• The Illusion Of Success Part II
    Mar 26 2026
    The Illusion of Success – Part 2
    Rooted in Ecclesiastes 5:18–20, this devotional challenges our modern picture of “success” and calls us back to God’s design for a fulfilled life. While the world—and the enemy—push a vision of success measured by money, status, and exotic experiences, Scripture reminds us that it is “good for people to eat, drink, and enjoy their work… and to accept their lot in life” (v. 18).
    “The Illusion of Success – Part 2” explores how comparison and jealousy can quietly lead us to reject the very place God has planted us. When we chase someone else’s lifestyle, we resist God’s plan, acting out of selfish ambition instead of trust. But when we accept our God-given “lot in life,” our eyes open to the unique gifts He has placed within us.
    This devotional invites readers to redefine wealth—not as money or material gain, but as the intangible treasures God has given: the ability to serve, to give, to encourage, to build, to care. As we embrace who we are in Christ and where He has us right now, we discover a simpler, deeper success: enjoying our work, using our gifts, and living out true kingdom prosperity. In doing so, our testimonies grow stronger, our joy richer, and even in challenging times, we learn to fully enjoy the life God has planned for us.

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    55 mins
  • The Illusion Of Success
    Mar 25 2026
    “The Illusion of Success” is a Bible devotional based on 1 John 2:15–17 that challenges how we measure and celebrate success. Too often, we only call it “success” when it looks like a promotion, a bigger paycheck, a new contract, nicer clothes, a better car, a larger house, or richer food and entertainment. Our celebrations reveal what truly matters to us—and many times, it’s what the world offers, not what the Father values.
    John warns us, “Do not love this world nor the things it offers you,” reminding us that cravings for pleasure, for what we see, and for status and possessions do not come from God. Worldly success is an illusion when it pulls our hearts away from Him. Real blessing comes from the Father, so our celebration of any success should honor Him, not just elevate our lifestyle.
    Drawing also from John 15:5–8, this devotional shows how we often start out seeking God—reading, praying, striving to be honest and faithful—only to drift away once the blessings begin to flow. Jesus, the true vine, says that apart from Him we can do nothing, and branches that do not remain in Him wither. With a real enemy working to lure us off the narrow road onto the wide path of materialism and pride, this devotional is a call back to our first love.
    “The Illusion of Success” invites you to reexamine what you celebrate, remember to whom you belong, and re-center every achievement—big or small—on abiding in Christ and honoring the Father.

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    55 mins
  • Vision Changes Everything Part II
    Mar 24 2026
    Vision Changes Everything – Part 2
    Matthew 13:10–23
    In a world loud with wars, corruption, and injustice, it’s easy to see only what the world shows us—and miss what God is actually doing. This devotional, “Vision Changes Everything – Part 2,” calls believers to see with the eyes of Christ by living in His Word every day, not just on Sundays and Wednesdays.
    Focusing on Matthew 13:11–12 and 19, we explore Jesus’ promise that His followers are permitted to understand the secrets of the kingdom of heaven. Those who truly listen to His teaching receive increasing understanding and an abundance of knowledge, while those who only hear superficially lose even the little they have. We also examine the “seed on the footpath”—the message planted in hearts but quickly stolen by the enemy because it was never understood.
    This devotional challenges us to:
    • Align our minds and attitudes with Christ by consistently studying Scripture.
    • Recognize that spiritual blindness isn’t cured by church attendance alone, but by daily, intentional fellowship with Jesus.
    • Guard the word God plants in our hearts through understanding, so the enemy cannot steal our hope, confidence, or faith.
    • Shift our vision from fear of world events to confidence in the God who rules over them.

    When our vision changes—when we see the world as Christ sees it—our fears change, our priorities shift, and our hearts become firmly rooted in the kingdom that cannot be shaken.

