Devotions, Teen Devotions

😎 Kingdom Teen Devotional — Day 41

“Don’t do your good deeds in front of others to be seen by them.”

Matthew 6:1 (Paraphrased)

🌟 Applause or Obedience?

There’s a temptation to post every good deed, to seek recognition for every act of kindness. But Jesus flips the script: the reward you want from people might be the only one you get.

He invites you to something deeper—living for an Audience of One. The quiet, obedient life seen by the Father is worth more than a thousand likes.

🖊 Real Talk:

  • Do I serve because it’s right, or because it’s seen?
  • Where is God calling me to be faithful in secret?

✨ Try This:

Do something kind this week that no one knows about. Make it a secret between you and God.

✍️ Prayer:

Lord, teach me to love the hidden path. I want to live for Your eyes, not theirs. Purify my motives and make me faithful in secret places. Amen.

Children's Devotionals, Devotions

🧢 Kingdom Kids Devotional — Day 41

“Don’t do good things just so people will see you.”

Matthew 6:1 (Paraphrased)

😊 Do It for God

Jesus says that when we do something good, it shouldn’t be to get a gold star or a big cheer. We should do it because we love God!

When no one is looking, and you still choose to help, share, or obey—God sees it. And He is happy with you.

🏛 Long Ago…

Early Christian children were taught to be humble and kind even when no one noticed. They learned that God sees everything done with love.

💡 Think About It:

  • Do I only do good things when someone is watching?
  • Can I be kind today even if no one claps or sees it?

✨ Let’s Pray:

Jesus, help me do the right thing even when no one sees. I want to please You most of all. Amen.


Kingdom Discipleship, Kingdom Living

The Midnight Cry

Responding to the Call of the Bridegroom

There is a moment coming when the call will go out—a cry that will shake the sleeping and stir the faithful. The Bridegroom is near. The wedding is at hand. And only those who have been watching will rise to meet Him.

“At midnight there was a cry, ‘Here is the bridegroom! Come out to meet Him.’”
Matthew 25:6

This cry is not just in the future—it is echoing even now. The Holy Spirit is calling the Church to awaken, to trim her lamp, and to go out to meet her Beloved.


The Midnight Cry Is a Wake-Up Call

“It is time to wake from sleep. For salvation is nearer to us now than when we first believed.”
Romans 13:11

We live in a generation lulled into spiritual slumber by comfort, entertainment, and distraction. But the Spirit is stirring. He is raising up voices to proclaim: Get ready. He is coming.

“He will come as He promised, suddenly and without delay. Let no one be caught unprepared.”
Hermas, Similitudes 9


Only the Ready Will Respond

When the cry came in Jesus’ parable, all the virgins rose—but only five had oil. The others had waited too long.

  • They were in the right crowd, but lacked the right heart
  • They had the form of devotion, but not the fullness
  • They were too late to borrow from the prepared

“Each must carry their own oil, for the Lord looks upon the heart, not the vessel.”
Didache, ch. 16


To Go Out to Meet Him Is to Leave the World Behind

The Bride does not meet her Groom halfway. She runs to Him, leaving behind the darkness, the distractions, and the comforts that once numbed her desire.

She:

  • Responds in obedience
  • Abandons compromise
  • Embraces the narrow way
  • Runs with joy and urgency

“Let the Bride rise with haste, for her Beloved draws near.”
Tertullian, On the Resurrection of the Flesh


What We Can Learn

  1. The midnight cry is sounding—will we rise or sleep?
  2. Only those with oil in their lamps will be ready.
  3. We cannot borrow readiness—it must be our own.
  4. To meet the Bridegroom is to run with urgency and joy.

Sources:

  • The Holy Bible — Matthew 25:6–13; Romans 13:11–14; Luke 12:36–40; Revelation 16:15
  • Hermas, Similitudes 9
  • Didache, ch. 16
  • Tertullian, On the Resurrection of the Flesh
  • Clement of Rome, 1 Clement 35

2–3 minutes

Leave a comment

Devotions, Family Devotionals

🏡 Kingdom Family Devotional — Day 41

“Beware of practicing your righteousness before men to be noticed by them…”

— Matthew 6:1 NASB1995

🌸 Quiet Faithfulness

Kingdom families don’t need a spotlight to do what’s right. Jesus tells us that good works should be done from a pure heart—not for praise, but for God.

As a family, we want to serve quietly, give generously, and obey joyfully—even when no one sees. Because the Father sees. And that’s what matters most.

🕯 A Mother’s Role

Model unseen obedience. When you choose humility, generosity, or patience without fanfare, you show your children that God’s approval is enough.

📖 Talk About It:

Why do we sometimes want people to notice our good deeds?

How can we practice doing things for God’s eyes alone?

🪡 Kingdom Practice

This week, each family member chooses one act of kindness to do in secret. At the end of the week, share how it felt to do something just for God.

