Devotions, Teen Devotions

😎 Teen Devotional — Day 30

“Testify Boldly”

📖 “But when the Helper comes, whom I shall send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth… He will testify of Me.”
—John 15:26 (NKJV)


Let’s be real: sharing your faith can feel awkward.
You might worry about sounding weird… losing friends… or getting labeled.

But here’s the truth—you’re not alone.

Jesus sent the Holy Spirit for a reason.

He’s not just a quiet voice inside you.
He’s the Spirit of truth.
And He testifies of Jesus—through you.

That means when you share your story, stand for what’s right, or even just choose kindness in a cruel world, the Holy Spirit is bearing witness.

You’re not just repping Jesus—you’re empowered by Him.

You’re not performing—you’re testifying.


Challenge:

  • What holds you back from speaking up about your faith?
  • How can you rely more on the Holy Spirit this week?

Prayer:
Holy Spirit, help me be bold and unashamed of Jesus. Speak through me. Remind me of the truth. Teach me how to share Him in a way that’s real and full of love. Amen.

Children's Devotionals, Devotions

🧒 Children’s Devotional — Day 30

“The Helper Who Tells Us About Jesus”

📖 “When the Helper comes… He will testify of Me.”
—John 15:26 (NKJV)


Did you know that God gave us a Helper?

He’s called the Holy Spirit, and He lives in everyone who believes in Jesus.

The Holy Spirit helps us remember the things Jesus said.
He teaches us how to live like Jesus.
And most of all, He tells us the truth about Jesus—so we don’t forget who He is.

It’s kind of like having a flashlight in your heart that always shines on Jesus.

When we read the Bible, pray, or tell someone about Jesus, the Holy Spirit is there, helping us understand and share the truth.


Think About It:

  • Why do you think Jesus gave us the Holy Spirit?
  • How can you ask the Holy Spirit to help you this week?

Prayer:
Thank You, God, for sending the Holy Spirit. Help me listen when He teaches me about Jesus. I want to follow You with all my heart. Amen.

Devotions, Women's Devotionals

👩‍🦰 Women’s Devotional — Day 30

“They Will Testify of Me”

📖 “But when the Helper comes, whom I shall send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth who proceeds from the Father, He will testify of Me.”
—John 15:26 (NKJV)

When the noise of this world rises up and the name of Jesus is mocked or forgotten, there remains a faithful witness who never grows silent:
The Holy Spirit.

Jesus promised that the Spirit would come—and testify.
Not just whisper, not just remind… but testify.

That means the Spirit speaks boldly and clearly about Christ, from within us and through us.
He points to the Son, always.

And that means you, dear sister in Christ, have been given a Helper who lives within you—one who emboldens, teaches, reminds, and strengthens you to do what you could never do alone.

When your heart is weary and your words feel weak,
He is strong.

When fear tempts you to stay silent,
He empowers you to speak truth in love.

The Spirit doesn’t point us to ourselves—He points us to Jesus.
And in doing so, we learn to point others to Him, too.


Reflection Questions:

  • How has the Holy Spirit helped you bear witness to Jesus in your life?
  • Are you listening to His voice or resisting His prompting?

Prayer:
Holy Spirit, thank You for testifying of Christ and living in me. Help me to yield to Your leading, to open my mouth when You prompt me, and to honor Jesus with my life. May others see Him through me. Amen.

Convergence, The Last Days

Climate Agenda & Control of Resources

Countdown to Convergence: How Agenda 2030, Today’s Headlines, and God’s Word Align


Few issues dominate headlines today like the climate crisis. Governments, corporations, and global institutions tell us it is the greatest existential threat of our time. From extreme weather to food shortages, climate change is framed as the cause — and the justification — for sweeping restrictions.

Headlines proclaim: “Nations Agree to Climate Lockdowns by 2030” and “Global Pact on Carbon Credits Advances.” To the world, these look like necessary solutions. But Scripture reveals another layer: control of resources, food, and land has long been a prophetic warning of the last days.


Agenda 2030’s Climate Goals

Agenda 2030 declares:

  • Goal 13: “Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts.”
  • Goal 15: “Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems…”

On the surface, these goals appear harmless, even admirable. Yet they open the door for unprecedented global management of natural resources — and by extension, control over people.

What begins as “saving the planet” becomes a mechanism of dependency and compliance.


