Lord, then they are probably going to Hell - but some religious Christians have a belief in their chances that they should not have. They lack closeness and relationship, which is why I have listed such relationship was the next step for a BEGINNER (the irreligious and those that follow other religions), because if you START your faith like this, than the only next step to take is to continue to live in your faith and pursue it wholeheartedly. So then, if you think this is about religion, stop right there. This is about Jesus. What's so important about Jesus? The Name "Christ" means Messiah, that is, Savior. So He saves us. From what? Our sins. Why do our sins matter? Because they distance us from God. You can't try to pursue Jesus while sinning. It's impossible. If you have less than full devotion towards God, then it will be difficult for Him to take you seriously, either. In the New Testament, when Jesus healed sick people, NOT ONCE did He heal someone with less than FULL faith. He never healed someone because they were religious, or a good person, or because they mostly believed - the only line of reasoning that He EVER gave for healing was because the person had full faith. In fact, in Mark 9:22-24, He tells a man who already believes in Him to "believe" because (as the man admits in that passage) that man's faith isn't full. So more than religion, or moral goodness, our ultimate way to Heaven is through Jesus, through faith. Jesus tells us "I am the way and the truth and the life, and nobody comes to the Father (God) in Heaven except through me" (John 14:6). Elsewhere we hear that "it is by grace you have been saved, through faith - and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God - not by works, so that no one can boast" (Ephesians 2:8-9). So Jesus is "the way" and "the only way to Heaven" and we are saved by God's grace which is unlocked "through faith." Basically: Jesus, faith. This would encourage the type of relationship where you have faith in Jesus. This is different than any other relationship - I like my friend rick, but I don't have faith in him (at all really, but CERTAINLY not as the Son of God). So clearly our relationship with Jesus is different. Our relationship with Jesus can be described like this: to know and obey. If you are irreligious, or of another religion, I am not asking you to listen to a sermon about Jesus every week - I am asking you to know and obey Jesus in all that you do in your everyday life. In your relationship with Jesus, it is important that you know Him - that you read His Word and learn more about Him, spending time in prayer. But this isn't unique - EVERY relationship benefits with knowing the other person a little better. The place where our relationship with God is totally unique is this: obedience. I obey my mom most of the time, sometimes I am dishonest, but now that I myself am an adult, there are times that I disobey her in ways that are totally ok. And that's my mom, the closest example on Earth that I can think of in terms of someone I obey. But my relationship with God is even different than that - I NEVER, as a Christian, am allowed to disobey God. Whereas I have the legal right to disobey my mom at the age of 18, and the Bible only calls for "children" to obey their parents (Colossians 3:20, implying that adult-kids have freedom), with God it isn't like this. I can't "respectfully disagree" with God. I am called to live my life to reach others for Christ - never will I do that for my mom, nor would she want anyone to "be reached for her". I am called to live according to the Words of Jesus (John 12:47, Matthew 7:24-28), because they are instructions from God Himself and they are needed, whereas when it comes to my mother and other people I have a relationship with, I can do with their words and teachings whatever I wish. Because my relationship with God, and your relationship with God, is simply this: that we know and obey Him. To the irreligious, it means coming to know Jesus - "I am the way and the truth and the life, and nobody comes to the Father (God) in Heaven except through me" (John 14:6). So Jesus is "the truth," and we hear elsewhere that if you "know the truth, then the truth will set you free" (John 8:32). So He is our Savior, our Messiah ("Christ"), the one who saves us and sets us free. So obviously it is important that we know Him. And, as a warning to those of other religions, I say this: it is important that we know HIM, and not some other god. This is why in that verse (John 14:6) Jesus says that "I" (referring only to Himself) am the way," and if it wasn't clear enough He adds "nobody will come to the Father (God) in Heaven except through me." So if you are trying to meet our Heavenly Father in Heaven through Allah or some other god, even conceptual gods (gods that aren't real gods but concepts that serve as gods) like the god of religion or the god of moral goodness, or any other figure that isn't Jesus Christ, then you will only make to the Throne of God to be Judged on the Day of Judgment, and then you will be cast away forever. This is not hateful, but loving for me to warn all of you like this. So if you aren't currently a Christian, the next step is this: enter into a relationship with God. This is the type of relationship that needs to be fed and nurtured, or it dies. So feed it every day by praying to Jesus and reading and obeying the Bible and attending a church that does and preaches these things as well.

