Devotions, Women's Devotionals

🌿 Women’s Devotional — Day 80

“The Holy Spirit Produces Goodness in My Life”

📖 “For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness, righteousness, and truth.”
—Ephesians 5:9 (NKJV)


Goodness is a quiet strength. It is the steady, Spirit-shaped desire to do what is right,
to love what is true, and to live in a way that reflects God’s character. Goodness is not perfection. It is sincerity, integrity, purity of intention, and moral courage. It shows up in everyday choices—the honesty of your words, the purity of your thoughts,
the compassion behind your actions, the righteousness you pursue when no one is watching. And goodness is something the Holy Spirit Himself forms within you.

He shapes your conscience through the Word.
He reveals motives that need cleansing.
He strengthens your resolve when you’re tempted to compromise.
He helps you love righteousness more than comfort.
He gives you discernment when decisions are unclear.
He convicts gently when something isn’t pleasing to God.
He produces goodness that flows from a transformed heart,
not from human effort or self-discipline alone.

Goodness becomes a testimony—not loud, but unmistakable.It influences your home, friendships, workplace, and ministry.It brings integrity to your character and stability to your walk with Christ.A woman filled with Spirit-produced goodness becomes a light in dark places,a quiet example of Christ’s truth, compassion, and purity.


Reflect:

  • Where is God calling you to walk in goodness right now?
  • What area of your life needs the Spirit’s cleansing, strengthening, or clarity?

Prayer:

Holy Spirit, produce goodness in my life. Purify my motives, strengthen my convictions,
and help me love what is right and true. Shape my character so my life reflects Your holiness
and honors Christ in all I do.
Amen.

Kingdom Discipleship, Prayer

Why We Are Still Here: Prayer, Purpose, and Endurance

From the series: Will He Find Faith? — Prayer in the Last Days

Scripture quotations are from the New King James Version®.
Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

There is a question Jesus asked that should sober every believer:

“Nevertheless, when the Son of Man comes, will He really find faith on the earth?”
Luke 18:8 (NKJV)

This question was not asked in a vacuum. It came at the end of a parable about persistent prayer. Jesus was not questioning His ability to save. He was questioning whether faith sustained by prayer would still remain when pressure, lawlessness, and persecution increased.

Scripture never presents the Christian life as a pursuit of comfort. It presents it as a calling to witness, and often, a calling to suffer.

“For to you it has been granted on behalf of Christ, not only to believe in Him, but also to suffer for His sake.”
Philippians 1:29 (NKJV)

The believer is not left on earth because God is indifferent. We are here because there is still work to be done—and prayer is how that work is sustained.


Prayer Comes First—Because It Changes Us First

Prayer does not begin by changing the world. Prayer begins by changing the heart of the one who prays. This is why Jesus commands:

“Watch therefore, and pray always that you may be counted worthy to escape all these things that will come to pass, and to stand before the Son of Man.”
Luke 21:36 (NKJV)

Prayer is not escapism. Prayer is how the believer stands when escape is not offered. Without prayer fear grows, bitterness takes root, love cools, and faith weakens’. With prayer the heart is guarded, love is preserved, discernment remains sharp, and endurance becomes possible. This is not theory. This is survival.


Prayer and the Armor of God

When the apostle Paul calls believers to put on the full armor of God, he does something deliberate. After naming every piece of armor, he concludes with this:

“Praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, being watchful to this end with all perseverance and supplication for all the saints.”
Ephesians 6:18 (NKJV)

Prayer is not listed as another piece of armor because prayer is the posture in which the armor is worn. An unpraying believer may know the truth—but will fight in the flesh. A praying believer stands in Christ.


Elijah: A Man Like Us—Who Prayed

Scripture removes every excuse for prayerlessness.

“Elijah was a man with a nature like ours, and he prayed earnestly…”
James 5:17 (NKJV)

Elijah lived in national apostasy, corrupt leadership, widespread idolatry, He was discouraged. He was afraid. He was weary. And yet—he prayed, and God moved. Not because Elijah was extraordinary, but because God is faithful. The same God hears now.