Current Events in Motion

  • Nations increasingly declare “climate emergencies” that give governments broad power to restrict movement, energy usage, and even travel.
  • Carbon credit systems are expanding, with restrictions placed on farming, livestock, and fertilizer.
  • Global treaties seek to regulate land, water rights, forests, and emissions.
  • Food insecurity is being framed as the reason to centralize agricultural production and distribution under international oversight.

The very resources God gave to sustain life are being consolidated into the hands of a few.


Prophecy Foretold This

The Bible warned that in the last days, food and resources would be tightly controlled:

“A quart of wheat for a denarius, and three quarts of barley for a denarius; and do not harm the oil and the wine.” (Revelation 6:6, c. AD 95, NKJV)

This prophecy of the black horse of famine reveals an economic system where food is weighed, measured, and rationed.

Joel, too, declared: “The field is wasted, the land mourns; for the grain is ruined, the new wine is dried up, the oil fails. Be ashamed, you farmers, wail, you vinedressers, for the wheat and the barley… Surely joy has withered away.” (Joel 1:10–12, c. 835 BC, NKJV)

And Jesus Himself said: “There will be famines, pestilences, and earthquakes in various places.” (Matthew 24:7, c. AD 60, NKJV)

Scarcity and control of resources are not new. But in our time, they are global, structured, and increasingly tied to governance.


Why This Matters

Climate policy is not just about the weather. It’s about control:

  • Who can farm and how.
  • What kind of food is available.
  • How much energy you can use.
  • Even where and when you can travel.

Framed as “sustainability,” these restrictions make citizens dependent on global structures. Once tied to digital ID and CBDCs, this becomes an inescapable system of compliance.


God’s Pattern of Provision and Sovereignty

But God remains sovereign over His creation.

  • After the flood, He promised: “While the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, winter and summer, and day and night shall not cease.” (Genesis 8:22, c. 2000 BC, NKJV)
  • In Egypt, He raised Joseph to preserve His people through famine (Genesis 41, c. 1875 BC).
  • In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus declared: “Look at the birds of the air… your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they?” (Matthew 6:26, c. AD 60, NKJV)

The world may weaponize resources for control, but God promises provision for His people.


A Call to Watchfulness

Christians must not be deceived by rhetoric that trades liberty for sustainability. While we are called to be good stewards of creation, we must never submit to systems that enslave in the name of peace or protection.

Our task is to watch, to prepare, and to trust in the God who provides even in famine.


Sources & References

Scripture

  • Genesis 8:22, c. 2000 BC
  • Genesis 41, c. 1875 BC
  • Joel 1:10–12, c. 835 BC
  • Matthew 6:26; 24:7, c. AD 60
  • Revelation 6:5–6, c. AD 95

Agenda 2030

  • Goal 13: Climate action
  • Goal 15: Ecosystems/land use
  • Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (United Nations, 2015)

Current Events

Climate Restrictions / Treaty Developments

  • UN Body agrees on rules to manage “emission reversal” risks
    The UNFCCC adopted new rules to guard against scenarios where emissions reductions might be reversed (for example, by land use change). UNFCCC
  • UN highest court: rich nations must curb emissions under treaties
    The International Court of Justice (ICJ) issued an opinion asserting that wealthy states are bound by their treaty commitments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and could be liable to pay compensation to climate-vulnerable nations. Reuters
  • US threatens sanctions over proposed global shipping emissions rules
    The U.S. objected to a new IMO (International Maritime Organization) proposal to set binding emissions standards for shipping, threatening visa bans or sanctions for countries that back the plan. Reuters
  • US urges countries to oppose plastic production caps at UN treaty talks
    A memo from the U.S. government encouraged nations to reject global limits on plastic production and stricter chemical regulations, pushing back against proposals supported by 100+ countries. Reuters
  • Trump signs executive order to withdraw US from Paris Agreement (again)
    On his first day back in office, President Trump issued notice of a second U.S. withdrawal from the Paris climate accord. The withdrawal process takes about one year after formal notification. The Guardian+1
  • High Seas Treaty to regulate deep-ocean activities, marine protection
    A new treaty on ocean biodiversity (areas beyond national jurisdiction) was ratified by 60 states, triggering its entry into force January 2026. It includes provisions for marine protected zones, environmental impact assessments, and benefit sharing. Financial Times+2Le Monde.fr+2
  • COP30 (2025) Climate Conference upcoming in Brazil
    The 30th UN climate conference (COP30) is set for November 10–21, 2025 in Belém, Brazil. The event will revisit national climate pledges (NDCs), climate finance scaling, forest conservation, and related treaty implementation. Wikipedia
  • Six key issues from Climate Week 2025
    An analysis piece outlines the major topics debated in Climate Week 2025, including energy transition, adaptation finance, methane, nature-based solutions, and climate justice. CGEP

