Roczaye is a follower of Jesus Christ, a Bible teacher, and a voice committed to proclaiming the truth of God’s Word without compromise. Rooted in Scripture and led by the Holy Spirit, his calling is to bring people back to the simplicity, power, and authority of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
With a passion for sound doctrine, biblical literacy, and authentic Christian living, Roczaye teaches the Bible verse by verse, drawing from both Old and New Testament truths, original Hebrew and Greek word studies, and historical context - always pointing back to Christ. His approach blends the discipline of a biblical scholar, the perspective of a theologian, and the conviction of a biblicist, holding Scripture as the final authority.
As the founder of RT Merce and the creator of the “Da Good News” platform, Roczaye uses digital media, teaching, and apologetics to equip believers, challenge surface-level Christianity, and reach seekers with clarity, love, and truth. His work emphasizes repentance, identity in Christ, Kingdom living, and a Spirit-filled life grounded in obedience rather than emotion.
Roczaye believes the Church is called to walk in truth, power, holiness, and compassion - just as modeled by Jesus and the early Church. His mission is simple: to glorify God, exalt Christ, and help people know, live, and stand on the Word of God in a confused and compromised world.
“Sanctify them by Your truth. Your word is truth.” — John 17:17
  • Machine Operator at Printing
  • Lives in Cape Town
  • From Bellville 7530
  • Country South Africa
  • Studied high school at Belhar High
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  • Married
  • 06/01/1989
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  • THE AUDACITY OF A CRY

    Written By Wambui Wagura
    When he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to shout, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me.”
    Mark 10:47
    Have you ever felt defined by your limitations? In scripture, we meet a man named Bartimaeus, introduced to us as a blind beggar sitting beside the road. His lack of sight had left him severely disadvantaged, stripping him of his livelihood and forcing him to resort to begging. He sat in his condition of dependency until he heard a name that offered a way out: Jesus of Nazareth. Perhaps he heard from the multitude that Jesus performs miracles and Bartimaeus realized his circumstance required divine intervention. He wasn’t looking for a temporary handout; he was calling out to the only person who could change his situation forever.

    When he realized Jesus was nearby, he began to shout, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me.” As the people around him tried to silence his voice, his faith became even more stubborn; he shouted even louder. Sometimes, faith requires that we silence the voices of discouragement that appear to be louder than our hope. Bartimaeus knew that Jesus was his only hope for restoration.

    Finally, he got the attention of Jesus, who asked what he wanted. Bartimaeus didn’t ask for coins; he asked for sight. He knew that with vision, he could finally support himself and no longer rely on the pity of others. You might be in a distinct place of need, perhaps lying down and knowing your situation requires a miracle. Jesus is only a prayer away; why not reach out to the One who is able to show you mercy?

    Heavenly Father, there is a situation currently depriving me of peace, and I desperately need your intervention. I call upon you in this hour, asking that you show me and my family your great mercy. Come to our aid, Lord, for you are the God who still performs miracles today. I trust in your power to restore us and empower us for the journey ahead. Amen.

    Throughout the Day Do you have a situation that is depriving you of peace? Choose today to cry out to Jesus; He is able to intervene as he did in the life of Bartimaeus. Stop focusing on your lack and instead focus on the Savior who is near. Let his presence fill you until his mercy overflows.

    #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
    THE AUDACITY OF A CRY Written By Wambui Wagura When he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to shout, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me.” Mark 10:47 Have you ever felt defined by your limitations? In scripture, we meet a man named Bartimaeus, introduced to us as a blind beggar sitting beside the road. His lack of sight had left him severely disadvantaged, stripping him of his livelihood and forcing him to resort to begging. He sat in his condition of dependency until he heard a name that offered a way out: Jesus of Nazareth. Perhaps he heard from the multitude that Jesus performs miracles and Bartimaeus realized his circumstance required divine intervention. He wasn’t looking for a temporary handout; he was calling out to the only person who could change his situation forever. When he realized Jesus was nearby, he began to shout, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me.” As the people around him tried to silence his voice, his faith became even more stubborn; he shouted even louder. Sometimes, faith requires that we silence the voices of discouragement that appear to be louder than our hope. Bartimaeus knew that Jesus was his only hope for restoration. Finally, he got the attention of Jesus, who asked what he wanted. Bartimaeus didn’t ask for coins; he asked for sight. He knew that with vision, he could finally support himself and no longer rely on the pity of others. You might be in a distinct place of need, perhaps lying down and knowing your situation requires a miracle. Jesus is only a prayer away; why not reach out to the One who is able to show you mercy? Heavenly Father, there is a situation currently depriving me of peace, and I desperately need your intervention. I call upon you in this hour, asking that you show me and my family your great mercy. Come to our aid, Lord, for you are the God who still performs miracles today. I trust in your power to restore us and empower us for the journey ahead. Amen. Throughout the Day Do you have a situation that is depriving you of peace? Choose today to cry out to Jesus; He is able to intervene as he did in the life of Bartimaeus. Stop focusing on your lack and instead focus on the Savior who is near. Let his presence fill you until his mercy overflows. #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
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  • JESUS DID NOT COME TO CREATE FAKE PEACE

    He Came With Truth - And Truth Will Divide

    Matthew 10:34–36
    “Do not think that I came to bring peace on earth. I did not come to bring peace but a sword. For I have come to ‘set a man against his father, a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law’; and ‘a man’s enemies will be those of his own household.’”

    This is one of the hardest sayings of Jesus, because it sounds shocking at first. It sounds like conflict. It sounds like division. It sounds like the opposite of peace. But Jesus was not saying He came to make people violent. He was not saying He came to destroy families for the sake of destruction. He was saying something far deeper:

    When truth enters a house, choice enters the house.
    And when choice enters the house, division is often the result.

    JESUS IS THE PRINCE OF PEACE - SO WHAT DID HE MEAN?

    The Bible clearly says in Isaiah 9:6 that Jesus is the Prince of Peace.
    In John 14:27, Jesus says, “My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you.”

    So how can Jesus say, “I did not come to bring peace, but a sword”?

    The answer is simple:
    Jesus came to bring peace with God, not fake peace with darkness.
    He came to bring shalom the Hebrew idea of wholeness, restoration, reconciliation, and divine order. But that peace only comes through surrender to Him.

    That means the peace Jesus gives is not the kind of peace where everyone is comfortable. It is not the kind of peace where truth is silenced to keep relationships smooth. It is not the kind of peace where sin is tolerated so nobody gets offended.

    Jesus brings peace to those who submit to the Father. But to those who reject Him, His very presence becomes a line of separation.

    WHAT IS THE “SWORD”?

    The word Jesus uses in Greek is μάχαιρα (machaira), a sword or blade. In this context, it does not mean a weapon for physical violence. It means division, separation, and cutting.

    The sword is the Word of God in action.
    The sword is truth exposing hearts.
    The sword is light separating from darkness.

    This is why Hebrews 4:12 says:

    “The word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword…”

    The Word of God does not just comfort. It also cuts.
    It does not just heal. It also exposes.
    It does not just encourage. It also divides truth from error.

    So when Jesus comes into a life, He does not come to decorate the old life. He comes to divide the old from the new, the false from the true, the flesh from the Spirit, the world from the Kingdom.

    TRUTH ALWAYS CREATES A DECISION

    Jesus said in John 3:19:

    “Light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil.”

    That is the real issue.

    When truth shows up, people must decide:

    light or darkness
    Christ or self
    holiness or compromise
    obedience or rebellion


    And that is why Jesus said His coming would divide. Not because division is His goal. But because truth reveals what people really love.

    Some will receive the light.
    Some will reject the light.
    Some will follow Christ.
    Some will resist Christ.

    And that division can happen even inside the same household.

    WHY DOES JESUS TALK ABOUT FAMILIES BEING DIVIDED?

    Jesus said:

    “A man’s enemies will be those of his own household.”

    That is painful, but real.

    Sometimes one person in a family gets saved and begins to walk with Christ, and the rest of the household resists it.
    Sometimes one person wants holiness and everyone else wants compromise.
    Sometimes one person wants to obey God and the family says, “Why are you changing?”

    Jesus is telling us that loyalty to Him will sometimes cost you relational comfort.

    That does not mean you become rude.
    It does not mean you become harsh.
    It does not mean you create unnecessary conflict.

    It means the truth of Christ will sometimes separate you from people who refuse to walk in that truth.

    This is why Matthew 10:37 says:

    “He who loves father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me.”
    That is strong. And Jesus meant it.

    He must come first.
    Not family pressure.
    Not tradition.
    Not approval.
    Not comfort.

    If Christ is not first, then everything else is out of order.

    JESUS IS NOT TEACHING HATRED - HE IS TEACHING PRIORITY

    This is important. Jesus is not saying, “Hate your family.”
    He is saying, “Love Me above all.”

    That is the difference between idolatry and discipleship.

    A true disciple does not make family his god.
    A true disciple does not make culture his god.
    A true disciple does not make comfort his god.

    Jesus is Lord.

    And when Jesus is Lord, He will shake things that are built on false foundations.
    He will expose what is real.
    He will show who is truly with Him and who is only close to Him by association.

    That is why Matthew 10:38 says:

    “And he who does not take his cross and follow after Me is not worthy of Me.”

    The cross means death to self.
    The cross means surrender.
    The cross means your old life must die.

    That is not peaceful to the flesh.
    But it is life to the spirit.

    THE WORD DIVIDES TOO

    The “sword” is not only a symbol of conflict. It is also the Word of God itself.

    The Word cuts pride.
    The Word exposes sin.
    The Word separates truth from error.
    The Word confronts compromise.

    That is why some people do not like biblical preaching anymore. They want encouragement without correction. They want comfort without conviction. They want blessing without surrender.

    But the real gospel is not soft religion.
    The real gospel is a call to die and live again.

    The Word of God will always produce one of two reactions:

    repentance
    resistance

    And that is why the sword is necessary.

    JESUS ALSO WARNED ABOUT THE COST OF DISCIPLESHIP

    This teaching is connected to the cost of following Christ.

    In Luke 14:26–27, Jesus says that if anyone does not hate father, mother, wife, children, brothers, and sisters in comparison to Him, he cannot be His disciple. That means Christ must be so central that every other love looks secondary by comparison.

    Then in Luke 14:28, He speaks about counting the cost.

    So Jesus never sold cheap Christianity.
    He never told people that following Him would be easy.
    He never promised that everyone would applaud your obedience.

    He promised truth.
    He promised Himself.
    He promised peace with God.
    But He also promised the cross.

    THIS IS WHY THE GOSPEL CAUSES DIVISION

    The gospel is not divisive because it is evil.
    It is divisive because it is true.

    Truth confronts lies.
    Light exposes darkness.
    Holiness challenges compromise.

    That is why 1 Corinthians 1:18 says:

    “The message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.”

    To one person, the cross is power.
    To another, it is offense.

    That is the sword.

    The same Jesus who saves one person will offend another person.
    The same gospel that humbles one heart will harden another heart.
    The same truth that sets one free will anger one who loves darkness.

    WHAT JESUS IS REALLY SAYING

    Jesus is saying:

    “I did not come to make sin comfortable.”
    “I did not come to make darkness respectable.”
    “I did not come to make false peace.”
    “I came to bring truth.”
    “And truth will separate.”

