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#wtsdevo goodness
walkthesame · 7 years
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Through Every Generation (#wtsdevo faithfulness)
“If we are faithless, he remains faithful— for he cannot deny himself.” -2 Timothy 2:13
I am deeply grateful that my God's faithfulness doesn't hinge on my faith. He would still be just if He measured our relationship based on what I offered Him. After all, we operate that way down here among the mortals.
One of our greatest flaws as human beings—what most separates us from a holy God is our failure to be perfect. We lie, we cheat, we cut corners and we disappoint. And because we're humans rubbing elbows with other humans on a daily basis, it can be easy to attach our standards to Him as well. Even accidentally.
He is holy and perfect. Anything short of that is a direct contradiction to His nature. He cannot fail. He can't be unloving. Even in His judgement He loves us. Also, while He deserves our best effort and perfect faith, we fall majorly short. Our God is still faithful.
All of our human characteristics are mere shadows compared to His. He is the essence and definition of faithfulness. He can never leave us or forsake us (Hebrews 13:5). Nothing can separate us from His love (Romans 8:38-39). The faithfulness of the Lord endures forever (Psalm 117:2).
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Devotional Series: Faithfulness (#wtsdevo faithfulness)
By: Julian Davis \ Personal // Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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Motivated for Good (#wtsdevo goodness)
“Show yourself in all respects to be a model of good works, and in your teaching show integrity, dignity, and sound speech that cannot be condemned, so that an opponent may be put to shame, having nothing evil to say about us.” - Titus 2:7-‬8‬
I used to have a lead foot. I treated the speed limit as merely a suggestion. Life behind the wheel was full of impatience and anxiety—all brought on by myself. I'd look for patrol cars or to see if traffic ahead of me was slowing down. If not, I put the pedal to the metal.
So I’ve had my share of speeding tickets. And to think it all could have been avoided if I just obeyed the law. I drove not to get caught. My motivation wasn't to abide by the God-to-man-appointed law. I had a bigger issue than just speeding. It was an integrity problem.
Although now I feel delivered from my racecar driver complex, that integrity struggle has leaked it's way into other facets of my life. Not long after engaging in the fight for integrity comes good ol’ legalism. And if I'm not careful my motivation can become not getting caught rather than pleasing the Father—bringing Him glory in my conduct at all times.
Am I moved to obey Him simply because of who He is? My only hope is that He grants me Psalm 19 verse 14:
“Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable in your sight, O LORD, my strength, and my redeemer.”
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Devotional Series: Goodness (#wtsdevo goodness)
By: Julian Davis \ Personal // Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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Bless the Lord (#wtsdevo goodness)
“I will bless the LORD at all times; his praise shall continually be in my mouth. My soul makes its boast in the LORD; let the humble hear and be glad. Oh, magnify the LORD with me, and let us exalt his name together! I sought the LORD, and he answered me and delivered me from all my fears. Those who look to him are radiant, and their faces shall never be ashamed. … Oh, taste and see that the LORD is good! Blessed is the man who takes refuge in him!” - Psalm 34:1-5, 8
Seventeen years ago this past Tuesday (October 31), Jesus Christ changed my life forever. My mom shared with me the truths that Jesus had died to save me so I could be forgiven. My small self knew that there was a standard of perfection (the holiness of God) that I could never live up to. Even as a child, I knew I was not perfect. The news that Jesus had lived up to that standard for me was amazing! I knew that I needed Him to make the way for me to be forgiven by God. I asked Him to save me, and He did. Heaven was filled with joy in that moment (Luke 15:7).
This is why I reflect on the goodness of God this week. He didn’t have to do that for me – but He did. And He did it for you too. Jesus covers all our shame and restores our relationship with our loving Creator, a relationship that we couldn’t fix by ourselves. Because of Jesus, our God sees us as His children whom He loves. Because of Him, I call out with the Psalmist, “Oh, magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt his name together!” This is true in my life: “I sought the Lord, and he answered me and delivered me from all my fears”! How incredible is the goodness of our God. He is not far away; He is right there ready to come and get His children. Fifteen years ago this week, He came and got me. My eternity was sealed by the God of the universe (2 Corinthians 1:21-22).