Farming / Food Production Controls & Policy

  • U.S. “MAHA” strategy to restrict food additives, dyes
    The “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) Commission released proposals to limit or eliminate petroleum-based food dyes (FD&C certified colors) in federally funded nutrition programs (e.g. school lunches), and to push reductions in sugar and sodium in packaged foods. Holland & Knight+1
  • USDA’s National Farm Security Action Plan elevates agriculture as national security
    The U.S. administration introduced an initiative linking agriculture to national security, aiming for resilience in food systems against external threats. USDA
  • Farm Bill / agriculture spending changes in 2025
    The “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (OBBB) was passed, increasing agricultural investment over a decade (estimated ~$66 billion), updating safety net programs (crop insurance, dairy margins, etc.). Farm Bureau
    Critics argue some policies increase “control” over subsidy rules, eligibility, and regulatory compliance. American Enterprise Institute
  • US agriculture policy changes and deregulation proposals
    The USDA released a 10-point plan in 2025 emphasizing environmental deregulation, local procurement, and support for small farms. Civil Eats
  • Agriculture groups push to bring “Food for Peace” program under USDA control
    Interest groups in the U.S. are lobbying to shift the administration of the Food for Peace program (formerly under USAID / State Dept) to USDA, which could centralize more control over food aid and production decisions. Pro Farmer
  • EU farming reform proposal: reducing red tape, redistributing subsidies
    The European Union published a vision to reform its Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), aiming to redirect subsidies toward smaller family farms, reduce regulatory burdens, and ensure that agricultural imports meet EU environmental and animal welfare standards. AP News
  • Czech farmers protests vs EU agricultural / environmental rules
    In the Czech Republic, farmers have held protests (2023–2025) opposing EU policies that restrict pesticide/fertilizer use, impose environmental mandates, and allow agricultural imports (especially from Ukraine) seen as undercutting domestic producers. Wikipedia
  • Decline in U.S. sugar beet farming due to demand drop
    U.S. sugar beet farmers are reducing acreage sharply as domestic demand plunges (in part from weight-loss drug usage), raising questions about policy responses and crop reallocation. Reuters

Devotions, Family Devotionals

👩‍👧 Family Devotional — Day 29

“When the World Pushes Back”

📖 “They hated Me without a cause.”
—John 15:25b (NKJV)


Faithfulness to Christ will not always be met with applause.
In fact, Jesus told us to expect the opposite.

He was hated—without cause.
Not for wrongdoing, but for His righteousness.

In the same way, a family who walks in truth, raises their children in godliness, and rejects cultural compromise will eventually feel resistance.

It may come from extended family, social settings, or even within the church.
But the comfort lies here: we are in good company.

Jesus was rejected first.
And He remained steadfast.

We are not called to stir up conflict, but we are called to stand when it comes—graciously, truthfully, and with unwavering love.


Family Reflection:

  • How has your family experienced resistance for choosing to follow Christ?
  • How can you prepare your children to respond like Jesus did?

Prayer:
Lord, when the world pushes back against our faith, help us to remember that You were hated without cause. Give our family strength to stand together in truth and grace, just as You did. Amen.

Devotions, Teen Devotions

😎 Teen Devotional — Day 29

“Unliked for the Right Reasons”

📖 “They hated Me without a cause.”
—John 15:25b (NKJV)


Let’s be honest—most people want to be liked.
We scroll, post, share, and speak hoping for a good reaction.

But what happens when standing with Jesus makes you stand out—and not in a good way?

Jesus didn’t get canceled because He was rude or reckless.
He was hated for speaking truth, loving purely, and refusing to compromise.

They hated Him without a cause—no valid reason, just discomfort with His light.

That still happens today.

If you’re walking with Christ, you’ll feel it.
People may mock you, misunderstand you, or call your beliefs offensive.
You might even lose followers—or friends.

But you’ll gain something better: a deeper connection with the One who was hated first.

And He never hated back.
He loved. He forgave. He stood firm.

You can too.


Challenge:

  • Are you more concerned with being liked or being faithful?
  • What would it look like to follow Jesus, even when it’s unpopular?

Prayer:
Lord, help me care more about being true to You than being liked by the world. When people don’t understand, remind me that they didn’t understand You either. Let my life reflect You—no matter the cost. Amen.

