soc.octade.net is a Fediverse instance that uses the ActivityPub protocol. In other words, users at this host can communicate with people that use software like Mastodon, Pleroma, Friendica, etc. all around the world.

This server runs the snac software and there is no automatic sign-up process.

Admin email
social@octade.net

Search results for tag #god

[?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
@LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

💠💎💙🩵💦⛵🏯🫂🐬💛✌️🕊️🦚🌴🐫🐪🌞💌🌐🌏💚💁🏿‍♀️*DEAR BELOVED PRECIOUS!*& GIFTED!*& KIND FRIENDS AROUND THE WORLD GREETINGS!*& GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING!🌞👉

(Galatians 1:1-5)

A beautiful painting of a lovely young girl with a pastel colorful dress on!*sitting in a field of gorgeous flowers*& there are words saying ~ ( "*Wishing all you Dear friends Across the world A full of God's Love Day!*Amen!")

Alt...A beautiful painting of a lovely young girl with a pastel colorful dress on!*sitting in a field of gorgeous flowers*& there are words saying ~ ( "*Wishing all you Dear friends Across the world A full of God's Love Day!*Amen!")

    [?]Gems of Knowledge » 🌐
    @gemsofknowledge.com@gemsofknowledge.com

    Stop Striving and Start Trusting God

    Are you exhausted from trying to make everything happen? The world teaches us to strive, struggle, compete, and push harder. God's Kingdom operates differently. Through faith, trust, and simple obedience, we discover the freedom of letting God carry the results. Jesus has already overcome every opposing force. He has already won every battle. He has already secured every victory. There is no competition for His throne, no rival to His authority, and no obstacle beyond His power. Nothing can stand against Him! In God's Kingdom, we are not called to strive. We are called to trust. Click here to read the full devotional. ✨ [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

    Today’s One Year Bible Verses: 1 Kings 18:1–46, Acts 11:1–30, Psalm 135:1–21, Proverbs 17:12–13


    Nothing Stands Against Him

    After worship this morning, the Lord told me to look up the definition of striving when He whispered this Gem of Knowledge to me:

    “It’s silly to think about striving. Look up the definition. It doesn’t even exist in My Kingdom. Here it is simply doing or not doing. Period.”

    Well, that certainly got my attention.

    So I looked it up.

    Striving means to make great efforts, exert yourself vigorously, struggle to achieve a goal, contend against opposing forces, or compete for a prize or position.

    As I read those definitions, something immediately stood out to me.

    Vigorously. Strenuous. Struggle. Contending. Competing.

    The Lord was right.

    None of these things exist in His Kingdom. Jesus has already overcome every opposing force. He has already won every battle. He has already secured every victory. There is no competition for His throne, no rival to His authority, and no obstacle beyond His power.

    Nothing can stand against Him.

    In God’s Kingdom, we are not called to strive. We are called to trust. We are called to obey.

    As I continued reading today’s Scriptures, I noticed something fascinating: God wasn’t asking anyone to strive. He was simply asking them to do what He said.

    The contrast is especially clear on Mount Carmel. The prophets of Baal spent hours striving. They shouted louder. They danced harder. They cut themselves. They exhausted themselves trying to force a response from a god who could not answer.

    Everything about their actions was striving.

    Meanwhile, Elijah simply obeyed.

    He rebuilt the altar.
    He prepared the sacrifice.
    He drenched it with water.
    Then he prayed.

    That was it.

    Elijah did not strive to make fire fall from heaven. He did not manipulate the situation or manufacture a miracle. He simply did what God told him to do and trusted God with the outcome.

    And God responded.

    Fire fell from heaven, consumed the sacrifice, the altar, the stones, the dust, and even the water in the trench. The people fell on their faces declaring, “The Lord—he is God! Yes, the Lord is God!” (1 Kings 18:39, NLT).

    What a powerful reminder that God’s power is not released through our striving. It is released through our obedience.

    We see the same principle in Acts 11. Peter was criticized for entering the home of Gentiles. He could have argued, defended himself, or tried to convince everyone through his own efforts. Instead, he simply shared what God had shown him and what God had done.

    The believers recognized God’s hand in the situation and glorified Him.

    Again, we see the pattern:

    Not striving.
    Not forcing.
    Not manipulating.
    Simply obeying and allowing God to work.

    Psalm 135 declares:

    “The Lord does whatever pleases him throughout all heaven and earth.” (Psalm 135:6, NLT)

    What freedom there is in that truth. The success of God’s plans does not depend on our ability to strive harder. It depends on His power.

    So many of us are exhausted because we are trying to do God’s job. We are striving to change people, fix situations, control outcomes, and make things happen. Meanwhile, God is simply asking us to obey the next thing He has placed before us.

    The burden of producing results belongs to Him…The responsibility of obedience belongs to us. 💎


    Action (5 Minutes with God)

    Give 5 minutes of your day today and surrender to the Lord. Ask Him:

    • Lord, what do You want me to know about this personally?”
      • Journal what He gives you through His Holy Spirit.
    • Then ask, “What do You want me to do?”
      • Journal what He reveals – then do it!

    Ask the Lord to reveal an area where you have been striving instead of trusting. Surrender the outcome to Him and focus only on the next step of obedience He has placed before you.


    Prayer

    Father, thank You for reminding me that I do not have to carry burdens You never intended me to carry. Forgive me for the times I have tried to force outcomes, control circumstances, or accomplish things in my own strength. Help me trust You more fully. Teach me to walk in simple obedience and leave the results in Your hands. Thank You that You have already overcome every obstacle and secured every victory. In Jesus’ mighty name I pray, Amen.

    To read more 5 Minutes with God devotionals click here.


    If Gems of Knowledge has blessed your walk with Christ, please subscribe or consider partnering with us today. Your gift helps keep these devotionals free for everyone and carries God’s Word to more hearts. Every seed matters—thank you for sowing into this work! 💛

    Test everything by the Word and the Spirit (John 16:13)

    Subscribe

    Partner/Donate

    A dramatic Mount Carmel scene showing the frantic prophets of Baal beside their altar while Elijah stands peacefully as God's fire falls from heaven upon his altar.

    Alt...A dramatic Mount Carmel scene showing the frantic prophets of Baal beside their altar while Elijah stands peacefully as God's fire falls from heaven upon his altar.

    [?]Daily in the Word » 🌐
    @dailyintheword.blog@dailyintheword.blog

    The God Who Sets Apart the Godly

    A Bible Study Reflecting on Psalm 4:3 Psalm 4:3 declares, “But know that the Lord has set apart the godly for himself; the Lord hears when I call to him.” Though brief, this verse contains profound theological truths about divine election, covenant relationship, God's intimate knowledge of His people, and the assurance of answered prayer. It stands as a declaration of confidence in the midst of opposition and uncertainty, reminding believers that their security is found not in […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

    A Bible Study Reflecting on Psalm 4:3

    Psalm 4:3 declares, “But know that the Lord has set apart the godly for himself; the Lord hears when I call to him.” Though brief, this verse contains profound theological truths about divine election, covenant relationship, God’s intimate knowledge of His people, and the assurance of answered prayer. It stands as a declaration of confidence in the midst of opposition and uncertainty, reminding believers that their security is found not in circumstances but in God’s sovereign grace.

    The context of Psalm 4 is one of distress. David is surrounded by adversaries who question his integrity and seek his downfall. Yet instead of allowing fear or resentment to dominate his heart, he directs his confidence toward God. The psalm moves from anxiety to peace because David knows something deeper than his circumstances. He knows the character of God.

    Verse three serves as the theological center of the psalm. It explains why David refuses to despair. His confidence is rooted in the truth that God has established a special covenant relationship with His people and that God faithfully responds when they seek Him.

    The opening words, “But know,” function as a command. David is calling both himself and his enemies to recognize a divine reality that transcends human opinion. God’s truth stands independent of public approval or earthly power. Human judgment fluctuates, but God’s purposes remain fixed forever.

    Throughout Scripture, knowledge of God is not merely intellectual information but covenant understanding. To know something in the biblical sense is to embrace it as reality that shapes one’s life. David insists that everyone recognize what God Himself has declared.

    The statement that “the Lord has set apart the godly for himself” introduces one of Scripture’s recurring themes: God distinguishes His people from the world for His own purposes.

    The phrase “set apart” carries the idea of separation, consecration, and ownership. It points toward holiness, not merely as moral purity but as belonging exclusively to God. In the Old Testament, priests were set apart, the temple was set apart, the Sabbath was set apart, and Israel itself was set apart from the nations. Holiness fundamentally means belonging to God before it means behaving differently.

    This understanding reaches back to God’s covenant with Abraham, where God sovereignly chose one man and one family through whom He would bless the nations. Israel did not become God’s people because of numerical strength or moral superiority but because of God’s gracious love and sovereign choice.

    David applies this covenant principle personally. He knows that his relationship with God is grounded in God’s initiative rather than human merit. This gives him tremendous confidence during times of attack.

    The term translated “godly” comes from a Hebrew word associated with covenant faithfulness, steadfast love, and devotion. It describes those who live within the covenant relationship established by God’s grace. The godly are not sinless individuals but people who belong to God and seek to walk faithfully before Him.

    This distinction is important because Scripture consistently teaches that righteousness is never self-generated. Even in the Old Testament, believers lived by faith in God’s promises. Their standing before God rested upon His mercy rather than their perfection.

    The New Testament expands this truth through Jesus Christ. Believers are called saints, literally “holy ones,” because they have been sanctified by God’s grace through faith. Their holiness is first positional before it becomes practical. God declares them His own and then progressively transforms them into Christ’s likeness.

    Psalm 4:3 therefore anticipates the New Testament doctrine of sanctification. God separates His people unto Himself and then works within them to produce lives that reflect His character.

    The words “for himself” deserve careful attention. God does not merely rescue people from judgment; He rescues them into relationship with Himself.

    The purpose of redemption has always been communion with God. Humanity was created to know God, worship Him, enjoy His fellowship, and reflect His glory. Sin shattered that fellowship, introducing alienation and spiritual death. Yet throughout redemptive history, God continually acts to restore His people to Himself.

    When Israel left Egypt, God’s repeated declaration through Moses was, “Let my people go, that they may serve me.” Deliverance was never an end in itself but the means by which God’s people entered deeper fellowship with Him.

    Likewise, Christ redeems believers so that they may become God’s treasured possession. Salvation is relational before it is merely judicial. Eternal life itself is defined as knowing God and Jesus Christ whom He has sent.

    David’s confidence rests in belonging to God. If God has claimed him as His own possession, then no earthly opposition can ultimately prevail against him.

    This truth offers profound comfort for believers today. Identity is one of the great struggles of modern culture. People seek significance through achievement, popularity, wealth, status, or personal success. Yet all such foundations are unstable.

    Scripture offers a different identity. Believers belong to God. They are His children, His workmanship, His inheritance, His temple, His bride, and His people. Their value comes not from what they accomplish but from the One who has claimed them as His own.

    The second half of the verse declares, “The Lord hears when I call to him.”

    This statement reveals another remarkable aspect of covenant relationship. The God who created the universe listens attentively to His people.

    Throughout pagan religions, gods were often viewed as distant, indifferent, or unpredictable. Worshippers attempted to manipulate them through rituals and sacrifices. Biblical faith presents an entirely different picture.

    The Lord is personal, attentive, compassionate, and faithful. He hears because He loves His people. Prayer is not an attempt to persuade an unwilling deity but communion with a loving Father who delights to hear His children.

    The assurance that God hears prayer appears repeatedly throughout Scripture. Abraham interceded for Sodom. Moses pleaded for Israel. Hannah cried out for a son. Elijah prayed for rain. Daniel prayed in exile. The prophets continually called God’s people to seek Him.

    Jesus elevated this confidence even further by teaching His disciples to pray, “Our Father in heaven.” The intimacy implied by that relationship transforms prayer from obligation into privilege.

    The promise that God hears does not imply that He always answers according to human expectations. Divine wisdom often leads to answers that differ from immediate desires. Yet God’s hearing always includes loving attention, perfect understanding, and sovereign action for His glory and His people’s ultimate good.

    David speaks with certainty rather than doubt. He does not say that perhaps God will hear or that he hopes God will listen. He declares confidently that the Lord hears.

    This confidence emerges from God’s covenant faithfulness. Since God has chosen His people and claimed them as His own, He remains attentive to their cries.

    The relationship between holiness and prayer is also significant. The one whom God has set apart enjoys fellowship with God through prayer. Communion with God naturally flows from belonging to Him.

    Prayer is therefore more than asking for blessings. It is the expression of covenant relationship. Children speak with their Father because they belong to Him. Citizens approach their king because they live under his authority. Sheep follow their shepherd because they know his voice.

    Likewise, believers pray because they belong to God and have been invited into His presence.

    This truth also encourages perseverance in difficult seasons. There are moments when God appears silent, circumstances remain unchanged, and suffering continues longer than expected. Psalm 4 reminds believers that apparent silence does not equal divine absence.

    God hears every prayer uttered in faith. He stores every tear, remembers every cry, and works through every circumstance according to His perfect wisdom. Faith rests not upon visible evidence but upon the trustworthy character of God.

    The practical implications of this verse extend into every area of Christian living.

    First, believers should live with confidence rather than insecurity. Their identity rests upon God’s gracious choice rather than human approval. Criticism, rejection, and misunderstanding cannot alter the fact that God has set apart His people for Himself.

    Second, believers should pursue holiness because they belong to God. Separation from sin is not legalistic obligation but grateful response to divine grace. Those who belong to God should increasingly reflect His character in their thoughts, words, and actions.

    Third, believers should cultivate a vibrant prayer life. Since God hears His people, prayer becomes one of the greatest privileges of the Christian life. The throne of grace remains continually open through Christ our High Priest.

    Fourth, believers should find peace amid adversity. David’s enemies surrounded him, yet his confidence remained unshaken because he knew who held his future. Likewise, Christians may face uncertainty, opposition, illness, or suffering while resting securely in God’s covenant love.