Over the past fifteen years of this relationship, I can say again with the Psalmist that I have tasted and seen the goodness of the Lord. He never changes, never fails, is never unfaithful. Any good in me is from Him. Jesus has truly changed not just my external life but my inner being. The ultimate purpose and fulfillment of my life is nothing if not found in Him whom I was created by and for. “In Your presence there is fullness of joy.” (Psalm 16:11)
I share this part of my story, the beginning, in the hope that it will encourage someone who reads it, that it will bring glory to my God, and that it will spark in someone a desire for the same kind of life change. All that is necessary is faith that Jesus really did live the perfect life that we could not live, die the death that we could not die, and rise again to eternal life so that we could spend forever with Him, our lives on this earth dedicated to His glory and praise. Our God is so good that He made the way for us to come back to Him when we couldn’t even see that we needed it.
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Devotional Series: Goodness (#wtsdevo goodness)
Posted by: Rebecca Hankins \ Personal //  Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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A Good God (#wtsdevo goodness)
“For I know that nothing good dwells in me, that is, in my flesh. For I have the desire to do what is right, but not the ability to carry it out.” -Romans 7:18
Hopefully we can all own this verse. It's only been a few years since I've been able to look at it honestly. Because we live among the measures of good, better and best by our standards. But God, in His perfect goodness is the only truly good One. Paul understood that.
If there is anything about me that isn't utterly despicable, it's only by the grace of God and His goodness through me. Not from me or by me. We are simply the vessels that display His goodness. Pride can convince us otherwise but only God is good.
He is a good, good Father.
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Devotional Series: Goodness (#wtsdevo goodness)
By: Julian Davis \ Personal // Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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His Goodness Prevails (#wtsdevo goodness)
Psalm 91 happens to be one of my most favorite Psalms in the Bible because on a bad day, it reminds me that God’s goodness stands out and breaks away all negativity and replaces it with the comfort and grace of God and everything good that you can possibly imagine.
I think that with so much happening these days around in our world, it is easy to lose it and fall into the trap where you end up feeling like everything is going downhill. And in circumstances such as this it is important to journey on ahead with positivity and so much hope. The way that one can do this is by being reminded of God’s goodness and the best source of this is through His own words in the Bible.
The Bible is filled with reminders about His goodness but simply taking Psalm 91 alone and unpacking it, tells us that no matter the season, situation or circumstance, God’s goodness prevails. It comes through even in the times when you might never expect it but it surely does come.
God is our Father and He loves us more than we can ever imagine. He is always for us and is always with us even in the stormy times of life - carrying us through and allowing us to grow in our wisdom and strength. All we need to do it believe and cling onto Him.
He never fails. His goodness is here to stay.
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Devotional Series: Goodness (#wtsdevo goodness)
By: Jude \ Personal // Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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His Steadfast Love (#wtsdevo goodness)
“For the Lord is good; his steadfast love endures forever, and his faithfulness to all generations.” - Psalm 100:5
There was a time in my life not too long ago where I questioned God’s goodness in my heart. For a few months, the circumstances of my life had been going in a direction that I thought was going to change my life for good. I thought I had reached a point where the next steps for me were clear, where I knew what was going to happen. I was so excited about the future that seemed to be in front of me. But in just a few days, all that changed completely. Almost every aspect of what I had planned fell apart. I no longer knew what I would be doing in the next few months, and I no longer knew who would be with me on that journey. It was one of the loneliest times of my life as I wrestled with trusting the Lord and remaining close to Him while I waited to see what He would actually bring about. Graciously He provided everything I needed and more, and now I am so thankful for the way He redirected my life. His plan was infinitely better than mine.  
