Devotions, Teen Devotions

😎 Kingdom Teen Devotional — Day 66

“Or what person is there among you who, when his son asks for a loaf of bread, will give him a stone?”

Matthew 7:9 NASB1995

🪨 Trading Rocks for Bread

Sometimes we feel like God is silent or gives us something we didn’t want. But Jesus says He’s not cruel—He doesn’t hand out pain for fun. If you’re seeking Him, what He gives is good, even if it surprises you.

🔍 Real Talk:

  • Have you ever felt like God gave you a stone?
  • Could it be that He’s giving you something better than what you asked?

✍️ Prayer:

Father, help me see the good in what You give—even when it’s not what I expected. I want to trust Your heart. Amen.

Children's Devotionals, Devotions

🧒 Kids Devotional — Day 66

“If your child asks for bread, would you give them a rock?”

Matthew 7:9 (Paraphrased)

🥪 God Doesn’t Trick Us

Imagine asking for a sandwich and someone gives you a rock! That’s silly—and kind of mean. Jesus says God isn’t like that. When we ask Him for good things, He doesn’t give us something bad instead.

🧭 Kingdom Tip:

You can trust God to be kind. He knows what’s best and never plays tricks.

💡 Think About It:

  • What’s something you’ve asked God for?
  • Do you believe He gives what’s good for you?

✨ Let’s Pray:

God, thank You for being kind and good. Help me trust You more each day. Amen.


Devotions, Women's Devotionals

🌿 Kingdom Living Devotional — Day 66

“Or what person is there among you who, when his son asks for a loaf of bread, will give him a stone?”

Matthew 7:9 NASB1995

🥖 The Father’s Heart

Jesus appeals to something we all understand: good parents want to bless their children. Our heavenly Father is even more generous, wise, and kind than the best of earthly parents. He does not mock our hunger—He feeds it.

🏛 Ante-Nicene Confidence

The early Christians had no riches to boast in, yet they trusted the Lord to meet their needs. Their prayers were not for abundance, but for daily bread and enduring strength.

💭 Reflect:

  • Do you see God as a generous Father?
  • What “stones” have you feared that He would give you?

✨ Prayer:

Father, help me see Your heart rightly. Thank You that You do not mock my needs, but provide what nourishes my soul. Amen.

Devotions, Women's Devotionals

🌿 Kingdom Living Devotional — Day 65

“For everyone who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds, and to the one who knocks it will be opened.”

Matthew 7:8 NASB1995

🙏 Promise with a Pattern

Jesus assures us—everyone who asks receives. Not always what we expect, but always what we need. The King hears every knock.

🏛 Ante-Nicene Faith

Early believers took Jesus at His word. They fasted, prayed, and lived lives of bold expectation—not naming and claiming, but submitting and trusting.

💭 Reflect:

  • Do I truly believe God responds?
  • How can I trust Him even when the answer feels delayed?

✨ Prayer:

Lord, let my faith be persistent and expectant. Teach me to wait with hope, knowing You hear me. Amen.

Kingdom Discipleship, Kingdom Living

Come, Lord Jesus

A Call to the Kingdom Life

This is not the end. It is only the beginning.

Throughout this series, we’ve journeyed through the Kingdom—its nature, its call, its power, and its people. We’ve looked to our King and learned what it means to live as citizens of heaven while still walking the earth. And now, as every disciple must do, we look ahead.

The King is returning. And until He does, we are to live ready, love deeply, stand boldly, and pass the truth faithfully.

“The Spirit and the Bride say, ‘Come!’”
Revelation 22:17


The Kingdom Life Is Now and Not Yet

We live in the tension between the already and the not yet. The Kingdom has come in power—but its fullness is still to come in glory. And so we labor, not in vain, but in hope.

“Seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness…”
Matthew 6:33

“Live as if the Kingdom is already among you—for it is.”
Ignatius of Antioch, Letter to the Philadelphians


The Call Is Urgent, Holy, and Beautiful

This world is not our home. We are pilgrims, priests, ambassadors, soldiers, and servants. The King is calling His Church to rise in holiness and humility, to shine as a light in a dark world, and to prepare the way of the Lord.