    Finally, this verse points ultimately to Jesus Christ. He is the perfectly Holy One, eternally set apart by the Father. Through His death and resurrection, sinners are brought into covenant relationship with God and become His holy people. In Christ, believers are chosen, sanctified, adopted, and welcomed into the Father’s presence.

    The certainty David experienced finds its fullest expression in the gospel. Those who trust Christ belong forever to God. Nothing can separate them from His love. Their prayers ascend before His throne, their lives remain under His sovereign care, and their future rests securely in His hands.

    Psalm 4:3 therefore stands as a timeless declaration of divine grace and covenant assurance. God sets apart His people for Himself, establishes them in His love, hears their cries, and faithfully preserves them through every trial. The believer’s confidence does not rest upon personal strength but upon the unchanging faithfulness of the Lord who knows His own, calls them by name, and invites them continually into His presence.

    The God Who Sets Apart the Godly

    Alt...The God Who Sets Apart the Godly

    [?]Daily in the Word » 🌐
    @dailyintheword.blog@dailyintheword.blog

    The Lord Who Knows His Own

    A Devotional Meditation on Psalm 4:3 The words of Psalm 4:3 shine like a lamp in the darkness of uncertainty: "But know that the Lord has set apart the godly for himself; the Lord hears when I call to him." In a world where identities are often shaped by achievement, popularity, wealth, or influence, this verse reminds the people of God that their deepest identity rests not in what they accomplish but in whom they belong. David speaks with unwavering confidence, not because his circumstances […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

    A Devotional Meditation on Psalm 4:3

    The words of Psalm 4:3 shine like a lamp in the darkness of uncertainty: “But know that the Lord has set apart the godly for himself; the Lord hears when I call to him.” In a world where identities are often shaped by achievement, popularity, wealth, or influence, this verse reminds the people of God that their deepest identity rests not in what they accomplish but in whom they belong. David speaks with unwavering confidence, not because his circumstances are easy, but because God’s covenant love is certain.

    The psalm itself is born in the midst of conflict. David is surrounded by opposition, misunderstanding, and false accusations. Enemies seek to shame him and undermine his confidence. Yet instead of allowing fear to govern his heart, he anchors himself in the character of God. His certainty is expressed in a simple but profound declaration: the Lord has set apart the godly for Himself.

    The phrase “set apart” carries the idea of separation for a holy purpose. Throughout Scripture, God continually distinguishes a people for His own possession. Israel was chosen not because of greatness or superiority, but because of God’s gracious love and sovereign purpose. Likewise, the Church is described as a holy nation and a royal priesthood, called out of darkness into marvelous light. God’s people belong to Him because He has claimed them through His grace.

    This truth reaches its fullest expression in Christ. Through His death and resurrection, believers are redeemed from sin and brought into the family of God. They are no longer strangers and enemies but beloved children. Their standing before God is not established by personal merit but by divine mercy. The blood of Christ has marked them as His own, and nothing in heaven or earth can erase that seal.

    There is great comfort in knowing that God does not merely tolerate His people but treasures them. Human relationships often fluctuate with circumstances and emotions. Affection rises and falls, loyalty can weaken, and friendships sometimes fade. The love of God, however, remains steadfast. His covenant faithfulness never changes because it rests upon His own unchanging character.

    The psalmist does not simply say that God notices the righteous; he declares that God has set them apart for Himself. This language speaks of intimacy and possession. The believer belongs to the Lord. The Creator of heaven and earth delights in calling His redeemed people His inheritance, His treasured possession, His beloved flock. Such grace exceeds all human understanding.

    This reality also shapes the Christian life. Being set apart means being called into holiness. God does not separate His people merely for privilege but for transformation. Holiness is not simply the avoidance of sin but the joyful pursuit of conformity to Christ. Those whom God claims He also sanctifies. The Holy Spirit continually works within believers to shape their desires, renew their minds, and produce the fruit of righteousness.

    The doctrine of sanctification is therefore woven into the words of this psalm. God’s people are separated from the dominion of darkness and brought into His marvelous kingdom. They are called to reflect His character before the world. Their speech, conduct, relationships, and priorities are increasingly shaped by the One who has called them.

    The second half of the verse offers another remarkable promise: “The Lord hears when I call to him.” The God who sets apart His people also listens to them. Divine election is joined with divine communion. The God who claims His children invites them into continual fellowship through prayer.

    Prayer is one of the greatest privileges granted to believers. The sovereign King of the universe bends His ear toward His children. This is not because of eloquent words or perfect faith but because they approach Him through the righteousness of Christ. Jesus has opened the way into the Father’s presence, removing every barrier that sin erected.

    This promise does not imply that God grants every request exactly as desired, but it assures believers that every cry is heard by infinite wisdom and perfect love. The Father never ignores the prayers of His children. Sometimes He answers immediately. Sometimes He answers differently than expected. Sometimes He delays for purposes hidden from human understanding. Yet every prayer enters His presence and is received with fatherly care.

    This confidence transforms anxiety into trust. When troubles multiply and circumstances become overwhelming, believers need not wonder whether heaven is silent. The Lord hears. His attention never wanders. His compassion never fails. His wisdom never errs. The One who governs galaxies also attends to the whispered prayers of the weary saint.

    The psalm invites God’s people to rest in this certainty. The world may reject them, misunderstand them, or oppose them, but they remain known by God. Human approval cannot add to their value, nor can human criticism diminish it. Their identity is secure because it rests upon God’s eternal purpose.

    This truth also humbles the heart. There is no room for pride in belonging to God, for salvation is entirely a work of grace. The believer stands only because God has chosen, redeemed, justified, and sanctified through Christ. Every blessing flows from divine mercy rather than human achievement. Such grace produces worship rather than self-exaltation.

    The certainty of God’s hearing also encourages perseverance in prayer. Many believers grow discouraged when answers seem delayed or circumstances remain difficult. Yet Psalm 4:3 calls them to continue crying out to the Lord with confidence. Prayer is not merely asking for gifts but drawing near to the Giver Himself. Communion with God becomes both the means of grace and the source of peace.

    Ultimately this verse points beyond David to Jesus Christ, the perfectly righteous One who was eternally beloved by the Father. Through union with Christ, believers share in that covenant relationship. They are accepted because He is accepted, loved because He is loved, heard because He intercedes continually before the Father. The security celebrated in Psalm 4:3 rests upon the finished work of Christ and His ongoing ministry as the believer’s Advocate.

    Therefore, the church may live with quiet confidence in an unstable world. God’s people are never abandoned, never forgotten, and never outside His care. They have been set apart for Him, and their prayers ascend before His throne continually. Such truth steadies the soul amid trials and fills the heart with hope that cannot be shaken.

    Short Prayer

    Heavenly Father, thank You for setting apart Your people through Your grace and for making them Your own through Jesus Christ. Strengthen hearts to live in holiness, to rest in Your unfailing love, and to approach Your throne with confidence, knowing that You hear every prayer. May every life reflect the glory of the One who has called His people out of darkness into His marvelous light. In the name of Christ our Savior, Amen.

    The Lord Who Knows His Own

    Alt...The Lord Who Knows His Own

    [?]amgbengaezekieloladosu » 🌐
    @megafeastamerica-dmgts.wordpress.com@megafeastamerica-dmgts.wordpress.com

    ” Capacities Development”

    Everybody is looking for something special and unique in our world of influence to humanity. To lean on and build hope of a good day with current situations they might found themselves. Toward enrich themselves or Nation economy, citizens has an equal role of their own leadership capacities that is not only to be for government alone. In other to reduce more burden on government. Some Nations are developed today because of the contributions of their own citizens without laying heavy […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

    Everybody is looking for something special and unique in our world of influence to humanity. To lean on and build hope of a good day with current situations they might found themselves. Toward enrich themselves or Nation economy, citizens has an equal role of their own leadership capacities that is not only to be for government alone. In other to reduce more burden on government.

    Some Nations are developed today because of the contributions of their own citizens without laying heavy burden on the government of their nation.

    During my studying days, in one of the neighboring country then before changing my Nationality as an American citizen.

    In this country, every citizen has their own role to offer government the opportunity of their own leadership skills and capacities. One day we want to cook for lunch in the house. So I was thinking to myself that we have to go the nearby market place to get some food stuff as an African.

    To my surprised, we are asked to go the farm house garden where we can get what we needs for the lunch preparation. So we did that and the lunch was prepared.

    Then I said to one of my friend then,

    I thought we are going to the nearby market to get these food stuff and he said to me that, here in my country, home has small farm garden to support the family for family use alone and if it is for commercial value, we have to go the market to get that. This way is to support the income as a family in other to build dream and hope.

    Developing human capacities can not be given to government alone because citizens has their own contributions to the development.

    As I was saying about my experience toward Nation building purposes. I was in one of our University studying center to study in Europe before I became an American citizen.

    There come this day the students are watching TV NEWS, about an erosion that destroy the goiter in the community. I saw how erosion had damaged the road which makes me wonder how this will be fixed as I said to one of my friend with me there that day.

    That it will take a while before government we come fix this road and the goiter been damage by erosion.

    Quickly he replied me,

    No, the people in that community can wait for the government to come because its what they can do themselves without waiting for the government to do that for the community involved. They we have to contribute money to fixed the goiter and the road then forward the bills to the government to reduce it from the annual taxes.

    ” You can only start the journey with your contribution toward building a nation of your dream with your own little coins”

    Gbenga Ezekiel Oladosu

    American National Award Winning Author

    Mega Feast Bestselling Author

    Honored as(WordPress “World Famous Author” Receive views from 50+ Different Countries)

    [?]A Faithful Sower Publishing » 🌐
    @afaithfulsower@mastodon.social

    Are there any giants in your life? By that, I mean huge problems. What do we do when our giants are bigger than we are? Click or tap the link to learn more.

    afaithfulsower.org/2026/06/17/

      [?]Daily in the Word » 🌐
      @dailyintheword.blog@dailyintheword.blog

      The God Who Sets Apart His Faithful Ones

      A Prayer Inspired by Psalm 4:3 Gracious and everlasting Father, we come before You with humble hearts, acknowledging that You alone are the holy God who calls sinners into Your marvelous light. You are the Lord of covenant mercy, the Keeper of every promise, and the Shepherd who never abandons the flock You have gathered by Your own hand. Before the foundations of the world were laid, Your wisdom ordained a people for Yourself, not because of their merit, but because of the immeasurable […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

      A Prayer Inspired by Psalm 4:3

      Gracious and everlasting Father, we come before You with humble hearts, acknowledging that You alone are the holy God who calls sinners into Your marvelous light. You are the Lord of covenant mercy, the Keeper of every promise, and the Shepherd who never abandons the flock You have gathered by Your own hand. Before the foundations of the world were laid, Your wisdom ordained a people for Yourself, not because of their merit, but because of the immeasurable riches of Your grace. You have loved us with an everlasting love, and through Your Son, Jesus Christ, You have called us from darkness into the kingdom of Your beloved Son.

      We praise You for the glorious truth that You know those who belong to You. When the world misunderstands us, You understand. When our hearts condemn us, Your mercy is greater than our hearts. When fear whispers that we are forgotten, Your Word declares that You have set apart the godly for Yourself and that You hear when Your children call upon You. What comfort there is in belonging to You. What peace is found in resting beneath the shadow of Your faithfulness.

      Lord, we confess that we often seek acceptance from the voices around us more than from Your voice. We are tempted to measure our worth by earthly success, by the opinions of others, or by fleeting achievements that vanish like morning mist. Forgive us for forgetting that our true identity is found in Christ alone. Remind us that our lives are hidden with Him, secured by His finished work, and sustained by His intercession before Your throne.

      Teach us to treasure the privilege of being Your people. Let us never take lightly the grace that has redeemed us. You have called us not only out of sin but into communion with Yourself. You have invited us into fellowship with the Father through the Son by the power of the Holy Spirit. You have made us temples of Your presence and heirs of eternal glory. Such mercy is beyond our understanding, yet we receive it with grateful hearts.

      Father, strengthen every weary believer who feels isolated or overlooked today. Remind them that they are never alone. Though the world may reject them, they are embraced by the everlasting arms of God. Though trials surround them, they are kept by Your sovereign power. Though they walk through valleys of uncertainty, Your rod and Your staff continue to comfort them. May Your Spirit bear witness within them that they are Your beloved children, adopted through Christ and sealed for the day of redemption.

      We pray for those who labor in ministry, who pour themselves out for others while quietly carrying burdens that few can see. Renew their strength and fill them with fresh assurance that their work in the Lord is never in vain. Let them hear Your gentle voice reminding them that they have been set apart for holy service and that every act of faithfulness is precious in Your sight. Guard them from discouragement and protect them from pride, keeping their eyes fixed upon Christ alone.

      We pray for those who suffer persecution for the sake of the gospel. Grant them courage to stand firm, knowing that they belong to a kingdom that cannot be shaken. Let them find comfort in the certainty that You hear every whispered prayer, every cry of anguish, and every silent tear. May they know that their suffering is not hidden from Your eyes and that You are preparing an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison.

      Lord, sanctify Your Church in every place. Make us a people who reflect Your holiness with humility and love. Help us to walk differently from the world, not because we seek to appear righteous, but because Your grace is transforming us into the image of Christ. May our words be marked by truth, our actions by compassion, our worship by sincerity, and our lives by joyful obedience. Let our communities become living testimonies that You are still calling people to Yourself and setting apart those who trust in Your name.

      We lift before You those who have wandered far from You. Draw them by Your irresistible grace. Break through hardened hearts with the gentle power of the gospel. Remove the blindness that sin has caused and awaken within them a longing for the Savior who alone can forgive and restore. Let prodigals return home and let skeptics become worshipers as they discover the beauty of Your mercy.

      Give us confidence in prayer, O Lord. Since You hear the cries of Your children, may we never hesitate to come before You. In moments of joy, let us praise You. In moments of grief, let us cling to You. In seasons of waiting, let us trust You. In times of uncertainty, let us rest in Your wisdom. Teach us that every prayer offered in faith ascends before Your throne through the mediation of Jesus Christ, our great High Priest, who ever lives to intercede for us.

