Friday, 23 May 2025

💔 What Is Genuine Repentance in the Eyes of God?

“The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise.”
Psalm 51:17 (KJV)

We hear it often—“Just repent.”
But what does genuine repentance actually look like in the eyes of God?

Is it just saying “sorry”?
Is it feeling bad about sin?
Or is it something deeper, something that moves heaven and transforms a soul?

Let’s look at what Scripture reveals about true repentance.


🔹 1. Repentance Is More Than Regret

Many feel sorrow when they get caught or face consequences.
But that isn’t true repentance—that’s remorse or fear.

“For godly sorrow worketh repentance to salvation not to be repented of: but the sorrow of the world worketh death.”2 Corinthians 7:10

Worldly sorrow says: “I’m upset I got caught.”
Godly sorrow says: “I’m grieved because I sinned against a holy God.”

True repentance is a change of heart, not just a change of mood.


🔹 2. Repentance Acknowledges Sin Without Excuses

David, after his fall with Bathsheba, didn’t blame anyone else. He said:

“Against thee, thee only, have I sinned, and done this evil in thy sight…”Psalm 51:4

Genuine repentance does not:

  • Blame others

  • Minimize the offense

  • Justify the action

It comes naked before God, owning the truth with humility.


🔹 3. Repentance Produces a Change in Direction

The Greek word for repent is metanoia, which means “a change of mind”—but it always results in a change of action.

“Bring forth therefore fruits meet for repentance.”Matthew 3:8

Real repentance bears fruit:

  • A turning away from sin

  • A desire to make things right

  • A pursuit of holiness

It doesn’t just confess sin—it forsakes it.


🔹 4. Repentance Is Fueled by God’s Kindness

“The goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance.”Romans 2:4

God doesn’t shame us into repentance—He draws us with His mercy.

When we realize how deeply He loves us even when we fail,
when we grasp that He sent Jesus to bear the weight of our sin—
our hearts break not just from guilt, but from gratitude.


🔹 5. Repentance Opens the Door to Restoration

God isn’t looking for perfection.
He’s looking for a broken and contrite heart.

The prodigal son didn’t clean himself up before returning home—he came back dirty, and the father ran to him.

That’s the God who receives repentance.

“If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us…”1 John 1:9


✨ Final Thought

Genuine repentance is not just a moment—it’s a movement.
From darkness to light.
From rebellion to surrender.
From pride to humility.

It’s not about guilt—it’s about grace.
It’s not about condemnation—it’s about conversion.

God doesn’t despise your broken heart—He welcomes it.
Because that’s where healing begins.


🙏 Prayer: A Heart of True Repentance

Abba Father, in the name of Jesus,
Search me and know me.
I don’t want shallow words or surface-level sorrow.
I want true repentance—a heart that breaks over what breaks Yours.

Forgive me, Lord.
For every sin I’ve justified, every moment I’ve grieved Your Spirit,
every time I’ve chosen my way over Yours—cleanse me.

Create in me a clean heart, O God.
Renew a right spirit within me.
Let my life bear fruit that proves I’ve turned.

Thank You for Your mercy that never runs dry.
Thank You for receiving me—again and again.
I surrender, Lord. Not just in word, but in truth.

In Jesus Almighty name, Amen. 

❤️ How to Love God the Way He Wants—Not Just the Way You Think

“If ye love me, keep my commandments.”
John 14:15 (KJV)

Many say, “I love God.”
But do we love Him on His terms—or ours?
True love isn’t defined by what we think it should be.
True love is shown the way God desires—through obedience, devotion, and relationship.


🔹 1. Loving God Is More Than a Feeling

In a world where “love” is equated with emotion or good vibes, we must remember:
Loving God is not about how you feel—it's about how you live.

Jesus never said, “If you love Me, feel passionately about Me.”
He said:

“If you love Me, keep My commandments.”

Loving God means:

  • Honoring His Word above your opinion

  • Choosing His will over your own

  • Worshiping Him in spirit and in truth

Love is action, not sentiment.


🔹 2. Obedience Is the Language of Love

Love in God's eyes is not vague—it’s measurable.
He sees love in our obedience, not just our expressions.