    That is why Jesus is not only Savior.
    He is also Judge.
    He is not only Comforter.
    He is also the One who examines hearts.
    He is not only Lamb.
    He is also Lord.

    He brings peace to the surrendered.
    But He brings a sword against the false, the proud, the rebellious, and the compromised.

    THE APPLICATION FOR US TODAY

    So what do we do with this?

    We stop trying to please everybody.
    We stop editing truth to make people comfortable.
    We stop calling compromise “love.”
    We stop calling silence “peace.”

    If you follow Jesus truly:

    some people will misunderstand you
    some family members may resist you
    some relationships may be tested
    some people may walk away

    But if they walk away because of truth, that does not mean truth failed.
    It means truth succeeded.

    Because the gospel does not exist to preserve false unity.
    The gospel exists to save souls, transform hearts, and establish the Kingdom of God.

    JESUS BRINGS TRUE PEACE, BUT NOT FALSE PEACE

    The world’s peace says, “Avoid conflict at all costs.”
    Jesus’ peace says, “Submit to God, and let truth do its work.”

    The world’s peace says, “Keep everyone happy.”
    Jesus’ peace says, “Take up your cross.”

    The world’s peace says, “Don’t disturb the system.”
    Jesus’ peace says, “Repent, for the Kingdom of heaven is at hand.”

    That is why His peace is deeper than comfort.
    It is peace with God, peace in the soul, peace through surrender, and peace that can survive even when relationships are tested.

    FINAL UNDERSTANDING

    Jesus did not come to create fake peace.
    He came to bring truth.

    And truth will do one of two things:

    it will unite those who receive it
    it will divide those who reject it
    That is the sword.

    So when Jesus said, “I came not to bring peace but a sword,” He meant:

    “I came to force a decision.”
    “I came to expose what is true.”
    “I came to separate light from darkness.”
    “I came to call people into real discipleship.”
    “I came to make My Father first.”

    CLOSING DECLARATION

    I will not choose false peace over truth.
    I will not choose comfort over Christ.
    I will not choose family pressure over obedience to God.
    I will not choose compromise over holiness.
    I will stand in the truth of Jesus Christ.

    Because Jesus is the Prince of Peace.
    But His peace is holy.
    His truth is sharp.
    And His sword divides what is real from what is false.

    #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
    JESUS DID NOT COME TO CREATE FAKE PEACE He Came With Truth - And Truth Will Divide Matthew 10:34–36 “Do not think that I came to bring peace on earth. I did not come to bring peace but a sword. For I have come to ‘set a man against his father, a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law’; and ‘a man’s enemies will be those of his own household.’” This is one of the hardest sayings of Jesus, because it sounds shocking at first. It sounds like conflict. It sounds like division. It sounds like the opposite of peace. But Jesus was not saying He came to make people violent. He was not saying He came to destroy families for the sake of destruction. He was saying something far deeper: When truth enters a house, choice enters the house. And when choice enters the house, division is often the result. JESUS IS THE PRINCE OF PEACE - SO WHAT DID HE MEAN? The Bible clearly says in Isaiah 9:6 that Jesus is the Prince of Peace. In John 14:27, Jesus says, “My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you.” So how can Jesus say, “I did not come to bring peace, but a sword”? The answer is simple: Jesus came to bring peace with God, not fake peace with darkness. He came to bring shalom the Hebrew idea of wholeness, restoration, reconciliation, and divine order. But that peace only comes through surrender to Him. That means the peace Jesus gives is not the kind of peace where everyone is comfortable. It is not the kind of peace where truth is silenced to keep relationships smooth. It is not the kind of peace where sin is tolerated so nobody gets offended. Jesus brings peace to those who submit to the Father. But to those who reject Him, His very presence becomes a line of separation. WHAT IS THE “SWORD”? The word Jesus uses in Greek is μάχαιρα (machaira), a sword or blade. In this context, it does not mean a weapon for physical violence. It means division, separation, and cutting. The sword is the Word of God in action. The sword is truth exposing hearts. The sword is light separating from darkness. This is why Hebrews 4:12 says: “The word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword…” The Word of God does not just comfort. It also cuts. It does not just heal. It also exposes. It does not just encourage. It also divides truth from error. So when Jesus comes into a life, He does not come to decorate the old life. He comes to divide the old from the new, the false from the true, the flesh from the Spirit, the world from the Kingdom. TRUTH ALWAYS CREATES A DECISION Jesus said in John 3:19: “Light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil.” That is the real issue. When truth shows up, people must decide: light or darkness Christ or self holiness or compromise obedience or rebellion And that is why Jesus said His coming would divide. Not because division is His goal. But because truth reveals what people really love. Some will receive the light. Some will reject the light. Some will follow Christ. Some will resist Christ. And that division can happen even inside the same household. WHY DOES JESUS TALK ABOUT FAMILIES BEING DIVIDED? Jesus said: “A man’s enemies will be those of his own household.” That is painful, but real. Sometimes one person in a family gets saved and begins to walk with Christ, and the rest of the household resists it. Sometimes one person wants holiness and everyone else wants compromise. Sometimes one person wants to obey God and the family says, “Why are you changing?” Jesus is telling us that loyalty to Him will sometimes cost you relational comfort. That does not mean you become rude. It does not mean you become harsh. It does not mean you create unnecessary conflict. It means the truth of Christ will sometimes separate you from people who refuse to walk in that truth. This is why Matthew 10:37 says: “He who loves father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me.” That is strong. And Jesus meant it. He must come first. Not family pressure. Not tradition. Not approval. Not comfort. If Christ is not first, then everything else is out of order. JESUS IS NOT TEACHING HATRED - HE IS TEACHING PRIORITY This is important. Jesus is not saying, “Hate your family.” He is saying, “Love Me above all.” That is the difference between idolatry and discipleship. A true disciple does not make family his god. A true disciple does not make culture his god. A true disciple does not make comfort his god. Jesus is Lord. And when Jesus is Lord, He will shake things that are built on false foundations. He will expose what is real. He will show who is truly with Him and who is only close to Him by association. That is why Matthew 10:38 says: “And he who does not take his cross and follow after Me is not worthy of Me.” The cross means death to self. The cross means surrender. The cross means your old life must die. That is not peaceful to the flesh. But it is life to the spirit. THE WORD DIVIDES TOO The “sword” is not only a symbol of conflict. It is also the Word of God itself. The Word cuts pride. The Word exposes sin. The Word separates truth from error. The Word confronts compromise. That is why some people do not like biblical preaching anymore. They want encouragement without correction. They want comfort without conviction. They want blessing without surrender. But the real gospel is not soft religion. The real gospel is a call to die and live again. The Word of God will always produce one of two reactions: repentance resistance And that is why the sword is necessary. JESUS ALSO WARNED ABOUT THE COST OF DISCIPLESHIP This teaching is connected to the cost of following Christ. In Luke 14:26–27, Jesus says that if anyone does not hate father, mother, wife, children, brothers, and sisters in comparison to Him, he cannot be His disciple. That means Christ must be so central that every other love looks secondary by comparison. Then in Luke 14:28, He speaks about counting the cost. So Jesus never sold cheap Christianity. He never told people that following Him would be easy. He never promised that everyone would applaud your obedience. He promised truth. He promised Himself. He promised peace with God. But He also promised the cross. THIS IS WHY THE GOSPEL CAUSES DIVISION The gospel is not divisive because it is evil. It is divisive because it is true. Truth confronts lies. Light exposes darkness. Holiness challenges compromise. That is why 1 Corinthians 1:18 says: “The message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.” To one person, the cross is power. To another, it is offense. That is the sword. The same Jesus who saves one person will offend another person. The same gospel that humbles one heart will harden another heart. The same truth that sets one free will anger one who loves darkness. WHAT JESUS IS REALLY SAYING Jesus is saying: “I did not come to make sin comfortable.” “I did not come to make darkness respectable.” “I did not come to make false peace.” “I came to bring truth.” “And truth will separate.” That is why Jesus is not only Savior. He is also Judge. He is not only Comforter. He is also the One who examines hearts. He is not only Lamb. He is also Lord. He brings peace to the surrendered. But He brings a sword against the false, the proud, the rebellious, and the compromised. THE APPLICATION FOR US TODAY So what do we do with this? We stop trying to please everybody. We stop editing truth to make people comfortable. We stop calling compromise “love.” We stop calling silence “peace.” If you follow Jesus truly: some people will misunderstand you some family members may resist you some relationships may be tested some people may walk away But if they walk away because of truth, that does not mean truth failed. It means truth succeeded. Because the gospel does not exist to preserve false unity. The gospel exists to save souls, transform hearts, and establish the Kingdom of God. JESUS BRINGS TRUE PEACE, BUT NOT FALSE PEACE The world’s peace says, “Avoid conflict at all costs.” Jesus’ peace says, “Submit to God, and let truth do its work.” The world’s peace says, “Keep everyone happy.” Jesus’ peace says, “Take up your cross.” The world’s peace says, “Don’t disturb the system.” Jesus’ peace says, “Repent, for the Kingdom of heaven is at hand.” That is why His peace is deeper than comfort. It is peace with God, peace in the soul, peace through surrender, and peace that can survive even when relationships are tested. FINAL UNDERSTANDING Jesus did not come to create fake peace. He came to bring truth. And truth will do one of two things: it will unite those who receive it it will divide those who reject it That is the sword. So when Jesus said, “I came not to bring peace but a sword,” He meant: “I came to force a decision.” “I came to expose what is true.” “I came to separate light from darkness.” “I came to call people into real discipleship.” “I came to make My Father first.” CLOSING DECLARATION I will not choose false peace over truth. I will not choose comfort over Christ. I will not choose family pressure over obedience to God. I will not choose compromise over holiness. I will stand in the truth of Jesus Christ. Because Jesus is the Prince of Peace. But His peace is holy. His truth is sharp. And His sword divides what is real from what is false. #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
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  • BIBLE TEACHING: BAPTISM & HOLY COMMUNION - WHAT DOES SCRIPTURE SAY ABOUT BABIES AND CHILDREN?

    There are two important practices in the Christian faith that many believers ask about: baptism and Holy Communion. The goal is not to create arguments, but to let the Word of God guide us in truth and love.

    WHAT IS BAPTISM?

    Baptism is an outward act that points to an inward reality. It shows that a person has believed in Jesus Christ, repented of sin, and identified with His death, burial, and resurrection.

    Romans 6:3–4
    “We were buried with Him through baptism into death… that we also should walk in newness of life.”

    Baptism is connected to:

    - faith
    - repentance
    - obedience
    - new life in Christ

    In the New Testament, the consistent pattern is:
    hearing the gospel → believing → baptism

    Acts 2:38
    “Repent and be baptized…”

    Acts 8:12
    “When they believed… they were baptized…”

    Acts 8:36–37
    “If you believe with all your heart, you may.”

    JESUS HIMSELF AS THE PERFECT EXAMPLE

    Jesus is our ultimate model in everything.

    Before beginning His public ministry, Jesus was baptized:

    Matthew 3:13–16
    “Then Jesus came from Galilee to John at the Jordan to be baptized by him…”

    Jesus was not baptized as a baby, but as an adult at the beginning of His ministry—showing identification, obedience, and public alignment with the will of the Father.

    If Jesus, who is sinless, chose baptism as an adult act of obedience, it shows us the pattern of intentional faith and public declaration.

    WHAT ABOUT BABIES AND BAPTISM?

