Testing the Spirits: Discerning Truth in an Age of Deception

microscope

“In late September 1864 Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest was leading his troops north from Decatur, Alabama, toward Nashville. But to make it to Nashville, Forrest would have to defeat the Union army at Athens, Alabama. When the Union commander, Colonel Wallace Campbell, refused to surrender, Forrest asked for a personal meeting, and took Campbell on an inspection of his troops. But each time they left a detachment, the Confederate soldiers simply packed up and moved to another position, artillery and all. Forrest and Campbell would then arrive at the new encampment and continue to tally up the impressive number of Confederate soldiers and weaponry. By the time they returned to the fort, Campbell was convinced he couldn’t win and surrendered unconditionally!”  Today in the Word, June 27, 1993.

Text: 1 John 4:1, Acts 17:11, Matthew 7:15

In 1 John 4:1 the apostle John begins his warning with a word of affection: “Beloved.” Discernment is not rooted in suspicion or fear, but in love for God and truth. John does not say some spirits should be tested but he says every spirit. Every teaching, every prophetic claim, every spiritual movement, every viral message wrapped in religious language must be examined. God calls us to have discernment, not gullibility believing everything that sounds biblical. Every voice is not from Him. Testing the spirits means examining words and experiences comparing it to God’s truth and character. Always stay rooted in Scripture and prayer, so all of the lies and deception gets exposed. That way faith grows steady, wise, and always anchored in Christ through the Spirit’s guidance daily.

Currently we live in a time where information spreads faster than wisdom. So many influencers, social media, podcasts, live streams, and self-proclaimed spiritual authorities have created an overwhelming environment where confidence is mistaken for credibility and emotion is mistaken for truth. We have to always compare everything that is said and suggested to what the Bible says. When we read the bible we can see that Scripture reminds us that not every voice speaking “in the name of God” actually comes from Him.

car salesman

John told us why comparing and testing is necessary: “for many false prophets have gone out into the world.” False teaching is not a future threat, it is a present reality. Jesus Himself even warned that the closer we get to His return deception would increase, not decrease, and will continue to get worse until He is finally here. You’ll never hear false prophets announce themselves as being false; they do however appear Biblical, convincing, compassionate, and sometimes even successful.

Testing the spirits does not mean rejecting everything unfamiliar. It means evaluating everything carefully. The Bereans in Acts 17:11 provide a model for us: “Now these were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, examining the Scriptures daily to see whether these things were so.” The Bereans listened eagerly, soaked up everything they could, but they always verified everything diligently. They did not reject Paul’s teaching outright, but they did not just sit back and accept it blindly. They searched and compared it to the Scriptures daily to confirm whether what they heard aligned with God’s revealed truth.

This raises an important question: What does it mean to test the spirits? Biblically, it means evaluating the source, the message, and the fruit.

  • First, test the source. John will later say in 1 John 4:2 that every spirit that confesses Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is from God. At the core of Christian discernment is Christology, “a branch of Christian theology that studies the nature and work of Jesus Christ, focusing on his humanity, divinity, and role in salvation.” Any teaching that diminishes Jesus; His deity, His humanity, His authority, or His sufficiency fails the test. If we allow Christ to be reduced to a moral teacher, a political symbol, or a means to personal gain, we then know that the source is not from the Spirit of God.
  • Second, test the message. Does what the “prophets” are saying align with Scripture as a whole? God does not contradict Himself. Feelings, visions, dreams, and personal revelations must always support and match the written Word of God. We do not validate Scripture by our feelings and experience, every experience is validated by Scripture. If a prophetic message requires twisting verses, ignoring context, or adding to God’s Word, it should raise immediate concern.
  • Third, test the fruit. Jesus told us that we would recognize false prophets by their fruit. Does their teaching produce humility, repentance, holiness, and love for others? Or on the other side of things; does it produce fear, pride, division, obsession, and control? The Spirit of God leads people toward truth and transformation, not confusion and bondage. Don’t be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what is the good, well-pleasing, and perfect will of God. Romans 12:2

Being able to Test the spirits requires spiritual maturity. Being able to have discernment grows through prayer, immersion in Scripture, and obedience. A believer that is unfamiliar with God’s Word will struggle to recognize error. This is why deception becomes the most effective among those who consume spiritual content but neglect personal study. “An astonishing and horrible thing has happened in the land.The prophets prophesy falsely, and the priests rule by their own authority; and my people love to have it so. What will you do in the end of it?” Jeremiah 5:30-31