“He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me…”
John 14:21

Do you:

  • Forgive when it’s hard?

  • Speak truth even when it costs?

  • Turn from sin even when no one is watching?

These acts reveal real love—not because they earn God’s love, but because they respond to it.


🔹 3. Loving God Means Letting Go of Self-Love

Modern culture preaches: "Love yourself first."
But Jesus said:

“If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow me.”Luke 9:23

To love God His way, you must surrender your way.
That means laying down pride, preferences, comfort, and convenience.
It means choosing His glory over your gain.


🔹 4. Worship God the Way He Desires

God doesn't want your performance—He wants your heart in truth.

“But the hour cometh… when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth…”John 4:23

It’s not about the song you sing or the posture you take—
It’s about the truthfulness and purity of your heart before Him.

You love Him rightly when you approach Him with reverence, not routine.


🔹 5. Love What God Loves, Hate What He Hates

“Ye that love the Lord, hate evil…”Psalm 97:10

To love God is to align your heart with His values.
You can’t love God and love sin at the same time.
You can’t say “I love Jesus” but disregard His Word.

Loving God means loving holiness, truth, justice, and mercy.


✨ Final Thought

Loving God isn’t about what feels good to us.
It’s about giving Him what He asks for:

  • Obedience

  • Surrender

  • Worship in truth

  • Loyalty

  • Holiness

Don’t love God on your terms.
Love Him on His.
That’s where true relationship and deep joy begin.


🙏 Prayer: Teach Me to Love You Rightly

Abba Father, in the name of Jesus,
I don’t want to love You based on my feelings or ideas.
I want to love You the way You desire—with my life, my obedience, my heart.

Teach me to walk in Your ways.
Let my actions match my words.
Reveal to me where my love has been shallow, selfish, or selective.
Create in me a clean heart, and renew a right spirit within me.

I love You, Lord—not just in word, but in truth.
Help me to love what You love and hate what You hate.
May my life reflect a love that honors You.

In Jesus Almighty name, Amen. 

🌍 Nothing Too Small, Nothing Too Big for God

 

“Ah Lord GOD! behold, thou hast made the heaven and the earth by thy great power and stretched out arm, and there is nothing too hard for thee:”
Jeremiah 32:17 (KJV)

We often limit God—not with our lips, but with our minds.
We think: “This is too small to bother Him with,”
or “This is too big—maybe even impossible.”

But here’s the truth:
Nothing is too small for God to notice,
and nothing is too big for God to handle.


🔹 1. Nothing Is Too Small for God

The Creator of galaxies also numbers the hairs on your head (Luke 12:7).
He knows when a sparrow falls.
He hears your whispered prayers, sees your unseen tears, and cares about the things you think are “too trivial” to bring to Him.

God is not only interested in the "big" miracles—He delights in every detail of your life.

So bring Him:

  • The anxiety in your chest

  • The missing keys

  • The school decision for your child

  • The conversation you’re nervous about

He’s not too busy.
He’s not disinterested.
He is intimately involved in your every breath.


🔹 2. Nothing Is Too Big for God

He created the universe with a word.
He split seas, raised the dead, calmed storms, cast out demons, and fed multitudes.

“With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible.”Matthew 19:26

Whatever mountain you’re facing—
A medical report, a financial crisis, a broken relationship—
God is not intimidated.

He is not limited by what limits us.
He specializes in the impossible.


🔹 3. Faith Brings the Small and the Big to God

The same faith that brings a headache to God in prayer
can also call down healing from cancer.

The same faith that trusts Him for daily provision
can also believe Him for supernatural breakthrough.

Your part is not to figure out the scale—
Your part is to trust Him and bring it all.


✨ Final Thought

Stop dividing your life into “God-sized” and “not worth His time.”

He is Lord over all.
He cares about the details, and He reigns over the impossible.
Whether it’s a whisper or a roar—He hears.
Whether it’s a grain of sand or a mountain—He moves.

Bring Him everything.
He delights in it.