      Help us to live each day with the quiet assurance that we belong to You. May that truth steady us when storms arise, humble us when blessings abound, and comfort us when loneliness presses in upon our souls. Let the certainty of Your covenant love cast out every fear and silence every accusation of the enemy. May we walk through this world as pilgrims whose citizenship is in heaven, awaiting the glorious appearing of our Savior.

      And when our earthly journey is complete, receive us into the fullness of Your presence, where faith will become sight and prayer will become endless praise. Until that day, keep our hearts steadfast, our hands faithful, and our eyes fixed upon Christ, who loved us and gave Himself for us. May all that we are and all that we do bring glory to Your holy name.

      We ask these things through Jesus Christ our Lord, who calls His own by name and keeps them forever.

      Amen.

      The God Who Sets Apart His Faithful Ones

      Alt...The God Who Sets Apart His Faithful Ones

      [?]Daily in the Word » 🌐
      @dailyintheword.blog@dailyintheword.blog

      The Prayer for Heavenly Wisdom

      A Poem Inspired by Ephesians 1:15-17 When first the morning gilds the eastern sky,And silent fields awake beneath the light,The faithful soul may lift its inward cryBeyond the veil that hides eternal sight.Not seeking treasures fashioned here below,Nor crowns that wither in the passing years,But yearning still the deeper truth to know,The wisdom born beyond all mortal spheres. O Father high, whose glory none can dim,Whose endless ages neither fade nor cease,The saints have raised their […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

      A Poem Inspired by Ephesians 1:15-17

      When first the morning gilds the eastern sky,
      And silent fields awake beneath the light,
      The faithful soul may lift its inward cry
      Beyond the veil that hides eternal sight.
      Not seeking treasures fashioned here below,
      Nor crowns that wither in the passing years,
      But yearning still the deeper truth to know,
      The wisdom born beyond all mortal spheres.

      O Father high, whose glory none can dim,
      Whose endless ages neither fade nor cease,
      The saints have raised their songs and trust to Him,
      Whose sovereign hand commands both storm and peace.
      Before His throne the lowly heart appears,
      Not clothed in pride nor earthly strength displayed,
      But carrying hopes and consecrated tears,
      And all the longing faith itself has made.

      For love is seen where hidden roots have grown,
      Within the vineyard planted by His grace;
      Its fruit is known by gentleness alone,
      Reflecting something of the Master’s face.
      The hands that serve, the lips that softly bless,
      The feet that walk where sorrow’s burdens lie,
      Declare the riches of true righteousness
      More loud than all the wisdom earth can buy.

      Yet greater still the prayer the Spirit wakes:
      That hearts might know the Lord in deeper ways;
      That every veil which human blindness makes
      Might vanish in His everlasting blaze.
      For knowledge born of books may quickly fade,
      And reason falter at the edge of night,
      But heavenly wisdom grants the soul its aid,
      Illumined by the everlasting Light.

      Who can ascend the mountain of His mind?
      Who measures all the counsels of His will?
      The eagle leaves the valleys far behind,
      Yet Heaven’s vast heights rise infinitely still.
      The wisest sage who traced the stars above
      Stands silent where God’s mysteries unfold;
      For every secret hidden in His love
      Outshines the rarest gems and finest gold.

      The Spirit comes with quiet, gentle breath,
      No trumpet sounding through the crowded square,
      But enters hearts once shadowed unto death,
      To kindle holy understanding there.
      The weary eyes begin at last to see
      The hand unseen that governs every hour;
      The captive soul discovers it is free
      By grace alone and resurrection power.

      Then pride must fall like leaves in autumn’s wind,
      Its boasting scattered over barren ground.
      The humble child alone is fit to find
      The hidden spring where living joys abound.
      The scholar kneels beside the shepherd boy,
      The ruler bows beside the widow poor,
      For heaven’s wisdom grants the selfsame joy
      To all who seek the everlasting Door.

      The saints whose footsteps marked the ages past
      Walk still before us through the pages worn;
      Their witness shines though earthly breath has passed,
      Like stars that linger long before the morn.
      They trusted not in kingdoms built by men,
      Nor leaned upon the strength of sword or throne,
      But sought the face of God again and again,
      Content that Christ should claim them as His own.

      So let the Church in every age arise,
      Not drunk with earthly glory’s fading wine,
      But fixing all her hope beyond the skies
      Upon the grace of Majesty Divine.
      Let shepherds pray for wisdom from above,
      Let teachers seek the Spirit’s holy flame,
      Let every labor blossom into love
      That magnifies the Savior’s precious name.

      The poor in heart shall find abundant store,
      The broken shall discover healing streams,
      The faint shall walk with vigor evermore,
      The old shall dream God’s everlasting dreams.
      The child shall learn that Heaven’s richest art
      Is not in power nor wealth that rust destroys,
      But in the quiet, consecrated heart
      That treasures God above all earthly joys.

      There waits a kingdom hidden from the proud,
      Prepared before creation’s dawn began,
      Where saints shall gather as a countless crowd,
      The final harvest of redemption’s plan.
      There every question shall be answered clear,
      Each mystery unveiled before His face;
      The wisdom sought through faith and patient prayer
      Will bloom forever in unending grace.

      Until that dawn, O Lord of light, impart
      The gift no human intellect can raise.
      Plant holy knowledge deep within the heart,
      And teach Thy people all Thy wondrous ways.
      May faith increase and steadfast love endure,
      As rivers flowing from the throne above,
      Till every soul made holy, bright, and pure
      Is filled with wisdom, revelation, love.

      The Prayer for Heavenly Wisdom

      Alt...The Prayer for Heavenly Wisdom

      [?]Daily in the Word » 🌐
      @dailyintheword.blog@dailyintheword.blog

      The Letter in the Drawer

      A Short Story Inspired by Ephesians 1:15-17 The old church building sat between a laundromat and a grocery store, its brick walls weathered by decades of rain and summer heat. Most people hurried past without noticing it, distracted by phones, schedules, and the endless demands of another ordinary day. Inside, however, life quietly continued. Every Tuesday afternoon, a small group gathered around a long wooden table in the fellowship hall. There were retirees, young parents, a mechanic who […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

      A Short Story Inspired by Ephesians 1:15-17

      The old church building sat between a laundromat and a grocery store, its brick walls weathered by decades of rain and summer heat. Most people hurried past without noticing it, distracted by phones, schedules, and the endless demands of another ordinary day.

      Inside, however, life quietly continued.

      Every Tuesday afternoon, a small group gathered around a long wooden table in the fellowship hall. There were retirees, young parents, a mechanic who always smelled faintly of engine oil, a nurse coming off the night shift, and a college student who never spoke much but never missed a meeting.

      Their pastor, Samuel, never began with announcements.

      He always began by asking the same question.

      “Who needs prayer this week?”

      At first people shared obvious requests: illness, employment, finances, struggling marriages. But after months together, something changed.

      They began praying for things no doctor could diagnose.

      Pray that my son would know God instead of merely knowing about Him.

      Pray that I would stop pretending everything is fine.

      Pray that I would have wisdom.

      Pray that I would understand why God has been so patient with me.

      The prayers became quieter and deeper.

      Samuel noticed.

      One rainy Tuesday he brought a stack of old envelopes.

      “I found these while cleaning my office,” he said. “They belonged to Pastor William, who served here forty years ago.”

      Everyone looked curiously at the faded handwriting.

      Samuel opened one carefully.

      Inside was a single page.

      It wasn’t a sermon outline or church budget or committee notes.

      It was a list of names.

      Beside every name were the same words.

      Lord, let them know You more deeply.

      Nothing else.

      Another envelope held another list.

      Again the same prayer.

      And another.

      For nearly twenty years, the old pastor had apparently kept writing the names of his congregation and praying that they would know God more fully.

      No requests for larger attendance.

      No petitions for bigger buildings.

      No dreams of influence.

      Only that people would know the Lord.

      The room grew silent.

      Even the rain outside seemed to pause.

      Emily, the youngest member of the group, finally asked, “Why would someone pray the same thing for twenty years?”

      Samuel smiled.

      “Maybe because he believed it was the greatest gift God could give.”

      That night everyone went home quietly.

      Emily lived alone in a tiny apartment above a coffee shop. She was twenty-three, studying business management while working evenings as a barista.

      Her life looked successful from the outside.

      Inside, she felt exhausted.

      She knew Bible verses.

      She attended church faithfully.

      She volunteered.

      But she secretly feared she knew Christianity better than she knew Christ.

      The old pastor’s prayer followed her home.

      Let them know You more deeply.

      She couldn’t stop thinking about it.

      The next morning she bought a journal.

      On the first page she wrote only four words.

      Teach me to know.

      Nothing more.

      Weeks passed.

      Her prayers changed.

      Instead of asking God to fix every problem, she began asking Him to reveal Himself.

      She started reading Scripture more slowly.

      Instead of racing through chapters, she would sit with a single sentence for an hour.

      Sometimes she closed the Bible without answers but with unexpected peace.

      At work customers came and went in endless streams.

      Most disappeared from memory before they reached the door.

      One afternoon an elderly woman ordered tea and sat alone for hours reading.

      Before leaving, she smiled at Emily.

      “You look tired.”

      Emily laughed politely.

      “I am.”

      The woman nodded knowingly.

      “Rest doesn’t always come from sleeping.”

      Then she left.

      The words lingered.

      Emily realized how desperately she had been chasing information while neglecting intimacy with God.

      She knew theology.

      She knew church history.

      She knew apologetics.

      But she had forgotten to simply sit with the One she claimed to love.

      Months later Samuel announced that the church basement needed cleaning before renovations.

      Everyone volunteered.

      Boxes filled with forgotten Sunday school materials and cracked folding chairs were hauled outside.

      In one dusty cabinet Emily discovered another envelope.

      Inside was another list from Pastor William.

      Most of the names belonged to people long gone.

      Some had died.

      Others had moved away decades before.

      At the bottom, written in shaky handwriting, were these words.

      If they know the Lord, everything else will find its proper place.

      Emily stared at the sentence until tears blurred the ink.

      It seemed so simple.

      The world taught people to seek success, certainty, security, influence, popularity, and comfort.

      The old pastor had spent years asking for something entirely different.

      That evening she walked through downtown as the city lights reflected across wet sidewalks.

      People rushed everywhere.

      Headphones covered ears.

      Conversations happened through screens.

      Everyone seemed connected and isolated at the same time.

      She wondered how many people had mistaken information for wisdom and activity for purpose.

      Passing a park bench, she noticed an elderly man feeding birds.

      Without knowing why, she sat beside him.

      They watched silently as sparrows hopped across the grass.

      After several minutes he spoke.

      “The birds always know where to find food.”

      She nodded politely.

      “They trust every morning that it will be there.”

      Another long silence.

      “People don’t seem to trust like that anymore.”

      Then he stood and walked away.

      Emily smiled to herself.

      The city suddenly felt less noisy.

      Not because the traffic had stopped but because her heart had slowed down.

      The next Tuesday the prayer group met again.

      Samuel asked his usual question.

      “Who needs prayer?”

      Emily surprised herself by speaking first.

      “I don’t need prayer for my circumstances.”

      Everyone looked up.

      “I need prayer that I would know God better.”

      The room remained quiet for a moment.

      Then the mechanic nodded.

      “So do I.”

      The nurse spoke next.

      “So do I.”

      The retired teacher whispered,

      “So do I.”

      One by one every person around the table asked for the same thing.

      No one mentioned promotions.

      No one mentioned possessions.

      No one asked for easier lives.

      Only deeper knowledge of the Father.

      Samuel looked around the room, unable to hide his smile.

      Without opening his notes, without planning a speech, he simply prayed.

      “Lord, give us wisdom that comes from You. Open the eyes of our hearts. Teach us not merely to speak about You but to walk with You. Let our faith become more than habit and our worship become more than routine. Let us know You.”

      Outside, the city remained busy.

      Cars hurried through intersections.

      Stores closed for the night.

      People chased tomorrow before finishing today.

      But inside the old brick church between the laundromat and the grocery store, something invisible was growing.

      Not larger crowds.

      Not greater influence.

      Not worldly success.

      Only hearts slowly learning that the greatest blessing God can give is Himself.

      The Letter in the Drawer

      Alt...The Letter in the Drawer

      [?]Daily in the Word » 🌐
      @dailyintheword.blog@dailyintheword.blog

      Praying for Hearts to Know God

      A Message to Church Leaders from Ephesians 1:15-17 Church leadership has always required far more than organizational ability, persuasive speech, or strategic planning. The church of Jesus Christ is not sustained by human wisdom but by the power and presence of God. Every generation is tempted to believe that the next program, the next innovation, or the next charismatic personality will secure the future of the church, yet the apostle Paul points leaders in a very different direction. In […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

      A Message to Church Leaders from Ephesians 1:15-17

      Church leadership has always required far more than organizational ability, persuasive speech, or strategic planning. The church of Jesus Christ is not sustained by human wisdom but by the power and presence of God. Every generation is tempted to believe that the next program, the next innovation, or the next charismatic personality will secure the future of the church, yet the apostle Paul points leaders in a very different direction. In Ephesians 1:15-17, he demonstrates that the greatest ministry a shepherd can offer the flock is not merely instruction but intercession. He prays that believers would know God more deeply through the Spirit of wisdom and revelation.

      This passage speaks with particular force to pastors, elders, ministry directors, missionaries, teachers, and every servant entrusted with spiritual leadership. The health of God’s people depends not only upon faithful preaching and sound doctrine but also upon leaders who labor before the throne of grace on behalf of those they serve. Paul reminds us that ministry begins with prayer because spiritual understanding is always God’s gift before it becomes humanity’s possession.

      Paul begins by acknowledging the faith and love that he has heard about among the Ephesian believers. Their faith in the Lord Jesus and their love toward all the saints are evidence that God’s grace is already active among them. Yet Paul is not satisfied that they merely possess faith. He longs for maturity, depth, wisdom, and greater knowledge of God Himself.