It is important to understand that discernment is not about superiority. It does not give us a license to have harshness or arrogance. Our goal is not to win arguments, but to guard hearts. Paul shows us in Ephesians 4:11-16 that immature believers are easily tossed by every wind of doctrine. Having good and proper judgement protects the church from instability and protects believers from spiritual harm.

hurricane

Finally, we need to understand that testing the spirits is not optional,  it is a responsibility. God has given His people the Holy Spirit, His Word, and the community of the church so that we may walk in truth together. In confusing times, discernment is an act of faithfulness: For if these things are yours and abound, they make you to not be idle or unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. For he who lacks these things is blind, seeing only what is near, having forgotten the cleansing from his old sins. Therefore, brothers,be more diligent to make your calling and election sure. For if you do these things, you will never stumble. 1 Peter 1:8-10

Thoughts to Ponder:

  1. What voices most influence your spiritual thinking right now?
  2. Are you more likely to accept teaching because it feels good or because it is biblical?
  3. How consistent is your personal study of Scripture?
  4. Have you ever shared or supported something spiritually without testing it first?
  5. What steps can you take this week to grow in biblical discernment?

Today, God is calling us to move from just a little bit of passive consumption to having active discernment. If you have relied on emotion, popularity, an influencer or culture more than Scripture, it is time to focus and return to the Word. Ask God to sharpen your spiritual awareness, to help you see the light, and align your heart with His truth. Choose to be a believer who tests, examines, and stands firm in God’s truth.

Prayer

Dear Heavenly Father, I want to thank You that You are a God of truth and not confusion. A God of order and not chaos. I live in a world filled with so many voices, help me to recognize Your voice above every other voice. Give me discernment through the Holy Spirit and a deep love for Your Word. Protect me from deception, strengthen my faith, and help me to walk in Your wisdom, humility, and obedience. May I honor You by holding fast to what is true and rejecting what is false. In Jesus Name Amen

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Testing the Spirits: Discerning Truth in an Age of Deception

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Renewing the Mind in a Corrupted Culture

The moment you give up your principles, and your values, you are dead, your culture is dead, your civilization is dead. Period. Oriana Fallaci

Text: Romans 12:1–2; Ephesians 4:22–24

“Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind…”

We are currently living in one of the loudest cultures in human history. Everyone has an opinion screaming out loud. The multiple algorithms are trying to shape our beliefs. Truth many times gets replaced with what feels right or what might get the most clicks, clickbait. Most believers will not lose their faith all at once. Instead they slowly drift because their minds are slowly influenced and shaped more by the current culture than by Christ.

Our culture is something that doesn’t just influence us, it forms us. Without realizing it, people can wake up one day believing things they never consciously chose. This confusion has become normal. Anxiety has sadly become common in all aspects of our lives. And truth, your truth, my truth, their truth, has become negotiable.

When we read the Bible we’ll see that it never tells us to escape the world. On the other hand we are warned not to be conformed by who is currently screaming the loudest. The battle we fight daily is largely is a constantly battle for our mind. Yet God gives each of us something radically different not just forgiveness, but transformation.

Biblical Foundation

Paul uses powerful language in Romans 12:2:

“Conformed” which means to be pressed into a mold from the outside. He then uses the word “Transformed” meaning to be changed from the inside out. Culture works externally constantly shaping us through repetition and outside influences. Oppositely God works internally by renewing us through truth. Notice Paul did not say “behave differently,” but to “think differently.” Having a renewed life begins with a renewed mind.

waterfall flowing into a river

Imagine a river that is flowing swiftly in one direction. Anything placed in it will naturally move with the current. That is how local culture works. If we do nothing, we will drift and follow the current. But when we renew our mind it is like swimming upstream, it requires intention, effort, and strength. Spiritual drift is always easier than spiritual growth.

Cultural Reality

Our culture has normalized the things Scripture warns us against and it questions truths that God has already settled. What was once clearly wrong is now celebrated as truth. What was once sacred is now mocked. This constant negative exposure subtly influences and reshapes how we think, the solution we have to have is being solidly anchored in God’s Word.

Ephesians 4:22–24 tells us to:

  • Put off the old self
  • Be renewed in the spirit of our minds
  • Put on the new self, created to be like God

This is not a one-time event. It is a daily process.