The next step for the Christian

So then, what is the next step for a Christian when it comes to God and Christianity? We had just established that the next step for an irreligious or other-religious person is to enter into a relationship with God where they "know and obey" Him and His teachings for their lives, and they do things to feed and nurture that relationship and prevent it from dying - things like Bible reading and prayer and attending theologically sound and community oriented churches. We want irreligious and other-religious people to ENTER into this type of a relationship with God. To be considered a part of this second group, the Christians, the assumption is made that you are already in this type of relationship with God. Your next step, then, is to continue to grow in that relationship. "And this is my prayer: that your love may abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight" (Philippians 1:9). The Bible also teaches that God is love (1 John 4:8) and that we are called to love God all our heart as the single most important commandment in the entire Bible (Matthew 22:36-37). So then, when in Philippians 1:9 we hear that our "love should abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight," it means many things. First of all, we "abound" (gain) "more and more" in knowledge. We get to know God better. We take the relationship with God that we already have, that already exists, and we continue to grow in that relationship. But not only that, the verse continues and says that we should also grow in terms of our "depth of insight." Insight goes hand in hand with knowledge, and since this is being used to describe our relationship to the Lord, we can safely conclude that "insight" refers here to our relationship with God, as does "knowledge." So not only does your base knowledge grow, your relationship with God grows in terms of what you know about Him and the Bible and how you see Him - but we are ALSO called to grow in terms of our "depth of insight." The DEPTH of our relationship with God is also something that we are called to improve upon. We must not only go farther with our knowledge, but DEEPER with our insight as well. Truthfully, this is the will of God. He wants us to draw closer. This is why the opportunity is offered to us - "Draw near to God, and He will draw near to you" (James 4:8). If we truly seek God, He will seek us - you get out of this what you put into it. Some may take issue with this and say that they had been reached by God when they had done nothing to earn it - they didn't have to draw near in order for God to draw near to them. Where this idea falls short is that God didn't "draw them near," He simply nudged their hearts, and they still had to make the decision to draw close to Him. So this IS based on free will, but God promises us certainty: if you draw near to Him, He WILL draw near to you. This is why we are taught in Jeremiah 29:12-13 that "I hear you when you pray to me, and you will find me when you seek me with all your heart." So if we truly draw near to God, He will draw near to us, and we WILL find Him (whether it's a piece of advice or some peace of mind, or even salvation itself, whatever we are looking for from Him we WILL find it), but only if you truly draw to Him. It is then that He will respond in turn by drawing near to you, and then you will find Him. How is it that you could "find" God if you're already a Christian? You're finding more. It didn't say "discover," as if you've never seen Him before - you're just finding more about Him. A lot like how different nations all around the world are "finding" oil and using it for revenue - they aren't discovering oil, simply finding it. So then, in the same way, if you've discovered God once then your job isn't to do so again, but to find more of Him as you continue to grow your relationship with Him. Again this can only be done by seeking Him "with ALL your heart" (Jeremiah 29:12-13), and He makes clear that if we truly search for Him then we will find Him. This challenge, this intensity, this is what our relationship with God is supposed to look like - you don't just want God, you want MORE. So find more. Draw near with all your heart. Continue to pray and read the Bible and attend a theologically sound, community oriented church. Jesus Himself teaches that, instead of just knowing God or simply calling Him Lord or doing great things in His Name, we must actually do His Will - we must actually nurture and grow our relationship, not just claim to have one or even have one but not nurture and grow it.

Matthew 7:21-27: “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons and in your name perform many miracles?’ Then I will tell them plainly, ‘I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!’ Therefore everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house; yet it did not fall, because it had its foundation on the rock. But everyone who hears these words of mine and does not put them into practice is like a foolish man who built his house on sand. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell with a great crash.”

What amazes me is that, throughout that passage, we meet many people who fall short of the glory of God and of a relationship with Him - what is so amazing is how these people fall short. It mentioned these people as "saying to Him 'Lord, Lord'" (meaning that they believed in Him and PROFESSED that belief, also people that cast out demons in His Name, and even people who heard "these Words of mine." All of these people fall short, despite knowing the Bible ("these Words of mine") and calling Him Lord  the only way that the people were saved is if they "did His will" and "put His works into practice." As the passage made clear, the storm of life will beat down both the one who is saved but also the one who is not - you are guaranteed to face persecutions and temptations, including the temptation to now grow your relationship with God any further. It is vitally important that you actually put your beliefs into practice, otherwise "faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead" (James 2:17). So only the one that truly grows his or her relationship with God and puts the will of God into practice, only this person will be saved in the end. So then, Christians, your next step is to take your relationship with God and to FURTHER it in all that you do in your everyday lives. Thanks for reading.

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