      This should shape the priorities of every church leader. It is possible to rejoice over growing attendance while neglecting spiritual maturity. It is possible to celebrate financial stability while disciples remain spiritually immature. It is possible to have gifted volunteers, attractive facilities, and well-organized ministries while the people lack intimacy with Christ.

      Paul sees beyond outward success. He desires transformed hearts.

      Leaders today must ask whether they are measuring ministry according to heaven’s standards or according to the world’s standards. The kingdom of God cannot be measured by numbers alone. Its true evidence is growing holiness, increasing love, deeper faith, expanding wisdom, and an ever-increasing knowledge of God.

      Paul says that because of their faith and love, he does not cease giving thanks for them while remembering them in his prayers. There is profound encouragement here for every spiritual shepherd.

      Leadership often becomes consumed by meetings, administration, counseling, planning, and problem-solving. These responsibilities are necessary, but they must never replace prayer. The greatest work a leader accomplishes is often invisible. Congregations may never know the hours spent praying for their spiritual growth, but heaven records every petition.

      Prayer protects leaders from believing that transformation is ultimately their responsibility. Only God changes hearts. Only God opens blind eyes. Only God produces lasting fruit. Prayer acknowledges complete dependence upon divine grace.

      The greatest leaders throughout Scripture understood this truth. Moses interceded for Israel after their rebellion. Samuel declared that ceasing to pray for God’s people would itself be sin. David continually sought the Lord before acting. Elijah prayed until heaven responded. Daniel prayed despite persecution. Jesus Himself often withdrew to lonely places for communion with the Father. The apostles devoted themselves to prayer and the ministry of the Word.

      The church flourishes where its leaders pray.

      Paul’s prayer is remarkable because it is centered upon knowing God rather than merely receiving blessings from God. Modern believers often pray for health, provision, protection, success, and relief from hardship. While such prayers are appropriate, Paul’s deepest desire reaches beyond temporary needs toward eternal realities.

      He asks that “the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him.”

      This is leadership at its highest level.

      The greatest gift leaders can desire for their congregations is not larger buildings, larger budgets, or larger ministries, but larger visions of God Himself.

      The Christian life is never merely about acquiring information. It is about knowing a Person. Theology serves doxology. Doctrine serves worship. Knowledge should produce awe, humility, obedience, and joy.

      Many churches struggle because people know about God but have not deeply encountered His majesty. They know Bible stories but not biblical intimacy. They know church traditions but not the living Christ. They know theological vocabulary but not communion with the Father.

      Paul’s prayer reminds leaders that their highest calling is to help people know God.

      The phrase “Father of glory” reveals the majesty of the One to whom Paul prays. God possesses infinite glory, eternal holiness, perfect wisdom, limitless power, and incomparable beauty. Every attribute of God surpasses human comprehension.

      Yet this glorious God invites His children into relationship.

      The church leader who regularly contemplates God’s glory will preach differently, counsel differently, lead differently, and endure suffering differently. Small frustrations lose their power when viewed against the greatness of God. Ministry disappointments cannot extinguish hope when leaders remember the sovereign Lord who rules over history.

      Church leadership becomes exhausting whenever leaders forget the greatness of God and begin relying upon their own strength.

      Paul’s prayer redirects our attention upward.

      The Spirit of wisdom and revelation does not imply new revelation that adds to God’s completed Word. Rather, Paul speaks of the Holy Spirit illuminating the truth already revealed so that believers understand and embrace it more fully.

      The Spirit opens minds that would otherwise remain blind.

      Church leaders teach Scripture faithfully, but illumination belongs to God alone. The most gifted preacher cannot produce repentance apart from the Spirit. The most eloquent sermon cannot regenerate hearts. The clearest exposition cannot create faith unless the Holy Spirit works within the hearer.

      This truth should produce both humility and confidence.

      Humility arises because leaders recognize that success does not depend upon personal brilliance.

      Confidence arises because God’s Spirit faithfully accomplishes what human effort never could.

      Every sermon preparation should begin with prayer for illumination. Every Bible study should depend upon the Spirit’s guidance. Every counseling session should seek divine wisdom. Every leadership decision should rest upon dependence rather than self-confidence.

      Paul prays specifically for wisdom.

      Wisdom differs from knowledge. Knowledge accumulates facts. Wisdom rightly applies truth. Knowledge understands Scripture intellectually. Wisdom lives Scripture faithfully.

      Churches today possess unprecedented access to information. Books, podcasts, seminars, conferences, online resources, and theological libraries abound. Yet information alone cannot produce spiritual maturity.

      Many know much while understanding little.

      True wisdom comes from God and produces holiness.

      Church leaders must therefore pursue wisdom above popularity, influence, or innovation. Wise leadership discerns eternal priorities amid temporary distractions. Wise leadership shepherds patiently instead of reacting impulsively. Wise leadership speaks truth with grace and confronts error with humility.

      Wisdom sees ministry through the lens of eternity.

      Paul also prays for revelation in the knowledge of God.

      The Christian life is a lifelong journey into the inexhaustible riches of God’s character. No believer ever graduates from knowing God. The oldest saint continues discovering fresh dimensions of divine mercy, holiness, faithfulness, justice, and love.

      Likewise, leaders never outgrow the need to know Christ more deeply.

      The greatest danger in ministry is becoming professionally familiar with sacred things while personally distant from God. It is possible to prepare sermons without worship, lead meetings without prayer, explain doctrine without adoration, and organize ministries without dependence upon the Spirit.

      Paul’s prayer calls leaders back to first love.

      Ministry cannot substitute for communion with God.

      Church leaders must guard private devotion with extraordinary care. Congregations often receive what their leaders cultivate. If shepherds pursue intimacy with God, that pursuit often spreads throughout the flock. If leaders become spiritually dry, churches eventually reflect the same condition.

      Leadership always reproduces itself.

      Paul’s prayer also reminds leaders that spiritual growth is progressive. The Ephesian believers already possessed genuine faith, yet Paul still prayed that they would know God more fully.

      Growth never ends.

      Church leaders should therefore remain patient with themselves and with others. Sanctification is God’s lifelong work. Maturity develops over years of faithful obedience, suffering, repentance, worship, and prayer.

      This perspective encourages perseverance.

      Many pastors become discouraged because transformation appears slow. They preach faithfully for years yet see only gradual change. They disciple individuals who struggle repeatedly. They labor through seasons that appear unfruitful.

      Paul’s prayer teaches leaders to keep praying.

      God works patiently.

      Seeds planted today may produce fruit decades later.

      No faithful prayer is wasted.

      No faithful sermon is forgotten.

      No faithful act of love escapes God’s notice.

      Leaders should therefore labor without despair, trusting that the Spirit continues working even when visible results seem absent.

      This passage also reveals the beautiful relationship between theology and pastoral care. Paul’s theology is profound, yet it never becomes detached from people. His understanding of God’s sovereignty does not lessen prayer but intensifies it. His doctrinal depth fuels pastoral compassion.

      Church leaders should reject the false choice between theological depth and practical ministry.

      The deepest theology produces the strongest shepherding.

      People hunger for truth that nourishes their souls. They need more than motivational speeches or cultural commentary. They need leaders who have stood in God’s presence and who faithfully proclaim His Word.

      Paul’s prayer demonstrates that leaders serve best when their hearts overflow with gratitude, humility, dependence, and love.

      The contemporary church faces countless challenges: secularism, division, moral confusion, declining biblical literacy, consumerism, and cultural hostility toward the gospel. Yet the answer remains what it has always been.

      The church needs leaders who pray.

      The church needs leaders who long for people to know God.

      The church needs leaders who rely upon the Holy Spirit rather than human ingenuity.

      The church needs leaders whose ministries flow from worship rather than ambition.

      The church needs leaders whose greatest desire is not earthly success but eternal transformation.

      May every pastor preach so that people know God more deeply.

      May every elder shepherd with wisdom from above.

      May every teacher seek illumination from the Holy Spirit.

      May every missionary proclaim Christ in dependence upon divine power.

      May every ministry leader remember that lasting fruit grows from prayerful dependence rather than human effort.

      The God whom Paul calls the Father of glory still delights to answer such prayers. He continues giving wisdom to those who ask. He continues revealing the riches of His grace through His Spirit. He continues drawing His people into deeper fellowship with Himself.

      Therefore, let church leaders never become satisfied with outward success while neglecting inward transformation. Let them pray continually that the people entrusted to their care would receive spiritual wisdom, heavenly insight, and ever-growing knowledge of the living God.

      For when God’s people truly know Him, they will worship with greater joy, serve with greater faithfulness, endure with greater hope, love with greater sincerity, and proclaim Christ with greater boldness until the whole earth is filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord.

      Praying for Hearts to Know God

      Alt...Praying for Hearts to Know God

      [?]Daily in the Word » 🌐
      @dailyintheword.blog@dailyintheword.blog

      The Prayer That Leads to Knowing God

      A Sermon Reflecting on Ephesians 1:15–17 The Christian life is not merely about beginning well; it is about growing continually in the knowledge of God. Many people long for greater peace, greater joy, greater confidence, and greater purpose, yet they seek these things through circumstances, possessions, achievements, or experiences. The Apostle Paul reminds the church that the deepest need of every believer is not first a change in outward circumstances but a deeper understanding of the […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

      A Sermon Reflecting on Ephesians 1:15–17

      The Christian life is not merely about beginning well; it is about growing continually in the knowledge of God. Many people long for greater peace, greater joy, greater confidence, and greater purpose, yet they seek these things through circumstances, possessions, achievements, or experiences. The Apostle Paul reminds the church that the deepest need of every believer is not first a change in outward circumstances but a deeper understanding of the God who has already revealed Himself through Jesus Christ.

      In Ephesians 1:15–17, Paul writes:

      “For this reason, ever since I heard about your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love for all God’s people, I have not stopped giving thanks for you, remembering you in my prayers. I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know him better.”

      These verses reveal one of the greatest prayers ever recorded in Scripture. It is not a prayer for wealth, safety, success, or earthly comfort. It is a prayer that believers would know God more deeply.

      This prayer remains desperately needed today.

      The church often measures spiritual maturity by activity. We count attendance, ministries, programs, and accomplishments. Yet Paul measures maturity differently. He begins by recognizing two visible evidences of genuine faith: faith in the Lord Jesus and love for all God’s people.

      Faith and love always belong together.

      True faith does not remain hidden inside the heart. It produces love toward others. A person cannot claim to love Christ while refusing to love His church. The vertical relationship with God transforms the horizontal relationships with others.

      Paul had heard about the Ephesian believers. Their faith had become known. Their love had become evident. Their lives demonstrated the reality of the gospel.

      This reminds every believer that Christianity is never merely intellectual agreement with doctrine. It is a transformed life. Saving faith produces visible fruit. It changes attitudes, priorities, relationships, and character.

      Jesus Himself declared that the world would recognize His disciples by their love for one another. Love is the evidence that grace has entered the heart.

      Yet even though the Ephesian church displayed remarkable maturity, Paul does not assume they have reached the end of their spiritual journey. Instead, he prays for even greater growth.

      This should encourage every believer.

      No matter how long someone has walked with Christ, there is always more of God to know. Infinite wisdom cannot be exhausted by finite minds. Throughout eternity believers will continue discovering new depths of God’s glory, holiness, mercy, justice, grace, and love.

      The Christian life is a lifelong pursuit of knowing God.

      Paul says that he never stopped giving thanks for them and remembering them in prayer.

      The heart of a pastor is revealed here.

      Spiritual leadership is not merely preaching sermons or organizing ministries. It is carrying God’s people before the throne of grace. Paul understood that spiritual transformation is ultimately the work of God, not human effort.

      Every church needs leaders who pray.

      Every family needs parents who pray.

      Every believer needs friends who pray.

      Prayer acknowledges our dependence upon God. It confesses that only the Holy Spirit can change hearts, enlighten minds, and transform lives.

      The greatest ministry often happens unseen when believers faithfully intercede for one another before God.

      Paul’s thanksgiving is equally significant. Gratitude recognizes God’s work wherever it appears. Instead of focusing on problems, Paul celebrates God’s grace already evident in the Ephesian believers.

      Thanksgiving strengthens faith because it reminds us that God is actively working among His people.

      Then Paul reveals the central request of his prayer.

      He asks that “the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation.”

      This phrase has generated much discussion, but its meaning is profoundly beautiful.

      Paul is not praying for secret knowledge available only to a select few. He is praying that the Holy Spirit would illuminate the truth God has already revealed in Christ.

      Wisdom in Scripture is more than information. It is the ability to see life from God’s perspective.

      Many people possess knowledge but lack wisdom.

      Knowledge tells us facts.

      Wisdom teaches us how to live.

      Knowledge can fill the mind.

      Wisdom transforms the heart.

      The Holy Spirit enables believers to understand spiritual realities that human reasoning alone cannot comprehend. Through Scripture He opens blind eyes, convicts hearts, strengthens faith, and reveals the beauty of Christ.

      Revelation here is not new doctrine beyond Scripture but spiritual illumination. The same Bible that once appeared ordinary suddenly comes alive through the Spirit’s work. Familiar verses speak with fresh power. Old truths become new discoveries. The character of God shines with increasing clarity.

      This is why believers should approach Scripture prayerfully.

      The Bible is not merely literature to be analyzed but divine revelation to be received.

      Academic study has value, but spiritual understanding comes through the illumination of the Holy Spirit.

      The goal of Paul’s prayer is simple yet profound: “that you may know him better.”

      This is the center of the Christian life.

      God does not merely invite people to know about Him.

      He invites them to know Him personally.

      There is a vast difference between information and relationship.

      A person may memorize theological systems and historical facts while remaining spiritually distant from God.

      Conversely, even a simple believer with limited education may possess deep intimacy with Christ through humble faith and obedience.

      Christianity is fundamentally relational.

      Eternal life itself is defined by Jesus in these terms: that they may know the only true God and Jesus Christ whom He has sent.

      Everything else flows from this relationship.

      Holiness grows from knowing God.

      Joy grows from knowing God.

      Peace grows from knowing God.

      Hope grows from knowing God.

      Assurance grows from knowing God.