We can look at this from a scientific point of view, science shows us that our muscles will weaken without resistance. In the same way our mind weakens spiritually without intentional renewal. If we chose passive faith it will lead to cultural conformity.

Practical Application

Renewing the mind requires intentional replacement, not just casual resistance. You cannot overcome lies by merely rejecting them, you will need to overcome lies by replacing them with truth.

Ask yourself:

  • What voices shape my thinking the most?
  • What consumes more of my attention; Scripture or screens?
  • Do I filter culture through the Bible, or the Bible through my culture?

If we choose to fill our minds with fear, confusion, and compromise, we should not be shocking when our faith feels weak. But if we saturate our minds with God’s truth, discernment will grow naturally.

Thermostat

Did you realize that your mind is a lot like a thermostat, not a thermometer. A thermometer tells us what the temperature around it. A thermostat sets the temperature. There are some believers that try to reflect the culture instead of setting the tone through Christ like thinking. God has called His people to be thermostats in a confused world full of thermometers.

Reflection Thoughts

  • What beliefs have you adopted without realizing where they came from?
  • In what areas might culture be discipling you more than Scripture?
  • What would change if God’s Word became your primary influence again?

Renewal can only happen when we slow down, listen carefully, and allow the Holy Spirit to re-train how we think.

Hopeful Encouragement

The final goal is not isolation from culture, it is transformation when we are living it. God never told us to fear the world, but to discern the chaos in it. Having a renewed mind leads to clarity, peace, and a confident faith even in confusing overwhelming times. Renewal is possible and it does not matter how far you’ve drifted, God is ready to begin again. The same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead can renew your mind today.

“God is not asking you to figure everything out. He is asking you to stay rooted in truth.”

Prodigal Son

“A certain man had two sons. The younger of them said to his father, ‘Father, give me my share of your property.’ So he divided his livelihood between them. Not many days after, the younger son gathered all of this together and traveled into a far country. There he wasted his property with riotous living. When he had spent all of it, there arose a severe famine in that country, and he began to be in need. 

He went and joined himself to one of the citizens of that country, and he sent him into his fields to feed pigs. He wanted to fill his belly with the pods that the pigs ate, but no one gave him any. But when he came to himself, he said, ‘How many hired servants of my father’s have bread enough to spare, and I’m dying with hunger! I will get up and go to my father, and will tell him, “Father, I have sinned against heaven and in your sight. I am no more worthy to be called your son. Make me as one of your hired servants.”’

“He arose and came to his father. But while he was still far off, his father saw him and was moved with compassion, and ran, fell on his neck, and kissed him. The son said to him, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven and in your sight. I am no longer worthy to be called your son.’ “But the father said to his servants, ‘Bring out the best robe and put it on him. Put a ring on his hand and sandals on his feet. Bring the fattened calf, kill it, and let’s eat and celebrate; for this, my son, was dead and is alive again.

He was lost and is found.’ Then they began to celebrate. “Now his elder son was in the field. As he came near to the house, he heard music and dancing. He called one of the servants to him and asked what was going on. He said to him, ‘Your brother has come, and your father has killed the fattened calf, because he has received him back safe and healthy.’ But he was angry and would not go in. Therefore his father came out and begged him. 

But he answered his father, ‘Behold, these many years I have served you, and I never disobeyed a commandment of yours, but you never gave me a goat, that I might celebrate with my friends. But when this your son came, who has devoured your living with prostitutes, you killed the fattened calf for him.’ “He said to him, ‘Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours. But it was appropriate to celebrate and be glad, for this, your brother, was dead, and is alive again. He was lost, and is found.’” (Luke 15:11-32)

Prayer

Dear Heavenly Father, I am here to come before You aware of how easily my mind is shaped by the world around me. Forgive me for the moments I have allowed culture to define truth instead of Your Word. Renew my mind through Your Spirit. Help me to recognize what is false, cling to what is true, and walk in Your wisdom and discernment. Shape my thoughts, desires, and decisions so that my lives reflect Christ. In a confused world, make me clear. In a dark world, make me a light. I surrender my mind to You today.

Lord, lift me eyes to see beyond what is temporary. Help me not to fix my gaze on what is seen, but on what is unseen, on Your promises, Your presence, and Your eternal Kingdom. When suffering feels close and answers seem to feel far away, anchor my heart in the truth that my present trials are not wasted, but are preparing me for a glory that far outweighs them all.