But what I struggled with as all this was happening was that I questioned whether God was really being “good” in all this. I felt like He had given me certain gifts of people in my life as well as a job opportunity. I felt like I had been unjustly robbed of those things when they were taken away. I wondered whether I had done something wrong, or whether I had just misheard God’s voice. It took many months, but after seeking the Lord and coming to Him in honesty and brokenness, He said to me clearly that He had never changed that whole time (Malachi 3:6). He had remained good. He had remained faithful and loving to me. What was missing was my perspective. His goodness never changes because He never changes! I simply could not see it from my partial and flawed perspective. Even when the Lord spoke that truth to me, I had to believe it by faith. I could not explain everything that happened. Today, I still may not be able to explain every detail, but what I definitely can explain is that since then, I have seen the goodness of the Lord (Psalm 27:13). Even in taking things away, He was actually merciful and loving and good because He knew what was best for me. He knew what His plan was all along, and just because I didn’t, didn’t mean that He wasn’t good. Friends, we can have confidence that our Lord never changes. No matter what happens, He is faithful and He is good. He is our rock solid foundation that we can trust. This means that when our circumstances seem awful or even irredeemable, the fact that He is good means that He is actually working in them to bring about His plan for our good as His children.  Let’s praise Him for His goodness today, rest in that foundation, and ask Him to help us trust Him by faith that He is good even when we can’t see it.
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Devotional Series: Goodness (#wtsdevo goodness)
Posted by: Rebecca Hankins \ Personal //  Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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Little Steps of Big Faith (#wtsdevo goodstarts)
“Noah did everything just as God commanded him.” -  Genesis 6:22
            It’s tempting to put together a list of all the things that need to fall into place before we can have a good start. I easily slip into this when it comes to my own dreams and plans. It feels so much safer if all our materials and opportunities are carefully catalogued before we contemplate stepping into a God-sized assignment.
           But Noah did not slip into this mindset when God called him to step into what seemed an impossible task and I’m challenged by Noah’s response. In Genesis 6, God commands Noah to build the ark, giving him all of the details on how this ark was to be built. The ark needed to be 450 feet long, 75 feet wide and 45 feet high; the perfect size to keep safe the people and animals who would enter it.
           I can hear the flood of questions that would have spilled from my own lips in this situation: “How is this possible, God? When will I find the time? Build an ark that size – me and what army?”
           Noah’s response, in comparison, is simple, but so powerful. The first thing Scripture says is, “Noah did everything just as God commanded him” (Genesis 6:22). Noah didn’t question how this was possible or demand that the details be made clearer to him. God had given him the first step of the process and Noah faithfully followed and obeyed where God led him.
           He trusted that, when the time came, God would reveal the next step and that’s exactly what God does in Genesis 7-9, as He leads Noah, his family and the animals safely through the flood and then out into the newly dry earth. One step at a time, God led Noah through the whole process and Noah trusted that that was more than enough. Noah understood that he only needed to follow through on the very next step and that God was faithful to reveal the rest in time.
           See, when it comes to good starts, it’s not so much about having every step of the plan laid out for us. When we trust that God is faithful to lead us through in His time – no matter how impossible the task appears – and we ourselves faithfully follow Him, there’s nothing holding us back.
           It’s just a matter of beginning.
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Devotional Series: Good Starts (#wtsdevo goodstarts)
By: Alexandria // Personal // Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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Freedom in a New Beginning (#wtsdevo goodstarts)
New beginnings are sometimes scary. That can be true for some people when it comes to thinking about having a new life in Christ. I have discovered that some people are scared that God is going to force them to go to Africa or do a year-long mission in the slums if they decide to give their life to Him. For some people yes, when they get renewed in Jesus they feel called to that, but God doesn't force people to do things that they don't want to do. He gives us the desires of our hearts, so whether it be feeling called to other countries to serve, or just to serve in your workplace by being kind to everyone, God is just pleased with us choosing to be made new—becoming free in Him. Coming into a new life in Jesus doesn't mean being pushed out into the mission field or attending church three times a week. Although, those can be very beneficial, new life in Jesus is about receiving love and giving love, it’s about changing your life in that your past no longer defines you, and your character becomes Christ-like through the renewing of your mind with His Word and Spirit. It’s about realizing your true identity, which is a son or daughter of God. Yes, God expects us to have a changed life when we become a new person in Jesus, and this can be expressed right where we’re at. In the work place, in our homes, at school, and in the mission field. He calls us to just be—His beloved, His family, His people.
 We don’t have to perform works for it, we don’t have to go on a radical trip to be renewed in Him. All we have to do is ask for Him to change us, be determined to follow Him in all our ways, and learn to receive His love and grace freely, as well as give it freely. Being made new in Jesus isn’t scary—it’s adventurous, fun, and freeing, and anyone can receive this new life right where they’re at.
