Walking On Water by Faith

Water

Walking on water by Faith to me means that we take a leap of faith. We step out of our comfort zone and do something that we have never did before, but we know that we must have faith to do it. We must know that God is with us through every decision we make in our life.

Like Peter, he took a leap of faith and stepped out of the boat to walk to Jesus in the middle of a storm. We must have that kind of faith knowing that if we sink, Jesus will be there to pull us up out of the depths of our failings.

Walking on water by Faith is having faith as a grain of a mustard seed. Sometimes life throws us curveballs that we can’t hit, sometimes life will throw us a fast ball that will cause us to strike out, but while we are trying to bat the balls of life we know that our coach is right there with us through every ending, and His name is Jesus Christ.

Not only is He our King, He is our coach in life. He will never leave us, nor forsake us when we are questioning our faith for whatever reason. He will show us what we need to do to strengthen our faith, and that is reading His Word. Walking on the water by Faith takes strong belief in God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit. It takes knowing that we are never alone no matter what May come our way.

With that being said, let us all remember that Jesus is for us. He wants what is best for us. We just have to believe that with all of our heart and soul. If you have not talked to Jesus today, take some time and get by yourself and open your heart that He may take away all of your hurt and pain. He will fill it with His love that will last forever. He will give you joy that the world cannot take away. His Joy is our strength. Until next time, and as always, thank you for joining me on my journey with Food for the Soul.

Walking On Water by Faith

Water

Walking on water by Faith to me means that we take a leap of faith. We step out of our comfort zone and do something that we have never did before, but we know that we must have faith to do it. We must know that God is with us through every decision we make in our life.

Like Peter, he took a leap of faith and stepped out of the boat to walk to Jesus in the middle of a storm. We must have that kind of faith knowing that if we sink, Jesus will be there to pull us up out of the depths of our failings.

Walking on water by Faith is having faith as a grain of a mustard seed. Sometimes life throws us curveballs that we can’t hit, sometimes life will throw us a fast ball that will cause us to strike out, but while we are trying to bat the balls of life we know that our coach is right there with us through every ending, and His name is Jesus Christ.

Not only is He our King, He is our coach in life. He will never leave us, nor forsake us when we are questioning our faith for whatever reason. He will show us what we need to do to strengthen our faith, and that is reading His Word. Walking on the water by Faith takes strong belief in God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit. It takes knowing that we are never alone no matter what May come our way.

With that being said, let us all remember that Jesus is for us. He wants what is best for us. We just have to believe that with all of our heart and soul. If you have not talked to Jesus today, take some time and get by yourself and open your heart that He may take away all of your hurt and pain. He will fill it with His love that will last forever. He will give you joy that the world cannot take away. His Joy is our strength. Until next time, and as always, thank you for joining me on my journey with Food for the Soul.

Inspiration: James1:5

Inspiration

The best one to turn to, in times where we need wisdom, is God. God is the one who holds all wisdom that is profitable to our lives. When we ask, He will readily give. We can receive wisdom in many ways – through other believers, through reading God’s word, and through prayer as well.

Prayer for Today

Prayer

My awesome God, I thank you for even giving me the opportunity to know and understand the richness and beauty of heaven. Assist me in my pursuit of good and help me be generous rather than greedy, as your son was for all of humanity. I pray that I can be a humble servant of yours by giving the treasure of my life in service to your name. Amen.

Inspiration

Inspiration

Greed is perhaps the deadliest and most tempting of sins. With more money and more possessions, we can better take care of ourselves and our families. At what point is it enough? At what point does it go from being a good thing to being a sin? Worldly possessions will fade, as will our bodies. Our time spent on Earth should be spent pursuing good so that we can live beside God in heaven. It is only then will we understand what true treasure really is.

Prayer: 2 Corinthians 4:17

Prayer

Dear God, I would like to use this moment to declare my faith in you and my resolve to abide in you no matter what. I am aware of what may come my way because I choose to align myself with you. Whatever my earthly body endures on this earth, as a result of being a Christian, I count it worth it when I think of the glory that is to come. I thank you, Lord, that I can be a partaker of this glorious future. In Jesus’ name, I pray. Amen.

Inspiration: 2 Corinthians 4:17

Inspiration

The persecution, mockery, beatings, isolation, and attacks we may face for being advocates of the gospel, will never gain any comparison to the glory of what is to come on the day of the Resurrection, where we will receive new glorious bodies, free from infirmities and sin. Persecution neither adds nor removes to our eternal security in Christ. Our salvation remains our priority and we should strive to proclaim it, defend it, and be proud of it no matter what.

Devotion Message: Proverbs 1:10

The flip side of pursuing wisdom is avoiding foolishness. Running toward God necessarily means hurrying away from selfish, short-sighted pursuits. We cannot genuinely pray for our heavenly Father to “deliver us from evil” if we are not striving to avoid personal temptations to sin.

There are different ways by which you may be enticed to sin. You may want to fit in or belong; you may be intimidated by a stronger personality; you may see some promise of personal advancement. Enticement can even come in the form of a well-meaning, but foolish, peer who offers counsel that is contrary to God’s Word.

‘If sinners entice you…’ Notice that we are not to be concerned with the pitfalls and shortcomings of others. What entices someone else to sin may not even be a temptation for you. But here is the vital principle: whatever sins do entice you, do not consent to them. It is not enough to console yourself with the fact that you have not committed the same sin to which someone else has fallen prey.