“Let your loins be girded and your lamps burning.”
Luke 12:35


We Leave a Legacy by Living Faithfully

Every generation must decide: will we live for this world, or will we live for His Kingdom? Will we compromise, or will we consecrate? We pass on the Kingdom by living it—with tears, truth, trials, and triumph.

“Be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord…”
1 Corinthians 15:58


The Bride Must Be Ready

We are not called to build empires—but to prepare the Bride. Our homes, churches, and hearts must be made ready. Because our Lord comes swiftly.

“Surely I am coming soon.”
Revelation 22:20
“Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.”


Until Then…

  • Seek the Kingdom
  • Live as citizens of heaven
  • Make disciples
  • Love not your life, even unto death
  • And watch the skies

Sources:

  • The Holy Bible — Revelation 22:17–21; Matthew 6:33; Luke 12:35–40; 1 Corinthians 15:58; Hebrews 10:23–25
  • Ignatius of Antioch, Letter to the Philadelphians
  • Clement of Rome, 1 Clement 50
  • Didache, ch. 16
  • Hermas, Mandate 13

2–3 minutes

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Editor's Picks, Kingdom Discipleship, Love In Action

If You Love Me, Obey Me

From the series “The Commands of Christ — Love in Action”

The love of God is not a feeling we carry. It is a life we surrender.
It does not ask for admiration. It calls for obedience.
Love that does not obey is not love at all.

“If you love Me, you will keep My commandments.”
John 14:15, NASB 1995

Jesus didn’t say this to burden His disciples.
He said it to anchor them.
Because love for Christ is not measured in passion, eloquence, or emotion—but in faithfulness.

To follow Jesus is not to admire His teachings.
It is to obey His voice.


There is a kind of faith that applauds Christ from a distance.
There is a kind of love that sings on Sunday and wanders on Monday.
But the love that saves—the love born of the Spirit—is a love that listens, follows, repents, and obeys.

“Why do you call Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not do what I say?”
Luke 6:46

This is the question that echoes through every age of the Church.
Not, “Do you feel love for Me?”
But, “Will you do what I say?”


Jesus’ commands are not suggestions. They are not optional for the mature or the zealous. They are for every disciple who has been born of the Spirit and adopted into the family of God.

“For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments; and His commandments are not burdensome.”
1 John 5:3

True love doesn’t argue with the Word.
It doesn’t try to explain away obedience with theology.
It bows. It follows. It trusts.


The early Church understood this well. Their love was visible, not because they claimed it, but because they lived it.

The Didache (c. AD 50–100):
“There are two ways: one of life, one of death. This is the way of life: First, you shall love God who made you; second, your neighbor as yourself. And whatsoever you would not have done to you, do not do to another… walk according to the commandments.”
Didache, Ch. 1–2

Irenaeus (c. 180 AD):
“Those who love Him walk in His commandments. For love does not destroy the Law, but fulfills it through obedience.”
Against Heresies, Book IV

These early believers did not separate doctrine from practice.
They didn’t ask how little they could obey and still be saved.
They asked how deeply they could obey to show their love.


So what does this mean for us?

It means love cannot remain vague.
It must be expressed in action—in forgiving, in speaking truth, in denying self, in remaining faithful, in keeping His words even when it costs us everything.

It means discipleship isn’t just about knowing what Jesus said—it’s about doing it.

“But the one who has listened and has not acted accordingly is like a man who built a house on the ground without a foundation…”
Luke 6:49

And it means this: the clearest evidence that the love of God abides in us… is that we obey.


📚 Sources & References

If You Love Me, Obey Me

Scripture (NASB 1995):

  • John 14:15 – “If you love Me, you will keep My commandments.”
  • 1 John 5:3 – “This is the love of God, that we keep His commandments…”
  • Luke 6:46–49 – “Why do you call Me, ‘Lord, Lord’ and do not do what I say?”

Ante-Nicene Sources:

  • The Didache, Chapters 1–2.
    “There are two ways… walk according to the commandments.”
    [Available at: EarlyChristianWritings.com]
  • Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book IV.
    “Love does not destroy the Law, but fulfills it through obedience.”
    [Available at: NewAdvent.org]
2–4 minutes

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Devotions, Family Devotionals

🏡 Kingdom Family Devotional — Day 65

“For everyone who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds, and to the one who knocks it will be opened.”