Why This Matters Now

Jesus warned that in the last days:

“Because lawlessness will abound, the love of many will grow cold.”
Matthew 24:12 (NKJV)

Cold love does not begin with hatred. It begins with prayerlessness. When the Church stops praying faith erodes, love cools, and endurance fails. But Jesus gives a promise to those who pray:

“Men always ought to pray and not lose heart.”
Luke 18:1 (NKJV)

Prayer is how the believer does not lose heart.


A Call to the Church

We are not called to predict dates. We are not called to preserve comfort. We are not called to win cultural power. We are called to remain faithful, endure in love, pray without ceasing, and bear witness to Christ.

“Here is the patience of the saints; here are those who keep the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus.”
Revelation 14:12 (NKJV)

This series begins here—because without prayer, none of what follows can stand.

Closing Prayer

Father in heaven,

You have not left us on this earth by accident, nor have You forgotten Your people. You have called us according to Your purpose, and You have appointed us for this hour. Teach us to understand why we are here.

Lord Jesus, You asked whether You would find faith on the earth when You return. Keep us from a faith that withers under pressure or grows cold in the face of lawlessness. Grant us a faith that endures—rooted in prayer, sustained by truth, and anchored in You.

Search our hearts, O God. Where fear has crept in, replace it with trust. Where bitterness has taken root, restore love. Where weariness has set in, renew our strength. Guard us from prayerlessness, for we know that without abiding in You we can do nothing.

Teach us to watch and to pray. Not so that we may escape suffering, but that we may stand, faithful, sober, and unmoved. Make us a people who do not lose heart, who do not compromise truth, and who do not grow silent when witness is required.

Strengthen Your Church, Lord. Unite us in humility, perseverance, and intercession. Teach us to pray not only for ourselves, but for all the saints, and even for those who oppose us—that they too may come to the full knowledge of You.

Until the day You return, keep us faithful to the end. May You find us watching, praying, loving, and enduring—clothed in Your righteousness and trusting in Your promises.

We ask this in the name of Jesus Christ, our Lord and our hope. Amen.

Devotions, Family Devotionals

🏡 Family Devotional — Day 80

“The Holy Spirit Helps Our Family Do What Is Good”

📖 “Trust in the Lord, and do good.”
—Psalm 37:3a (NKJV)


Goodness is something every family needs—doing what is right, choosing what honors God, and treating one another with integrity and love. But goodness isn’t automatic.
Life gets stressful. People get tired. Feelings get hurt. Temptations arise, and sometimes doing what is right feels harder than doing what is easy. This is why your family needs the Holy Spirit. He helps your home choose goodness in everyday moments.

He guides decisions when choices are unclear.
He strengthens your hearts to do what is right even when it’s difficult.
He helps each family member treat one another with honesty and love.
He convicts gently when something needs to change.
He grows compassion for those who are hurting.
He gives courage to resist wrong influences.
He forms a desire for righteousness that brings peace to your home.

When a family walks in goodness, the atmosphere becomes healthier,
relationships become stronger, and trust begins to flourish. Goodness makes your home a reflection of Christ—not perfect, but honest, loving, and Spirit-led.


Talk About It Together:

  • What is one good choice our family can make this week?
  • Where do we need the Holy Spirit’s help to do what is right?

Prayer:

Holy Spirit, help our family walk in goodness. Guide our decisions, purify our hearts,
and give us strength to choose what honors You. Fill our home with integrity, compassion, and the goodness that comes from Your work within us. men.

Devotions, Family Devotionals

🏡 Family Devotional — Day 79

“The Holy Spirit Helps Our Family Show Kindness”

📖 “And be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another…”
—Ephesians 4:32a (NKJV)


Kindness is one of the simplest ways a family can show love—yet it often gets buried under stress, routines, misunderstandings, or busy schedules. Kindness in a home isn’t about big gestures. It’s often seen in the little things:

• a gentle tone instead of a sharp one
• a helping hand without being asked
• a patient response instead of irritation
• a kind word that lifts someone’s mood
• forgiveness instead of holding onto offense
• thoughtfulness in daily interactions
• noticing when someone needs encouragement

But even small kindnesses require a soft heart. And the Holy Spirit is the One who gives that.