    The Bible does not give a clear example of a baby being baptized.

    Babies cannot:

    - understand the gospel
    - repent
    - believe personally
    - confess faith in Christ

    So from the New Testament pattern, baptism follows personal faith and repentance.

    This is why many believers understand baptism as something that happens when a person is old enough to make their own decision for Christ.

    WHAT DID JESUS SAY ABOUT CHILDREN?

    Jesus loves children and welcomes them:

    Matthew 19:14
    “Let the little children come to Me…”

    This shows children are precious to God.
    But blessing children is not the same as baptizing them.

    Children should be:

    - loved
    - prayed for
    - taught the Word
    - brought up in Christ

    Deuteronomy 6:6–7
    “Teach them diligently to your children…”

    WHAT IS HOLY COMMUNION?

    Holy Communion, or the Lord’s Supper, was given by Jesus as a remembrance of His sacrifice.

    Luke 22:19–20
    “Do this in remembrance of Me.”

    Communion is about:

    - remembering Jesus
    - proclaiming His death
    - honoring His body and blood

    1 Corinthians 11:26
    “As often as you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death till He comes.”

    WHO SHOULD TAKE COMMUNION?

    The Bible teaches self-examination:

    1 Corinthians 11:28–29
    “Let a man examine himself…”

    This means Communion is for those who can:

    - understand what it represents
    - discern the Lord’s body
    - examine their heart
    - participate in faith and reverence

    WHAT ABOUT CHILDREN AND COMMUNION?

    Children can be taught about Jesus from a young age, but Communion requires understanding and discernment.

    Babies cannot:

    - examine themselves
    - understand the cross
    - discern the meaning of the bread and cup

    So Communion is not an infant ritual it is a faith-based remembrance.

    SIMPLE SUMMARY

    Baptism

    - follows repentance and faith
    - is a public declaration of belief
    - is shown in Scripture after personal decision
    - Jesus Himself was baptized as an adult, setting the example

    Holy Communion

    - is remembrance and proclamation
    - requires self-examination
    - requires understanding and discernment

    Children

    - should be taught the Word
    - should be brought to Jesus
    - should be discipled early
    - can choose baptism and Communion later when they understand and believe

    FINAL WORD

    Let us not fight over tradition. Let us stay grounded in Scripture, led by the Holy Spirit, and focused on raising our children to truly know Jesus Christ.

    Ephesians 4:2–3
    “Be completely humble and gentle… eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.”

    Romans 14:19
    “Let us pursue what makes for peace and for mutual upbuilding.”

    May our homes be built on truth, love, and the Word of God.

    Jesus Christ remains our perfect example and our foundation.

    #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
    BIBLE TEACHING: BAPTISM & HOLY COMMUNION - WHAT DOES SCRIPTURE SAY ABOUT BABIES AND CHILDREN? There are two important practices in the Christian faith that many believers ask about: baptism and Holy Communion. The goal is not to create arguments, but to let the Word of God guide us in truth and love. WHAT IS BAPTISM? Baptism is an outward act that points to an inward reality. It shows that a person has believed in Jesus Christ, repented of sin, and identified with His death, burial, and resurrection. Romans 6:3–4 “We were buried with Him through baptism into death… that we also should walk in newness of life.” Baptism is connected to: - faith - repentance - obedience - new life in Christ In the New Testament, the consistent pattern is: hearing the gospel → believing → baptism Acts 2:38 “Repent and be baptized…” Acts 8:12 “When they believed… they were baptized…” Acts 8:36–37 “If you believe with all your heart, you may.” JESUS HIMSELF AS THE PERFECT EXAMPLE Jesus is our ultimate model in everything. Before beginning His public ministry, Jesus was baptized: Matthew 3:13–16 “Then Jesus came from Galilee to John at the Jordan to be baptized by him…” Jesus was not baptized as a baby, but as an adult at the beginning of His ministry—showing identification, obedience, and public alignment with the will of the Father. If Jesus, who is sinless, chose baptism as an adult act of obedience, it shows us the pattern of intentional faith and public declaration. WHAT ABOUT BABIES AND BAPTISM? The Bible does not give a clear example of a baby being baptized. Babies cannot: - understand the gospel - repent - believe personally - confess faith in Christ So from the New Testament pattern, baptism follows personal faith and repentance. This is why many believers understand baptism as something that happens when a person is old enough to make their own decision for Christ. WHAT DID JESUS SAY ABOUT CHILDREN? Jesus loves children and welcomes them: Matthew 19:14 “Let the little children come to Me…” This shows children are precious to God. But blessing children is not the same as baptizing them. Children should be: - loved - prayed for - taught the Word - brought up in Christ Deuteronomy 6:6–7 “Teach them diligently to your children…” WHAT IS HOLY COMMUNION? Holy Communion, or the Lord’s Supper, was given by Jesus as a remembrance of His sacrifice. Luke 22:19–20 “Do this in remembrance of Me.” Communion is about: - remembering Jesus - proclaiming His death - honoring His body and blood 1 Corinthians 11:26 “As often as you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death till He comes.” WHO SHOULD TAKE COMMUNION? The Bible teaches self-examination: 1 Corinthians 11:28–29 “Let a man examine himself…” This means Communion is for those who can: - understand what it represents - discern the Lord’s body - examine their heart - participate in faith and reverence WHAT ABOUT CHILDREN AND COMMUNION? Children can be taught about Jesus from a young age, but Communion requires understanding and discernment. Babies cannot: - examine themselves - understand the cross - discern the meaning of the bread and cup So Communion is not an infant ritual it is a faith-based remembrance. SIMPLE SUMMARY Baptism - follows repentance and faith - is a public declaration of belief - is shown in Scripture after personal decision - Jesus Himself was baptized as an adult, setting the example Holy Communion - is remembrance and proclamation - requires self-examination - requires understanding and discernment Children - should be taught the Word - should be brought to Jesus - should be discipled early - can choose baptism and Communion later when they understand and believe FINAL WORD Let us not fight over tradition. Let us stay grounded in Scripture, led by the Holy Spirit, and focused on raising our children to truly know Jesus Christ. Ephesians 4:2–3 “Be completely humble and gentle… eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.” Romans 14:19 “Let us pursue what makes for peace and for mutual upbuilding.” May our homes be built on truth, love, and the Word of God. Jesus Christ remains our perfect example and our foundation. #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
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  • BIBLE TEACHING

    Generational Curses, Unclean Things, Familiar Spirits, Tattoos, Media, Doors, and Freedom in Jesus Christ

    We need to speak plainly about something many believers do not handle carefully enough: spiritual contamination. Some people live in repeated cycles and never ask why. The same patterns keep showing up in the family. The same bondage keeps returning. The same anger, addiction, poverty, lust, brokenness, fear, and confusion keep appearing from one generation to another.

    The Bible does not teach fear. It teaches discernment. The Bible does not teach superstition. It teaches holiness. The Bible does not teach legalism. It teaches freedom in Christ.

    This is not about becoming paranoid. This is about becoming spiritually awake.
    The center of all of it is this: Jesus Christ sets people free.

    The New Testament word for freedom is ἐλευθερόω (eleutheroō) - to set free, to liberate, to make free indeed. Jesus did not come to decorate bondage. He came to destroy it.

    WHAT IS A GENERATIONAL CURSE?

    A generational curse is not a magical spell sitting on a family tree. It is a repeated spiritual, moral, and often practical pattern of sin and consequences that passes through generations because the same rebellion, idolatry, disobedience, and unbelief keep being repeated.
    In Exodus 20:5–6, God says He visits the iniquity of the fathers upon the children to the third and fourth generation of those who hate Him, but He also shows mercy to thousands who love Him and keep His commandments.

    The Hebrew word for iniquity is עָוֹן (ʿavon) - crookedness, guilt, perversity, the twisted consequences of sin. That means sin is not just a private act. Sin carries weight. Sin leaves a trail. Sin can shape a family atmosphere.
    What a parent opens, a child can inherit. What a generation normalizes, the next generation may continue.
    But the Bible also gives balance in Ezekiel 18:20, where God says the son will not bear the guilt of the father, and the father will not bear the guilt of the son. That means each person is accountable before God for their own sin.

    So we must hold both truths together:
    Sin can produce family patterns.
    But nobody is doomed forever if they come to Christ.

    That is why Galatians 3:13 matters so much: “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us.”

    The word for curse there is κατάρα (katara) - a curse, a pronouncement of doom. The word redeemed is ἐξαγοράζω (exagorazō) - to buy out of slavery, to purchase out from under ownership.
    Jesus did not only forgive sins. He broke the legal right of the curse over those who belong to Him.

    BLOODLINE CURSES ARE REAL PATTERNS, BUT JESUS IS GREATER

    When people talk about bloodline curses, they are often talking about repeated patterns in a family line.

    It may look like:

    repeated divorce
    repeated poverty
    repeated addiction
    repeated fatherlessness
    repeated anger
    repeated occult involvement
    repeated sickness
    repeated unforgiveness
    repeated rebellion
    repeated sexual immorality


    These patterns can come through:

    generational sin
    family agreements with darkness
    unresolved trauma
    idols in the home
    spoken words
    repeated rebellion
    hidden practices that invited oppression

    But the good news is this: Jesus Christ breaks every chain.
    In Colossians 2:14–15, we are told that Jesus canceled the record of debt that stood against us and triumphed over principalities and powers through the cross.

    The Greek words matter here:

    ἀρχαί (archai) - principalities, ruling powers
    ἐξουσίαι (exousiai) - authorities
    χειρόγραφον (cheirographon) - handwritten record of debt

    That means Jesus did not just forgive. He canceled the accusation and disarmed the powers.
    So the blood of Jesus is not a symbol only. It is victory. It is authority. It is deliverance. It is legal cancellation. It is the end of the enemy’s claim.

    FAMILIAR SPIRITS AND SPIRITUAL AGREEMENTS

    Familiar spirits are spirits that attach themselves to families, homes, or individuals, often because of repeated sin, rebellion, occult involvement, or agreements with darkness.
    The Old Testament warns against them in Leviticus 19:31 and Deuteronomy 18:10–12.

    The Hebrew terms often associated with this are:

    medium, familiar spirit, spirit of the dead - אוֹב (ʾov)
    familiar spirit, spirit of knowing - יִדְּעֹנִי (yiddeʿoni)

    These are forbidden because they are counterfeit spiritual access. They are a false doorway into the invisible realm.

    Familiar spirits can manifest as:

    recurring strongholds
    unexplained fear or anxiety
    repeated deception
    oppression in the home
    compulsions or habits that feel unbreakable
    cycles that seem to “know your family”


    They can attach to bloodlines, objects, or even generational curses. Often, the enemy uses them to continue cycles of sin or to intimidate believers.
    But the Word is clear: no familiar spirit has authority over a child of God.
    In Acts 16:18, Paul commands a spirit to come out in the name of Jesus, and it obeys instantly. The authority of Jesus is not theoretical. It is active.

    Jesus said in Luke 10:19:

    “I have given you authority to trample on serpents and scorpions and over all the power of the enemy.”
    The word authority there is ἐξουσία (exousia) - delegated right, legal authority, permission to act under a higher King.
    So familiar spirits are real, but Jesus is greater. We are not powerless. We are not victims. We are conquerors in Christ.

    HOW DO DOORS OPEN SPIRITUALLY?