Father, forgive me for the times when I have allowed fear, anxiety, or the voices of this world to shape my perspective more than Your Word. Teach me to set my heart and mind on the things above, where Christ is seated at Your right hand. Remind me that my life is hidden with Christ, secure, held, and never forgotten.

For those who are weary tonight, bring renewal. For those who are discouraged, restore hope. For those who are suffering in silence, let Your Spirit be near and gentle. Give me strength not just to endure, but to trust, to believe that You are working even when I cannot see it. I place my life, my struggles, and my future in Your hands. In Jesus Name Amen

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What Is Truth?

Jesus before Pilate

Truth in an Age of Confusion

Verses: John 18:37–38; John 8:31–32; Psalm 119:160

Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing happened. 

Winston Churchill.

As the years pass there is more and more information it is everywhere. Opinions are endless, AI videos about everything, doctored pictures it has made us start to doubt what we see and hear. We now can access more voices in one day than people once heard in their entire lifetime. However, with all this noise, many are even more confused than ever. The question Pilate asked Jesus nearly two thousand years ago is even more important today that it ever has been: “What is truth?” (John 18:38).

When Pilate asked this question he was not sincere, it was weary and heavily cynical. He was surrounded by politics, pressure, and competing narratives, kind of sounds familiar. They created an environment that made truth felt slippery. There are so many ways today that our world feels the same. Truth is often treated as flexible, “my truth, your truth, it’s personal”, or even optional. We can see that Jesus never treated truth as a narrative, a statement or some weird rendering.

In John 18:37, Jesus declares, “For this purpose I was born and for this purpose I have come into the world to bear witness to the truth.” Truth is not something that is merely a concept or a philosophy. Truth is something Jesus embodies. He does not say, “I teach truth,” instead he said: “I am the truth.” (John 14:6)

Something to Think about

Imagine you are in the woods, turned around a little bit, trying to navigate with a compass that changes direction depending on how you feel. One day north is north; the next day north is wherever you think it should be. You would never reach your destination. In the same way, a culture without fixed truth cannot find its way it only wanders. Truth must be stable, or it cannot guide us.

Jesus offers truth that does not shift with trends or emotions. His truth anchors us. Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever. (Hebrews 13:8)

bible

Biblical Foundation

In John 8:31–32, Jesus says, “If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” Pay attention to the order: abiding leads to knowing, and knowing leads to freedom. There are many that want freedom without truth, but Jesus teaches that freedom is the result of truth, not a replacement for it.

Psalm 119:160 declares, “The sum of your word is truth.” Not part of it. Not the convenient parts, the definition of sum: the whole amount. All of it. God’s Word is not shaped by culture. On the other hand, culture is meant to be shaped by God’s Word.

Perception

One of the biggest dangers of a loud culture is that when the volume is turned up it gets mistaken for authority. There is a mistake that some will fall for, just because something is repeated over and over again does not make it true. Even when something feels right does not mean it is right. Having biblical discernment requires slowing down, opening Scripture, and asking, “What does God say?”

Truth is not discovered by following the crowd; it is revealed by listening to Christ.

Perspective

Consider how a doctor when diagnosing an illness. A good doctor does not change the diagnosis to make the patient feel better. The doctor tells the truth because healing depends on it. In the same way, God’s truth may confront us, but it always heals us. Lies may comfort temporarily, but truth transforms permanently.

Application

To follow Jesus in a confused world means we:

  • Measure every voice against Scripture
  • Choose obedience over popularity
  • Seek truth even when it challenges us

Truth is not something we customize; it is something we submit to.

Reflection Questions

  • What voices shape your thinking the most?
  • Where might you be believing something because it is popular rather than biblical?
  • Are you abiding in God’s Word, or just visiting it occasionally?

Conclusion

Jesus stands before Pilate, and before us, calm, unshaken, and certain. In a world asking, “What is truth?” Jesus answered not with an argument, but with His life. To know Him is to know truth. To follow Him is to walk in freedom. For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore, and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery. (Galatians 5:1)

Prayer

Dear Heavenly Father, I come before You as one of Your people, living in a world that often feels heavy, uncertain, and overwhelming. You are the truth. In a world full of noise, quiet my heart to hear Your voice. Give me discernment to recognize what is true and courage to live by it. Align my mind, choices, and life with Your Word. You see the outward pressures I carry, the weariness of my body, and the burdens of my heart. Yet You remind me that while the outer person may be wasting away, You are renewing me inwardly day by day.