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Devotional Series: Good Starts (#wtsdevo goodstarts)
By: Kiana // Personal // Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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The Comeback (#wtsdevo goodstarts)
“You’re too far gone.”
The devil is a liar. That is all he ever has been and all he ever will be. This statement you see above is his weapon to the brokenhearted, the beaten, the damned. This is his way of trying to not only get you to hit rock bottom, but ensnaring you there in such a way that you feel you will never again have the strength it takes to do something, anything to rise to your feet.
Now, the good thing about rock bottom is this: Once you’re there, the only place to look is up. Whenever we stop looking at OURselves and OUR situation and start looking up to the face of The One who created and saved us, we have the opportunity to see that we aren’t too far gone. This is just the start, a start of a life filled with the joy and peace that comes with knowing we are held by a Father who has a specific path for each and every one of us. The best part about all this is that He never changes.
Hebrews 13:8 says that “He is the same yesterday, today and forever.” So if in the beginning He loved us, then that means He also loved us when His son was dying on a tree, He loved us while we were in our mother’s womb, He loved us before we could even speak His name, He loved us when we were so lost and broken we thought about ending ourself, He loves us now, and He will love us through eternity. And that is the amazing miracle that is the love of the Lord our God.
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Devotional Series: Good Starts (#wtsdevo goodstarts)
Posted by: Conner Folger\ Personal // Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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Greatness starts from the small (#wtsdevo goodstarts)
Small beginnings have defined some landmark and memorable moments throughout the Bible and these have proved that no matter how small, little or in-significant a start has been, the impact it makes is incredible. At first it may seem like our start isn't all that awesome or worthy enough to be remembered down the road. It might look weird, awful or even embarrassing. But fast-forward time and how you feel about your start may surely change.
The impressive trees you see around you don't all start like that. In the beginning they are little tiny seeds or plants. But with time they end up becoming mighty and majestic in size providing shelter and making our world a tree-more beautiful. Nature aside, taking some examples from the Bible - consider Moses. His greatest story started from his exile - forgotten and insignificant. But as time progressed, he became one of the greatest prophets with one of the greatest stories in the Bible. Even better - Jesus! His story started in the most insignificant of circumstances. No one really knew Him or even cared. But fast forward to today, and there is no greater name than the Name of Jesus. 
What I am trying to share is that, greatness can be achieved without having to have your beginning all great and mighty. All that is needed is a whole lot of faith and belief. Belief in that you will reach the finish line of your journey and faith that nothing will come your way knowing that Jesus is leading you to where you should be. Time will pass but God will reward your patience and faithfulness with something beyond your expectations. ____________________________________________
Devotional Series: Good Starts (#wtsdevo goodstarts) By: Jude \ Personal // Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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Patient in Tribulation (#wtsdevo patience)
Romans 12:12 - Rejoice in hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in prayer.
When I go through a difficult time or situation, usually my impulse reaction is to try to make it stop as soon as possible. I don’t want to be in the trial because it hurts or because it is difficult. We as humans want to avoid pain and suffering at all costs, so much so that entire religions like Buddhism are centered around that idea. So many aspects of our lives have been constructed for the purposes of making things easier and preventing us from experiencing suffering or pain. In my life recently, I have seen my own tendency to try to protect myself from pain and make a struggle end as soon as possible.
Now, I’m not trying to say that avoiding pain and struggle is inherently wrong or sinful. I think there can certainly be aspects of it that are, and I definitely don’t think that we should seek out those things. But here’s the thing about living in our world: we are inevitably going to experience trial, struggle, pain, and suffering at some point in our lives if we are living in the real world. And instead of encouraging us to do what our gut reaction is (to escape), God’s Word exhorts us to a higher standard. He wants to actually use those things in our lives for His glory and our good (Romans 8:28). Instead of escaping, he says that we should rejoice in the hope that we have in Him. We should constantly be in prayer, which will keep us connected to His Spirit and bring us peace. And we should be patient in tribulation. We often don’t have any control over it in the first place, so instead of fighting and trying to escape when we know we can’t do it ourselves, we need to be patient and wait for the storm to pass. Something I have been learning recently is that while in a storm of life, being patient doesn’t have to mean being passive. Instead, I can ask God what He wants to teach me from the situation about life, about His Word, about who He is. I can ask Him to use it to make me more like Him. I can ask Him to show me more of who He is and draw me closer to Himself. I can ask Him to use the trial of my life to help someone else grow nearer to God. Join me in asking God to do that in each of our lives today.  