    Doors open in several ways:

    Through personal sin - giving room for darkness.
    Through family patterns - repeated rebellion or occult involvement.
    Through unclean objects and practices - items connected to idolatry, death, witchcraft, or rebellion.
    Through media and entertainment - movies, music, and visual content can shape your mind spiritually.
    Through spoken words - agreements with darkness, curses, or self-condemnation.
    Through unforgiveness - leaving a place in the heart empty allows the enemy to return.

    Jesus warned in Matthew 12:43–45 that when an unclean spirit leaves and finds the house empty, swept, and put in order, it can return with more trouble.
    The Greek idea of the house there is οἶκος (oikos) - house, household, family environment.

    That means deliverance is not enough if the house is left empty. The house must be filled with the Holy Spirit, the Word of God, prayer, worship, and obedience.
    Jesus closes every door when we repent, renounce evil, and fill our hearts with the Holy Spirit.

    UNCLEAN THINGS IN THE HOUSE

    A house is not only a structure. A house is a spiritual environment.

    What you allow in your home matters:

    music
    movies
    symbols
    idols
    occult items
    sexual impurity
    curses spoken in the house
    constant anger
    disrespect
    ungodly altars
    witchcraft objects
    rebellion normalized as entertainment

    In the Old Testament, Joshua 7 shows how hidden sin can bring judgment on the whole camp. One man’s secret disobedience became a public problem.

    In 1 Corinthians 10:20–21, Paul warns against participating in what belongs to demons.
    That means believers should not be casual about what they bring into their homes.
    Do not ignore objects connected to darkness. Remove agreements with sin. But remember this carefully: objects themselves do not have power over God’s children. The issue is what they represent, what they were used for, and what spiritual agreement they carry.
    A home must not only be clean physically. It must be clean spiritually.

    CLOTHES, SCARVES, BONES, AND SYMBOLS

    Clothing or objects themselves are not magical. But clothing can represent identity, allegiance, honor, shame, rebellion, paganism, modesty, or holiness.

    The Bible speaks about this in several places:
    Deuteronomy 22:5 - clothing and identity distinctions
    1 Timothy 2:9 - modest apparel
    Acts 19:11–12 - objects as points of contact for God


    In Acts 19, cloths and aprons associated with Paul were used by God in healing. That does not mean cloth has power by itself. It means God can use physical things as points of contact when He chooses.
    So if a scarf, cloth, bone, charm, or symbol is tied to witchcraft, occult practices, ancestral rituals, or death worship, remove it. Do not keep agreements with darkness.
    We do not worship objects. We do not fear objects. We do not give objects more power than Christ.
    But we also do not stay careless about spiritual symbols.

    TATTOOS: WHAT DOES THE WORD REALLY SAY?

    People often quote Leviticus 19:28, where God says not to make cuts in the body for the dead and not to tattoo themselves.
    The Hebrew idea here is tied to pagan mourning rituals and idolatrous identity. In context, God was setting Israel apart from the nations around them.

    So what is the real issue?
    Not just ink. The issue is pagan identity, covenant loyalty, and holiness.
    The New Testament adds an important truth in 1 Corinthians 6:19–20:
    Your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit.

    The Greek word for temple there is ναός (naos) - the holy sanctuary, not just a building, but the place where God dwells.
    That means your body is not yours to glorify rebellion, vanity, lust, death, gang identity, occult symbolism, or self-worship.

    Tattoos are not condemned automatically. But motives matter:

    Is it honoring God?
    Is it tied to rebellion, lust, death, occult, or vanity?
    Does it glorify Christ or self?

    If someone already has tattoos, the blood of Jesus is greater than the ink on the skin. They are not condemned if they are in Christ. But if someone is considering tattoos, they must not treat the body lightly.
    The heart behind the tattoo matters more than the ink.

    MOVIES, MUSIC, AND WHAT WE ALLOW INTO THE MIND

    Matthew 6:22–23 says the eye is the lamp of the body.

    The Greek word for eye is ὀφθαλμός (ophthalmos), and the idea is that what enters through the eye affects the whole inner life.
    What you watch shapes your imagination, conscience, appetite, fears, and worldview.
    Repeated exposure to occult themes, sexual immorality, revenge, witchcraft, rebellion, or darkness opens doors spiritually.
    That does not mean every movie is evil. But it does mean believers must not be careless.
    You cannot feed on darkness and then wonder why your spirit feels weak.
    You cannot normalize sin in your entertainment and then expect spiritual sensitivity.
    What enters the mind shapes what grows in the heart.

    GENERATIONAL, NORMAL, AND BLOODLINE CURSES

    There are different kinds of curse language in Scripture and in life:

    Generational curses - repeated sin across family lines
    Normal curses - spoken words of evil
    Bloodline curses - family patterns of oppression
    Self-curses - agreements with negative words about yourself


    But always remember: the authority of Christ is greater than any curse.
    In Numbers 23:23, Balaam says there is no enchantment against Jacob. In Isaiah 54:17, the Word declares that no weapon formed against God’s people shall prosper.

    That does not mean weapons won’t form. It means they will not win.
    The curse may come. The curse may speak. The curse may threaten. But in Christ, it does not rule.

    JESUS SETS US FREE

    This is the center of the message.

    John 8:36 - “If the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.”
    1 John 3:8 - Jesus was manifested to destroy the works of the devil.
    2 Corinthians 5:17 - in Christ, you are a new creation.

    Galatians 3:13 h redeemed from the curse.


    The Greek word for new creation is καινὴ κτίσις (kainē ktisis) — not repaired, but made new.
    That means curses, bloodline oppression, occult powers, and familiar spirits are all subject to Jesus.
    He is not one power among many. He is Lord over all.

    WALKING IN DELIVERANCE

    Deliverance is not only a prayer event. It is a life of surrender.

    You must:

    repent
    renounce darkness
    forgive others
    remove unclean objects
    close spiritual doors
    stop feeding on darkness
    renew your mind
    pray over your family
    speak the Word
    walk in obedience
    stay filled with the Holy Spirit


    The Greek word for repent is μετανοέω (metanoeō) - to change one’s mind, to turn, to reorient one’s whole life.
    A cleaned house and life must be filled with Christ.

    A cleaned house without Christ becomes vulnerable again. A cleaned heart without the Word becomes unstable again. A cleansed life without discipleship becomes empty again.

    TEACH CHILDREN SPIRITUAL WARFARE EARLY

    This is very important.

    Teach children:

    prayer
    discernment
    rejection of evil
    honoring God with the body and mind

    The Bible says:

    Proverbs 22:6 - train up a child in the way they should go
    Deuteronomy 6:6–7 - teach God’s words diligently to children
    Ephesians 6:4 - bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord


    The Greek word in Ephesians 6:4 for nurture is παιδεία (paideia) - training, discipline, instruction. Children are not just to be corrected; they are to be trained in truth.

    Teach them early to know Jesus, resist darkness, and walk in truth.
    Do not wait until the world has discipled them first. Train them while they are young.



    Generational curses broken in Jesus’ name. Bloodline oppression destroyed. Unclean things removed. Spiritual doors closed. Bodies sanctified. Minds renewed. Children protected.

    Christ redeems, cleanses, restores, and sets free.

    CLOSING DECLARATION

    I declare:

    Every curse broken in Jesus’ name. Every familiar spirit removed. Every unclean object removed. Every door of darkness shut. My body a temple of the Holy Spirit. My mind belongs to Christ. My children will walk in truth. My home belongs to Jesus.

    Whom the Son sets free is free indeed.