🙏 Prayer: You Care About It All

Abba Father, in the name of Jesus,
I thank You that nothing is too small for You to notice,
And nothing is too big for You to overcome.

You are Lord over the details and the impossible.
Forgive me for holding back or doubting what You care about.
I bring You every concern—great and small.
Because You care. Because You are able. Because You are good.

Increase my faith.
Let me trust You with the little things, and believe You for the impossible.
You are the God who sees, who hears, who answers.
I rest in Your power and Your love.

In Jesus Almighty name, Amen.

❤️ Understanding Your Heart Before God

“The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it? I the Lord search the heart...”
Jeremiah 17:9–10 (KJV)

Our hearts are complex.
They hold love and jealousy, dreams and doubts, courage and fear.
We can’t always trust what we feel—because our hearts can be deceptive. But God knows every corner of it.

So what does it mean to understand your heart before an all-knowing God?


🔹 1. Your Heart is Known by God

Before you try to explain yourself to anyone—God already knows.
He doesn’t just see your actions; He sees your intentions.
He knows what you’re not saying.
He understands your motives even when you don’t fully understand them yourself.

“O Lord, thou hast searched me, and known me… thou understandest my thought afar off.”
Psalm 139:1–2

There is deep comfort in this:
You don’t need to perform for God.
You don’t need to hide from Him.
He sees your brokenness and loves you still.


🔹 2. God Wants You to Understand Your Own Heart

While God knows your heart completely, He also calls you to examine it:

“Examine me, O Lord, and prove me; try my reins and my heart.”Psalm 26:2
“Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life.”Proverbs 4:23

You’re called to search your heart in His presence—to bring your emotions, wounds, and even sinful desires before Him, so He can purify them.

Understanding your heart means acknowledging what’s really there:

  • Am I jealous?

  • Am I afraid?

  • Am I angry with God?

  • Am I trusting Him?

When you bring these things to the light, He doesn't condemn—He heals.


🔹 3. Let God Shape Your Heart

God doesn't just want to know your heart—He wants to transform it.

“A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you…”Ezekiel 36:26

As you spend time in the Word, in prayer, and in worship, your heart is renewed.
He softens what was hard. He purifies what was impure.
He begins to shape you into someone who desires what He desires.


✨ Final Thought

You may not fully understand your own heart—but God does.
So don’t fear the mess inside. Bring it to Him.

Let Him examine you, heal you, and shape you.
That’s where transformation begins—not in hiding your heart, but in opening it to the One who understands it completely.


🙏 Prayer: Search My Heart, O God

Abba Father, in the name of Jesus,
You know my heart better than I do.
You see every corner—every thought, every motive, every desire.

I ask You to search me.
Reveal what is not pleasing to You.
Uproot bitterness, pride, fear, and sin.

Create in me a clean heart, O God.
Renew a right spirit within me.
Help me to walk in truth,
Not led by feelings, but grounded in Your Word.

Give me a heart that beats in rhythm with Yours.
Tender to Your voice. Obedient to Your will.
Let me not be deceived by emotions,
But let me live in the light of Your truth.

In Jesus Almighty name, Amen. 

🔥 What Does It Mean That God Is a "Terrible" God?

📖 Key Verse (KJV):

“For the LORD your God is God of gods, and Lord of lords, a great God, a mighty, and a terrible, which regardeth not persons, nor taketh reward.”
Deuteronomy 10:17

Here, “terrible” is used to describe God's overwhelming glory, might, and holiness that causes reverent fear and awe in people.

In Hebrew, the word translated as "terrible" is often “yare’”, which means:

  • To fear

  • To revere

  • To stand in awe


🟡 1. "Terrible" Means God Is Awe-Inspiring and Fearsome in Power

God is called "terrible" because His presence shakes mountains, parts seas, and consumes with fire. He is not to be taken lightly.

“Who is like unto thee, O LORD, among the gods? who is like thee, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders?”
Exodus 15:11

His power humbles kings, topples nations, and silences proud men. This fear is not terror for the righteous—it is holy reverence.


🟡 2. God’s Justice Is Uncompromising

He is "terrible" because He is utterly just.
He will not tolerate sin, lies, or rebellion. This quality should make the unrepentant fear and the righteous rejoice, because it means evil will not win forever.