✍️ Prayer:

Lord, help our family love quiet faithfulness. May our hearts seek Your reward above all. Teach us to live for Your glory, not our own. Amen.

Devotions, Women's Devotionals

🌿 Kingdom Living Devotional — Day 41

“Beware of practicing your righteousness before men to be noticed by them; otherwise you have no reward with your Father who is in heaven.”

Matthew 6:1 NASB1995

🕵️️ The Hidden Life That God Sees

Jesus shifts from external action to internal motive. Even good deeds can be self-serving when done for applause. Kingdom righteousness isn’t for performance; it’s for the pleasure of the Father.

The desire to be seen is natural, but Jesus calls us to live for the unseen God who rewards what is done in secret. Living before His eyes alone purifies our motives and deepens our intimacy with Him.

🔗 Ante-Nicene Reflection

Early Christians lived humbly, often serving in obscurity. Their faithfulness wasn’t paraded; it was hidden in everyday acts of mercy, hospitality, and generosity—all done unto the Lord.

💭 Reflect

  • Do I crave recognition more than obedience?
  • Am I willing to be unseen if it means being faithful?

✨ Prayer

Father, teach me to desire Your reward above all others. Help me to live quietly, faithfully, and joyfully before Your eyes alone. Amen.

Editor's Picks, God Is Love, Kingdom Discipleship

Love Empowered: The Holy Spirit and the Life of Christ Within

From the series “The Love of God: Revealed, Received, and Radiated”

It is one thing to speak of the love of God.
It is another to receive it.
But it is something far more profound to live it.

The love that created the world, the love that was nailed to a cross, is not meant to remain distant—admired but unreachable. The risen Christ did not ascend to leave us longing. He sent the Holy Spirit to abide with us, teach us, and form His love within us.

“The love of God has been poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us.”
Romans 5:5

This is not a metaphor.
It is not a poetic way of saying we feel better when we believe.
It is the supernatural reality of regeneration.

Through the Holy Spirit, the love of God ceases to be a doctrine we study and becomes a presence we carry.


Many speak of love, but very few walk in it.
Why?
Because it cannot be manufactured by discipline, religious knowledge, or human willpower.

The love that forgives enemies, blesses persecutors, shows mercy to the undeserving, and remains faithful in suffering is not natural. It is the result of divine indwelling.

“But I say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you…”
Matthew 5:44

“By this all men will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.”
John 13:35

These are not ideals for the spiritually gifted—they are commands for every believer. But without the Spirit, they are impossible.


When the Holy Spirit takes up residence in a believer, He does not merely convict and comfort. He conforms us to the image of Christ. He produces what we cannot:

“The fruit of the Spirit is love…”
Galatians 5:22

Notice where it begins: love. Not a feeling. Not attraction. Not tolerance.
A supernatural, self-denying, enemy-forgiving, holiness-seeking love that mirrors the life of Jesus Christ.

It is this kind of love that stunned the Roman Empire. The early Christians didn’t argue the culture into submission—they loved their enemies, cared for the sick during plagues, rescued abandoned infants, and refused to curse their executioners. And this wasn’t because of their willpower. It was the Spirit of Christ within them.


Tertullian (c. 160–220 AD) recorded that the pagans exclaimed:
“See how they love one another… and how ready they are to die for one another!”
Apology, Chapter 39

They loved with a kind of love the world could not explain—because it did not originate in them.
It came from heaven.
It flowed from a Person.
And it burned even when they were burned at the stake.


This is the love that dwells in every true follower of Christ.

It is not optional.
It is not theoretical.
It is not silent.

Where the Spirit is, there is love. And not merely for the brethren. The true test of love is not how we treat our friends, but how we treat our enemies.

“If anyone says, ‘I love God,’ and hates his brother, he is a liar…”
1 John 4:20

The early Church didn’t love one another because it made sense. They loved one another because the Spirit of the risen Christ had made them one. They didn’t love enemies to win debates—they loved them because they had died with Christ, and it was no longer they who lived, but He who lived in them.


This is what the Holy Spirit does.
He makes the love of God a living reality—poured out, overflowing, unstoppable.

Without Him, we cannot love as Christ loves.
With Him, we cannot help it.

Sources & References

Love Empowered: The Holy Spirit and the Life of Christ Within

Scripture (NASB 1995):

  • Romans 5:5 – “The love of God has been poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit…”
  • Galatians 5:22 – “The fruit of the Spirit is love…”
  • Matthew 5:44 – “Love your enemies…”
  • John 13:35 – “By this all men will know…”
  • 1 John 4:20 – “If anyone says, ‘I love God,’ and hates his brother, he is a liar…”

Ante-Nicene Sources:

  • Tertullian, Apology, Chapter 39.
    “See how they love one another… and how ready they are to die for one another!”
    [Available at: NewAdvent.org/fathers/0301.htm]
3–4 minutes

Leave a comment

Kingdom Discipleship, Kingdom Living

Prepared People, Glorious King

A Vision of the Ready Bride and the Coming Kingdom

The return of Christ is not a myth. It is not symbolic. It is not far off in some unreachable realm. It is the blessed hope of the Church—and the King is coming for a prepared people.