He helps your family:
• respond to each other with grace
• understand one another’s feelings
• slow down instead of react
• show tenderness instead of frustration
• choose words that build up instead of tear down
• see opportunities to bless each other
• reflect Jesus in everyday life

A Spirit-filled home becomes a kind home—and kindness strengthens your relationships, heals hurts, and creates a safe, warm atmosphere where love can grow. Your family’s kindness can become a testimony of God’s love, starting inside your home and spilling outward.


Talk About It Together:

  • What is one act of kindness we can show each other today?
  • How can we rely on the Holy Spirit to help us be more gentle and thoughtful?

Prayer:

Holy Spirit, help our family show kindness every day. Soften our words, guide our actions,
and fill our home with compassion and gentleness. Teach us to treat one another with love
in all the small and meaningful moments. Amen.

Devotions, Teen Devotions

👧👦 Teen Devotional — Day 79

“The Holy Spirit Teaches Me to Show Kindness, Even When It’s Hard”

📖 “And be kind to one another, tenderhearted…”
—Ephesians 4:32a (NKJV)


Kindness is simple—but it isn’t always easy. It’s easy to be kind when people treat you well.
It’s harder when they don’t. It’s easy to be kind when life feels good. It’s harder when you feel stressed, annoyed, or overwhelmed. But kindness is a mark of someone who walks with Jesus. And the Holy Spirit helps you show it in ways you could never do on your own.

The Holy Spirit teaches you to be kind:

• when someone is rude
• when a sibling or friend gets on your nerves
• when a classmate feels left out
• when you’re tempted to clap back or be sarcastic
• when someone needs help and no one else notices
• when people misunderstand you or judge you
• when kindness costs your time, comfort, or pride

Kindness is powerful. It reflects the heart of Jesus more than almost anything else. It softens hearts. It builds bridges. It opens doors for healing. It influences others in quiet but meaningful ways. And every time you choose kindness—especially when it’s hard—the Holy Spirit is shaping your character and making Jesus visible through you.


Talk About It:

  • When is it hardest for you to be kind?
  • How can the Holy Spirit help you choose kindness in those moments?

Prayer:

Holy Spirit, help me show kindness today. Fill my words and actions with gentleness and compassion. Help me respond with grace, even when others don’t. Let my life reflect the kindness of Jesus. Amen.

Children's Devotionals, Devotions

🧒 Children’s Devotional — Day 79

“The Holy Spirit Helps Me Be Kind”

📖 “Be kind to one another, tenderhearted…”
—Ephesians 4:32a (NKJV)


Kindness makes the world brighter. A kind word can make someone smile. A kind action can make someone feel loved. A kind heart shows people what Jesus is like. But sometimes being kind is hard—especially when you’re tired, frustrated, or someone else is unkind first.

That’s why the Holy Spirit helps you be kind.

He reminds you to use gentle words.
He helps you share or help without being asked.
He fills your heart with compassion for others.
He helps you think before you speak.
He shows you how to treat people with love, even when it’s difficult.

Kindness is a fruit the Holy Spirit grows in you—and every act of kindness is a way to shine God’s love to others. You never know how much your kindness can mean to someone.


Talk About It:

  • What is a kind thing you can do for someone today?
  • How can the Holy Spirit help you show kindness even when it’s hard?

Prayer:

Holy Spirit, help me be kind today. Give me gentle words, caring actions, and a heart that loves others like Jesus. Amen.

Devotions, Women's Devotionals

🌿 Women’s Devotional — Day 79

“The Holy Spirit Forms a Heart of Kindness in Me”

📖 “She opens her mouth with wisdom, and on her tongue is the law of kindness.”
—Proverbs 31:26 (NKJV)


Kindness is one of the most beautiful expressions of Christlike character—gentle, steady, thoughtful, and deeply powerful. It softens tension. It comforts the hurting. It restores dignity. It builds trust. It reflects Jesus. Yet kindness often requires more strength than it seems. It means choosing gracious words when irritation rises. It means offering help when you feel stretched thin. It means responding gently when someone is harsh. It means showing compassion when your own heart feels tired. It means being tenderhearted in a world that teaches hardness. True kindness is not shallow—it is Spirit-produced.