“It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.”
Hebrews 10:31

For the wicked, God’s justice is terrible. For the righteous, His justice is comforting.


🟡 3. God’s Presence Evokes Holy Fear

Even those who loved and obeyed God fell on their faces when He appeared.

  • Isaiah cried, “Woe is me!” (Isaiah 6:5)

  • Ezekiel fell on his face (Ezekiel 1:28)

  • John fell as though dead when he saw the glorified Christ (Revelation 1:17)

Why? Because God is terribly holy—so perfect, so pure, so powerful that no flesh can stand casually in His presence.


✅ So Why Call Him “Terrible”?

Because in the old language, it’s the highest way of expressing reverence.

Today, we might say:

  • “God is awesome in power.”

  • “God is fearsome in holiness.”

  • “God is mighty and majestic beyond words.”

But in the poetic and reverent language of the King James Bible, “terrible” captured this awe.


🔥 Final Thought

God is not “terrible” in character—He is perfect, holy, just, and good.
But He is "terrible" in His majesty—so mighty that no one can stand before Him apart from mercy.

To love God is to revere Him.
To follow Him is to fear Him—in awe, in wonder, in trembling trust.

“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom…” — Proverbs 9:10


🙏 Prayer: Revering the Fearsome Majesty of God

Abba Father, in the name of Jesus,
I come before You with reverence and trembling,
For You are a great and terrible God—
Awesome in power, unmatched in holiness,
The One who spoke and the heavens obeyed,
Who thundered from Sinai and parted the sea.

You are not to be taken lightly.
You are not a God to be molded by man’s hands or diluted by the world’s ideas.
You are fire, You are glory, You are light unapproachable.
And yet—You call me to come close through the blood of Jesus.

I humble myself before Your throne.
Teach me to fear You rightly—not with dread,
But with awe that stirs worship, obedience, and wonder.
Let my heart never grow casual about Your majesty.
Let me not treat what is holy as common.

Lord, You are both Lion and Lamb—
Terrible in judgment, tender in mercy.
Let this holy fear lead me to walk uprightly,
To turn from sin, to revere Your Word,
To tremble at Your voice and delight in Your presence.

I worship You—mighty God, consuming fire,
The One who was, who is, and who is to come.
May my life honor the weight of who You are.
And may I live every day in the fear of the Lord,
Which is the beginning of wisdom.

In Jesus Almighty name, Amen. 

🙏 How Do You Talk to an All-Knowing God?

 

“O Lord, thou hast searched me, and known me… For there is not a word in my tongue, but, lo, O Lord, thou knowest it altogether.”
Psalm 139:1,4 (KJV)

If God already knows everything—our thoughts, feelings, needs, and future—then why pray?
Why talk to Him?
What’s the point of communication with someone who knows it all?

Let’s dig into the beauty and mystery of speaking to the all-knowing God.


🔹 1. Because Communication Builds Relationship

God doesn’t invite us into a transaction.
He invites us into a relationship.

Prayer is not about informing God—it’s about knowing God.

Jesus Himself often withdrew to pray. Not because the Father needed updates, but because intimacy flows through communion. Even though God already knows what you’ll say, He delights in hearing your voice. Just like a parent knows their child’s needs, yet still treasures the child’s cry and conversation.

“Draw nigh to God, and he will draw nigh to you.” — James 4:8


🔹 2. Because Prayer Transforms Us, Not God

God doesn’t need your words to learn something.
You need your words to surrender something.

Prayer is not about moving God to your plan—it’s about aligning your heart to His will. It’s in prayer that pride melts, clarity comes, and faith rises. The act of talking to God changes you.

“Be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind…” — Romans 12:2

When you pray to an all-knowing God, you’re not updating Him—you’re allowing Him to update you.


🔹 3. Because Jesus Told Us To

The Son of God, who was in perfect unity with the Father, still prayed constantly.

He taught us to pray.
He modeled prayer.
He even prayed for us (John 17).