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    54 mins
  • Vision Changes Everything
    Mar 23 2026
    Vision Changes Everything is a transformational devotional that challenges believers to go beyond simply choosing God—to fully embracing a Christ-centered mindset that reshapes how we see, think, and respond to the world around us. Rooted in Philippians 2:5–11, with a powerful emphasis on verse 5, this devotional calls us to adopt the very attitude of Christ Jesus—an attitude marked by humility, obedience, purpose, and unwavering alignment with the will of God. It reminds us that true vision is not just about what we see with our eyes, but how we perceive, process, and respond from the depths of our hearts. Too often, we commit our lives to God, yet continue to operate with the same mindset we had before. This devotional confronts that disconnect, urging believers to allow God to transform their thinking, as reinforced in Romans 12:2. When our minds are renewed, our vision changes—and when our vision changes, everything changes. This is not about perfection—it’s about intentionality. It’s about being purposeful in our words, deliberate in our actions, disciplined in our thoughts, and aligned in our prayers. It’s about living in such a way that every part of our lives reflects the character and nature of Christ. As servants of the Most High God, we are not called to conform to the environments we enter—we are called to change them. We are atmosphere shifters. Where there is chaos, we bring order. Where there is strife, we bring peace. Where there is brokenness, we bring healing. But this transformation can only happen when our attitudes, principles, and vision are aligned with Christ. Jesus, though fully divine, humbled Himself and stepped into humanity to model what it means to serve, obey, and love God completely—even unto death. Because of His obedience, He was exalted above all, and every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that He is Lord. This devotional is a call to reflect that same mindset—not for status, not for position, but for purpose. Because when your vision aligns with Christ…
    your life no longer blends in—it stands out.
    your presence no longer adapts—it transforms.
    and your service is no longer routine—it becomes powerful. Vision changes everything.

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    54 mins
  • Somebody Is Lying
    Mar 19 2026
    Somebody's Been LyingA
    Foundational Scripture "But if our gospel be hid, it is hid to them that are lost: In whom the god of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them."
    — 2 Corinthians 4:3-4 (NLT)
    Description
    Have you ever looked around at this world and felt like something just isn't right—like somebody's been lying to us all along? In 2 Corinthians 4:3-4, the Apostle Paul reveals a sobering truth: if the Gospel is hidden, it's hidden only from those who are perishing, those whose minds have been blinded by Satan, the god of this world. This devotional pulls back the veil on the enemy's greatest strategy—a strategy deployed against us from the moment we entered this world, designed either to deceive us into willingly walking toward our own destruction or to actively attack and destroy us every single day. We live in a microwave generation, a corrupted timeline where we're bombarded with lies disguised as promises: "Get rich now, no effort required," "Lose weight without discipline," "Take what you want just because." But the Kingdom of God doesn't work that way—everything must be earned through effort, understanding, and discipline; we must learn to say no, to walk away, to recognize our goals, identify those trying to trip us up, see the traps along our path, and discern truth from deception. The enemy's power lies in the fact that most people don't even believe spiritual warfare is real; they don't believe an entity exists that has been lying to them and attacking them since birth. But for those of us blessed enough to find the narrow path and courageous enough to walk it, we know the battle is real—our character, motives, emotions, faith, and every aspect of our lives come under attack daily. As a minister and believer, I pray every day that if my words or actions cause confusion, others will ask me why, giving me the opportunity to introduce them to the God I serve so they may know the same love, grace, and mercy I enjoy. Those walking in the light can clearly see that some people simply don't understand why we do what we do—and that's because the veil remains over their eyes. But when they finally ask, when curiosity breaks through the blindness, that's our moment to shine the light of Christ into their darkness. Somebody's been lying, but now it's time to expose the truth: spiritual warfare is real, the enemy is real, but so is the Light—and Light always overcomes darkness.


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    48 mins
  • Countermeasures_ Seeking The Truth Part 4
    Mar 18 2026
    Countermeasures: Seeking the Truth – Part Four
    Based on 1 John 1:5–10
    In this part of our “Countermeasures: Seeking the Truth” devotional, we step into the second half of 1 John 1:5–10, where John confronts us with a hard but liberating reality: we are sinners. Not just on our “bad days,” not only when we are clearly wrong, but every day—often in ways we don’t see, don’t understand, or don’t even consider “a big deal.”
    John exposes one of the enemy’s most subtle strategies: deception about our own condition. The devil wants us to believe that if we don’t feel guilty, we must be innocent. If we didn’t “mean” to do wrong, then it must not be sin. If our culture calls something normal—like living together and having sex outside of marriage—it can’t really be that serious before God. But Scripture says otherwise. There are sins we commit intentionally, and sins we commit unintentionally. There are things we excuse or ignore that still break the law and heart of God.
    When we tell ourselves, “I didn’t do anything wrong today,” we may be confusing “I didn’t offend my own conscience” with “I didn’t sin.” God’s standard is higher and holier than our feelings, our habits, or our society’s norms. We live in a world already corrupted by “the prince of the power of the air,” so much of what is ordinary and accepted stands in quiet rebellion against God. To claim we love God and yet insist we have no sin is to step out of the light and into self-deception—exactly where the enemy wants us.
    Yet John does not leave us in condemnation; he points us to a powerful countermeasure: truthful confession. When we agree with God about our sin—both the obvious and the hidden—something beautiful happens. We step into the light. We break agreement with the enemy’s lies. We position ourselves under the promise that God is “faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” Our ongoing repentance doesn’t prove we are perfect; it proves we belong to Him.
    This devotional invites you to:
    • Let go of the illusion that “no obvious wrong” means “no sin.”
    • Ask the Holy Spirit to reveal not only the sins you know, but the ones you’ve ignored, minimized, or never recognized.
    • Embrace daily confession, not as a ritual of shame, but as a rhythm of walking in the light.
    • Renew your commitment to God’s high standard—not because you’ve already reached it, but because you refuse to stop pursuing it.