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Devotional Series: Patience (#wtsdevo patience)
Posted by: Rebecca Hankins \ Personal //  Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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Filling up that Empty Space (#wtsdevo kindness)
Once I heard someone saying that his inability felt like a huge gaping hole in his life that simply sat there, empty and breaking everything else good that was around him. He said that he wished that someone could fill that hole up so that he could heal.
It made me realize that most of us come across those situations in life where we feel like there’s something empty inside. And worst of all, it is eating us away slowly and steadily and we simply can’t do anything about it on our own and by our own strength. But in that situation, if someone chooses to help us and lift us up, everything changes. Our worries our gone. Our stresses no more and things feel like they are going to be okay after all. That’s because someone’s kindness filled the empty void that was in our life. It feels like we are whole again.
Kindness does more than meets the eye. It heals, it brings joy, it transforms lives and it makes us whole again. Sounds like Jesus doesn’t it? We were a wretched people, living life our own way and by our own terms. What we didn’t realize was that we were opening up wounds within ourselves and by the day, they got raw and inflamed. God didn’t have to save us but He saw our hurting hearts. He wanted us to be more. He wanted us to be the way He created us to be. And out of His sheer kindness and love for us, He sent us His Son. That chasm that once was between us and God was now filled by the incredible sacrifice that Christ made for us. His kindness saved us and here we are.
Remember that being kind to others is more than just helping someone. It is a lifestyle for us Christians and it is part of who we are and our identity. When we choose to be kind, we allow Christ to shine onto others through our lives. We may not realize it but every little act of kindness plays a part in changing the world.
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Devotional Series: Kindness (#wtsdevo kindness)
By: Jude \ Personal // Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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Being Faithful (#wtsdevo patience)
The one cycle or process that has remained consistent throughout the ages is growth. Let me start off by saying that all (and perhaps many) good things come out of being patient. And why patience? Because we have this thing called growth and this process of growth exists within so many things and aspects of our lives that we've come to take it for granted.
The very first thing about us - literally us, comes out of the result of patience. Our birth! The process takes months and once that perfect time has completed, so are we ready to be born. And then again, we don't come out a man or a woman. For that to happen, our own lives need to go through the process of growth. We start off knowing literally nothing and we grow up knowing and doing everything in our own unique ways. If you even take a piece of machinery, you don't have the whole genie effect where you'd have it at the snap of a finger. Initially the pieces of that machine need to designed, tested, assembled, tested again and then its becomes ready to go out into the wild. Growth exists in so many things and what's easy to notice is that this process of growth needs to be complete and needs its own time to ensure that whatever results, become the best it can be.
Our births become premature if we don't go through the entire process of pregnancy, we don't mature if we don't take the time or the effort to grow. A machine would be in-operable or easily broken if not assembled to its fullest. And we too as human beings and Christians would be incomplete and fragile if we don't allow God to work in us through His time and pace.
Within us lies the great expectations and intentions that God has for us and they start off being little seeds. We are then taken through life and in parallel, this journey that God has laid out of us. A journey that works and operates in God's time and in God's plan. When we choose to be patience and take this road, the seeds planted within us grow gradually as we take on this journey. Soon we become people who reflect much of Christ in our own lives and with time, we begin to emulate Him in our ways, actions and our interactions.
Our start may seem really insignificant and unworthy but God calls us to start where we are and to be faithful in patience. When we choose Him, He will make our faith and patience in Him result in fruitfulness.
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Devotional Series: Patience (#wtsdevo patience)
By: Jude \ Personal // Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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Kindness over Condemnation (#wtsdevo kindness)
The Samaritan woman said to him, “How is it that you, a Jew, ask for a drink from me, a woman of Samaria?” (For Jews have no dealings with Samaritans.) -John 4:9
This is such a sweet parable. Not only was it taboo for a man to confront a woman back then, it was well known that Jews and Samaritans did not associate with one another. A double whammy. So when Jesus approached "the woman at the well" He was overstepping some major boundaries.