Lord, lift me eyes to see beyond what is temporary. Help me not to fix my gaze on what is seen, but on what is unseen, on Your promises, Your presence, and Your eternal Kingdom. When suffering feels close and answers seem to feel far away, anchor my heart in the truth that my present trials are not wasted, but are preparing me for a glory that far outweighs them all.

Father, forgive me for the times when I have allowed fear, anxiety, or the voices of this world to shape my perspective more than Your Word. Teach me to set my heart and mind on the things above, where Christ is seated at Your right hand. Remind me that my life is hidden with Christ, secure, held, and never forgotten.

For those who are weary tonight, bring renewal. For those who are discouraged, restore hope. For those who are suffering in silence, let Your Spirit be near and gentle. Give me strength not just to endure, but to trust, to believe that You are working even when I cannot see it. I place my life, my struggles, and my future in Your hands. In Jesus Name Amen

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Living With Eternal Perspective

man playing a piano

Text: 2 Corinthians 4:16–18; Colossians 3:1–4

Seeing Beyond the Moment

It is said of one of the famous composers that he had a rebellious son who used to come in late at night after his father and mother had gone to bed. And before going to his own room, he would go to his father’s piano and slowly, as well as loudly, play a simple scale, all but the final note. Then leaving the scale uncompleted, he would retire to his room. Meanwhile the father, hearing the scale minus the final note, would writhe on his bed, his mind unable to relax because the scale was unresolved. Finally, in dismay, he would stumble down the stairs and hit the previously unstruck note. Only then would his mind surrender to sleep once again.

George MacDonald, Restoring Your Spiritual Passion.

One of the greatest dangers for believers when times are hard is not persecution or hardship it is short-sightedness. When we focus on what we can see, feel, or immediately experience, discouragement grows and hope shrinks. The Paul the apostle wrote to believers who were familiar with and lived through suffering, opposition, and loss. Paul breaks it down and speaks with remarkable clarity and confidence. His secret was not denial of pain but an eternal perspective having the ability to interpret present hardship in light of eternal truth.

Have you ever noticed that different situations will look depending on where you’re standing? When we were a child watching a storm we’d only see dark clouds and lightning, but if we are a pilot flying above it we will see clear skies and sunshine. Our perspective doesn’t change the storm, but it changes how we understand it.

The apostle Paul writes to believers who knew suffering firsthand, but he spoke with confidence and hope. His strength did not come from having easier circumstances, but because he held an eternal perspective, the ability to view present hardship through the lens of forever. Paul shows us that how we see determines how we endure. When we place eternity in the front we frame our thinking, today’s trials no longer will define us.

Eternal Perspective Sustains the Inner Person

“Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day.” (2 Corinthians 4:16)

Paul begins by recognizing reality. He highlights the outward person, our physical bodies, circumstances, and resources are wasting away. Bodies age. Energy fades. Circumstances take their toll. But while the outer self declines, God is quietly renewing the inner person.Through time, pressure, and hardship leaving scars. The Bible does not ignore this reality. In this verse Paul contrasts our outward decline with our inward renewal.

Think of a home under renovation. When we look at the outside it may look worse before it looks better, the dust, noise, and torn walls. But inside, there’s something stronger and more beautiful being built. An Eternal perspective reminds us that God’s primary work is not cosmetic; it is transformational.

Having an eternal viewpoint allows believers to understand that God is doing His deepest work inside us, not just the things around us. While our situations may drain our strength, God renews faith, character, and hope daily. When we limit our perspective to what we can measure, we lose heart our faith and hope. When we realize that God’s greatest works are usually invisible, our discouragement and dismay will lose its grip.

As a believer our hope is not found in preserving the temporary but in being renewed for eternity. When a believer only focuses on what is they can see, discouragement grows. But when we place our trust in God it will renew us daily on the inside, we discover strength that unfortunate circumstances cannot steal.

Suffering

Present Suffering Is Interpreted Through Eternal Weight

“For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all.” (2 Corinthians 4:17)

Paul’s language here is distinct. He does not minimize suffering by calling it imaginary; he reframes it by comparing it to eternity. Calling suffering “light” seems odd until we understand the comparison. Paul is not comparing pain to comfort; he is measuring it against eternity. The use of these words carry weight in the bible and conveys significance, substance, and lasting value. Paul tells us that the present suffering is on one side of the scale and eternal glory on the other, and eternity overwhelms the balance.