The Holy Spirit forms kindness in you by:

• softening your tone and guarding your words
• giving you compassion for people’s hidden struggles
• helping you see others through God’s eyes
• strengthening you to respond with grace under pressure
• reminding you of God’s kindness toward you
• creating a warm, gentle spirit within you
• guiding your reactions so they reflect Christ, not circumstances

A kind woman is not a weak woman. She is a Spirit-filled woman. And her kindness becomes a ministry—to her family, her friends, her coworkers, and even strangers. When the Holy Spirit fills your heart with kindness, your life becomes a refuge, a blessing, and a quiet testimony of Jesus’ love.


Reflect:

  • Where is the Holy Spirit inviting you to practice deeper kindness?
  • How can you let Him guide your tone, responses, and attitude today?

Prayer:

Holy Spirit, form a heart of kindness within me. Let my words be gentle, my actions compassionate, and my spirit tender toward others. Help me reflect the kindness of Christ
in every place You have called me to walk. Amen.

Kingdom Discipleship, The Whole Counsel of God

The Whole Counsel of God

From the Series: The Gospel According to the Whole Counsel of God

“For I have not shunned to declare to you the whole counsel of God.”
—Acts 20:27 (NKJV)

The story of Scripture is one unified testimony pointing to Jesus Christ. From Genesis to Revelation, God reveals His plan of redemption through promises, prophecies, covenants, and fulfillment in His Son. When Paul stood before the Ephesian elders, he could say with confidence that he had declared the whole counsel of God. Nothing was held back, nothing was hidden, and nothing was reserved for a select group.

Christ Himself confirmed this unity when He opened the Scriptures to His disciples after His resurrection. “Beginning at Moses and all the Prophets, He expounded to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning Himself” (Luke 24:27). Again He said, “These are the words which I spoke to you… that all things must be fulfilled which were written in the Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms concerning Me” (Luke 24:44).

The Word of God reveals the Son of God, and the Spirit of God illuminates these truths to the people of God. This is the whole counsel—comprehensive, Christ-centered, Spirit-illumined.

Not Partial, Not Hidden

Man-made systems often emphasize certain passages while neglecting others, creating a narrow lens instead of the full picture. But the Word of God is not fragmented. It is a seamless testimony of God’s character, will, and purpose. To receive the whole counsel means to allow Scripture to interpret Scripture, holding every truth in balance under the light of Christ.

The Witness of the Early Church

The Ante-Nicene believers treasured the entirety of God’s Word. They did not have elaborate creeds or rigid systems in the earliest days; they had the Scriptures, the apostolic teaching, and the Spirit’s illumination. Their lives were shaped by the whole message of God’s Word: holiness, love, perseverance, and hope in the return of Christ.

They resisted efforts to reduce the faith to human philosophy. They rejected attempts to blend the gospel with the traditions of men. Their testimony was clear: cling to Christ, cling to the Scriptures, and walk by the Spirit.

Our Call Today

We too are called to embrace the whole counsel of God. Not a partial gospel, not a philosophy, not a system of men—but the full revelation of the Father in the Son, made alive by the Spirit. This is what sustains us in trials, guides us in truth, and equips us for every good work.

The whole counsel of God is not complicated. It is rich, but it is simple: Christ revealed, Christ proclaimed, Christ obeyed.


Reflection Questions

  1. What does it mean to you personally to embrace the “whole counsel of God” rather than a partial view of Scripture?
  2. How do Luke 24:27 and Acts 20:27 show us that all of Scripture is centered on Christ?
  3. What lessons can we take from the Ante-Nicene Church’s reliance on the whole Word of God without human systems?

Closing Prayer

Father, thank You for giving us the whole counsel of Your Word. Thank You that all of Scripture points to Christ and that the Spirit guides us into truth. Keep me from clinging to partial truths or man-made systems. Teach me to live by every word that proceeds from Your mouth. Help me to walk in the same simplicity and devotion as the early believers, holding fast to Christ until the end. Amen.

