Because God has unlimited mercy, we can feel confident that anything we bring up to him will be met with compassion, understanding, and forgiveness.
In this devotional, we’ll learn to focus on connection instead of criticism, being grateful instead of being good, and letting God teach us to love.
Loving God with all your soul is important; Jesus says it is part of the first and greatest commandment.
Sin isn’t usually a popular topic, but God can teach us how to handle it and find freedom
Spirituality and the Bible can help us redefine what being vulnerable should look like, and show us how it can lead to great power.
When we aren’t actively resisting the forces of darkness, we become susceptible to letting our view of sin get rosy.
A guide to what may be blocking your love for others.
The following are three traps we can easily fall into that will weigh our hearts down, followed by three conversations we can have that will help ensure that we come out of the holidays stronger than we were when we went in.
Being vulnerable with God means being comfortable with our weaknesses because we know God’s power is greater than any of our weaknesses or flaws and that all our strength and courage comes from God. There’s freedom knowing that God loves us no matter what and can make us strong despite our weaknesses or insecurities.
God’s forgiveness and love can soften even our most ungrateful hearts and motivate us to treat others around us with love and compassion.
What would it be like if you weren't bitter? Would you be positive and hopeful, more pleasant to be around? What hurts, regrets, or disappointments have you been unable to move past?