    #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
    BIBLE TEACHING Generational Curses, Unclean Things, Familiar Spirits, Tattoos, Media, Doors, and Freedom in Jesus Christ We need to speak plainly about something many believers do not handle carefully enough: spiritual contamination. Some people live in repeated cycles and never ask why. The same patterns keep showing up in the family. The same bondage keeps returning. The same anger, addiction, poverty, lust, brokenness, fear, and confusion keep appearing from one generation to another. The Bible does not teach fear. It teaches discernment. The Bible does not teach superstition. It teaches holiness. The Bible does not teach legalism. It teaches freedom in Christ. This is not about becoming paranoid. This is about becoming spiritually awake. The center of all of it is this: Jesus Christ sets people free. The New Testament word for freedom is ἐλευθερόω (eleutheroō) - to set free, to liberate, to make free indeed. Jesus did not come to decorate bondage. He came to destroy it. WHAT IS A GENERATIONAL CURSE? A generational curse is not a magical spell sitting on a family tree. It is a repeated spiritual, moral, and often practical pattern of sin and consequences that passes through generations because the same rebellion, idolatry, disobedience, and unbelief keep being repeated. In Exodus 20:5–6, God says He visits the iniquity of the fathers upon the children to the third and fourth generation of those who hate Him, but He also shows mercy to thousands who love Him and keep His commandments. The Hebrew word for iniquity is עָוֹן (ʿavon) - crookedness, guilt, perversity, the twisted consequences of sin. That means sin is not just a private act. Sin carries weight. Sin leaves a trail. Sin can shape a family atmosphere. What a parent opens, a child can inherit. What a generation normalizes, the next generation may continue. But the Bible also gives balance in Ezekiel 18:20, where God says the son will not bear the guilt of the father, and the father will not bear the guilt of the son. That means each person is accountable before God for their own sin. So we must hold both truths together: Sin can produce family patterns. But nobody is doomed forever if they come to Christ. That is why Galatians 3:13 matters so much: “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us.” The word for curse there is κατάρα (katara) - a curse, a pronouncement of doom. The word redeemed is ἐξαγοράζω (exagorazō) - to buy out of slavery, to purchase out from under ownership. Jesus did not only forgive sins. He broke the legal right of the curse over those who belong to Him. BLOODLINE CURSES ARE REAL PATTERNS, BUT JESUS IS GREATER When people talk about bloodline curses, they are often talking about repeated patterns in a family line. It may look like: repeated divorce repeated poverty repeated addiction repeated fatherlessness repeated anger repeated occult involvement repeated sickness repeated unforgiveness repeated rebellion repeated sexual immorality These patterns can come through: generational sin family agreements with darkness unresolved trauma idols in the home spoken words repeated rebellion hidden practices that invited oppression But the good news is this: Jesus Christ breaks every chain. In Colossians 2:14–15, we are told that Jesus canceled the record of debt that stood against us and triumphed over principalities and powers through the cross. The Greek words matter here: ἀρχαί (archai) - principalities, ruling powers ἐξουσίαι (exousiai) - authorities χειρόγραφον (cheirographon) - handwritten record of debt That means Jesus did not just forgive. He canceled the accusation and disarmed the powers. So the blood of Jesus is not a symbol only. It is victory. It is authority. It is deliverance. It is legal cancellation. It is the end of the enemy’s claim. FAMILIAR SPIRITS AND SPIRITUAL AGREEMENTS Familiar spirits are spirits that attach themselves to families, homes, or individuals, often because of repeated sin, rebellion, occult involvement, or agreements with darkness. The Old Testament warns against them in Leviticus 19:31 and Deuteronomy 18:10–12. The Hebrew terms often associated with this are: medium, familiar spirit, spirit of the dead - אוֹב (ʾov) familiar spirit, spirit of knowing - יִדְּעֹנִי (yiddeʿoni) These are forbidden because they are counterfeit spiritual access. They are a false doorway into the invisible realm. Familiar spirits can manifest as: recurring strongholds unexplained fear or anxiety repeated deception oppression in the home compulsions or habits that feel unbreakable cycles that seem to “know your family” They can attach to bloodlines, objects, or even generational curses. Often, the enemy uses them to continue cycles of sin or to intimidate believers. But the Word is clear: no familiar spirit has authority over a child of God. In Acts 16:18, Paul commands a spirit to come out in the name of Jesus, and it obeys instantly. The authority of Jesus is not theoretical. It is active. Jesus said in Luke 10:19: “I have given you authority to trample on serpents and scorpions and over all the power of the enemy.” The word authority there is ἐξουσία (exousia) - delegated right, legal authority, permission to act under a higher King. So familiar spirits are real, but Jesus is greater. We are not powerless. We are not victims. We are conquerors in Christ. HOW DO DOORS OPEN SPIRITUALLY? Doors open in several ways: Through personal sin - giving room for darkness. Through family patterns - repeated rebellion or occult involvement. Through unclean objects and practices - items connected to idolatry, death, witchcraft, or rebellion. Through media and entertainment - movies, music, and visual content can shape your mind spiritually. Through spoken words - agreements with darkness, curses, or self-condemnation. Through unforgiveness - leaving a place in the heart empty allows the enemy to return. Jesus warned in Matthew 12:43–45 that when an unclean spirit leaves and finds the house empty, swept, and put in order, it can return with more trouble. The Greek idea of the house there is οἶκος (oikos) - house, household, family environment. That means deliverance is not enough if the house is left empty. The house must be filled with the Holy Spirit, the Word of God, prayer, worship, and obedience. Jesus closes every door when we repent, renounce evil, and fill our hearts with the Holy Spirit. UNCLEAN THINGS IN THE HOUSE A house is not only a structure. A house is a spiritual environment. What you allow in your home matters: music movies symbols idols occult items sexual impurity curses spoken in the house constant anger disrespect ungodly altars witchcraft objects rebellion normalized as entertainment In the Old Testament, Joshua 7 shows how hidden sin can bring judgment on the whole camp. One man’s secret disobedience became a public problem. In 1 Corinthians 10:20–21, Paul warns against participating in what belongs to demons. That means believers should not be casual about what they bring into their homes. Do not ignore objects connected to darkness. Remove agreements with sin. But remember this carefully: objects themselves do not have power over God’s children. The issue is what they represent, what they were used for, and what spiritual agreement they carry. A home must not only be clean physically. It must be clean spiritually. CLOTHES, SCARVES, BONES, AND SYMBOLS Clothing or objects themselves are not magical. But clothing can represent identity, allegiance, honor, shame, rebellion, paganism, modesty, or holiness. The Bible speaks about this in several places: Deuteronomy 22:5 - clothing and identity distinctions 1 Timothy 2:9 - modest apparel Acts 19:11–12 - objects as points of contact for God In Acts 19, cloths and aprons associated with Paul were used by God in healing. That does not mean cloth has power by itself. It means God can use physical things as points of contact when He chooses. So if a scarf, cloth, bone, charm, or symbol is tied to witchcraft, occult practices, ancestral rituals, or death worship, remove it. Do not keep agreements with darkness. We do not worship objects. We do not fear objects. We do not give objects more power than Christ. But we also do not stay careless about spiritual symbols. TATTOOS: WHAT DOES THE WORD REALLY SAY? People often quote Leviticus 19:28, where God says not to make cuts in the body for the dead and not to tattoo themselves. The Hebrew idea here is tied to pagan mourning rituals and idolatrous identity. In context, God was setting Israel apart from the nations around them. So what is the real issue? Not just ink. The issue is pagan identity, covenant loyalty, and holiness. The New Testament adds an important truth in 1 Corinthians 6:19–20: Your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit. The Greek word for temple there is ναός (naos) - the holy sanctuary, not just a building, but the place where God dwells. That means your body is not yours to glorify rebellion, vanity, lust, death, gang identity, occult symbolism, or self-worship. Tattoos are not condemned automatically. But motives matter: Is it honoring God? Is it tied to rebellion, lust, death, occult, or vanity? Does it glorify Christ or self? If someone already has tattoos, the blood of Jesus is greater than the ink on the skin. They are not condemned if they are in Christ. But if someone is considering tattoos, they must not treat the body lightly. The heart behind the tattoo matters more than the ink. MOVIES, MUSIC, AND WHAT WE ALLOW INTO THE MIND Matthew 6:22–23 says the eye is the lamp of the body. The Greek word for eye is ὀφθαλμός (ophthalmos), and the idea is that what enters through the eye affects the whole inner life. What you watch shapes your imagination, conscience, appetite, fears, and worldview. Repeated exposure to occult themes, sexual immorality, revenge, witchcraft, rebellion, or darkness opens doors spiritually. That does not mean every movie is evil. But it does mean believers must not be careless. You cannot feed on darkness and then wonder why your spirit feels weak. You cannot normalize sin in your entertainment and then expect spiritual sensitivity. What enters the mind shapes what grows in the heart. GENERATIONAL, NORMAL, AND BLOODLINE CURSES There are different kinds of curse language in Scripture and in life: Generational curses - repeated sin across family lines Normal curses - spoken words of evil Bloodline curses - family patterns of oppression Self-curses - agreements with negative words about yourself But always remember: the authority of Christ is greater than any curse. In Numbers 23:23, Balaam says there is no enchantment against Jacob. In Isaiah 54:17, the Word declares that no weapon formed against God’s people shall prosper. That does not mean weapons won’t form. It means they will not win. The curse may come. The curse may speak. The curse may threaten. But in Christ, it does not rule. JESUS SETS US FREE This is the center of the message. John 8:36 - “If the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.” 1 John 3:8 - Jesus was manifested to destroy the works of the devil. 2 Corinthians 5:17 - in Christ, you are a new creation. Galatians 3:13 h redeemed from the curse. The Greek word for new creation is καινὴ κτίσις (kainē ktisis) — not repaired, but made new. That means curses, bloodline oppression, occult powers, and familiar spirits are all subject to Jesus. He is not one power among many. He is Lord over all. WALKING IN DELIVERANCE Deliverance is not only a prayer event. It is a life of surrender. You must: repent renounce darkness forgive others remove unclean objects close spiritual doors stop feeding on darkness renew your mind pray over your family speak the Word walk in obedience stay filled with the Holy Spirit The Greek word for repent is μετανοέω (metanoeō) - to change one’s mind, to turn, to reorient one’s whole life. A cleaned house and life must be filled with Christ. A cleaned house without Christ becomes vulnerable again. A cleaned heart without the Word becomes unstable again. A cleansed life without discipleship becomes empty again. TEACH CHILDREN SPIRITUAL WARFARE EARLY This is very important. Teach children: prayer discernment rejection of evil honoring God with the body and mind The Bible says: Proverbs 22:6 - train up a child in the way they should go Deuteronomy 6:6–7 - teach God’s words diligently to children Ephesians 6:4 - bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord The Greek word in Ephesians 6:4 for nurture is παιδεία (paideia) - training, discipline, instruction. Children are not just to be corrected; they are to be trained in truth. Teach them early to know Jesus, resist darkness, and walk in truth. Do not wait until the world has discipled them first. Train them while they are young. Generational curses broken in Jesus’ name. Bloodline oppression destroyed. Unclean things removed. Spiritual doors closed. Bodies sanctified. Minds renewed. Children protected. Christ redeems, cleanses, restores, and sets free. CLOSING DECLARATION I declare: Every curse broken in Jesus’ name. Every familiar spirit removed. Every unclean object removed. Every door of darkness shut. My body a temple of the Holy Spirit. My mind belongs to Christ. My children will walk in truth. My home belongs to Jesus. Whom the Son sets free is free indeed. #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
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  • FULL BIBLE TEACHING
    Generational Curses, Unclean Things, Familiar Spirits, Tattoos, Media, Doors, and Freedom in Jesus Christ

    I’m going to share a small Bible study with verses to back up all the claims I made this morning.
    Join the WhatsApp group to receive it: https://chat.whatsapp.com/HJgZWj7CXhoDhWG2TVrysG?mode=gi_t⁠�
    FULL BIBLE TEACHING Generational Curses, Unclean Things, Familiar Spirits, Tattoos, Media, Doors, and Freedom in Jesus Christ 📖 I’m going to share a small Bible study with verses to back up all the claims I made this morning. 🙌 Join the WhatsApp group to receive it: 👉 https://chat.whatsapp.com/HJgZWj7CXhoDhWG2TVrysG?mode=gi_t⁠�
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  • Do you know the King?
    He’s the King of the ages, the King of heaven, the King of glory, the King of kings, and the Lord of lords. That’s my King . Do you know Him personally, or just by name?

    He is the greatest phenomenon this world has ever seen . He is the sinner’s Savior, unparalleled and unprecedented. He is the highest personality in philosophy, the fundamental doctrine of true theology, the strength for the weak , the comfort for the tempted, the guide for the lost , and the hope for the hopeless.

    He heals the sick , cleanses the lepers, forgives sinners, delivers the captives, defends the feeble, blesses the young , and beautifies the meek. His life is matchless. His goodness is limitless. His mercy is everlasting. His love never changes , and His word is enough.

    No power of man, no ruler, no weapon , no trial, no death can stop Him. The Pharisees couldn’t stop Him. Pilate couldn’t find any fault in Him. Herod couldn’t hold Him. Death couldn’t defeat Him . And the greats of history couldn’t contain Him.

    That’s my King. And He’s available for you today . Not tomorrow, not someday, but now. Open your heart . Let Him meet you. Let Him strengthen you. Let Him lift you. Let Him transform your life.

    Psalm 145:13-16 – “Your kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and your dominion endures throughout all generations. The Lord is faithful in all his words, and gracious in all his deeds. The Lord upholds all who are falling, and raises up all who are bowed down.”

    Comment “Amen” if you know Him. Share this post to let others meet the King too!
    🔥 Do you know the King? 🔥 He’s the King of the ages, the King of heaven, the King of glory, the King of kings, and the Lord of lords. That’s my King 👑. Do you know Him personally, or just by name? He is the greatest phenomenon this world has ever seen 🌍. He is the sinner’s Savior, unparalleled and unprecedented. He is the highest personality in philosophy, the fundamental doctrine of true theology, the strength for the weak 💪, the comfort for the tempted, the guide for the lost 🧭, and the hope for the hopeless. He heals the sick 💖, cleanses the lepers, forgives sinners, delivers the captives, defends the feeble, blesses the young 🌼, and beautifies the meek. His life is matchless. His goodness is limitless. His mercy is everlasting. His love never changes ❤️, and His word is enough. No power of man, no ruler, no weapon ⚔️, no trial, no death can stop Him. The Pharisees couldn’t stop Him. Pilate couldn’t find any fault in Him. Herod couldn’t hold Him. Death couldn’t defeat Him 💀. And the greats of history couldn’t contain Him. That’s my King. And He’s available for you today 🌟. Not tomorrow, not someday, but now. Open your heart ❤️. Let Him meet you. Let Him strengthen you. Let Him lift you. Let Him transform your life. 📖 Psalm 145:13-16 – “Your kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and your dominion endures throughout all generations. The Lord is faithful in all his words, and gracious in all his deeds. The Lord upholds all who are falling, and raises up all who are bowed down.” 💬 Comment “Amen” if you know Him. Share this post to let others meet the King too! 🤝
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  • Do you know the King?
    He’s the King of the ages, the King of heaven, the King of glory, the King of kings, and the Lord of lords. That’s my King . Do you know Him personally, or just by name?