Kingdom Discipleship, The Whole Counsel of God

Man-Made Systems vs. Apostolic Simplicity

From the Series: The Gospel According to the Whole Counsel of God

“Beware lest anyone cheat you through philosophy and empty deceit, according to the tradition of men, according to the basic principles of the world, and not according to Christ.”
—Colossians 2:8 (NKJV)

From the beginning, the gospel was a simple and powerful message: Christ died for our sins, was buried, and rose again the third day (1 Corinthians 15:3–4). This was the truth preached by the apostles, believed by the early Church, and confirmed by the Spirit. Yet, as time passed, men began to surround this message with philosophies, traditions, and systems that complicated what God had made plain.

The apostles were clear: anything that shifts the focus away from Christ alone is a danger to the soul. Paul’s warning in Colossians 2:8 echoes through history, reminding us that clever frameworks, whether ancient or modern, cannot replace the living Word of God.

Apostolic Simplicity

The gospel is not bound in riddles. It is not hidden in secret decrees or reserved for the intellectual. Jesus said that unless we become like little children, we will by no means enter the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 18:3). The message is clear enough for the humble and dependent heart.

The apostles lived this simplicity. They prayed, they taught the Scriptures, they broke bread together, and they proclaimed Christ crucified and risen. Their power was not in systems of thought but in the Spirit and truth.

The Witness of the Early Church

The Ante-Nicene believers followed this same path. They had no elaborate frameworks to explain away God’s promises or to restrict His call. They lived by faith, walked in holiness, and loved one another with sincerity. Their writings urge us again and again to hold fast to “the rule of faith”—Christ Himself as revealed in Scripture.

Irenaeus warned of those who twisted Scripture with elaborate ideas and philosophies, while the true Church held fast to the apostolic teaching. Tertullian mocked the philosophers of Rome who prided themselves on speculation while missing the truth plainly revealed in Christ.

Their strength lay in simplicity. They knew the gospel, they clung to the Scriptures, and they trusted the Spirit to guide them.

Returning to the Foundation

The Church in every age must resist the temptation to replace God’s revelation with man’s reasoning. Systems and philosophies may appear wise, but they cannot save. The simplicity of Christ is enough.

As Paul wrote to the Corinthians, “I determined not to know anything among you except Jesus Christ and Him crucified” (1 Corinthians 2:2). That simplicity remains the foundation for true faith.


Reflection Questions

  1. How does Colossians 2:8 challenge the pull of man-made philosophies and systems today?
  2. What does it mean to return to “apostolic simplicity” in your faith and practice?
  3. How can the example of the Ante-Nicene Church encourage you to trust more fully in Scripture and the Spirit?

Closing Prayer

Lord, guard my heart from being led astray by human systems and philosophies. Keep me anchored in the simplicity of Christ and the truth of Your Word. Thank You for the witness of the early believers who clung to apostolic teaching and endured with faith. Help me to walk in that same simplicity, trusting in Christ alone. Amen.

Devotions, Family Devotionals

🏡 Family Devotional — Day 78

“The Holy Spirit Helps Our Family Be Patient With One Another”

📖 “Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love.”
—Ephesians 4:2 (NKJV)


Every family needs patience—patience in conversations, patience during stressful days,
patience with different personalities, patience with weaknesses, patience with growth, patience with mistakes. A home without patience becomes tense. A home with patience becomes peaceful. But patience doesn’t come naturally. It is a fruit the Holy Spirit grows inside each member of the family.

He helps your family:

• slow down instead of snap
• listen instead of interrupt
• respond gently instead of reacting harshly
• give grace when someone is having a hard moment
• forgive quickly instead of letting anger grow
• understand differences instead of judging
• love one another even when it’s difficult

Patience makes your home safe, warm, and loving. And as each person yields to the Holy Spirit, family relationships become stronger. The Spirit teaches your home to breathe, to pause, to choose love over frustration, and to give each other room to grow. A patient family is not a perfect family—but it is a Spirit-led one. And that makes all the difference.


Talk About It Together:

  • Where do we need more patience in our home?
  • How can we invite the Holy Spirit to help us respond with love in difficult moments?

Prayer:

Holy Spirit, help our family be patient with one another. Teach us to slow down, listen, and respond with grace. Fill our home with Your peace and help us grow together in love. Amen.