“Behold, I am coming soon. Blessed is the one who keeps the words of the prophecy of this book.”
Revelation 22:7

History is not spiraling toward chaos—it is moving toward a wedding and a Kingdom. The Bride who waits in purity will be clothed in glory, and the King who comes in power will dwell with His people forever.


The Prepared Are Not Caught Off Guard

“But you are not in darkness… for that day to surprise you like a thief.”
1 Thessalonians 5:4

The faithful may not know the hour, but they are not sleeping. They are:

  • Watching and praying
  • Repenting and refining
  • Serving and shining
  • Hoping and proclaiming

“Let us be found ready, lest shame cover us when the King appears.”
Hermas, Mandate 9


The Glory of the King Will Outshine Every Trial

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

Every tear, every loss, every moment of faithful waiting will be swallowed up in glory. He will wipe away every tear. He will reign. And we will reign with Him.

“The coming of the King will make radiant all who have kept the faith.”
Clement of Rome, 1 Clement 50


The Bride and the Kingdom Are One

The prepared people are not spectators—they are heirs. They will inherit the Kingdom prepared for them. And they will shine like the sun in the Kingdom of their Father.

“Then the righteous will shine like the sun in the Kingdom of their Father.”
Matthew 13:43


What We Can Learn

  1. The King is coming—live like you believe it.
  2. The prepared Bride will be clothed in eternal glory.
  3. The Kingdom belongs to those who are faithful in the waiting.
  4. Hope is not wishful—it is certain. The wedding is real.

Sources:

  • The Holy Bible — Revelation 22:7; 1 Thessalonians 5:4–8; Colossians 3:4; Matthew 13:43; Revelation 21:3–4
  • Hermas, Mandate 9
  • Clement of Rome, 1 Clement 50
  • Ignatius of Antioch, Letter to Polycarp
  • Didache, ch. 16

2–3 minutes

Leave a comment

Devotions, Family Devotionals

🏡 Kingdom Family Devotional — Day 40

“Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.”

Matthew 5:48 NASB1995

🌟 A Family Growing in Wholeness

Jesus tells us to be perfect like our Heavenly Father. He doesn’t mean never making a mistake—He means we should grow to be whole in how we love, forgive, and live.

In a Kingdom home, we don’t just do the right things—we seek to love like the Father loves: completely and without condition.

🕯 A Mother’s Role

Model grace while guiding your children toward spiritual maturity. Encourage growth, not perfectionism. Let love lead the way in discipline, conversation, and correction.

📖 Talk About It:

  • What does it look like to be a “whole” family in God’s eyes?
  • How can we grow in love and maturity together?

🪡 Kingdom Practice

Choose one area where your family can grow in wholeness this week—whether in how you speak, forgive, or serve each other. Pray over it together.

✍️ Prayer:

Lord, help our family grow into Your likeness. Make us whole, not just right. Let our love be full, our hearts undivided, and our eyes fixed on You. Amen.

Devotions, Teen Devotions

😎 Kingdom Teen Devotional — Day 40

“Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.”

Matthew 5:48 NASB1995

🌟 Wholehearted, Not Halfway

Jesus isn’t calling you to flawlessness—He’s calling you to wholeness. To grow into someone who doesn’t just act right but loves right. Someone whose heart is shaped by the Father.

This is spiritual maturity: when your words, thoughts, and actions are all pulling in the same direction—toward God.

🖊 Real Talk:

  • Are you chasing perfectionism or pursuing Christlikeness?
  • What’s one area where God is calling you to grow deeper?

✨ Try This:

Ask God to reveal where you’re living halfhearted. Then take one step this week toward being whole in that area.

✍️ Prayer:

Father, I don’t want to fake maturity. Make me whole. Teach me to love fully, forgive freely, and live like You. Amen.

Children's Devotionals, Devotions

🧢 Kingdom Kids Devotional — Day 40

“Be perfect, just like your Father in heaven is perfect.”

Matthew 5:48 (Paraphrased)

✨ Growing to Be Like God

Jesus wants us to grow to be more like God—not by being perfect at everything, but by loving like God does! When we show kindness, tell the truth, and forgive, we are acting like our Heavenly Father.

God knows we won’t always get it right, but He wants us to keep growing every day.

🏛 Long Ago…

Children in the early church learned that God wanted them to grow in love and goodness. They weren’t perfect, but they kept trying to be more like Jesus.

💡 Think About It:

  • What does it mean to love like God?
  • How can you grow to be more like Him today?

✨ Let’s Pray:

Jesus, help me grow in love every day. I want to be like You and my Father in heaven. Amen.