    He is the greatest phenomenon this world has ever seen . He is the sinner’s Savior, unparalleled and unprecedented. He is the highest personality in philosophy, the fundamental doctrine of true theology, the strength for the weak , the comfort for the tempted, the guide for the lost , and the hope for the hopeless.

    He heals the sick , cleanses the lepers, forgives sinners, delivers the captives, defends the feeble, blesses the young , and beautifies the meek. His life is matchless. His goodness is limitless. His mercy is everlasting. His love never changes , and His word is enough.

    No power of man, no ruler, no weapon , no trial, no death can stop Him. The Pharisees couldn’t stop Him. Pilate couldn’t find any fault in Him. Herod couldn’t hold Him. Death couldn’t defeat Him . And the greats of history couldn’t contain Him.

    That’s my King. And He’s available for you today . Not tomorrow, not someday, but now. Open your heart . Let Him meet you. Let Him strengthen you. Let Him lift you. Let Him transform your life.

    Psalm 145:13-16 – “Your kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and your dominion endures throughout all generations. The Lord is faithful in all his words, and gracious in all his deeds. The Lord upholds all who are falling, and raises up all who are bowed down.”

    Comment “Amen” if you know Him. Share this post to let others meet the King too!
    🔥 Do you know the King? 🔥 He’s the King of the ages, the King of heaven, the King of glory, the King of kings, and the Lord of lords. That’s my King 👑. Do you know Him personally, or just by name? He is the greatest phenomenon this world has ever seen 🌍. He is the sinner’s Savior, unparalleled and unprecedented. He is the highest personality in philosophy, the fundamental doctrine of true theology, the strength for the weak 💪, the comfort for the tempted, the guide for the lost 🧭, and the hope for the hopeless. He heals the sick 💖, cleanses the lepers, forgives sinners, delivers the captives, defends the feeble, blesses the young 🌼, and beautifies the meek. His life is matchless. His goodness is limitless. His mercy is everlasting. His love never changes ❤️, and His word is enough. No power of man, no ruler, no weapon ⚔️, no trial, no death can stop Him. The Pharisees couldn’t stop Him. Pilate couldn’t find any fault in Him. Herod couldn’t hold Him. Death couldn’t defeat Him 💀. And the greats of history couldn’t contain Him. That’s my King. And He’s available for you today 🌟. Not tomorrow, not someday, but now. Open your heart ❤️. Let Him meet you. Let Him strengthen you. Let Him lift you. Let Him transform your life. 📖 Psalm 145:13-16 – “Your kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and your dominion endures throughout all generations. The Lord is faithful in all his words, and gracious in all his deeds. The Lord upholds all who are falling, and raises up all who are bowed down.” 💬 Comment “Amen” if you know Him. Share this post to let others meet the King too! 🤝
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  • Standing In Grace

    Written By Marilyn Adams
    Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. Through him we have also obtained access by faith into this grace in which we stand, and we rejoice in hope of the glory of God.
    Romans 5:1-2
    Accepting Jesus as our personal Savior, requires believing through faith after hearing the gospel. We recognize that Jesus took our place, and died on a cross to give us forgiveness of sins. We then place our trust in him for eternal life.

    We are redeemed from a life of bondage to sin through his shed blood. We are set apart for his work. His grace is a gift. That is our standing, or position, in Christ, that never changes. We do not deserve it, nor can we earn it.

    Our journey of sanctification began the moment we accepted Jesus. We obtained our standing as children of God. He set us apart for his desired purposes to be fulfilled through our lives. It is a journey of growth in holy attitudes, words, actions and knowledge of God. This progressive work is called our state, which changes throughout our lives.

    Our old thought patterns are not erased at salvation. The devil does not give up on us. He constantly sets enticing temptations in front of us. His goal is to undermine and destroy our faith. He hates God so he attacks those made in God’s image. Grace again is given by God as an empowerment to overcome all temptations to sin.

    The trials that we encounter are divinely orchestrated. They are never in vain. They conform us to Jesus’ likeness so that we reflect his character to others. He uses each trial’s pressure and hardship to center us on Christ Jesus. He is the author and finisher of our faith.

    Father, I am so grateful for your gift of grace. I embrace its empowerment to do all that you have called me to do. I constantly remind myself to walk in humility, so that your grace is there to sustain and undergird me moment by moment.

    Throughout this day: Make some time to meditate on and give thanks for the grace that has saved you, and is available every moment to empower you as you grow into Jesus’ likeness.

    #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
    Standing In Grace Written By Marilyn Adams Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. Through him we have also obtained access by faith into this grace in which we stand, and we rejoice in hope of the glory of God. Romans 5:1-2 Accepting Jesus as our personal Savior, requires believing through faith after hearing the gospel. We recognize that Jesus took our place, and died on a cross to give us forgiveness of sins. We then place our trust in him for eternal life. We are redeemed from a life of bondage to sin through his shed blood. We are set apart for his work. His grace is a gift. That is our standing, or position, in Christ, that never changes. We do not deserve it, nor can we earn it. Our journey of sanctification began the moment we accepted Jesus. We obtained our standing as children of God. He set us apart for his desired purposes to be fulfilled through our lives. It is a journey of growth in holy attitudes, words, actions and knowledge of God. This progressive work is called our state, which changes throughout our lives. Our old thought patterns are not erased at salvation. The devil does not give up on us. He constantly sets enticing temptations in front of us. His goal is to undermine and destroy our faith. He hates God so he attacks those made in God’s image. Grace again is given by God as an empowerment to overcome all temptations to sin. The trials that we encounter are divinely orchestrated. They are never in vain. They conform us to Jesus’ likeness so that we reflect his character to others. He uses each trial’s pressure and hardship to center us on Christ Jesus. He is the author and finisher of our faith. Father, I am so grateful for your gift of grace. I embrace its empowerment to do all that you have called me to do. I constantly remind myself to walk in humility, so that your grace is there to sustain and undergird me moment by moment. Throughout this day: Make some time to meditate on and give thanks for the grace that has saved you, and is available every moment to empower you as you grow into Jesus’ likeness. #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
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  • We must speak boldly about our faith. In Luke 19:40, Jesus states, "I tell you that if these should keep silent, the stones would immediately cry out." This reminds us that our voices are essential in sharing the truth of the Gospel. Let us proclaim His goodness and not allow others to take our place in declaring His glory. Stand firm in your faith and be a testament to God's love.
    We must speak boldly about our faith. In Luke 19:40, Jesus states, "I tell you that if these should keep silent, the stones would immediately cry out." This reminds us that our voices are essential in sharing the truth of the Gospel. Let us proclaim His goodness and not allow others to take our place in declaring His glory. Stand firm in your faith and be a testament to God's love.
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  • #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
    #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
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  • Emmaus Road

    Written By Janice Caldwell-Boucher
    That same day two of Jesus’ followers were walking to the village of Emmaus and they were talking with each other about all these things that had happened. Jesus himself suddenly came and began walking with them.
    Luke 24:13-15
    Hours after the angel had declared to the women at the tomb that Christ was risen, Cleopas and another follower of Jesus began the trek from Jerusalem to their home in the outlying village of Emmaus. Their steps were heavy with disillusionment. As they plodded along, their minds burdened with dismay and their hearts bowed with discouragement, they could talk about nothing else. Their conversation was an attempt to make sense of the events that have just unfolded. The defeat and death of their Messiah had knocked the wind from their sails and the women’s declaration of the empty tomb had only piled perplexity onto their disenchantment.

    A stranger joined them on their journey and probed the subject of their discussion. The two were incredulous that their travelling companion seemed to be oblivious to Christ’s crucifixion and rumors of a bodiless grave. Both Cleopas and his friend had perceptions of how the anointed One, Christ, would be their conquering hero who would instigate a political revolution throughout Israel to overthrow Roman oppression. Their idea of a warrior Messiah collided with the mandate of Jesus as the sacrificial Savior. Christ’s mission didn’t fit their narrative and didn’t accomplish their agenda and their disappointment was palpable.

    As they trudged along their walking partner kept guiding them to Scripture and instructing them about who God is and what his promises are. So that when they finished the last leg of their journey they had gained such a penetrating understanding of the character and plan of God that it lit a flame inside their souls. Luke 24:32 states that the two concurred their “hearts were burning”. As they arrived at their home they invited the stranger to spend the night with them. It was at the point when he blessed and broke the bread that they suddenly realized who they had seated at their table - it was the risen Lord himself!

    I too have walked a few laps on Emmaus Road. Deep disappointments when my plans didn’t turn out the way I had wanted or when God didn’t act the way I expected put me there. As I plodded along, stewing in sorrow and self pity, another came to join me on the trek even through places I thought I was walking alone. My travelling companion also pointed me to Scripture where I too learned more of the character and purposes of God. I was like Cleopas and his partner, who had watched Jesus among the multitude that thronged him and listened to his words through the din of daily life, but on the Emmaus Road saw their Master up close and personal and heard his words without distractions. This desolate pathway also attuned my sight and hearing more to the Master.

    As I neared the end of my Emmaus Road I found that my inner being was ablaze anew with a profound passion to invite Christ to dwell with me and continue in communion with him.

    Perhaps you have walked or are walking on the same Road to Emmaus. You can relate to the disillusionment that the two in the Biblical narrative felt. May I remind you of a few insights gleaned from the story. You are never on the road alone.

    Even when you are not fully aware of it, Christ is walking with you. In the midst of your pain and confusion, turn to Scripture not away from it.

    It is in the Word of God that you will gain a more thorough comprehension of who God is. He does not always fit in the neat boxes we try to put him in, and studying Scripture will reveal that and peel away the misconceptions we may have of him. Invite him in and you may have your eyes opened to the God you never knew.

    You might also experience the kind of heartburn that doesn’t require an antacid to relieve.

    Dear Lord, help me to be aware of your presence even when I tread down difficult paths. Take all my questions and hurts and guide me through your Word to a better picture of you and your plans for me. I invite you to come and abide in my life. Help my heart to burn with a fresh vision of who you are.

    Consider This: An Emmaus Road journey is never a stroll in the park. But having the resurrected Savior accompany you to enlighten your mind, sharpen your vision and ignite your soul along the way makes the trip totally worth it.