Children's Devotionals, Devotions

🧒 Children’s Devotional — Day 29

“Jesus Was Hated—But He Still Loved”

📖 “They hated Me without a cause.”
—John 15:25b (NKJV)


Have you ever had someone not like you—and you didn’t even know why?

That can feel confusing and sad.

Jesus felt that too.

People hated Him, even though He never did anything wrong.
He told the truth. He healed the sick. He showed love.
Still, some people were angry with Him… just because He was different.

But do you know what Jesus did?

He kept loving them.

He didn’t fight back. He didn’t stop helping people.
He kept showing God’s love—even to the people who hated Him.

When people treat us badly for being like Jesus, we can remember:
Jesus understands… and He can help us do what’s right.


Think About It:

  • Why do you think some people didn’t like Jesus?
  • What can you do when someone is unkind to you?

Prayer:
Jesus, thank You for loving people—even when they didn’t love You back. Help me love others like You do, even when it’s hard. Amen.

Devotions, Women's Devotionals

👩‍🦰 Women’s Devotional — Day 29

“They Hated Me Without a Cause”

📖 “But this happened that the word might be fulfilled which is written in their law, ‘They hated Me without a cause.’”
—John 15:25 (NKJV)

There’s a certain sting in being disliked unfairly.
Especially when your heart is pure. When your words are careful. When your motive is love.

And yet, that’s exactly what Jesus endured.

They hated Him—without cause.

No wrongdoing. No offense. Just His presence… His truth… His holiness.

For the faithful woman of God, this reality becomes familiar. You may be judged harshly for your biblical convictions. Dismissed as narrow for honoring God’s Word. Called out for standing firm in grace and truth.

But take heart—you are not being treated differently than your Lord.

His life fulfilled what was written long before: They hated Me without a cause.

And still… He loved.

Still… He gave.

Still… He endured.

So can you.
Through the power of the Spirit, you can keep shining—even when it costs.


Reflection Questions:

  • Have you ever been unfairly judged or hated because of your faith?
  • How does Jesus’ example encourage you to respond?

Prayer:
Jesus, thank You for showing me how to walk through rejection. When I am misunderstood or opposed, help me remember that You endured it first—without sin, without bitterness, and without backing down. Help me love like You. Amen.

Devotions, Teen Devotions

😎 Teen Devotional — Day 28

“This Path Isn’t Popular”

📖 “If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you…”
—John 15:20a (NKJV)


Let’s be real—no one likes to be hated.
But Jesus didn’t sugarcoat it:
If you follow Him, people won’t always like it.

You might be left out.
You might be mocked.
You might even be labeled as “judgy” just for standing on truth.

But here’s the truth Jesus wants you to hold onto:

🔹 He was hated too.
🔹 He never gave up.
🔹 He promises to walk with you.

When you live like Jesus, you’re going to bump up against a world that doesn’t want Him.
But don’t let that silence your faith or dim your fire.

You’re not living for likes—you’re living for life.
And the One who was persecuted now strengthens you to stand.


Challenge:

  • Where are you tempted to stay silent or hide your faith?
  • What would it look like to choose Jesus over approval this week?

Prayer:
Jesus, help me remember that following You won’t always be popular, but it will always be worth it. Give me courage to stand, to speak, and to keep walking with You. Amen.

Devotions, Family Devotionals

👩‍👧 Family Devotional — Day 28

“Walking the Road Jesus Walked”

📖 “If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you…”
—John 15:20a (NKJV)


The idea of persecution can feel far off—something that happens in other countries or dramatic stories of the past.

But Jesus’ words remind us that opposition comes in many forms.

For a mother training her children in godliness, it may look like being misunderstood by extended family.
It could mean holding firm in truth when the world screams compromise.
It might simply mean being weary, yet still showing up in faithfulness.

Jesus told us this would happen—not to discourage us, but to prepare us.

You are walking a narrow road, one your Savior Himself walked.
And He is not asking you to go anywhere He hasn’t gone first.

Your family’s choice to follow Christ may put you at odds with the world, but it places you firmly in step with the King.


Family Reflection:

  • In what ways do we see “persecution” (large or small) in daily life as believers?
  • How can we encourage one another when walking through it?

Prayer:
Lord Jesus, thank You for preparing us. When we face opposition, remind us that You faced it first. Let our family walk in Your steps—with courage, love, and unwavering faith. Amen.