Matthew 7:8 NASB1995

🌿 Strengthening Faith at Home

This verse gives a steady anchor for children learning to pray: God listens. As a mother, remind them that they are part of the everyone Jesus speaks of.

Teach them that delayed answers aren’t denials—but invitations to draw nearer in trust.

📖 Talk About It:

  • Has your child ever experienced an answered prayer?
  • How can we celebrate faithfulness even in the waiting?

🧺 Kingdom Practice:

Write down prayer requests together and revisit them weekly—celebrating what God is doing, even in silence.

✍️ Prayer:

Lord, teach our family to believe Your promises. Let our children grow up confident that You are near and faithful. Amen.

Devotions, Teen Devotions

😎 Kingdom Teen Devotional — Day 65

“For everyone who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds, and to the one who knocks it will be opened.”

Matthew 7:8 NASB1995

🔓 A Promise That Still Stands

No one is too messed up, too late, or too young for this promise. Everyone who seeks—finds. Period. That includes you.

The question isn’t whether God hears—it’s whether you’ll keep seeking even when you don’t feel Him.

🔍 Real Talk:

  • What’s something you’ve been afraid to ask God?
  • Have you stopped knocking too soon?

✍️ Prayer:

Father, remind me that Your door is always open. Make me bold to seek You again. Amen.

Children's Devotionals, Devotions

🧒 Kids Devotional — Day 65

“Everyone who asks will get what they ask for. Everyone who looks will find. Everyone who knocks will have the door opened.”

Matthew 7:8 (Paraphrased)

🎁 Everyone Means YOU

When Jesus says everyone, that means even you! He promises to hear your voice and open the door when you knock.

🧭 Kingdom Tip:

Don’t be afraid to talk to God. He loves to hear from you!

💡 Think About It:

  • What’s something you really want to ask God about?
  • How does it feel to know He listens?

✨ Let’s Pray:

God, thank You for always hearing me. I know You love me and I trust You. Amen.

Kingdom Discipleship, Kingdom Living

Preparing the Bride and Her Children for His Return

Passing on a Living Hope and Holy Anticipation

We are not just raising children—we are preparing the Bride. Kingdom legacy is more than good values or sound doctrine; it is preparation for a holy wedding. Christ is coming for a people ready, radiant, and faithful, and it is our joyful task to pass on that expectancy to those who come after us.

“Let us rejoice and exult and give Him the glory, for the marriage of the Lamb has come, and His Bride has made herself ready.”
Revelation 19:7


We Prepare by Living Watchful Lives

The early Church lived in expectation, often greeting one another with “Maranatha”—Come, Lord Jesus! Their lives were marked by urgency, holiness, and longing for His return.

“Keep your lamps burning… for the Son of Man is coming at an hour you do not expect.”
Luke 12:35–40


We Teach Our Children to Long for the King

We don’t just teach them how to live—we teach them why: because the King is returning. That truth gives weight to obedience, urgency to our days, and hope to our suffering.

“The Spirit and the Bride say, ‘Come!’”
Revelation 22:17

“Train the children not only to live well but to die ready—to greet the coming King without shame.”
Hermas, Mandate 13


We Model Readiness, Not Complacency

Kingdom legacy means watching together. It means preparing hearts, not just calendars. Our homes must echo with a hopeful cry: “Even so, come, Lord Jesus.”

“Let the Bride remain pure, for the time is short and the crown is near.”
Clement of Rome, 1 Clement 50


The Legacy We Leave Is the One We Live

Faithfulness in this hour prepares the next generation for that Day. When Christ returns, may He find a generation raised to know Him, love Him, and long for His appearing.


What We Can Learn

  1. The Church is a Bride being made ready for the King.
  2. Children must be discipled in hope, not just morals.
  3. Readiness is modeled in how we live today.
  4. Legacy ends with longing: “Come, Lord Jesus.”

Sources:

  • The Holy Bible — Revelation 19:7–9; Revelation 22:17; Luke 12:35–40; Titus 2:11–13; 2 Timothy 4:8
  • Hermas, Mandate 13
  • Clement of Rome, 1 Clement 50
  • Didache, ch. 16
  • Ignatius of Antioch, Letter to the Philadelphians

2–3 minutes

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