Unfortunately, there are still some people groups and locations that are considered off limits. Certain races aren't welcomed and certain social classes are thought to be best remaining separate. But there is one universal action that could open the door that leads to change. It could loosen the brick that drops the entire wall.
Kindness. And at its finest it's given undeservingly. This kind of action can't be mustered up from our will. Granted, we can be really, really nice. We can be compassionate. But kindness—this kindness only comes through the very Spirit of God.
It's nothing different from the grace He gives us or His eagerness to give us good things. At the very least, He is kind to give us a roadmap with all the directions and detours to avoid destruction. See, kindness meets a need. It bridges the gap. So we offer it freely as it is offered to us.
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Devotional Series: Kindness (#wtsdevo kindness)
By: Julian Davis \ Personal // Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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The Harvest Lesson (#wtsdevo patience)
Sometime back, I happened to watch this documentary where it showed how corporate giants were forcing farmers to grow their crop faster. To help these farmers with this, they provided them with a whole load of chemicals and other types of treatment. The crops grew faster at a rate that out-ran the pace of natural growth and these crops also seemed unusually “prettier” with vivid colours, wholesome surfaces and simply perfect. However with this process looping around in a cycle over the last few years, there came some immensely negative impacts.
Whilst crops grew up faster, farmers, and their families and the people around in the area began to face health related issues. Children were weak, weird diseases started to come out of nowhere and people even began dying. It just got out of control and although we may not realize it, this is happening to some parts of our world even this very moment.
But compare this whole farming scenario to how it was done decades ago and you’ll find healthier people, thriving communities and a positive environment all around. That’s because back then, farmers would allow nature do its thing and therefore crops grew naturally in their perfect timing. These were much healthier and even though it may seem like a small thing, it impacted people  and communities as a whole in a great way.
What I am trying to say is that the people back then were living and experiencing the finest and goodness in its true nature. That’s because goodness and prosperity is a product of patience and to experience that, farmers had to be patient. But at the end of the day, what they receive and experience is the best there is.
As human-beings we are all driven towards success and we want to reach it the soonest possible. However with God, time takes on a whole different course and it is up to us to look up to Him in faith knowing that He surely will provide us with the best there is. And to maintain this faith, we need to have a whole lot of patience in us. Without it, it is clear that life becomes a confusing and tangly mess. Impatience does us no good except have us make terrible decisions and in the end we have to live through those messes that we made for ourselves.
Being Christian, we are left to trust in God and in His Word and know that only through patience, can we nurture the good thing that God has in store for us.
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Devotional Series: Patience (#wtsdevo patience)
By: Jude \ Personal // Walk the Same
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walkthesame · 7 years
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The Fruit of the Spirit (wtsdevo joy)
Galatians 5:22 – “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness…”
What is joy? Is it just a stronger form of happiness, or is it something more? Or something else entirely? It’s defined by some Bible scholars as “cheerfulness” or “calm delight,” a disposition marked by contentedness and peace. I think that what sets joy apart from simple happiness is its source. In Galatians, Paul is teaching the Christians about walking by the Spirit, not by the sinful desire of the flesh. He even says that the two desires are in opposition to one another. He draws a sharp distinction and clearly shows by examples what the desires of the flesh are: “sexual immorality, impurity, sensuality, idolatry, sorcery, enmity, strife, jealousy, fits of anger, rivalries, dissensions, divisions, envy, drunkenness, orgies, and things like these” (v. 5:19-21). Then he gives us a list of what things are “fruit of the Spirit” – which includes joy! This list describes not what we can do for ourselves (because of our flesh), but the fruit that the Holy Spirit of God produces in us when we are walking in Him! So the source of joy is the Spirit of God. This is more than just happiness or “cheerfulness” because those things more often than not have their source in circumstance. Joy, on the other hand, can only be produced by the Spirit of God working in us and giving us joy in Him despite other secondary circumstances. Friends, because God is the source of all joy and tells us that His Spirit produces it in us, that means we can actually pray and ask Him for joy and He will give it to us. He says in the Word that we know that we have whatever we ask for from Him when we ask in faith according to His will (1 John 5). Today I am going to boldly ask the Lord to fill me with joy in Him—join me!
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Devotional Series: Joy (#wtsdevo joy)
Posted by: Rebecca Hankins \ Personal //  Walk the Same
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