      Love grows from knowing God.

      The more believers understand God’s character, the more their own lives are transformed into His likeness.

      This knowledge is never merely intellectual.

      It changes behavior.

      A person who truly knows God’s holiness cannot casually embrace sin.

      A person who knows God’s mercy learns to forgive.

      A person who knows God’s patience becomes patient.

      A person who knows God’s generosity becomes generous.

      A person who knows God’s love begins loving others sacrificially.

      Doctrine always leads to discipleship.

      Theology always shapes practice.

      Paul’s prayer also reminds the church that spiritual growth is supernatural.

      Modern culture emphasizes self-improvement through discipline, education, and motivation. While these have value, Scripture teaches that genuine spiritual transformation is accomplished by the Holy Spirit.

      Human effort alone cannot produce spiritual sight.

      The Spirit opens blind eyes.

      The Spirit softens hard hearts.

      The Spirit convicts of sin.

      The Spirit reveals Christ.

      The Spirit grants wisdom.

      The Spirit produces holiness.

      Therefore believers should pray constantly for His illuminating work.

      Reading Scripture should begin with humble dependence.

      Worship should begin with humble dependence.

      Preaching should begin with humble dependence.

      Every decision should begin with humble dependence.

      Without God’s Spirit, human wisdom remains insufficient.

      This passage also teaches the importance of continual growth.

      Paul writes to believers who already possess faith and love, yet he prays they will know God better.

      No Christian should ever become spiritually complacent.

      There is no graduation ceremony in discipleship.

      The oldest saint and the newest convert both stand as learners before the infinite majesty of God.

      Every season of life provides new opportunities to know Him.

      In joy we discover His goodness.

      In suffering we discover His faithfulness.

      In weakness we discover His strength.

      In failure we discover His mercy.

      In uncertainty we discover His sovereignty.

      In waiting we discover His patience.

      Every circumstance becomes a classroom where God reveals more of Himself.

      This truth also reshapes our prayers.

      Many prayers focus almost entirely upon physical needs. Scripture certainly invites believers to bring every concern before God, yet Paul’s example challenges the church to pray more deeply.

      Pray that families would know God better.

      Pray that children would know God better.

      Pray that churches would know God better.

      Pray that missionaries would know God better.

      Pray that leaders would know God better.

      Pray that suffering believers would know God better.

      Pray that new believers would know God better.

      The greatest blessing anyone can receive is not temporary success but increasing intimacy with the living God.

      Such knowledge produces lasting stability.

      Cultures change.

      Governments change.

      Economies change.

      Health changes.

      Relationships change.

      But the believer anchored in the knowledge of God remains secure because God’s character never changes.

      He is eternally faithful.

      He is eternally holy.

      He is eternally merciful.

      He is eternally just.

      He is eternally loving.

      He is eternally sovereign.

      The storms of life cannot overthrow the soul that knows its God.

      The church today needs this prayer more than ever. Information has never been more accessible, yet spiritual wisdom often seems increasingly rare. Technology fills minds with endless data while many hearts remain spiritually empty.

      The answer is not more information but deeper revelation of God through His Spirit and His Word.

      Believers should never settle for shallow Christianity.

      God calls His people into ever-deepening fellowship with Himself.

      Every page of Scripture invites them closer.

      Every act of worship invites them closer.

      Every prayer invites them closer.

      Every trial invites them closer.

      Every act of obedience invites them closer.

      The Christian journey is ultimately the journey of knowing God.

      Paul’s prayer remains the prayer of every faithful church and every faithful believer.

      May God grant His people wisdom that sees His truth clearly.

      May He grant revelation that opens hearts to His glory.

      May He deepen faith that trusts Him completely.

      May He enlarge love that reflects His own heart.

      May every believer grow continually in the knowledge of the Father of glory through Jesus Christ our Lord.

      For there is no greater treasure than knowing Him, no greater wisdom than walking with Him, and no greater joy than being transformed into the likeness of the One who loved us before the foundation of the world and who calls His people into everlasting fellowship with Himself.

      The Prayer That Leads to Knowing God

      Alt...The Prayer That Leads to Knowing God

      [?]Earl » 🌐
      @Earl@mast.john1126.com

      Old Words Coming True....
      Three Days of Darkness

        [?]Daily in the Word » 🌐
        @dailyintheword.blog@dailyintheword.blog

        The Prayer for Wisdom and Revelation

        A Theological Commentary on Ephesians 1:15-17 Ephesians 1:15–17 stands as one of the most profound apostolic prayers in the New Testament. Rather than merely introducing the theological arguments that follow, these verses reveal the pastoral heart of Paul and establish a framework for understanding Christian knowledge, spiritual growth, and divine revelation. The apostle's prayer is not primarily concerned with external prosperity, physical safety, or even ministerial success. Instead, he […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

        A Theological Commentary on Ephesians 1:15-17

        Ephesians 1:15–17 stands as one of the most profound apostolic prayers in the New Testament. Rather than merely introducing the theological arguments that follow, these verses reveal the pastoral heart of Paul and establish a framework for understanding Christian knowledge, spiritual growth, and divine revelation. The apostle’s prayer is not primarily concerned with external prosperity, physical safety, or even ministerial success. Instead, he prays that believers might know God more deeply through the gracious work of the Holy Spirit. In these few verses, Paul unites doctrine, worship, and prayer into a single theological vision that continues to shape Christian understanding of sanctification and spiritual maturity.

        The passage reads:

        “For this reason, ever since I heard about your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love for all God’s people, I have not stopped giving thanks for you, remembering you in my prayers. I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know him better.”

        These verses appear immediately after Paul’s magnificent blessing in Ephesians 1:3–14, where he celebrates God’s eternal plan of redemption through election, adoption, redemption through Christ’s blood, forgiveness of sins, and the sealing ministry of the Holy Spirit. The prayer naturally arises from the theology that precedes it. Doctrine leads to doxology, and doxology leads to intercession.

        Paul begins with the words, “For this reason.” The phrase connects the prayer with everything that has already been proclaimed regarding God’s saving work. Because God has chosen, redeemed, forgiven, and sealed His people, Paul is compelled to pray that believers would increasingly understand the riches they already possess in Christ. The prayer therefore is not for new salvation but for deeper comprehension of existing salvation.

        This distinction is critically important for Pauline theology. The Christian life does not begin with human understanding and then proceed toward salvation. Rather, salvation is God’s gracious gift, and spiritual understanding follows as believers grow into the knowledge of what God has already accomplished. The prayer is therefore rooted in grace from beginning to end.

        Paul next refers to hearing about the faith and love of the Ephesian believers. Faith toward Christ and love toward fellow believers form the two great evidences of authentic Christianity. Throughout the New Testament these two virtues appear together repeatedly because they summarize the believer’s relationship both vertically and horizontally. Faith unites the believer to Christ, while love expresses that union within the community of believers.

        The sequence is equally significant. Faith produces love. Love does not create faith; rather, genuine trust in Christ transforms the heart and manifests itself through sacrificial concern for others. This reflects Jesus’ own teaching that love for God and neighbor summarize the entire Law.

        Paul’s thanksgiving demonstrates another important theological principle. Gratitude is the natural response to evidence of God’s grace. He does not congratulate the Ephesians primarily for their achievement but thanks God for His work within them. The emphasis remains consistently on divine initiative rather than human accomplishment.

        The apostle then says, “I have not stopped giving thanks for you, remembering you in my prayers.” The present tense suggests ongoing action rather than occasional remembrance. Prayer characterizes Paul’s ministry. His letters repeatedly reveal that intercession was not peripheral but central to his apostolic calling.

        This persistent prayer reflects Paul’s understanding of sanctification. Spiritual growth depends upon God’s continued activity just as much as initial conversion does. The same grace that saves also enlightens, strengthens, and transforms believers throughout their lives.

        The content of Paul’s prayer reveals his deepest pastoral concern. He prays that “the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation.”

        The expression “the God of our Lord Jesus Christ” emphasizes Christ’s incarnational role within redemption history. According to His divine nature, the Son shares equality with the Father, but according to His incarnate humanity, Christ worships and obeys the Father as the representative Head of redeemed humanity. Paul’s language therefore reflects the mystery of the incarnation rather than any denial of Christ’s deity.

        The title “the glorious Father” literally means “the Father of glory.” Glory throughout Scripture represents the visible manifestation of God’s infinite holiness, majesty, and perfection. God is not merely glorious; He is the source from whom all glory proceeds. Every created beauty, every display of divine power, every revelation of holiness originates in Him.

        By invoking God under this title, Paul reminds believers that true wisdom originates only from God’s own self-disclosure. Human reason, while valuable, cannot ascend into divine truth apart from revelation. Theology therefore begins not with human speculation but with God’s gracious unveiling of Himself.

        The phrase “the Spirit of wisdom and revelation” has generated considerable theological discussion. Some interpreters understand “Spirit” to refer to the Holy Spirit Himself, while others suggest it describes a disposition or attitude produced by God.

        The broader context strongly favors understanding this as a reference to the Holy Spirit. Throughout Ephesians the Holy Spirit occupies a central role in salvation and sanctification. Earlier in the chapter believers have been sealed by the Holy Spirit of promise, and later Paul will describe the Spirit’s indwelling ministry and His role in uniting the church.

        If this interpretation is correct, Paul prays not for a different Spirit but for the fuller ministry of the Holy Spirit already dwelling within believers. The Spirit who regenerates also illumines. The Spirit who seals also teaches. The Spirit who unites believers to Christ also opens their understanding to perceive divine realities.

        The word “wisdom” carries rich biblical significance. In Scripture wisdom is never merely intellectual knowledge or philosophical sophistication. Rather, wisdom is the God-given ability to perceive reality from God’s perspective and to live accordingly.

        The wisdom literature of the Old Testament repeatedly declares that “the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” Wisdom therefore begins with reverence, humility, and submission to divine authority. It is practical, moral, and theological simultaneously.

        Within Paul’s theology, Christ Himself embodies divine wisdom. In Him “are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.” Consequently, the Spirit’s ministry of wisdom is fundamentally Christ-centered. The Spirit does not direct attention toward Himself but reveals the beauty, sufficiency, and glory of Christ.

        The companion term “revelation” likewise deserves careful consideration. Revelation here should not necessarily be understood as new canonical revelation equivalent to Scripture. Rather, it refers to God’s ongoing illumination of truths already revealed in Christ and recorded in the apostolic witness.

        The distinction between revelation and illumination is helpful. Objective revelation has been given through God’s redemptive acts and apostolic testimony. Subjective illumination occurs as the Holy Spirit enables believers to understand, embrace, and apply that revelation personally.

        The Spirit therefore functions as the divine Teacher who opens the eyes of the heart to perceive realities that would otherwise remain spiritually hidden.

        This understanding harmonizes with Paul’s teaching elsewhere that natural humanity cannot receive the things of the Spirit because they are spiritually discerned. Spiritual understanding requires supernatural illumination.

        Paul identifies the ultimate purpose of this wisdom and revelation with remarkable simplicity: “that you may know him better.”

        This statement forms the theological center of the passage. Christianity is fundamentally relational before it is informational. Eternal life itself is defined by Jesus as knowing the only true God and Jesus Christ whom He has sent.

        Knowledge in biblical thought extends far beyond intellectual accumulation. The Hebrew concept underlying biblical knowledge involves personal relationship, covenant fellowship, experiential intimacy, and faithful obedience. To know God is to live in communion with Him.

        Paul therefore does not pray that believers merely acquire theological information, although sound doctrine remains essential. Rather, he prays that theological truth would deepen personal fellowship with the living God.

        This emphasis distinguishes biblical theology from abstract philosophy. The goal of theology is worship. The goal of doctrine is communion. The goal of revelation is relationship.

        The paradox is striking. Paul writes to Christians whose faith and love are already exemplary, yet he prays that they may know God better. Spiritual maturity never exhausts the possibility of further growth. The infinite God can never be fully comprehended by finite creatures.

        Consequently, the Christian life involves perpetual movement into deeper knowledge of God’s character and grace. Every new insight into divine truth leads to greater worship, greater humility, and greater love.

        This dynamic reflects the doctrine of sanctification. Growth in holiness is inseparable from growth in the knowledge of God. As believers behold God’s glory, they are transformed into His image by the Spirit.

        The passage also challenges contemporary assumptions regarding spiritual maturity. Modern culture often equates knowledge with information acquisition or academic achievement. Paul’s prayer points toward a richer understanding. Genuine knowledge involves transformation of the whole person through encounter with divine reality.

        Likewise, spiritual maturity cannot be reduced to emotional experience or external activity. It consists fundamentally in progressively knowing God through the ministry of the Holy Spirit as revealed in Jesus Christ.

        The Trinitarian structure of the passage deserves special attention. Paul addresses the Father, through the mediation of the Lord Jesus Christ, requesting the ministry of the Holy Spirit. The entire Trinity participates in the believer’s growth in knowledge.

        The Father is the source of wisdom, the Son is the object through whom God is known, and the Spirit is the agent who grants illumination. The prayer therefore reflects the cooperative work of the triune God in redemption and sanctification.

        From a pastoral perspective, these verses also redefine Christian priorities. Paul’s greatest concern is not worldly success but spiritual perception. He does not ask primarily for easier circumstances but for deeper understanding. Such priorities challenge contemporary ministry to value spiritual formation above external achievement.

        The prayer also affirms the necessity of dependence upon divine grace in theological study. Human scholarship, historical research, and linguistic expertise all possess genuine value, yet without the Spirit’s illumination they remain insufficient for true knowledge of God. Academic theology and spiritual devotion must therefore remain inseparably united.

        For seminary education especially, this passage provides a corrective against reducing theology to intellectual exercise alone. Theological reflection should always culminate in worship, obedience, and communion with God. The greatest theologians in Christian history have consistently been those who combined rigorous intellectual engagement with profound spiritual devotion.

        Finally, Ephesians 1:15–17 reminds believers that prayer itself is an instrument of theological formation. Paul teaches doctrine by praying doctrine. His intercession shapes the church’s understanding of God even as it seeks God’s blessing. Prayer and theology therefore belong together, each enriching the other.