Imagine carrying around a backpack filled with rocks. The backpack feels heavy, until you compare it to the weight of a freight train. Paul sets up our suffering on one side of the scale and eternal glory on the other. He highlights how eternity overwhelms the balance. When we understand that suffering is temporary and glory is eternal, having unshakable endurance becomes possible without despair.

Suffering, in God’s presence, is not wasted. It is achieving something. Our trials will refine faith, deepen our trust, strengthen our dependence, and shape us for glory. Having an eternal perspective teaches us that pain is not pointless, and hardship is not final. Living through suffering is not meaningless; it is productive. It is like a weights used when training, resistance builds strength.

Faith Fixes Its Focus on the Unseen

“So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal.” (2 Corinthians 4:18)

Perspective is a matter of focus. Paul does not say we should ignore what is seen, he says we need to refuse to fix our eyes on it. Our temporary surroundings constantly demand attention: news cycles, financial pressure, health concerns, and cultural instability. The things we do not see, God’s promises, Christ’s reign, and the coming Kingdom, are more real and more permanent than anything we see with our eyes. An eternal perspective will train believers to evaluate life through God’s promises rather than current appearances. Our faith chooses where to rest its gaze.

The things we see in this world constantly demands our attention: headlines, fears, pressures, and an overabundance of social media opinions. Having faith chooses where to rest your gaze. The unseen realities of God’s promises, Christ’s reign, eternal life become more real and more lasting than what we can touch. What we focus on shapes what we fear, what we hope for, and how we live. When we fix our eyes on temporary things, fear and anxiety grows. If you have ever walked a narrow path understands this, if you look down, you stumble; look ahead, and you keep moving. When you fix your eyes on eternal truth, seeds are planted and peace takes root.

Eternal Perspective Reorients Our Identity

“Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above… For you died, and your life is now hidden with Christ in God.” (Colossians 3:1–3)

Paul refreshes believers memories that eternal perspective begins with identity. Paul reminds us again that our true identity is not found in surrounding circumstances but in Christ. If we accept the reality of Christ and who He is, our lives no longer belong solely to this world. Our true life is “hidden with Christ,” it’s securely protected by God Himself. When we are “hidden” with Christ this means we are secure, protected, and held beyond the reach of this world.

Truth liberates believers from living as though this world, and our current situation is all there is. Think about a valuable document that is locked in a fireproof safe. The building around the safe may shake and burn, but what is hidden remains secure. Just like the document in the safe, the believer’s life is safeguarded in Christ. When we secure our identity is and anchor ourselves in Christ, success and suffering no longer defines us. We live our lives from eternity backward, not from the next crisis forward. If we always remember who we belong to, the chaos, fear, anxiety of the world loses its power to define us.

home

Glory Is the Final Destination

“When Christ, who is your life, appears, then you also will appear with Him in glory.” (Colossians 3:4)

An eternal perspective ends with hope. Living the eternal perspective does not make believers passive; it makes them faithful. History is moving toward a conclusion, Christ’s return. The believer’s future is not uncertainty but glory. Every sacrifice, trial, and faithful act finds its meaning there. We endure today because we know how the story ends.

It’s like having a GPS it makes every journey easier when you know where you’re going. A long road is bearable when home is at the end. Our Christian story ends in glory not defeat. Christ is returning, and believers will share in His victory. Always remember that being a christian and having an eternal perspective does not remove hardship, but it assures us that suffering is not the final chapter.


Conclusion: Living Today in Light of Forever

Eternal perspective does not remove hardship, but it redeems it. It lifts our eyes, strengthens our faith, steadies our hearts and anchors our hope. When we live with eternity in view, we discover that today’s struggles, and trials are temporary and shaping tomorrow’s glory and Christ Himself is our reward.

Prayer

Dear Heavenly Father, I come before You as one of Your people, living in a world that often feels heavy, uncertain, and overwhelming. You see the outward pressures I carry, the weariness of our bodies, and the burdens of our hearts. Yet You remind me tonight that while the outer person may be wasting away, You are renewing me inwardly day by day.

Lord, lift me eyes to see beyond what is temporary. Help me not to fix my gaze on what is seen, but on what is unseen, on Your promises, Your presence, and Your eternal Kingdom. When suffering feels close and answers seem to feel far away, anchor my heart in the truth that my present trials are not wasted, but are preparing me for a glory that far outweighs them all.