When Jesus says, “When you pray…” (Matthew 6:5), He assumes prayer is part of your life. Even though God knows all, prayer is obedience.


🔹 4. Because God Wants Our Hearts, Not Just Our Words

God knows what you’re going through, but He still wants you to come to Him.

Like a loving Father, He’s not distant and analytical—He’s near and relational.

“Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you.” — 1 Peter 5:7

He doesn’t just know your situation—He cares.
He longs for the moment when you trust Him enough to share it.


✨ Final Thought

Talking to an all-knowing God isn’t pointless—it’s powerful.

It’s not about information.
It’s about intimacy.

It’s not about telling Him what He doesn’t know.
It’s about trusting Him with what you need to release.

So come boldly. Come honestly. Come often.

He already knows.
And He already cares.
And still—He loves to hear from you.


🙏 Prayer

Abba Father, in the name of Jesus,
Thank You for knowing me fully and still loving me completely.
You see my heart, my thoughts, my fears—yet You invite me to come.
Teach me to pray not out of duty, but out of love.
Let prayer be my joy, not my burden.
Shape me, speak to me, and walk with me.
I want to know You more each day.
Amen.

🔥 “Believe Also in Me”: Why Jesus Demands Our Trust

“Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me.”
John 14:1, KJV

These words fell from the lips of Jesus not in calm times, but in a moment of great coming trial. The cross was near. The disciples were confused, fearful, and uncertain. And Jesus, knowing their hearts, spoke life into the atmosphere of anxiety.

But why did He say, “Believe in God, believe also in Me”?
Wasn’t belief in God enough?

Let’s dive deep.


🔹 1. Jesus Was Declaring His Deity

In Jewish tradition, belief in God—the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob—was foundational. No one questioned that. But when Jesus added, “Believe also in Me,” He was doing something radical.

He was claiming equality with God.

“I and my Father are one.” — John 10:30

He wasn’t asking for belief in addition to God, but as God.
This wasn’t blasphemy—it was truth incarnate.
To believe in Jesus was, and still is, to believe in the fullness of who God is.


🔹 2. He Was Preparing Their Faith for What Was Coming

In just a short while, they would see Jesus arrested, beaten, and crucified. The One they followed would look defeated. Their world would shake.

But Jesus wanted their faith to remain unshaken.

“You’ve trusted God in the unseen. Now trust Me, even when I seem absent.”

Jesus knew what was ahead, and He was fortifying their faith. Not in religion. Not in circumstances. But in Him—the Living Word, the Risen Lamb.


🔹 3. Faith in Jesus Is the Fulfillment of Faith in God

The Old Testament prepared hearts for the coming Messiah. Prophecies whispered His name. Shadows pointed to His cross. Jesus didn’t come to replace faith in God—He came to fulfill it.

“He that hath seen me hath seen the Father.” — John 14:9

If you claim belief in God but reject Jesus, your faith remains incomplete.
To believe in Jesus is to believe in the God who walked among us.


🔹 4. Jesus Is the Only Way to the Father

Just moments later, Jesus makes one of His boldest declarations:

“I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.”John 14:6

This is why He said, “Believe also in Me.”
He is not just a signpost pointing to God—He is the Way. The Door. The Bridge. The Light in our darkness.

There is no access to God apart from Jesus.
He alone has the keys.
He alone paid the price.
He alone rose from the dead.


🔥 Final Thought: Trust That Transforms

Jesus doesn’t ask for blind belief. He invites us to real, raw, unshakable trust—even when things don’t make sense.
Especially when they don’t.

So when your heart is troubled,
When fear knocks on your door,
When the world shakes—

Don’t just believe in God.
Believe also in Jesus.
He is the Anchor.
He is the Answer.
He is God.


🙏 Prayer

Abba Father, in the name of Jesus,
Help me trust You more deeply each day.
Not just in theory, but with my whole heart.
When storms rise and trials press in,
Let me hear the voice of Jesus saying,
“Let not your heart be troubled.”
I believe in You, Lord.
I believe in Jesus—my Savior, my King, my Peace.

Amen. 

I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob…

 When God says: “I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob…” He is not merely introducing Himself. He is revealin...