        The apostle’s words continue to summon the church toward a deeper pursuit of God Himself. Faith and love mark the beginning of the Christian journey, but wisdom and revelation draw believers ever more deeply into the inexhaustible riches of divine fellowship. The highest blessing for which the church can pray is not merely greater knowledge about God but greater knowledge of God. Such knowledge comes only through the gracious ministry of the Holy Spirit, who continually opens the eyes of believers to behold the glory of the Father revealed in Jesus Christ. In that knowledge the church finds both its greatest privilege and its eternal destiny.

        The Prayer for Wisdom and Revelation

        Alt...The Prayer for Wisdom and Revelation

        [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
        @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

        🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

        Galatians 2:19-21

          [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
          @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

          🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

          Galatians 2:19-21

            [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
            @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

            🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

            Galatians 2:19-21

              [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
              @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

              🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

              Galatians 2:19-21

                [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                Galatians 2:19-21

                  [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                  @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                  🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                  Galatians 2:19-21

                    [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                    @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                    🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                    Galatians 2:19-21

                      [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                      @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                      🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                      Galatians 2:19-21

                        [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                        @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                        🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                        Galatians 2:19-21

                          [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                          @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                          🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                          Galatians 2:19-21

                            [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                            @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                            🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                            Galatians 2:19-21

                              [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                              @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                              🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                              Galatians 2:19-21

                                [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                                Galatians 2:19-21

                                  [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                  @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                  🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                                  Galatians 2:19-21

                                    [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                    @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                    🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                                    Galatians 2:19-21

                                      [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                      @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                      🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                                      Galatians 2:19-21

                                        [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                        @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                        🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                                        Galatians 2:19-21

                                          [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                          @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                          🤗☁️🌈☁️🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗[“Ithrough law I died that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& Christ lives in me!*life I now live in flesh I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!*I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*BECAUSE if righteousness is through the law!*then Christ died for nothing!”]🤗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥💗☁️🌈☁️🛐🫂💜💚💌🤗

                                          Galatians 2:19-21

                                            [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                            @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                            ☁️🌈☁️✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💌🌐🌏💜💁🏼‍♀️*(“through the law I died to the law that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ! I no longer live!*but Christ lives in me!*life I am now living in flesh!*I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!)*[I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*As a matter of fact!*if righteousness is 👉

                                            Galatians 2:19-21

                                              [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                              @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                              ☁️🌈☁️✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💌🌐🌏💜💁🏼‍♀️*(“Ithrough the law I died to the law that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& I no longer live!*but Christ lives in me!)*[The life I am now living in the flesh!*I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!]*{I do not regard the grace of God as nothing!*As a matter of fact!*if👉

                                              Galatians 2:19-21

                                                [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                                @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                                ☁️🌈☁️✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💌🌐🌏💜💁🏼‍♀️*(APOSTLE PAUL)*[“Ithrough the law I died to the law that I might live for God!*I have been crucified with Christ!*& I no longer live!*but Christ lives in me!]*{The life I am now living in the flesh!*I live by faith in the Son of God!*who loved me!*& gave himself for me!}*I do not regard the grace of God as👉

                                                Galatians 2:19-21

                                                  [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                                  @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                                  ☁️🌈☁️✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💌🌐🌏💜💁🏼‍♀️*(APOSTLE PAUL)*[“Indeed!*through the law I died to the law that I might live for God!]*{I have been crucified with Christ!*& I no longer live!*but Christ lives in me!}*The life I👉

                                                  Galatians 2:19-21

                                                    [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                                    @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                                    ☁️🌈☁️✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💌🌐🌏💜💁🏼‍♀️*(*DEAR BELOVED FRIENDS ”APOSTLE PAUL” WROTE A LETTER TO US ALL ON HOW WE ARE ALL Justified by Faith!)*[“Indeed!*through the law I died to the👉

                                                    Galatians 2:19-21

                                                      [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                                      @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                                      ☁️🌈☁️✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💌🌐🌏💜💁🏼‍♀️*(*DEAR BELOVED FRIENDS ON THIS REALM OF THE WHOLE WIDE WORLD ”APOSTLE PAUL” {A TEACHER APPOINTED BY “CHRIST JESUS’” HIMSELF!} WROTE A LETTER IN THE PAST!*& ALSO TO US ALL FOR FUTURE KNOWLEDGE ON HOW WE ARE ALL Justified by Faith!)👉

                                                      Galatians 2:19-21

                                                        [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                                        @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                                        🤗☁️🌈☁️💌💗🌐🌏✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚🤗*Justified by Faith!🤗💌💗🌐🌏☁️🌈☁️✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💜💚🤗

                                                        ☁️🌈☁️✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💌🌐🌏💜💁🏼‍♀️*(*DEAR BELOVED FRIENDS ON THIS REALM OF THE WHOLE WIDE WORLD👉

                                                        (Galatians 2:19-21)

                                                          [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                                          @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                                          ☁️🌈☁️✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💌🌐🌏💚💁🏿‍♀️*[*DEAR BELOVED FRIENDS ”APOSTLE PAUL” WROTE FOR FUTURE KNOWLEDGE ON HOW WE ARE ALL]*Justified by Faith!👉

                                                          ☁️🌈☁️👉

                                                          (Galatians 2:19-21)

                                                            [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                                            @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                                            ☁️🌈☁️✝️👑🕊️💦🏩💒❤️‍🔥🛐🫂💌🌐🌏💚💁🏿‍♀️*[*DEAR BELOVED FRIENDS ACROSS THIS BEAUTIFUL EARTH ”APOSTLE PAUL” WROTE A LETTER IN THE PAST!*& ALSO TO US ALL FOR FUTURE KNOWLEDGE ON HOW WE ARE ALL]*Justified by Faith!👉

                                                            (Galatians 2:19-21)

                                                              [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                                              @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                                              🩴🩴👙🐚🏖️🌊⛱️🩲🐬🏊‍♀️🌊⛲💦⛵⛵⛵🌞🌐🌏💗💁🏽‍♀️*DEAR BELOVED FRIENDS I HOPE!*& PRAY YOU ALL HAVE A DAY GIVING!*& SURROUND BY ENCOURAGING LOVE!*& HAVE A FUN!*WHIMSICAL!*& MARVELOUS DAY!*AMEN!†🤗💮🤍💚💜🌐💛🧡🩷🩵💜💚🐬☁️🌈☁️🐦‍⬛🦃🏩💌🌞💗🩴🩴👙🐚🏖️🌊⛱️🌏🤗👉

                                                              (Galatians 2:19-21)

                                                                [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                                                @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                                                🩴🩴👙🐚🏖️🌊⛱️🩲🐬🏊‍♀️🌊⛲💦⛵⛵⛵🌞🌐🌏💗💁🏽‍♀️*DEAR BELOVED FRIENDS TODAY I AM CHALLENGED BY HEALTH ISSUES SO FOR SURE I NEED TO FEED MY SPIRIT WITH GOOD!*& LOVING THINGS!*& SHARE WITH YOU ALL SO WE ALL CAN BE FILLED WITH POSITIVE HOPE!*AMEN!🙏👉

                                                                (Galatians 2:19-21)

                                                                  [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                                                  @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                                                  🩴🩴👙🐚🏖️🌊⛱️🩲🐬🏊‍♀️🌊⛲💦⛵⛵⛵🌞🌐🌏💗💁🏽‍♀️*DEAR BELOVED FRIENDS GOOD TUESDAY MORNING!🌞*& TODAY I AM CHALLENGED BY HEALTH 👉

                                                                  (Galatians 2:19-21)

                                                                    [?]Lisa J. Warner / Lisa Luv » 🌐
                                                                    @LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social

                                                                    🩴🩴👙🐚🏖️🌊⛱️🩲🐬🏊‍♀️🌊⛲💦⛵⛵⛵🌞🌐🌏💗💁🏽‍♀️*DEAR BELOVED FRIENDS ALL AROUND THE WORLD GOOD TUESDAY MORNING!🌞👉

                                                                    (Galatians 2:19-21)

                                                                    A picture of a cute little squirrel sitting on a fence with his arms crossed and he has a beautiful yellow belly and his back side is a gorgeous blended grey

                                                                    Alt...A picture of a cute little squirrel sitting on a fence with his arms crossed and he has a beautiful yellow belly and his back side is a gorgeous blended grey

                                                                      [?]Gems of Knowledge » 🌐
                                                                      @gemsofknowledge.com@gemsofknowledge.com

                                                                      The God Who Fights for You

                                                                      We often ask God to help us fight our battles, but how often do we stop to realize He already has? The cross was not simply an act of love. It was an act of war. Jesus stepped onto a battlefield we could never win. He took on sin, death, hell, and the grave itself. He willingly put His life on the line so that we could have life and life more abundant (John 10:10). No one has ever fought for us the way Jesus has. Click here to read the full devotional. ✨ [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

                                                                      Today’s One Year Bible Verses: 1 Kings 15:25–17:24, Acts 10:24–48, Psalm 134:1–3, Proverbs 17:9–11


                                                                      You’re Not Fighting Alone

                                                                      Have you ever felt like you were fighting a battle completely alone?

                                                                      Maybe it was a financial struggle, a health issue, a broken relationship, or a season filled with uncertainty. You prayed. You worried. You searched for answers. Yet the burden still felt heavy on your shoulders.

                                                                      As I prayed about today’s Scriptures, the Lord spoke these words to my heart:

                                                                      “I am the one fighting for you. I put My life on the line for you. No one or nothing else will love you like I do or do the things I am willing to do for you. Amen.”

                                                                      I paused and thought about that for a moment.

                                                                      We often ask God to help us fight our battles, but how often do we stop to realize He already has?

                                                                      The cross was not simply an act of love. It was an act of war.

                                                                      Jesus stepped onto a battlefield we could never win. He took on sin, death, hell, and the grave itself. He willingly put His life on the line so that we could have life and life more abundant (John 10:10).

                                                                      No one has ever fought for us the way Jesus has.

                                                                      And as I continued reading today’s Scriptures, I realized that truth was woven throughout every story.

                                                                      Consider Elijah.

                                                                      A famine had gripped the land. Resources were scarce. The future looked uncertain. Yet while Elijah could only see the drought around him, God was already fighting for him.

                                                                      God commanded ravens to bring food.
                                                                      God prepared a widow to provide shelter.
                                                                      God multiplied flour and oil when there was none left.

                                                                      At every turn, God was already one step ahead.

                                                                      Elijah wasn’t sustaining himself – God was sustaining him.

                                                                      Then came perhaps the widow’s greatest battle. Her son became sick and died. There was nothing she could do to save him. No amount of effort, money, or determination could change the situation.

                                                                      But God could.

                                                                      Through Elijah, the Lord restored the boy’s life and turned hopelessness into rejoicing.

                                                                      The battle belonged to God all along.

                                                                      We see the same truth in Acts. Cornelius was seeking God. Peter was seeking God. Neither man knew what the Lord was doing behind the scenes.

                                                                      Cornelius didn’t know God was preparing Peter- Peter didn’t know God was preparing Cornelius. Yet God was orchestrating every detail.

                                                                      While they were simply being obedient, God was fighting for something far greater than either of them could see. He was opening the door of salvation to the Gentiles and changing the course of history.

                                                                      How often does God do the same for us?
                                                                      How many times has He protected us from dangers we never knew existed?
                                                                      How many prayers has He answered before we even thought to ask?
                                                                      How many doors has He opened or closed for our good?

                                                                      Sometimes we imagine God’s protection only looks like dramatic miracles or giving us what we want in the moment, but often it looks like provision we didn’t expect.

                                                                      A closed door that keeps us from the wrong path.
                                                                      A conversation at just the right moment.
                                                                      Strength when we should have fallen apart.
                                                                      Peace when there should have been none.

                                                                      The truth is, God is fighting battles for us every day that we never even know existed.

                                                                      The Creator of heaven and earth is some unknown, far-distant God. He is near you, involved, watching, protecting, and fighting for you.

                                                                      And if we ever question His love, we need only look at the cross. After all, as today’s Gem reminds us: “I put My life on the line for you.”

                                                                      No one has ever loved us like that.

                                                                      No one ever will. 💎


                                                                      Action (5 Minutes with God)

                                                                      Give at least 5 minutes of your time today to be with the One who loves beyond measure, Jesus. Ask Him:

                                                                      • Lord, what do You want me to know about this personally?”
                                                                        • Journal what He gives you through His Holy Spirit.
                                                                      • Then ask, “What do You want me to do?”
                                                                        • Journal what He reveals – then do it!

                                                                      Give Him your battles, burdens, worries, and stress – just surrender it all at His feet. Then thank Him for the ways He is already working behind the scenes for you, even when you cannot yet see it.


                                                                      Prayer

                                                                      Father, thank You for loving me enough to fight for me. Thank You for sending Jesus to do what I could never do for myself. Forgive me for the times I try to carry battles You never intended me to carry alone. Help me trust You more deeply and remember that You are always working, always providing, always protecting, and always loving me. Thank You for being my Defender, my Provider, and my Savior. In Jesus’ name I pray, Amen.

                                                                      To read more 5 Minutes with God devotionals click here.


                                                                      If Gems of Knowledge has blessed your walk with Christ, please subscribe or consider partnering with us today. Your gift helps keep these devotionals free for everyone and carries God’s Word to more hearts. Every seed matters—thank you for sowing into this work! 💛

                                                                      Test everything by the Word and the Spirit (John 16:13)

                                                                      Subscribe

                                                                      Partner/Donate

                                                                      A discouraged woman sits on a park bench while Jesus stands behind her protecting her from unseen spiritual attacks and darkness.

                                                                      Alt...A discouraged woman sits on a park bench while Jesus stands behind her protecting her from unseen spiritual attacks and darkness.