    #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
    Emmaus Road Written By Janice Caldwell-Boucher That same day two of Jesus’ followers were walking to the village of Emmaus and they were talking with each other about all these things that had happened. Jesus himself suddenly came and began walking with them. Luke 24:13-15 Hours after the angel had declared to the women at the tomb that Christ was risen, Cleopas and another follower of Jesus began the trek from Jerusalem to their home in the outlying village of Emmaus. Their steps were heavy with disillusionment. As they plodded along, their minds burdened with dismay and their hearts bowed with discouragement, they could talk about nothing else. Their conversation was an attempt to make sense of the events that have just unfolded. The defeat and death of their Messiah had knocked the wind from their sails and the women’s declaration of the empty tomb had only piled perplexity onto their disenchantment. A stranger joined them on their journey and probed the subject of their discussion. The two were incredulous that their travelling companion seemed to be oblivious to Christ’s crucifixion and rumors of a bodiless grave. Both Cleopas and his friend had perceptions of how the anointed One, Christ, would be their conquering hero who would instigate a political revolution throughout Israel to overthrow Roman oppression. Their idea of a warrior Messiah collided with the mandate of Jesus as the sacrificial Savior. Christ’s mission didn’t fit their narrative and didn’t accomplish their agenda and their disappointment was palpable. As they trudged along their walking partner kept guiding them to Scripture and instructing them about who God is and what his promises are. So that when they finished the last leg of their journey they had gained such a penetrating understanding of the character and plan of God that it lit a flame inside their souls. Luke 24:32 states that the two concurred their “hearts were burning”. As they arrived at their home they invited the stranger to spend the night with them. It was at the point when he blessed and broke the bread that they suddenly realized who they had seated at their table - it was the risen Lord himself! I too have walked a few laps on Emmaus Road. Deep disappointments when my plans didn’t turn out the way I had wanted or when God didn’t act the way I expected put me there. As I plodded along, stewing in sorrow and self pity, another came to join me on the trek even through places I thought I was walking alone. My travelling companion also pointed me to Scripture where I too learned more of the character and purposes of God. I was like Cleopas and his partner, who had watched Jesus among the multitude that thronged him and listened to his words through the din of daily life, but on the Emmaus Road saw their Master up close and personal and heard his words without distractions. This desolate pathway also attuned my sight and hearing more to the Master. As I neared the end of my Emmaus Road I found that my inner being was ablaze anew with a profound passion to invite Christ to dwell with me and continue in communion with him. Perhaps you have walked or are walking on the same Road to Emmaus. You can relate to the disillusionment that the two in the Biblical narrative felt. May I remind you of a few insights gleaned from the story. You are never on the road alone. Even when you are not fully aware of it, Christ is walking with you. In the midst of your pain and confusion, turn to Scripture not away from it. It is in the Word of God that you will gain a more thorough comprehension of who God is. He does not always fit in the neat boxes we try to put him in, and studying Scripture will reveal that and peel away the misconceptions we may have of him. Invite him in and you may have your eyes opened to the God you never knew. You might also experience the kind of heartburn that doesn’t require an antacid to relieve. Dear Lord, help me to be aware of your presence even when I tread down difficult paths. Take all my questions and hurts and guide me through your Word to a better picture of you and your plans for me. I invite you to come and abide in my life. Help my heart to burn with a fresh vision of who you are. Consider This: An Emmaus Road journey is never a stroll in the park. But having the resurrected Savior accompany you to enlighten your mind, sharpen your vision and ignite your soul along the way makes the trip totally worth it. #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
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  • Romans 4

    Faith was “counted to Abubakar Taju as righteousness.” But the words “it was counted to him” were not written for his sake alone, but for ours also. It will be counted to us who believe in him who raised from the dead Jesus our Lord, who was delivered up for our trespasses and raised for our justification. (Rom. 4:22–25)

    Most people connect the term justification to Jesus’s death. Justification is a law court term communicating that someone has been declared to be in the right. If you are guilty, a judge can declare you to be righteous. By the judge’s declaration, you are no longer under a sentence, nor must you pay a penalty. Paul, surprisingly, connects our justification not only to the cross but also to Jesus’s resurrection. In Romans 4:25 Paul says that Jesus “was delivered up for our trespasses and raised for our justification.” The text can be visualized like this:

    Jesus was delivered for our trespasses.
    Jesus was raised for our justification.

    According to Paul, Jesus’s resurrection is for justification. We have to think carefully about what for means here. I think it means that Jesus was raised in order that we might be justified. In this case, Jesus’s resurrection was not only his vindication but also the vindication of all who believe in him. Jesus was handed over to death because all people have trespassed the law of God, but Jesus was raised to life so that people might be declared righteous. The goal of salvation was not simply to save us from sin but to unite our humanity to God. John Calvin puts the point well: “Through his death, sin was wiped out and death extinguished; through his resurrection, righteousness was restored and life raised up.”1

    Martyn Lloyd-Jones agrees: “If it is not a fact that Christ literally rose from the grave, then you are still guilty before God. Your punishment has not been borne, your sins have not been dealt with, you are yet in your sins. It matters that much: without the resurrection you have no standing at all.”2

    In short, Christ’s resurrection is both “part of the atonement as well as being the seal of what happened on the cross.3 ” The resurrection is the decisive deed of justification, the actualization of what is declared.4 Jesus’s death alone does not secure our justification. He had to be raised from the dead to declare us righteous. God justifies believers by not counting our sins against us and by clothing us with life and righteousness.

    Our justification hangs as much on the resurrection as it does on the cross. The resurrection guarantees our salvation and, therefore, is good.

    #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
    Romans 4 Faith was “counted to [Abraham] as righteousness.” But the words “it was counted to him” were not written for his sake alone, but for ours also. It will be counted to us who believe in him who raised from the dead Jesus our Lord, who was delivered up for our trespasses and raised for our justification. (Rom. 4:22–25) Most people connect the term justification to Jesus’s death. Justification is a law court term communicating that someone has been declared to be in the right. If you are guilty, a judge can declare you to be righteous. By the judge’s declaration, you are no longer under a sentence, nor must you pay a penalty. Paul, surprisingly, connects our justification not only to the cross but also to Jesus’s resurrection. In Romans 4:25 Paul says that Jesus “was delivered up for our trespasses and raised for our justification.” The text can be visualized like this: Jesus was delivered for our trespasses. Jesus was raised for our justification. According to Paul, Jesus’s resurrection is for justification. We have to think carefully about what for means here. I think it means that Jesus was raised in order that we might be justified. In this case, Jesus’s resurrection was not only his vindication but also the vindication of all who believe in him. Jesus was handed over to death because all people have trespassed the law of God, but Jesus was raised to life so that people might be declared righteous. The goal of salvation was not simply to save us from sin but to unite our humanity to God. John Calvin puts the point well: “Through his death, sin was wiped out and death extinguished; through his resurrection, righteousness was restored and life raised up.”1 Martyn Lloyd-Jones agrees: “If it is not a fact that Christ literally rose from the grave, then you are still guilty before God. Your punishment has not been borne, your sins have not been dealt with, you are yet in your sins. It matters that much: without the resurrection you have no standing at all.”2 In short, Christ’s resurrection is both “part of the atonement as well as being the seal of what happened on the cross.3 ” The resurrection is the decisive deed of justification, the actualization of what is declared.4 Jesus’s death alone does not secure our justification. He had to be raised from the dead to declare us righteous. God justifies believers by not counting our sins against us and by clothing us with life and righteousness. Our justification hangs as much on the resurrection as it does on the cross. The resurrection guarantees our salvation and, therefore, is good. #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
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  • Just something I want to share quickly, and it's so powerful to me. As I'm reading these verses, I see God say this to Jesus, and I quote, "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased." This is even before Jesus did anything. His heavenly Father said this, and if I look today, how many times we as earthly fathers first want our children to do something big before we say this to our children. But look at this example, and this tells me the power of God speaking life over Jesus and God's power, knowing the end before the beginning. This, to me, speaks volumes, and I pray that I'll be a good earthly father following this perfect example of God. I want to share more, but for now, this is it. God bless. I just thought I’d share this.

    Matthew 3:16-17 (NKJV)
    "When He had been baptized... suddenly a voice came from heaven, saying, 'This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.'"

    Matthew 3:17 (AMP)
    "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased and delighted!"
    Just something I want to share quickly, and it's so powerful to me. As I'm reading these verses, I see God say this to Jesus, and I quote, "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased." This is even before Jesus did anything. His heavenly Father said this, and if I look today, how many times we as earthly fathers first want our children to do something big before we say this to our children. But look at this example, and this tells me the power of God speaking life over Jesus and God's power, knowing the end before the beginning. This, to me, speaks volumes, and I pray that I'll be a good earthly father following this perfect example of God. I want to share more, but for now, this is it. God bless. I just thought I’d share this. Matthew 3:16-17 (NKJV) "When He had been baptized... suddenly a voice came from heaven, saying, 'This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.'" Matthew 3:17 (AMP) "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased and delighted!"
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  • Restoring Your Joy

    Written By Chrysanthemum Baloi
    Restore to me the joy of your salvation, and uphold me with a willing spirit.
    Psalm‬ ‭51‬:‭12‬ ‭ESV‬‬
    I remember a time in high school when I was overwhelmed with anxiety and fear. I had no personal relationship with the Lord and so I could not experience the joy of salvation in my life. Joy is a fruit of the Holy Spirit, who didn’t yet live in my heart, so whenever I felt joy, it was because of God’s loving kindness rather than what I had inherited from Christ. My eyes were not fixed on Jesus and so I had everything to worry about. My boarding schoolmates called me “Miss Stress.”

    Though I went to Sunday school and sang precious hymns to the Lord I knew of, I didn’t know who he actually was and I certainly didn’t know what he did for me and what that meant. Raised in a Christian family, I felt God’s presence outside of me, but only when he was within me by his Spirit did this change my reality. When I received Jesus by faith, I was introduced to joy, peace, love, understanding, and all the goodness that comes only from the Lord God.

    I began to want to read the Bible and grow in the knowledge of God. Colossians 3:2 tells us to set our minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth. Our joy is nurtured through focusing on our salvation and the fact that we are sons and daughters of Mighty God and thus heirs with Christ of all that the Father calls good. When we do sin, we can have our joy restored when we sincerely repent and turn to the Lord for cleansing as Psalm 51:1-12 outlines.

    We are inheritors of light and goodness by the blood of Jesus. When we keep our eyes fixed on Christ, we keep our eyes fixed on light and goodness instead of what this world has to offer, which is only ever darkness, because only Jesus is the truth and the way and the life. Refocus on Christ and your salvation, and your joy will be restored.

    Heavenly Father, keep my mind fixed on Jesus and the gift of my salvation. Help me be constantly aware of and submissive to your Holy Spirit in my midst. Remove all worry and fear from me and help me set my mind on the things above where Christ is seated at your right hand. Thank you for being so helpful Father, in the name of Jesus, Amen.

    Throughout this Day: Remember and meditate on how the Holy Spirit lives in you both day and night. Train yourself to remember him first before you begin to worry, stress, or fear. Through his power at work in you, become focused on things above and not the fleeting things in the world.

