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And God will generously provide all you need. Then you will always have everything you need and plenty left over to share with others. ‭‭2 Corinthians‬ ‭9‬:‭8‬

Have you ever been in a situation where you had an opportunity to give but just didn’t do it? You were asked to donate to a worthy cause and while you could afford it, just didn’t do it?

You were asked to help with a church or community event and even though you had the time, the invitation of your couch and TV was more compelling

A group of friends invite you to a cookout but your grass needed mowing (which you never got around to doing anyway).

In 2 Corinthians 9:8, the Apostle Paul is writing regarding a financial gift the Corinthian church had committed to. He reminds them that while giving financially can be hard at times, the reward of knowing you are helping the Kingdom of God and the Body of Christ is not without reward.

While Paul is talking money here, there is a valuable principle we can sure in other areas of life. The more we give of our time, our gifts and yes, our money, the more we can see God work.

I’m not talking prosperity gospel here, I’m not saying give (out of duty) and you’ll get an unexpected check in the mail. I’ve found that the more I give of my time, the more time I tend to have. The more I use my gifts, the more enjoyment I get from seeing others encouraged.

I’ve started a practice lately that may seem rather odd or even self-serving. When time allows, I do much of my writing/studying at a local coffee shop. More often than not, someone I know will ‘stop by’ my table and chat. I’ve been able to minister and encourage in ways that I never could have sitting in my home office.

We have more than we need to accomplish God’s will for our lives. A will that we are told in Romans and elsewhere is good, pleasing and perfect. Sometimes it’s the little things we can do that make a big difference.

Use the overabundance of resources God has freely given you to give freely to others.


Day after day they continue to speak; night after night they make him known. Psalms‬ ‭19‬:‭2‬

I love the mountains. A few years ago we took a trip from our midwest, relatively flat area to the mountains. Driving through one pass in particular, the mountains on either side of us nearly blocked the sky. They were huge.

One of the things I thought of as I gazed at these immense rocks is how they had withstood the passage of time, endured the changing elements and had been unaffected by disease, political change, or any other environmental issue.

They were the same in hot weather and cold, dry weather or wet, in the brightness of the day and the darkness of night.

The Psalmist writes of the stability and order of God’s creation. Here, in verse two he writes of creation enduring through time. Like the mountains I looked on with awe, God stands tall.

Night after night, season after season, He stands immovable and impenetrable regardless of what is going on around Him.

It’s so hard, in our frail humanity to fathom how God stands unaffected by anything going on around us. We are affected physically, emotionally and spiritually by weather, illness, social and political climate, relational differences and much more.

Yet our God isn’t moved. Mountains don’t speak words, but they speak lessons. They speak reminders of God’s immensity. They speak reminders of God’s resilience. They speak reminders that whatever is bothering you today; whatever fear you are dealing with; whatever worry is attacking you,

God stands strong. When we live in the power and shelter of his spirit, we can stand strong too.

In your mind, right now, picture the grandeur of the mountains and remember, your God stands strong through whatever you are going through.


For the law was given through Moses, but God’s unfailing love and faithfulness came through Jesus Christ. John‬ ‭1‬:‭17‬

When God gave Moses the law, it was to show us as humans, the standards that we would need to keep to be holy and perfect before God.

There was no wavering in the law. There was no giving and taking. The standard was set, and if we did not meet the standard, we would be separated from God in this life and the next.

We would be without hope. We would never be in relationship with him.

While the law showed us God‘s holiness and standards, Jesus shows us God‘s character.

It’s almost as if God gave us the law to say here’s what I expect, and you will never be able to match that! Then he sent Jesus to say, here’s a better way.

His purpose was never to put us down. his purpose was never to destroy us. His purpose was never to make us struggle with our own thoughts and actions.

His purpose, was always to draw us closer to him. his purpose was always to give us a fulfillment and peace that nothing else could give us.

In Jesus, he gave us what we were never worthy of so that we could be what we could never achieve.


In those days when you pray, I will listen. Jeremiah‬ ‭29‬:‭12
God’s word came to Jeremiah during a very difficult time in life of the Israelites.

They were abused, they were oppressed, they were under constant threat of attack.

Someday God would deliver them completely. But until then, he gives them a promise that he gives to us as well.

When we pray, he will listen.

God doesn’t listen the way some of us do. His listening isn’t surface level. His listening isn’t subject to distractions or circumstances.

When he listens to us, we have his undivided attention. It’s as if he looks into our eyes and sees clear through to our hearts.

That doesn’t mean he’ll remove the troubles. That doesn’t mean he’ll remove those enemies and obstacles that keep us awake at night. But it does mean he listens to us.

And sometimes we just need to be heard.


For I am the least of all the apostles. In fact, I’m not even worthy to be called an apostle after the way I persecuted God’s church. ‭‭1 Corinthians‬ ‭15‬:‭9

“I don’t deserve this.”

How many times do we hear that said, or maybe we’ve said that after we’ve been criticized or wrongfully accused. Maybe we’ve been judged unfairly for not meeting the expectations of others. Then there are the times when people play the comparison game, “Not bad, but sally does it better.”

Life is hard when it never seems like we can catch a break. If there was anyone who deserved to be scrutinized, the Apostle Paul was one.

He was a Pharisee, and likely had some part in the decision to murder Jesus. He gleefully watched the stoning of Stephen after Jesus’ resurrection and ascension. He celebrated the persecution, imprisonment and physical beating each follower of ‘The Way’ received.

After his conversion to Jesus, Paul was called to preach this same Jesus that he’d ridiculed earlier. There were many who doubted him, right up until the day he died. Among other things, he was beaten, jailed, stoned and left for dead, and shipwrecked.

Paul could have said, ‘I don’t deserve all this! I’m the Apostle Paul after all. I was called by Jesus Himself. I’m important.” But he didn’t.

Instead Paul counted himself of being unworthy of any ministry at all because of his former life. The mistreatment he endured was nothing compared to what Jesus endured.

Jesus was completely innocent of any sin, yet rejected, abused and murdered. Elsewhere Paul says he would gladly go through abuse because of what Jesus endured for him.

None of us deserve to be mistreated on the physical plain, yet compared to God’s Holy standards, we all deserve so much more. We deserve death, but Jesus gives us life. We deserve punishment for our sins, but Jesus gives us forgiveness. We deserve poverty, Jesus provides from heavens storehouses.

I don’t deserve the abuse I get, but in reality, I deserve so much more! Thank you Jesus for sparing me from what I truly deserve.

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