Father, forgive me for the times when I have allowed fear, anxiety, or the voices of this world to shape my perspective more than Your Word. Teach me to set my heart and mind on the things above, where Christ is seated at Your right hand. Remind me that my life is hidden with Christ, secure, held, and never forgotten.

For those who are weary tonight, bring renewal. For those who are discouraged, restore hope. For those who are suffering in silence, let Your Spirit be near and gentle. Give me strength not just to endure, but to trust, to believe that You are working even when I cannot see it. I place my life, my struggles, and my future in Your hands. In Jesus Name Amen

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Do Not Be Afraid: God’s Most Repeated Command

General Patton

Text: Isaiah 41:10; Matthew 6:25–34

Fear’s Quiet Influence on the Human Heart

Fear shapes decisions, obedience, and daily living, often unnoticed

During World War II, a military governor met with General George Patton in Sicily. When he praised Patton highly for his courage and bravery, the general replied, “Sir, I am not a brave man. . . The truth is, I am an utter craven coward. I have never been within the sound of gunshot or in sight of battle in my whole life that I wasn’t so scared that I had sweat in the palms of my hands.” Years later, when Patton’s autobiography was published, it contained this significant statement by the general: “I learned very early in my life never to take counsel of my fears.”

Fear is one of the oldest and most powerful forces that helps shape human behavior. It impacts not only how people react to danger, but how they make decisions, raise families, spend money, speak. Whether or not we remain silent and even how we serve God. Fear hardly ever announces itself loudly. Fear will disguise itself as caution, overplanning, control, or even what we call “being realistic.” If we read the Bible we will see throughout Scripture, there is one command echoes again and again from Genesis to Revelation: “Do not be afraid.”

God’s Command Is Grounded in His Presence

“Fear not, for I am with you” (Isaiah 41:10)

In Isaiah 41:10, God is speaking people that are surrounded by political threat, uncertainty, and exile. He does not deny the reality of their circumstances. Instead, He says, “Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God.” We can see that the foundation of courage in the Bible is not confidence in yourself, but confidence in God’s nearness. Fear will always lose its power when we makes God’s presence the dominant reality in our minds and hearts.

Promises That Answer Our Deepest Fears

Strength for weakness, help for helplessness, stability for uncertainty

Isaiah 41:10 continues with, “I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.” When we study this we will see that each phrase confronts a specific fear. Strength answers exhaustion. Help answers helplessness. Upholding answers instability. God did not put these in the Bible to be emotional affirmations; these are covenant promises. He shows us that when everything feels uncertain, God promises to be the One who sustains His people.

knight fighting a dragon

Courage in the Midst of Real Danger

Faith illustrated through Scripture and history, not denial of reality

When looking through history we’ll see that it offers countless examples of this truth. In the early years of the Protestant Reformation, Martin Luther faced constant threats; political pressure, religious opposition, and the possibility of execution. With everything around him Luther famously wrote the hymn “A Mighty Fortress Is Our God,” drawing from Psalm 46. Martin Luther wrote this hymn not in a time of safety, but in a time of fear. Luther’s courage was unshakable not from the denial of danger, but from confidence that God was an unshakable refuge.

Jesus Confronts Anxiety at Its Root

Misplaced focus and misplaced trust (Matthew 6:25–30)

Jesus speaks about fear again in Matthew 6, He focuses His attention on anxiety in daily life; food, clothing, and the future. He tells us, “Do not be anxious about your life.” Jesus shows us that anxiety is misplaced focus. Fear will magnify what we lack and minimizes who God is. To help us correct this, Jesus points to creation itself: “the birds of the air and the lilies of the field. They neither store nor strive, yet God sustains them.”

The Futility of Fear and the Illusion of Control

Why anxiety feels productive but produces nothing

Jesus asks a question that today still speaks to modern hearts: “Which of you by being anxious can add a single hour to his span of life?” When we look at it anxiety feels productive, but it produces nothing, maybe some heartburn. Worry does not solve tomorrow’s problems, it overwhelming steals today’s peace. Fear is the promise of control, but delivers exhaustion and stress.