Regardless of the multi-faceted enticements to sin which you may encounter, here is the simple, straight-forward admonition — do not consent. Though others may entice you to sin, they cannot force you to sin. We can never say someone else “made me do it.” When you feel the tug of sin, do not consent to its alluring invitation.

Set your mind, by God’s grace and power, to say “No” to every one of Satan’s advances, and to consciously consent to the claims of Christ upon your life.

Devotion Message: Isaiah 40:29

It is not hard to find someone who will give support to the powerful, attention to the famous, notice to the remarkable, or recognition to the accomplished. Virtually everyone is willing to jump on the bandwagon of some well-known, talented, or beautiful person.

But God gives encouragement to the faint. He gives strength to the exhausted. He does not join the crowds hurrying after celebrities; he seeks out the broken-hearted and the overlooked and gives them the greatest honor imaginable — his attention and his love.

This is not because God is a cosmic talent-scout, finding the individual diamonds in the many roughs throughout the world. It is to those who truly have no merit, who can stake no claim to his assets, who have no might that he sends reinforcements of strength and provision. It is God’s grace, not our value, that draws him to hurting, helpless humanity.

While this is humbling — even humiliating — to realize, it is also liberating and invigorating. We can let all our collected claims of good works and inherent worth fall around our feet as we reach out to a God who only heals the sick, who only mends the broken, who only gives strength to the powerless.

How do you see yourself? It doesn’t matter how others might describe you; perhaps they even consider you among the great, the mighty, the successful. But are you broken-hearted and helpless before the Lord? If so, then prepare for a strength infusion from the most High him

Devotion Message: Psalm 81:16

There are great lessons to be learned even from the failures of God’s people recorded in the Scriptures. God says if his people had obeyed his voice he would have subdued their enemies and fed them with honey out of the rock. But they rebelled and walked in their own counsels.

How sad that a people who that could have enjoyed the richest of blessings from their gracious God were instead given up to their own desires and suffered the consequences of their disobedience.

How often have you neglected the place of blessing? There is counsel and comfort in God’s Word but you have spent little time reading it. There are rich mercies to be found at the throne of grace but you have neglected prayer. There are joys and blessings to be found in God’s house but you have been attracted by the empty promises of the world.

Churches sometimes mourn the loss of spiritual fervor enjoyed in former days. But instead of being brought to repentance for sin and neglect, the excuse is made that we live in difficult times. The lack of power in preaching is a concern but still messages to make people feel good take precedence over sound biblical exposition.

The next time you are facing temptation to sin or to squander God’s blessings, remember this: God is willing and able to bless his people. Today, heed his call to return. Call upon him, knowing he is willing to hear and ready to bless.

Devotion Message: John 11:35

This is verse is famous for being the shortest verse in the Bible. But it deserves our attention for reasons much more significant than that. What a scene! The eternal, unchanging, immovable God-in-the-flesh Jesus, weeping in front of the tomb of a friend.

How mysterious a scene this is. And yet there are some clear implications, embedded in the context of the verse, from which we can learn valuable lessons. First, Jesus was not weeping because of despair at the death of Lazarus his friend. He had already told his disciples that this death had been allowed in order to provide an occasion for their faith to be strengthened (11:15). Moments after weeping, Jesus would raise Lazarus from the dead.

Secondly, Jesus was weeping because he saw the deep grief of those around him and was deeply moved by compassion for them (11:33). Even though he knew that he was about to bring Lazarus back from the dead, Jesus was still effected by the sorrow that others were experiencing.

What about you? When you have lost a loved one, or seen your fondest hopes or projects fall dead at your feet, do you despair or do you see it, like Jesus did, as an occasion for faith to be strengthened? Does it cause you to lose hope or to place your hope in the strength and wisdom of God?

On the other hand when you see others experiencing deep grief, does it move you at all? Even if it does not directly effect your life, are you compassionate toward those whose lives are shattered by sin or sorrow? Do you weep with those who are weeping around you, bearing their burden empathetically and prayerfully with them?

May this day find you walking in the faith, and in the sympathy, of our beloved friend Jesus Christ, who is still touched by the sorrows of his people and who is still able to speak life to the dead.

Devotion Message: Zechariah 10:1-2

There are a thousand different places and people and pleasures that promise comfort and healing and satisfaction… but their comfort is vain, their promises are empty. Cosmetics are not the fountain of youth they claim to be, cars do not satisfy the cavernous need for pleasure that people have, and college will not fill the need for knowledge that every one of us feels. They comfort in vain.

Many religious leaders or philosophical seers or academic icons pretend to understand the needs of mankind and claim to have found the answers to life’s big questions. But they have seen a lie. They are just as blind in their own musings and speculations as those whom they persuade to follow them.

The only true promise, the only full comfort that is to be found in all the universe is found at the feet of Jesus. He is the Way, he is the Truth, in him is the Life. Everything else and everyone else that makes a pretense of substituting the creator God is telling you a lie, is offering empty promises, is plying a false comfort.

Are you looking today for a soul-filling, need-meeting, pleasure-supplying comfort? The greatest pleasure the world will ever know is the satisfaction of submitting to God, confessing our desperate condition apart from him, and begging him to fill us with himself.

Ask ye of the Lord. You will not be disappointed. His comfort is not in vain.

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑

%d bloggers like this: