serendipity
(n.) luck, finding good things without looking for them
(The concert was sold out but by serendipity, my friend had bought me a ticket for my birthday.)From the Vocabulary app: http://itunes.apple.com/app/id1084540807?pt=119655832&ct=Share
Inspirational Message✝️
To hear this message click here on the link above. God bless you.🙏🏾
Inspirational Message
To see this video, click here on the link above. God bless you.🙏🏾
The Apostle Paul on Modesty: A 5-Day Bible Study on the Daily Devotion App.
dailydevotion.app/plans/the-apostle-paul-on-modesty/id45002
If you would like to start this Bible Study, click on the link above. God bless you.🙏🏾
Parenting for the Greater Joy

Communication in our technology-saturated world is more accessible than it ever has been. It still astounds me that I can connect with nearly anyone around the world in mere seconds with a device that fits in the palm of my hand.
The presence of this type of universal and instant communication has moved us as a people into an entirely new human experience. For much of our history we’ve depended upon communication in person or in written form. This is the type of communication we see taking place in the Bible. We even see plenty of examples of letters in the New Testament written in response to news the apostles received about churches or other Christians, perhaps waiting weeks or months to hear such news. The epistle of 3 John is one such letter. It is here we find John’s words:
“For I was very glad when fellow believers came and testified to your fidelity to the truth—how you are walking in truth. I have no greater joy than this: to hear that my children are walking in truth.” – 1 John 3-4
The basis of John’s joy is the news that his children, those converted under his preaching of the gospel or entrusted to his care as a shepherd, are “walking in truth.” Here’s a challenge and encouragement from Charles Spurgeon in the Spurgeon Study Bible.
False Parental Priorities
“I have no greater joy than this: to hear that my children are walking in truth.”
It is grievous to see how some professing Christian parents find satisfaction when their children display cleverness in learning or sharpness in business, although they show no signs of a renewed nature. If they pass their exams with credit and promise to be well-fitted for the world’s battle, their parents forget that a superior is calling, involving a higher crown, for which the child will need to be fitted by divine grace and armed with the whole armor of God. If our children lose the crown of life, it will be but a small consolation that they have won the laurels of literature or art.
Many who ought to know better think themselves superlatively blessed if their children become rich, marry well, strike out into profitable enterprises, or attain eminence in their profession. These parents will go to bed rejoicing and wake satisfied—though their boys are on the road to hell—if they are also making money. They have no greater joy than that their children are having their portion in this life and laying up treasure where rust corrupts it. Though neither their sons nor their daughters show any signs of the new birth, give no evidence of being rich toward God, manifest no traces of electing love, redeeming grace, or the regenerating power of the Holy Spirit, yet the parents are content with their condition.
True Parental Priorities
I hope no parent will allow their children to grow up and leave their roof without knowing the doctrines of the gospel, the life of Christ, and the great precepts of Scripture—without having as clear an understanding as possible of the great principles and plan of salvation. It should be the holy ambition of every parent that his entire family should be renewed by the Holy Spirit. Happy as a marriage day is that day when a parent sees his child surrendered to the people of God, having first given his heart to Christ. The joy of the text is that the children “walk in the truth”—the actual demonstration of the power of the gospel in their lives. This proves that the teaching was well received, the feeling was not mere excitement, and the profession was not a falsehood but was done in truth.
The Spurgeon Study Bible
This is exactly the type of content you can expect from the Prince of Preachers’ study Bible. The Spurgeon Study Bible is full of notes, quotes, and illustrations pulled from Spurgeon’s sermons. This resource even includes photocopies of his handwritten notes!
TAP HERE to get a copy for yourself!
Closing Guided Scripture 1/11/24 Thursday
Sometimes we hold on to things that we need to let go of but it’s hard. We hold on to things so we don’t forget how we were treated, or to remember something that happened long ago. I want to say to you that even though it is hard to let go of, we have to. We can’t keep holding on to hurt, pain, and disappointment. When we let go of those things our heart and soul becomes lighter, and we no longer have to carry those burdens of the past. Give the burdens to God. We do have to carry our own crosses we bear, but we do not have to carry past hurts. Let us remember to cast them at the feet of Jesus and leave them there. With that being said, God bless you, stay safe, and as always, thank you for joining me on Food for the Soul. Happy New Year.🎆 
Devotional: The Presence of God
The Presence of God
The writer of Psalm 27 is intentionally focusing on one of the most important aspects of our spiritual life. Throughout Scripture, we learn about the importance of the presence of God.
It is in the presence of God that we find strength and hope (Psalm 27:1). It’s also in God’s presence that our enemies lose their power over us (Psalm 27:2-3).
In Psalm 27:4 the writer of the Psalm expresses his desire to dwell within the house of the Lord, to gaze upon God’s beauty and be in His presence in the temple. In the Old Testament, the presence of God was primarily within the temple. But through spending time with God, the Psalmist found hope and restoration for his soul.
Thanks to Jesus, God’s presence is no longer confined to the temple. His presence is now available to us through the Holy Spirit who dwells within believers. We now have access to God’s presence at any time.
Just like the writer of the Psalm desired to dwell within God’s presence, we also should desire to be with God as much as possible. It is in God’s presence that we find hope, joy, beauty, and the restoration of our weary souls.
It is important that we spend time with God each and every day. We can do this through regularly reading Scripture and reflecting on what we read. We can also spend time in prayer, talking to God about what is happening in our life. Another way to spend time in God’s presence is to simply be aware that He is with you through your daily tasks each day.
serendipity


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