Negative thoughts about ourselves can be debilitating and discouraging
God's thoughts are higher than and completely different from ours
While it isn’t wrong to feel angry, God can give us the power to handle this emotion in a spiritual and helpful way.
The heart is powerful enough to determine the course of our lives: what we feel, what we say, and what we do.
Building or rebuilding our emotional lives will allow us to grow our character as we walk with God and develop our strength from the inside out.
We are excited to present to you an excerpt from the audio version of our upcoming book He's Not Who You Think He Is: Dropping Your Assumptions and Discovering God for Yourself.
When we get our happiness from God, we want to share that happiness with others.
God notices what we go through, even if no one else does, and he wants to do something about our pain.
God wants to give us the help we need, but we have to be willing to be vulnerable enough to ask him for it.
Vulnerability is usually not the first thing we associate with being strong, but the Bible tells us true strength actually comes from embracing our weaknesses.
We'll be vulnerable with God when we believe he loves us, is interested in us, and has a plan for us.
In this week's Mini Quiet Time, we'll look at a story where Jesus had to choose to be vulnerable and what came as a result of his decision.