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The Unconditional Love of God

In a world filled with conditions, expectations, and disappointments, one truth remains steady and unchanging: the unconditional love of God. It is a love not based on our performance, our perfection, or our past, but on His nature, His grace, and His desire to restore and embrace His children. A Love That Never Fails Human love often has limits. People may withdraw when they are hurt, become distant when disappointed, or change based on circumstances. But God’s love is not like that. Scripture reminds us that “His steadfast love endures forever.” God’s love is not temporary. It’s not fragile. It does not break when life gets hard or when we fall short. His love is the same yesterday, today, and forever. No matter how far we stray or how difficult our journey becomes, His love continues to reach for us. A Love That Pursues God’s love is not passive—it is active and pursuing. From the beginning of time, God has taken the initiative to bring humanity back into relationship with Him. He walks toward the broken, reaches out to the hurting, and lifts up those who have fallen. Just like the father in the story of the prodigal son, God runs to meet us even when we feel unworthy, wraps us in His embrace, and restores us. He doesn’t say, “Come back when you’re clean.” Instead, He says, “Come as you are, and I will make you whole.” A Love That Forgives One of the most powerful expressions of God’s unconditional love is His forgiveness. Many people carry guilt, shame, or regret—burdens God never meant for us to carry. Through Jesus Christ, God offers complete forgiveness, not because we have earned it, but because His love is greater than our sin. This forgiveness is not partial. It is not temporary. It is not fragile. God removes our sins “as far as the east is from the west” and remembers them no more. When God forgives, He restores with love, dignity, and purpose. A Love That Transforms The unconditional love of God doesn’t leave us where it finds us—it lifts us, strengthens us, and transforms us. When we truly encounter God’s love, something inside us changes. Fear is replaced with peace. Shame is replaced with hope. Brokenness is replaced with healing. His love empowers us to love others more deeply, forgive more freely, and live with greater purpose. It becomes the foundation for our identity, our decisions, and our future. A Love That Is Always Available Perhaps the most reassuring truth is this: God’s love is always present and always available. It’s not just for the spiritually strong or the morally perfect—it’s for the tired, the hurting, the doubtful, and the messy. No matter what season you are in, no matter what mistakes you have made, no matter how far from God you feel, His love is right there—ready to comfort, heal, and renew.

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A World Upside Down

A World upside down

Follow not that which is evil, but that which is good . . . —3 John 11 We must get this fact firmly fixed in our minds: we live in an upside-down world. “, fight when they should be peaceful, wound when they should heal, steal when they should share, do wrong when they should do right. I once saw a toy clown with a weight in its head. No matter what position you put it in, it invariably assumed an upside-down position. Put it on its feet or on its side, and when you let go it flipped back on its head. Unregenerate people are just like that! Do what you may with them and they always revert to an upside-down position. That is why the disciples to the world were misfits. To an upside-down person, a right-side up person seems upside down. To a sinner, a righteous person is an oddity and an abnormality. A Christian’s goodness is a rebuke to the wicked; his being right-side up is a reflection upon the worldling’s inverted position. Christians are called to be a light in the darkness.

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Make Room in Your Heart

Make Room in Your Heart

Ye have heard that it hath been said, Thou shalt love thy neighbor, and hate thine enemy. But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you; that ye may be the children of your Father which is in heaven . . . —Matthew 5:43–45 When H. G. Wells summed up the influence of Jesus in history, he said, “Is it any wonder that this Galilean is too much for our small hearts?” And yet the heart of man, though small, is big enough for Christ to live in, if man will only make room for Him. Christ instilled the spirit of Christian love in His followers, so that they lived without malice and died without rancor. The love that Christ talked about can only be given to us by God. It is one of the fruits of the Spirit. When you come to Jesus Christ, He transforms you. Your past is forgiven. You receive a power to love men, beyond your natural ability to love. Love is an action word that we must all put into an everyday practice in our lives. Someone cannot feel loved unless we display the love to them. Jesus is love yes and we are to be just as Jesus is “Love” I pray this short blog/devotion ministers to you and after you have read this you start to realize the importance of the word “love” and how so many in this dark world need it. To God be all the glory!

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A Seared Conscience

A Seared Conscience (Genesis 37:18-33) Paul warns Timothy that some people have had their conscience “seared as with a hot iron” (1 Tim. 4:2 NIV). In this context, he is talking about hypocrites who spread false teaching based on lies. But this is a phenomenon that can happen to anyone. When we give in to sin, it makes sin seem less repulsive to us. At first, we may understand that we shouldn’t take a single step into sin, but the further that we go into sin, the less repulsive those first steps seem to look. Eventually, we have gone so far into the evil depths of sin, that we look back on those initial sins, and don’t regard them as evil at all. Compared to the depths of sin that we are in now, those initial sins seem “positive” or even “good.” This is what it means to have our conscience seared. We are no longer able to determine right from wrong. Even what is wrong appears right to us. This is what happens to Joseph’s brothers, as we’ll see in today’s Scripture passage. Please read Genesis 37:18-33. Joseph’s brothers have determined to kill him. Can you imagine how far they must have fallen into sin to simply contemplate killing their brother? Now they have moved past thought and are ready to take action—they are actually going to kill their brother! But both Reuben and Judah have second thoughts: maybe they shouldn’t actually kill their brother. Instead, Reuben suggests they simply torture him in a pit for awhile before bringing him back home, and Judah suggests that they sell him into slavery so they can at least make some money off of showing mercy to their brother. Did you catch that? Compared to the rest of Joseph’s brothers, Reuben and Judah actually think that they are showing mercy to Joseph… by throwing him in a pit and selling him into slavery! That’s how badly their consciences have been seared! They are committing horrible atrocities against their own brother, and they see it as mercy! When we don’t honor God as the Lord of our lives, we too are susceptible to committing heinous acts. The more that we give in to our sinful nature, the less evil these acts appear to us. No matter where you are in your walk with God, we all have sinned and fallen short of His glory. The closer that we get to Him, the more the ugliness of our sin is revealed to us. The closer we get to the Truth, the more we understand the truth of sin: Sin is horrible, disgusting, and wretched! And yet, many of us can commit certain sins without even feeling guilty about it. When we don’t see anything wrong with breaking God’s Word, violating His commands, and rebelling against His lordship through sin, we are in trouble. When we think that it was just a quick look at something sexual, it was just a small lie, it was only a little greedy or selfish; when we think that we deserve that new toy, or we’ve earned this or that right; when we give in to pride or vanity or gluttony because everyone else is doing it, we are only demonstrating that our consciences are seared. If we are to have a right view of our sin and God’s holiness, then we need to repent of our sin, and ask God to renew our consciences by the power of the Holy Spirit. Ask God to help us to see sin for what it is, not to make light of it, but to hate it as He does. Ask God today to give you a new heart that desires to follow Him above all else. Ask before its too late, and you too feel righteous about selling your brother into slavery because it seems better than your original plan to murder him. Christians are called to be a light in the darkness and there is no such things as “loving someone from afar!!!” We are called to treat each other as Christ treats us.

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