    “Countermeasures: Seeking the Truth – Part Four” calls you to stand against the devil’s deception by facing the truth about your sin—and, in doing so, to experience the freedom, cleansing, and assurance that come only from living fully in the light of God’s grace.

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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • Countermeasures_ Seeking The Truth Part V
    Mar 17 2026
    “Then Jesus told him, ‘I entered this world to render judgment—to give sight to the blind and to show those who think they see that they are blind.’” (John 9:39, NLT)
    This devotional, Countermeasures: Seeking the Truth Part 4, walks through John 9:35–41 and challenges us to honestly face our own spiritual blindness. The chapter begins with Jesus healing a man who was born blind—not as a punishment for sin, but so that “the works of God might be displayed in him.” That miracle sets off conflict in the community and exposes the hearts of the religious leaders. When the formerly blind man is questioned, pressured, and ultimately thrown out of the synagogue, his bold response—“Do you want to become his disciples too?”—reveals a powerful contrast: he is moving toward Jesus in simple faith, while the religious experts cling to being “disciples of Moses,” disciples of the law. This devotional highlights the significance of that difference: to be a disciple of Christ is to live under grace, where the impossible standard is met in Him, but to remain a disciple of Moses alone is to stay under a law no one can fully keep. When Jesus later finds the rejected man and reveals Himself, He explains that He came “to render judgment”—not merely to condemn, but to expose who is truly blind and who is truly seeing. The devotional presses this truth into our own lives: like someone active in church, serving and doing “all the right things,” we can still be spiritually blind, thinking we see because of our activity and rituals. Jesus’ judgment lovingly confronts that illusion. He tells the Pharisees that if they were truly ignorant—truly blind—they would not be guilty; but because they claim they can see and yet reject Him, their guilt remains. In the same way, once Christ reveals our condition and we refuse His diagnosis, we move from ignorance to guilt. The worst place for a believer is not weakness or struggle, but a willful decision to remain spiritually blind. This devotional urges the reader to study John 9 deeply, to receive Jesus’ judgment with an open heart, and to let Him heal their spiritual sight so they can truly see.

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    52 mins
  • Countermeasures: Seeking The Truth Part III
    Mar 16 2026
    Countermeasures – Seeking the Truth, Part 3
    Scripture: 1 John 1:5–10 (focus on vv. 5–6)
    In this devotional we slow down and study John’s words instead of simply reading them. John says, “This is the message we heard from Jesus and now declare to you” (v.5). That means what follows is not secondhand religion, but a direct word that Jesus shared with His disciples—men like Peter, Philip, Bartholomew, Matthew, and John himself. The message? “God is light, and there is no darkness in Him at all.”
    That truth isn’t surprising on the surface—God is love, God is truth, and in Him there is no shadow, no deceit, no hidden agenda. But verse 6 confronts us: “So we are lying if we say we have fellowship with God but go on living in spiritual darkness.” Here John forces us to examine the gap between what we say and how we live.
    In this episode, we explore how easy it is to fall into spiritual routine—Sunday church, Sunday best, Sunday worship—yet slip right back into cussing, fussing, gossiping, jealousy, and selfishness before we’ve even left the parking lot. Like Isaiah 29:13 warns, we can honor God with our lips while our hearts remain far from Him, living by “man‑made rules learned by rote.”
    “Countermeasures” calls us to push beyond what we inherited—beyond “Mama took me to church”—into a personal, transforming relationship with Christ. John challenges us to let God’s light expose our spiritual darkness and to allow the teachings of Jesus to shape our character at work, at home, and in private. If we claim fellowship with God, our actions, attitudes, and inner life must begin to reflect the light we say we walk in.

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    45 mins