                                                                      [?]Daily in the Word » 🌐
                                                                      @dailyintheword.blog@dailyintheword.blog

                                                                      The Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation

                                                                      A Bible Study Reflecting on Ephesians 1:15–17 The opening chapter of Ephesians is one of the richest theological passages in the New Testament. The apostle Paul begins by lifting the eyes of believers to the eternal purposes of God, praising the Father for choosing His people before the foundation of the world, celebrating the redeeming work of Christ, and rejoicing in the sealing ministry of the Holy Spirit. The passage overflows with worship because salvation is entirely the work of […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

                                                                      A Bible Study Reflecting on Ephesians 1:15–17

                                                                      The opening chapter of Ephesians is one of the richest theological passages in the New Testament. The apostle Paul begins by lifting the eyes of believers to the eternal purposes of God, praising the Father for choosing His people before the foundation of the world, celebrating the redeeming work of Christ, and rejoicing in the sealing ministry of the Holy Spirit. The passage overflows with worship because salvation is entirely the work of God’s grace from beginning to end. After celebrating these magnificent truths, Paul immediately turns to prayer. His response to doctrine is devotion, and his response to theology is intercession.

                                                                      Ephesians 1:15–17 reads:

                                                                      “For this reason, because I have heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love toward all the saints, I do not cease to give thanks for you, remembering you in my prayers, that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and of revelation in the knowledge of him.”

                                                                      These verses reveal the heart of a faithful pastor and apostle. Paul does not merely teach truth; he prays that believers will experience its transforming power. He understands that spiritual maturity is not simply the accumulation of information but the gracious work of God opening hearts and minds to know Him more deeply.

                                                                      The phrase “for this reason” points back to everything Paul has already written. Because God has blessed His people with every spiritual blessing in Christ, chosen them before creation, adopted them into His family, redeemed them through Christ’s blood, forgiven their sins, revealed His will, and sealed them with the Holy Spirit, Paul cannot help but pray for them. Theology naturally leads to prayer because the greatness of God’s grace creates dependence rather than pride.

                                                                      Paul says that he has heard of their faith in the Lord Jesus and their love toward all the saints. These two qualities have always been distinguishing marks of genuine Christianity. Faith reaches upward toward Christ while love reaches outward toward His people. One demonstrates trust in the Savior, while the other demonstrates the transforming power of salvation within the believer’s life.

                                                                      Faith in Christ is never merely intellectual agreement with facts about Jesus. Biblical faith is wholehearted reliance upon His person and work. It embraces Him as Lord and Savior and rests entirely upon His finished work on the cross. Such faith produces visible fruit, and among the clearest evidences of authentic faith is love for fellow believers.

                                                                      Love for the saints reflects the character of Christ Himself. Jesus declared that the world would know His disciples by their love for one another. The church is not simply an organization but a family united by grace. Every believer has been redeemed by the same blood, adopted into the same family, and indwelt by the same Holy Spirit. Love within the church therefore becomes a testimony to the reality of the gospel.

                                                                      Paul’s encouragement reminds believers that true spirituality cannot be separated from relationships. It is possible to possess great theological knowledge while lacking genuine love, but such religion contradicts the very nature of Christ. The gospel that reconciles sinners to God also reconciles believers to one another.

                                                                      The apostle then says, “I do not cease to give thanks for you.” Gratitude fills Paul’s prayers. He thanks God because every evidence of spiritual life originates in divine grace. Faith is God’s gift. Love is God’s work. Spiritual growth is God’s accomplishment.

                                                                      Paul’s example teaches that prayer should include thanksgiving as much as petition. The believer who constantly remembers God’s work in others develops a spirit of encouragement rather than criticism. Instead of focusing on failures, Paul rejoices over the evidence of grace already visible within the church.

                                                                      His thanksgiving also demonstrates confidence in God’s continuing work. The God who began the work of salvation will continue to complete it. Every evidence of grace becomes a reason for praise because it reveals God’s faithfulness.

                                                                      Paul also says that he remembers them in his prayers. His concern extends beyond physical needs into the deepest realities of spiritual life. He prays not primarily for prosperity, comfort, or success but for greater knowledge of God.

                                                                      This emphasis challenges many modern assumptions about prayer. Much contemporary praying centers upon circumstances, yet Paul focuses upon transformation. He understands that changed hearts are more important than changed situations. A believer who knows God deeply can endure suffering with hope, face opposition with courage, and serve faithfully through every season of life.

                                                                      The central request of Paul’s prayer appears in verse seventeen: “that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and of revelation in the knowledge of him.”

                                                                      This statement contains profound theological significance. Paul addresses God as “the God of our Lord Jesus Christ,” emphasizing the incarnate humanity of Christ while maintaining His divine nature. Jesus, in His humanity, perfectly worshiped and obeyed the Father. The phrase highlights the beautiful relationship within the Trinity and reminds believers that Christ’s mediatorial work brings them into fellowship with God.

                                                                      Paul also calls Him “the Father of glory.” Glory throughout Scripture refers to the fullness of God’s majesty, holiness, beauty, and infinite perfection. He is the source of all glory because all excellence originates in Him. Every display of divine power, mercy, wisdom, justice, and love reflects His glorious character.

                                                                      When believers approach God in prayer, they come before the Father of glory. This reality transforms prayer from routine religious activity into worshipful communion with the infinitely majestic Creator and Redeemer.

                                                                      Paul asks that God would give “the Spirit of wisdom and revelation.” Scholars have discussed whether this refers directly to the Holy Spirit or to a spirit of wisdom produced by Him. The broader context strongly supports understanding this as the ministry of the Holy Spirit Himself, who illuminates the hearts of believers so they may understand divine truth.

                                                                      This does not imply new revelation beyond Scripture. Rather, the Holy Spirit opens the believer’s understanding to grasp the truths already revealed by God. Scripture itself remains complete, sufficient, and authoritative. Yet fallen human understanding cannot fully appreciate spiritual realities without divine illumination.

                                                                      Wisdom in Scripture is more than intelligence. It is the ability to see reality from God’s perspective and to live accordingly. Biblical wisdom joins truth with obedience and knowledge with godliness. It transforms doctrine into daily living.

                                                                      Revelation here refers to God’s gracious unveiling of spiritual truth to the believer’s heart. The Holy Spirit removes blindness and enables believers to see the beauty and significance of Christ. He causes Scripture to come alive, not by changing its meaning but by changing the reader’s understanding.

                                                                      Paul’s ultimate goal is expressed in the final phrase: “in the knowledge of him.” Everything centers upon knowing God Himself.

                                                                      The Greek word used here suggests deep, personal, experiential knowledge rather than superficial acquaintance. Christianity is fundamentally relational rather than merely informational. Eternal life itself is described by Jesus as knowing the only true God and Jesus Christ whom He has sent.

                                                                      Many people seek knowledge about God while neglecting knowledge of God. They may master theological systems, historical facts, or doctrinal formulations without cultivating intimacy with the Lord. Paul desires something deeper. He longs for believers to know God’s character, His heart, His purposes, His holiness, His mercy, His faithfulness, and His love.

                                                                      Such knowledge changes every aspect of life.

                                                                      Knowing God produces humility because His greatness exposes human weakness. Pride cannot survive prolonged contemplation of divine majesty.

                                                                      Knowing God produces worship because the soul naturally delights in the beauty of His holiness. True worship flows from seeing God as He truly is.

                                                                      Knowing God produces obedience because love always seeks to please its beloved. Obedience becomes joyful rather than burdensome when it arises from knowing God’s goodness.

                                                                      Knowing God produces endurance because His promises become anchors for the soul during suffering. Circumstances may change, but God’s character never changes.

                                                                      Knowing God produces hope because His sovereign purposes extend beyond present difficulties into eternal glory.

                                                                      The practical implications of Paul’s prayer remain deeply relevant for believers today. Churches often pursue growth through better programs, stronger leadership, or more effective strategies. While these have their place, Paul’s greatest concern is spiritual illumination. The church needs people whose hearts are captivated by the knowledge of God.

                                                                      Individual believers likewise need more than information. The modern world provides unprecedented access to biblical resources, sermons, books, podcasts, and theological education. Yet spiritual maturity requires more than accumulated content. It requires the Holy Spirit opening the heart to see the glory of God revealed in Christ.

                                                                      This passage also reminds believers that spiritual growth depends upon divine grace. No one can force spiritual understanding through intellectual effort alone. Study is essential, but illumination comes from God. Prayer therefore becomes indispensable. Christians should regularly ask the Father of glory to deepen their understanding of His Word and enlarge their vision of His Son.

                                                                      Paul’s prayer encourages believers to prioritize eternal realities above temporary concerns. Physical needs matter, but spiritual knowledge matters even more. Material blessings fade, but knowing God grows richer throughout eternity.

                                                                      The Christian life is not a journey away from theology into practical experience. Rather, it is a journey in which theology becomes increasingly practical because knowing God reshapes every thought, desire, decision, and relationship. The deepest need of every believer is not merely more activity but greater intimacy with the living God.

                                                                      Ephesians 1:15–17 therefore stands as both a prayer and an invitation. It calls believers to thank God for His grace, to pray continually for one another, to seek wisdom from the Holy Spirit, and above all to pursue an ever-deepening knowledge of the Father of glory through Jesus Christ. Such knowledge is inexhaustible because God Himself is infinite. Throughout this life and into eternity, the redeemed will continue discovering the immeasurable riches of His grace, the beauty of His holiness, the greatness of His wisdom, and the endless depths of His love. The more believers know Him, the more they will worship Him, trust Him, serve Him, and reflect His glory to a watching world.

                                                                      The Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation

                                                                      Alt...The Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation

                                                                      [?]amgbengaezekieloladosu » 🌐
                                                                      @megafeastamerica-dmgts.wordpress.com@megafeastamerica-dmgts.wordpress.com

                                                                      “The Strategy”

                                                                      Focus indicates the movement and the path to growth which illustrate the opportunity it might give to us as individuals or Nation for the national interest to grow Nation economy and human capacity. Life gives warrant to strategies that we might win someday and we might lose someday. Each football player has the trained strategies to better the position been given to him in a football matches for a good result for the team. The leadership of every co-operation needs a team building as a […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

                                                                      Focus indicates the movement and the path to growth which illustrate the opportunity it might give to us as individuals or Nation for the national interest to grow Nation economy and human capacity. Life gives warrant to strategies that we might win someday and we might lose someday. Each football player has the trained strategies to better the position been given to him in a football matches for a good result for the team.

                                                                      The leadership of every co-operation needs a team building as a brilliant strategies to growth. Self-centered leading can never gives a better result or desire want of opportunity we long for in every organization. Even to the creation of a family we kind of desire to live for.

                                                                      Success require strategies that can be attributed to the instrument of enhance capacities involved. At the same time to associate with the growth of national interest of Nations. Creating capacity in human work force as leader of a Nation needs adequate strategies to succeed beyond the former administration to reach out to the heart of citizens. Everybody can not be a born leader, and each born leader needs to be trained as a unique strategies to bring out the inner abilities to a better governance of people group.

                                                                      In as much, each trained leaders need a strategies toward mentorship process from past successful leaders as way of submissions to learn out the classroom phase of life and thinking outside the box.

                                                                      Army does not go to a war without a strategical plans to win the battle of defending the national interest and value of their Nation or win the coupe of overthrowing the government of their own country if their desire is not met.

                                                                      “So the co-existent of every individualism is depend in the strategies been given for living purposes”

                                                                      Gbenga Ezekiel Oladosu

                                                                      American National Award Winning Author

                                                                      Mega Feast Bestselling Author

                                                                      Honored as(WordPress “World Famous Author” Receive views from 50+ Different Countries)

                                                                      [?]Choose Joy Adventure » 🌐
                                                                      @choosejoyadventure.wordpress.com@choosejoyadventure.wordpress.com

                                                                      Doing More or Becoming More?

                                                                      The Choice Every Christian Must Make In today's world, we are constantly encouraged to pursue our dreams, follow our passions, and do what makes us happy. While there is nothing inherently wrong with pursuing goals and ambitions, followers of Jesus must ask a deeper question: Am I becoming who God created me to be? There is a significant difference between doing what you want and becoming who God wants you to become. The Christian life requires both. God has given us gifts, talents, […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

                                                                      The Choice Every Christian Must Make

                                                                      In today’s world, we are constantly encouraged to pursue our dreams, follow our passions, and do what makes us happy. While there is nothing inherently wrong with pursuing goals and ambitions, followers of Jesus must ask a deeper question:

                                                                      Am I becoming who God created me to be?

                                                                      There is a significant difference between doing what you want and becoming who God wants you to become. The Christian life requires both. God has given us gifts, talents, desires, and opportunities to steward. But He is far more concerned with our character than our accomplishments.

                                                                      Too often, we measure success by what we achieve. God measures success by who we are becoming.

                                                                      The reality is that many people can build successful careers, lead ministries, grow businesses, and accomplish impressive things while neglecting the condition of their hearts. Yet Scripture repeatedly reminds us that character matters.

                                                                      Your character is not separate from your destiny.

                                                                      It is your destiny.

                                                                      The person you are becoming determines how you will handle influence, relationships, challenges, victories, and disappointments. God is not simply preparing a destination for you; He is preparing you for the destination.

                                                                      This raises another important question:

                                                                      Are you working to win, or are you working to build your identity?

                                                                      Many of us spend enormous amounts of energy trying to prove ourselves. We want to win the approval of others, win the promotion, win the recognition, or win the argument. But followers of Christ do not work from a place of insecurity. We work from a place of identity.

                                                                      Our identity is not something we create.

                                                                      It is something we receive.

                                                                      Because of Christ, we are already loved, chosen, forgiven, and accepted. When we truly understand who we are in Him, we stop striving to earn what has already been given through grace.

                                                                      The goal is no longer to build an identity through performance.

                                                                      The goal is to live out the identity God has already spoken over us.

                                                                      This is why what captures our attention matters so much.

                                                                      Where your attention goes, your energy flows.

                                                                      Whatever consistently occupies your mind will eventually shape your heart. Whatever shapes your heart will influence your decisions. And your decisions will determine the direction of your life.

                                                                      If our attention is consumed by social media, comparison, achievement, entertainment, or the opinions of others, our spiritual growth will suffer. But when our attention is fixed on Christ, our hearts begin to reflect His character.