Seeking First the Kingdom Reorders the Heart

Putting God back at the center of life and priorities

There is a very simple example that makes this clear. Imagine that you are sitting in a rocking chair, constantly moving. But where are you going? It never takes you anywhere. This is what fear does, it always keeps us busy, restless, and worn out, never moving us forward. It never helps us build our faith.

Jesus’ final words concluded by calling His followers to reordered priorities: “Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness.” Fear grows and overwhelms when God is pushed to the margins of our life. Our faith grows when God is placed at the center of our lives. When we seek the Kingdom first it does not eliminate hardship; it reframes it. We are reminded that our lives are in the hands of a Father that knows what we need before we ask.

Faith That Speaks Louder Than “What If”

Choosing trust even when outcomes are uncertain

Corrie ten Boom, a survivor of the horrors of a Nazi concentration camp, once said, “Worry does not empty tomorrow of its sorrow; it empties today of its strength.” Her words were not theoretical. They were created through suffering. Even when it is the darkest, faith remained her anchor because she trusted the faithfulness of God.

Biblical faith is not pretending everything is fine; it is choosing trust when everything is uncertain. Fear says, “What if?” Faith says, “Even if.” Even if the economy shifts, even if health falters, and even if the future is unclear. God remains faithful.

a man holding his chest

An Invitation to Live Free From Fear’s Grip

From self-reliance to God-dependence; from survival to obedience

His command “Do not be afraid” is fully an invitation to move from self-reliance to God-dependence, from anxiety to assurance, and from being in a survival mode to faithful obedience. Fear may be knocking, but when surrounding yourself with faith it does not mean you have to answer. When God is with us, fear no longer has the final word.


Prayer


Dear Heavenly Father, I thank You that Your mercies are new every morning and that great is Your faithfulness (Lamentations 3:22–23). You go before us and You are with me; You will never leave me nor forsake me (Deuteronomy 31:8).

Please quiet our hearts. Guard our minds. Teach us to trust You above every fear, every wall, and anxiety. We receive Your peace today. Nothing that is ahead is hidden from You. Lord, I commit this year to You, I am trusting You with all my heart and leaning not on my own understanding (Proverbs 3:5–6). I acknowledge that all of my plans are subject to Your will, and I say with humility, “If it is the Lord’s will, we will live and do this or that” (James 4:15). Order my steps according to Your Word (Psalm 119:133).

Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me (Psalm 51:10). Transform me by the renewing of my mind, so that I may discern what is good, pleasing, and perfect in Your will (Romans 12:2). Let Your Word be a lamp to my feet and a light to my path in every decision I face (Psalm 119:105).

We ask for Your peace to guard our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus (Philippians 4:7). Heal the brokenhearted and bind up my wounds (Psalm 147:3). Teach me to forgive as I have been forgiven (Colossians 3:13), and to walk in love, just as Christ loved (Ephesians 5:2).

Prepare me for every season this year brings. When trials come, help me to count it joy, knowing You are producing endurance in me (James 1:2–4). When blessings come, keep me humble and thankful, remembering that every good and perfect gift comes from You (James 1:17).

I will seek first Your kingdom and Your righteousness, trusting that what I need will be provided (Matthew 6:33). I dedicate this year to You, asking that my life will bring You glory in all that I do (1 Corinthians 10:31).

I pray this with confidence in the name of Jesus, who is the same yesterday, today, and forever (Hebrews 13:8). In Jesus Name Amen.

Getting to Know Him

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You are God’s Child

“Yet to all who did receive him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God.” John 1:12

You are not defined by your past or your performance. You are defined by your relationship with God. The Bible says that when you received Christ, you become a child of God. That means you belong, you are wanted, and you are loved. No circumstance can take that away.

Dear Heavenly Father, thank You that I belong to You. Help me walk today with the confidence of being Your child. In Jesus Name Amen


Getting to Know Him

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John 14:27

Tranquil day at the beach
Peaceful mountain morning

Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.


Dear Heavenly Father, be my guide and protect me from these things that surround me that I do not understand or that influence me in ways that are not from You. Lord I want to be and act as close to You as You’ve always wanted Your children to be. Lord give the strength to stand against the evil in this world, the distractions and influences. Help me to not fear and worry about these issues that continue to affect everything around us. Thank you Lord for Your protection, direction, and love. In Jesus Name Amen

Getting to Know Him

Do you want eternal life? Do you want to enter heaven through the only guide that can help you navigate your way there? To enter His home, get to know Him better, and make Him your Lord and Savior CLICK HERE…..