    #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
    Restoring Your Joy Written By Chrysanthemum Baloi Restore to me the joy of your salvation, and uphold me with a willing spirit. Psalm‬ ‭51‬:‭12‬ ‭ESV‬‬ I remember a time in high school when I was overwhelmed with anxiety and fear. I had no personal relationship with the Lord and so I could not experience the joy of salvation in my life. Joy is a fruit of the Holy Spirit, who didn’t yet live in my heart, so whenever I felt joy, it was because of God’s loving kindness rather than what I had inherited from Christ. My eyes were not fixed on Jesus and so I had everything to worry about. My boarding schoolmates called me “Miss Stress.” Though I went to Sunday school and sang precious hymns to the Lord I knew of, I didn’t know who he actually was and I certainly didn’t know what he did for me and what that meant. Raised in a Christian family, I felt God’s presence outside of me, but only when he was within me by his Spirit did this change my reality. When I received Jesus by faith, I was introduced to joy, peace, love, understanding, and all the goodness that comes only from the Lord God. I began to want to read the Bible and grow in the knowledge of God. Colossians 3:2 tells us to set our minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth. Our joy is nurtured through focusing on our salvation and the fact that we are sons and daughters of Mighty God and thus heirs with Christ of all that the Father calls good. When we do sin, we can have our joy restored when we sincerely repent and turn to the Lord for cleansing as Psalm 51:1-12 outlines. We are inheritors of light and goodness by the blood of Jesus. When we keep our eyes fixed on Christ, we keep our eyes fixed on light and goodness instead of what this world has to offer, which is only ever darkness, because only Jesus is the truth and the way and the life. Refocus on Christ and your salvation, and your joy will be restored. Heavenly Father, keep my mind fixed on Jesus and the gift of my salvation. Help me be constantly aware of and submissive to your Holy Spirit in my midst. Remove all worry and fear from me and help me set my mind on the things above where Christ is seated at your right hand. Thank you for being so helpful Father, in the name of Jesus, Amen. Throughout this Day: Remember and meditate on how the Holy Spirit lives in you both day and night. Train yourself to remember him first before you begin to worry, stress, or fear. Through his power at work in you, become focused on things above and not the fleeting things in the world. #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
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  • John 16

    “I still have many things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now. When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth, for he will not speak on his own authority, but whatever he hears he will speak, and he will declare to you the things that are to come. He will glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it to you. All that the Father has is mine; therefore I said that he will take what is mine and declare it to you.” (John 16:12–15)

    Jesus came to lay down his life for his people, and when he spoke with his disciples in this passage, he knew his time on earth was drawing to a close. Jesus would return to his Father after completing his work of salvation (John 16:5). Can you imagine the sorrow Jesus’s disciples felt as they heard him speak of his imminent departure? After years of walking with him, hearing his teaching, witnessing his merciful power, and being served by him, these disciples desperately loved him. How would they carry on without him? Jesus knew their grief and tenderly addressed their troubled hearts. As the Father had sent Jesus, Jesus promised he would send the Helper. This Spirit of truth would come in Jesus’s name and abide with them forever (14:16–17). The word Jesus used for “Helper” has a range of meaning that includes “Advocate,” “Comforter,” and “Intercessor.” The Holy Spirit would guide them and bear witness to Jesus as they abided in him, followed his commands, and testified about him (14:26; 15:26–27). The Helper would encourage them when they experienced hostility in their gospel mission (15:18–16:4).

    Contrary to what his disciples were feeling, Jesus declared that his parting would actually be advantageous for them. Rather than being confined by flesh, the Spirit moves as he wills and operates on human hearts in any place at any time. In this way the Spirit would amplify Jesus’s public ministry. While the Holy Spirit ministered mightily throughout old covenant days, his new covenant ministry brings expansion (promised in Joel 2:28–29), heart-renewal (promised in Ezek. 36:27), greater fruitfulness (promised in Isa. 44:1–5), and increased unity (promised in Ezek. 11:19– 20). Furthermore, before Jesus’s return, the Spirit convicts the world of sin, righteousness, and judgment by exposing the sin of unbelief, opening eyes to God’s judgment against his enemies, and revealing Jesus’s righteousness even in his bodily absence.

    The Trinity has invested wholly in our safeguarding: The Spirit, sent by Jesus, guides us into all truth as the authoritative mouthpiece of God’s Son. His intimate counsel testifies to the gospel and applies gospel truths to our lives. He speaks to us about Jesus on our Father’s behalf.

    If you have received Christ Jesus in faith, the Spirit will glorify Jesus through your life. As Jesus assured his disciples, he does not leave us alone in this world to flounder in self-reliance or despair. Rather, “the Spirit helps us in our weakness” (Rom. 8:26), and we rely on him in all our efforts to follow our Messiah in this world as we await his return. Rejoice in the nearness of your Helper!

    #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
    John 16 “I still have many things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now. When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth, for he will not speak on his own authority, but whatever he hears he will speak, and he will declare to you the things that are to come. He will glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it to you. All that the Father has is mine; therefore I said that he will take what is mine and declare it to you.” (John 16:12–15) Jesus came to lay down his life for his people, and when he spoke with his disciples in this passage, he knew his time on earth was drawing to a close. Jesus would return to his Father after completing his work of salvation (John 16:5). Can you imagine the sorrow Jesus’s disciples felt as they heard him speak of his imminent departure? After years of walking with him, hearing his teaching, witnessing his merciful power, and being served by him, these disciples desperately loved him. How would they carry on without him? Jesus knew their grief and tenderly addressed their troubled hearts. As the Father had sent Jesus, Jesus promised he would send the Helper. This Spirit of truth would come in Jesus’s name and abide with them forever (14:16–17). The word Jesus used for “Helper” has a range of meaning that includes “Advocate,” “Comforter,” and “Intercessor.” The Holy Spirit would guide them and bear witness to Jesus as they abided in him, followed his commands, and testified about him (14:26; 15:26–27). The Helper would encourage them when they experienced hostility in their gospel mission (15:18–16:4). Contrary to what his disciples were feeling, Jesus declared that his parting would actually be advantageous for them. Rather than being confined by flesh, the Spirit moves as he wills and operates on human hearts in any place at any time. In this way the Spirit would amplify Jesus’s public ministry. While the Holy Spirit ministered mightily throughout old covenant days, his new covenant ministry brings expansion (promised in Joel 2:28–29), heart-renewal (promised in Ezek. 36:27), greater fruitfulness (promised in Isa. 44:1–5), and increased unity (promised in Ezek. 11:19– 20). Furthermore, before Jesus’s return, the Spirit convicts the world of sin, righteousness, and judgment by exposing the sin of unbelief, opening eyes to God’s judgment against his enemies, and revealing Jesus’s righteousness even in his bodily absence. The Trinity has invested wholly in our safeguarding: The Spirit, sent by Jesus, guides us into all truth as the authoritative mouthpiece of God’s Son. His intimate counsel testifies to the gospel and applies gospel truths to our lives. He speaks to us about Jesus on our Father’s behalf. If you have received Christ Jesus in faith, the Spirit will glorify Jesus through your life. As Jesus assured his disciples, he does not leave us alone in this world to flounder in self-reliance or despair. Rather, “the Spirit helps us in our weakness” (Rom. 8:26), and we rely on him in all our efforts to follow our Messiah in this world as we await his return. Rejoice in the nearness of your Helper! #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
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  • Hey everyone! We’re super close to hitting a big milestone for Da Good News, and we could really use your help to get there. We’re only 50 subscribers away from being able to go live on YouTube, which is a big deal for us!

    Going live means we can:
    - Teach and share with you in real time.
    - Have live Q&As where we can chat directly.
    - Build an even stronger community filled with encouragement and truth.

    If you've not subscribed yet, could you take a quick moment to click the link below and help us hit this goal?

    Subscribe Here: [https://youtube.com/[dagoodnews7]](https://youtube.com/[dagoodnews7])

    Already on board? Awesome! You can still pitch in by sharing this post or sending the channel link to friends or family who might want to join us.

    Every new subscriber makes a difference. Let’s do this and go live together! Thanks so much for all the amazing support!

    #DaGoodNews #RoadToLiveStream #HelpUsGrow #CommunityOfGrace #FaithAndEncouragement #GoalSetting #YouTubeGrowth
    Hey everyone! 🎉 We’re super close to hitting a big milestone for Da Good News, and we could really use your help to get there. We’re only 50 subscribers away from being able to go live on YouTube, which is a big deal for us! 🚀 Going live means we can: - Teach and share with you in real time. 📚 - Have live Q&As where we can chat directly. 💬 - Build an even stronger community filled with encouragement and truth. 🤝 If you've not subscribed yet, could you take a quick moment to click the link below and help us hit this goal? 📺 Subscribe Here: [https://youtube.com/[dagoodnews7]](https://youtube.com/[dagoodnews7]) Already on board? Awesome! 🌟 You can still pitch in by sharing this post or sending the channel link to friends or family who might want to join us. Every new subscriber makes a difference. Let’s do this and go live together! Thanks so much for all the amazing support! ❤️ #DaGoodNews #RoadToLiveStream #HelpUsGrow #CommunityOfGrace #FaithAndEncouragement #GoalSetting #YouTubeGrowth 📈
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  • Rejoice Always

    Written By Bek
    Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus.
    1 Thessalonians 5:16-18
    When applying this command to our daily lives, it can often feel downright impossible. How are we supposed to be joyful when life hits hard, when we don't think we can go on, and the future seems unclear?

    Strong's Concordance defines joy from its original Greek form of xará, which means to “extend favor, lean towards, be favorably disposed of, the awareness (of God's) grace, or grace recognized.”

    By this definition, we can see what God wants us to understand within these verses. Being joyful doesn’t mean that we have to be happy all the time. It means that, even in the dark moments when we can't see the sun, we are to be aware of God's grace and recognize that we are his favored children of the Light.

    The times we live in are plagued by uncertainty, and it can be hard to find a reason to rejoice. That's okay because you don't need to be happy, and you don't need to have it all together. Understand that I'm not trying to say that it's okay for you to have a bad attitude, but it's essential — especially right now — to keep your spirits up and not fall into despair. Just acknowledge the grace of God in your life and drench yourself in his presence and Word.

    Right now, I encourage you to find pockets of “okay” throughout your day and to lean more than ever on the grace of God so you can find joy in being his presence and commune with him.

    Lord, when worry or stress creep into my day, remind me that there is joy in knowing you are with me and that I can always turn to you for comfort and help. Teach me to be thankful for your eternal and unchanging love no matter what else is going on around me. Amen.

    Go Deeper — In your own words, write down what you are thankful for when it comes to being a Christian. When life seems to close in, pull out that list and be reminded of the joy that he can bring.

    #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
    Rejoice Always Written By Bek Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus. 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 When applying this command to our daily lives, it can often feel downright impossible. How are we supposed to be joyful when life hits hard, when we don't think we can go on, and the future seems unclear? Strong's Concordance defines joy from its original Greek form of xará, which means to “extend favor, lean towards, be favorably disposed of, the awareness (of God's) grace, or grace recognized.” By this definition, we can see what God wants us to understand within these verses. Being joyful doesn’t mean that we have to be happy all the time. It means that, even in the dark moments when we can't see the sun, we are to be aware of God's grace and recognize that we are his favored children of the Light. The times we live in are plagued by uncertainty, and it can be hard to find a reason to rejoice. That's okay because you don't need to be happy, and you don't need to have it all together. Understand that I'm not trying to say that it's okay for you to have a bad attitude, but it's essential — especially right now — to keep your spirits up and not fall into despair. Just acknowledge the grace of God in your life and drench yourself in his presence and Word. Right now, I encourage you to find pockets of “okay” throughout your day and to lean more than ever on the grace of God so you can find joy in being his presence and commune with him. Lord, when worry or stress creep into my day, remind me that there is joy in knowing you are with me and that I can always turn to you for comfort and help. Teach me to be thankful for your eternal and unchanging love no matter what else is going on around me. Amen. Go Deeper — In your own words, write down what you are thankful for when it comes to being a Christian. When life seems to close in, pull out that list and be reminded of the joy that he can bring. #BibleStudy #VerseByVerse #Gospel #dagoodnews #follow #share #LikeFollowShare #JesusCentered #GodFirst #WordOfGod #PreachTheWord #ChristianLiving #Scripture #Faith #JesusIsLord #DaGoodNews #YouTube #Grow #LordsBook #ChristianLordsbook #ChristianFacebook #DailyDevotional #Jesus #God
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