                                                                      Jesus gave us the picture in John 15 when He described Himself as the vine and His followers as the branches.

                                                                      A branch does not strain to produce fruit.

                                                                      It remains connected to the vine.

                                                                      The fruit is the natural result of the connection.

                                                                      The same is true for us.

                                                                      The question is not merely what are you doing for God.

                                                                      The question is: What are you building into your life to stay connected to Him?

                                                                      Are you creating space for prayer?

                                                                      Are you spending time in God’s Word?

                                                                      Are you worshiping beyond Sunday mornings?

                                                                      Are you surrounding yourself with people who challenge you to grow spiritually?

                                                                      Are you creating rhythms that draw you closer to Jesus?

                                                                      Connection to the vine does not happen accidentally. It happens intentionally.

                                                                      Every day, we are becoming someone. We are either being shaped by the world around us or transformed by the Spirit within us.

                                                                      The life God desires for us is not simply about accomplishing more.

                                                                      It is about becoming more like Christ.

                                                                      So today, pause and ask yourself:

                                                                      Am I only doing what I want to do?

                                                                      Or am I becoming who God created me to become?

                                                                      Because at the end of the day, success is not measured by what you built, earned, or achieved.

                                                                      It is measured by whether you faithfully became the person God called you to be.

                                                                      Stay connected to the Vine.

                                                                      The fruit will follow.

                                                                      With love and joy,

                                                                      Laura

                                                                      Doing More or Becoming More?

                                                                      Alt...Doing More or Becoming More?

                                                                      [?]Daily in the Word » 🌐
                                                                      @dailyintheword.blog@dailyintheword.blog

                                                                      The God Who Gives the Spirit of Wisdom

                                                                      A Devotional Meditation on Ephesians 1:15-17 The opening chapter of Ephesians lifts the heart toward the eternal purposes of God. Before Paul ever addresses the practical life of the church, he begins with worship, thanksgiving, and prayer. After celebrating the immeasurable blessings believers possess in Christ, he turns his attention to intercession, praying that God's people would grow deeper in their understanding of the One who has redeemed them. Ephesians 1:15-17 reveals that […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

                                                                      A Devotional Meditation on Ephesians 1:15-17

                                                                      The opening chapter of Ephesians lifts the heart toward the eternal purposes of God. Before Paul ever addresses the practical life of the church, he begins with worship, thanksgiving, and prayer. After celebrating the immeasurable blessings believers possess in Christ, he turns his attention to intercession, praying that God’s people would grow deeper in their understanding of the One who has redeemed them.

                                                                      Ephesians 1:15-17 reveals that Christian maturity is not measured merely by outward activity or religious knowledge, but by an ever-increasing knowledge of God Himself. Paul writes:

                                                                      “Wherefore I also, after I heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus, and love unto all the saints, cease not to give thanks for you, making mention of you in my prayers; That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give unto you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of him.”

                                                                      The apostle begins with gratitude. He rejoices because he has heard of the believers’ faith in Christ and their love for all the saints. These two qualities belong together. Faith reaches upward toward Christ while love reaches outward toward His people. Genuine conversion produces both. One cannot claim to know Christ while refusing to love His church, for the grace that unites believers to the Savior also unites them to one another.

                                                                      Paul does not merely congratulate them for their spiritual progress. Instead, he continues praying for them. This teaches an important truth: no believer ever graduates from needing prayer. Even faithful Christians require continual growth in grace and understanding. The Christian life is not static but dynamic, drawing ever closer to the infinite riches of God.

                                                                      His prayer centers upon the character of God Himself. He addresses “the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory.” This magnificent title reminds us that all glory originates with God. He is the source of every perfect gift, every ray of truth, every act of redemption, and every expression of divine majesty. His glory is not borrowed or acquired; it is His eternal nature. The splendor of heaven reflects only a small measure of His infinite holiness and beauty.

                                                                      Paul asks that God would grant “the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of him.” This request deserves careful reflection. The apostle is not praying for secret information unavailable to ordinary believers, nor is he seeking mystical experiences detached from Scripture. Rather, he prays that through the work of the Holy Spirit, believers would increasingly understand the God who has already revealed Himself through Christ and His Word.

                                                                      Biblical wisdom is far more than intelligence or education. It is the God-given ability to see reality from heaven’s perspective. It recognizes God’s hand in history, His sovereignty over circumstances, and His purposes in both joy and suffering. Wisdom enables believers to interpret life through the lens of divine truth rather than human opinion.

                                                                      Revelation here points to spiritual illumination. The truths of Scripture may be read with the eyes, but they must also be opened by the Spirit to the heart. The same words that appear ordinary to one person become life-giving treasures to another because the Spirit enlightens the mind to behold the glory of God in Christ.

                                                                      The ultimate goal of Paul’s prayer is not merely greater theological knowledge but greater knowledge of God Himself. Christianity is fundamentally relational before it is informational. Eternal life, according to Jesus, consists in knowing the only true God and Jesus Christ whom He has sent. The Christian faith invites believers into an ever-deepening fellowship with the Creator and Redeemer of all things.

                                                                      This knowledge is inexhaustible. The finite mind can never fully comprehend the infinite God, yet throughout eternity His people will continually discover new depths of His mercy, wisdom, holiness, justice, and love. Every page of Scripture, every act of providence, every answer to prayer, and every display of grace becomes another opportunity to know Him more fully.

                                                                      Many pursue knowledge that perishes. They devote themselves to mastering countless subjects while neglecting the knowledge that gives eternal life. The greatest education is the knowledge of God. Every other discipline finds its proper place only when understood in relation to Him who created all things.

                                                                      Paul’s prayer also teaches that spiritual growth is ultimately a gift from God. Human effort alone cannot produce divine wisdom. Study, discipline, and meditation are valuable, but illumination comes from above. The Spirit opens blind eyes, softens hardened hearts, and makes eternal truths living realities within the soul.

                                                                      This should encourage every believer who desires deeper communion with God. Growth is not reserved for scholars or pastors but is available to every child of God who humbly seeks Him. The Father delights to reveal Himself to those who hunger for His presence. The Spirit patiently teaches, convicts, comforts, and transforms as believers abide in Christ and dwell upon His Word.

                                                                      The prayer of Ephesians also reminds the church that its greatest need is not worldly success, influence, or recognition. The church’s greatest need is to know God more deeply. Programs may organize, strategies may assist, and resources may expand ministry, but only the knowledge of God produces lasting transformation. Hearts captivated by His glory become instruments through which His grace is displayed to the world.

                                                                      As believers behold more of God’s majesty, they become increasingly conformed to the image of Christ. Worship grows richer, obedience becomes more joyful, suffering is endured with greater hope, and love for others deepens. The knowledge of God is never merely intellectual; it shapes every aspect of life.

                                                                      Paul’s ancient prayer remains profoundly relevant today. In a world overflowing with information yet starving for wisdom, believers are called to seek the One who alone satisfies the deepest longings of the human soul. To know God is to possess a treasure beyond measure, a hope beyond disappointment, and a joy beyond circumstance.

                                                                      May every heart continually seek the wisdom that comes from above, the revelation that comes through the Holy Spirit, and the knowledge that leads into ever greater worship of the Father of glory, whose grace has been fully revealed in Jesus Christ.

                                                                      Prayer

                                                                      Father of glory, grant to Your people the spirit of wisdom and revelation that we may know You more fully through Your Son. Open our minds to understand Your truth, soften our hearts to receive Your grace, and shape our lives according to Your holy will. Let the knowledge of Christ fill us with worship, strengthen us in faith, and lead us into deeper love for Your church and for the world You have called us to serve. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

                                                                      The God Who Gives the Spirit of Wisdom

                                                                      Alt...The God Who Gives the Spirit of Wisdom

                                                                      [?]Daily in the Word » 🌐
                                                                      @dailyintheword.blog@dailyintheword.blog

                                                                      The Prayer That Knows the Father of Glory

                                                                      A Prayer Inspired by Ephesians 1:15-17 Gracious and eternal Father, the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, we come before You with humble hearts, filled with gratitude that You have made Yourself known through Your Son and have called us into the fellowship of Your everlasting kingdom. Before the foundations of the world were laid, You purposed to redeem a people for Yourself, and in the fullness of time You revealed Your grace through Jesus Christ, who died and rose again so […] [SENSITIVE CONTENT]

                                                                      A Prayer Inspired by Ephesians 1:15-17

                                                                      Gracious and eternal Father, the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, we come before You with humble hearts, filled with gratitude that You have made Yourself known through Your Son and have called us into the fellowship of Your everlasting kingdom. Before the foundations of the world were laid, You purposed to redeem a people for Yourself, and in the fullness of time You revealed Your grace through Jesus Christ, who died and rose again so that sinners might become sons and daughters by adoption. Every blessing we possess flows from Your sovereign mercy, and every hope we cherish rests securely upon Your unchanging promises.

                                                                      We worship You because You are infinitely wise, holy, righteous, and good. Your wisdom established the heavens, Your power sustains every star in its place, and Your providence governs every detail of history according to Your perfect will. Nothing escapes Your notice, and nothing can frustrate Your eternal purpose. You are the God who speaks light into darkness, life into death, and hope into despair. Your faithfulness has never failed, and Your covenant love endures forever.

                                                                      Lord, we thank You for the faith that You have planted in the hearts of Your people through the gospel of Jesus Christ. We praise You that You have drawn us from spiritual blindness into marvelous light and have opened our hearts to trust in the Savior who loved us and gave Himself for us. We thank You that faith is not merely the work of human effort but the gracious gift of Your Spirit, awakening dead hearts to believe and rejoice in the glory of Christ.

                                                                      We thank You also for the love that You produce among Your saints. Left to ourselves, our hearts are selfish and divided, but by Your transforming grace You teach us to bear one another’s burdens, to forgive as we have been forgiven, and to seek the good of others above ourselves. Thank You for every act of kindness that reflects the character of Christ, for every quiet sacrifice made in obedience to Your Word, and for every unseen work of compassion that glorifies Your name. May the Church continue to be known not merely by its words but by its Christlike love, demonstrating to a broken world that the gospel truly changes lives.

                                                                      Father, we pray that You would give Your people the Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of You. Though we have believed, we confess that we still know You imperfectly. Too often our understanding is shallow, our worship distracted, and our vision clouded by earthly concerns. Draw us deeper into the knowledge of Your holiness and grace. Teach us to treasure Your character above every earthly possession and to delight ourselves in Your presence above every temporary pleasure.

                                                                      Grant us wisdom that comes from above, pure and peaceable, full of mercy and good fruit. Give us discernment to recognize truth in an age of confusion and courage to stand upon Your Word when the culture rejects it. Keep us from being captivated by empty philosophies or distracted by passing trends that cannot satisfy the soul. Anchor our minds in the truth of Scripture and shape our thinking by the mind of Christ, so that every decision, every ambition, and every relationship may reflect Your kingdom.

                                                                      Lord, grant us revelation through the illumination of Your Holy Spirit as we open the Scriptures. We ask not for new truth beyond what You have spoken but for clearer sight of the truth You have already revealed. Open the eyes of our hearts to behold the beauty of Christ in every page of Your Word. Let us see His majesty in the promises, His mercy in the sacrifices, His righteousness in the law fulfilled, and His victory in the resurrection. May our understanding move beyond information into transformation, producing lives marked by holiness and joyful obedience.

                                                                      Teach us to know You personally and intimately. Guard us from reducing Christianity to mere religious habit or intellectual exercise. May our relationship with You grow daily through prayer, worship, repentance, and meditation upon Your Word. Let our hearts become increasingly sensitive to the leading of Your Spirit, eager to obey Your commands and quick to confess our sins when we fall short. May our fellowship with You become our greatest delight and our deepest source of strength.

                                                                      Strengthen those who are weary in faith today. Some struggle beneath heavy burdens of grief, illness, disappointment, loneliness, or uncertainty. Remind them that You are near to the brokenhearted and that Your grace is sufficient for every weakness. Lift their eyes beyond present circumstances to the eternal inheritance that awaits all who belong to Christ. Let hope arise where despair has lingered, and let confidence return where fear has taken root.

                                                                      We pray for Your Church throughout the world. Unite believers in truth and love. Protect pastors, elders, missionaries, teachers, and servants of the gospel who labor faithfully in difficult places. Fill them with wisdom from above and sustain them with joy that cannot be extinguished by opposition or hardship. May the proclamation of Christ continue to spread among every nation, tribe, language, and people until the earth is filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord.

                                                                      Father, protect us from spiritual complacency. Do not allow us to settle for shallow faith or comfortable religion. Awaken within us a greater hunger for Your presence and a deeper longing for holiness. May we seek first Your kingdom and Your righteousness, trusting that You will provide everything necessary for life and godliness. Teach us to value eternal treasures above temporary success and to measure our lives not by worldly achievement but by faithful obedience to Christ.

                                                                      Give us hearts that continually overflow with thanksgiving. In seasons of abundance and in seasons of hardship, remind us that every good gift comes from Your hand. Even when we cannot understand Your providence, help us to trust Your goodness. Even when the path is difficult, help us to remember that You are conforming us to the image of Your beloved Son. Let gratitude replace complaint, worship overcome anxiety, and hope triumph over discouragement.

                                                                      May our lives become living testimonies of Your grace. Let our speech reflect the gentleness of Christ, our actions display His compassion, and our decisions reveal His wisdom. May our homes become places where Your Word is honored, our churches become communities marked by love and truth, and our daily work become an offering of worship to Your glory.

                                                                      Above all, deepen our knowledge of You until every lesser affection fades beside the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus our Lord. Let our hearts rest securely in Your sovereign love, our minds be renewed by Your truth, and our souls be satisfied in Your presence until the day when faith becomes sight and we stand before Your throne in everlasting joy.

                                                                      We ask these things through Jesus Christ our Savior and Lord, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, one God forever and ever.

                                                                      Amen.

                                                                      The Prayer That Knows the Father of Glory

                                                                      Alt...The Prayer That Knows the Father of Glory

                                                                      Back to top - More...