Devotions, Women's Devotionals

👩‍🦰 The Promise of the Spirit — Day 1

“And I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Helper, so that He may be with you forever; the Helper is the Spirit of truth…”
John 14:16–17a, NASB1995

You Are Not Alone

Before the cross, Jesus looked at His disciples—not yet strong, not yet bold, not yet ready—and gave a promise:
You won’t walk this alone. The Holy Spirit will come.

This wasn’t a distant hope. It was an anchor. The Spirit of God—our Helper, Comforter, and Counselor—would dwell within them, just as He does within us.

He’s not a feeling. Not a force. He is God Himself—sent to lead, convict, teach, comfort, and strengthen us to live out the Kingdom life.
You are not forgotten. Not helpless. Not unequipped.
You are filled—with the very presence of God.

Reflection:
Do I truly live as though the Spirit of the Living God is with me, in me, and guiding me?

Prayer:
Holy Spirit, thank You for dwelling in me. Help me yield to Your voice and live by Your power. Make Christ known through my life. Amen.

Children's Devotionals, Devotions

🧒 The Promise of the Spirit — Day 1

“And I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Helper, so that He may be with you forever; the Helper is the Spirit of truth…”
John 14:16–17a, NASB1995

God’s Spirit Is with You
Jesus promised that when He went to heaven, He would send someone very special to be with His friends—and that includes you!

The Holy Spirit is like a Helper from God. He’s always with you to teach you, help you make good choices, and remind you how much Jesus loves you.

You can talk to Him anytime—He listens. And when you feel scared, confused, or even really happy, He’s right there with you.

Try This:
Ask the Holy Spirit today: “Please help me remember Jesus.”

Prayer:
Holy Spirit, thank You for always being with me. Help me listen to You and follow Jesus. Amen.

Devotions, Women's Devotionals

😎 The Promise of the Spirit — Day 1

“And I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Helper, so that He may be with you forever; the Helper is the Spirit of truth…”
John 14:16–17a, NASB1995

More Than a Feeling
Jesus didn’t say, “Try harder.”
He said, “I will send you the Helper.”

The Holy Spirit isn’t a vibe or a moment of emotion—He is the third Person of the Trinity. Real. Personal. Powerful.
He was there at creation, moved through the prophets, raised Jesus from the dead—and now He lives in you.

When you read Scripture, feel conviction, experience peace in chaos, or speak truth in love—you’re not doing that alone.
He’s training you to walk like Christ in a world that doesn’t.

Reflection:
Do you talk to the Holy Spirit throughout the day—or just during church moments?

Prayer:
Holy Spirit, wake me up to Your presence. Be my strength, my reminder, and my guide. Teach me to live like Jesus every day. Amen.

Biblical Interpretation, Kingdom Discipleship

The Role of the Holy Spirit in Reading Scripture

How to Read the Bible Series

You open your Bible, and the words lie before you.
But without the Author beside you, the meaning remains hidden. The Word is alive (Hebrews 4:12), yet it breathes only when the Spirit breathes into us. Many read the Bible as information; few read it as revelation. The early Church knew the difference—and their lives reflected it.

The Ante-Nicene believers didn’t read Scripture through systems. They weren’t led by councils or creeds. They were led by the Spirit of Truth. The Bereans searched daily, but they did not search alone. The Spirit was their Teacher—and He must be ours.


Scripture Focus:

“But when He, the Spirit of truth, comes, He will guide you into all the truth…”
John 16:13, NASB1995


The Spirit Is the Teacher

The Lord never left His people with a book and no Guide. Jesus promised that the Spirit would lead us into all truth—not through mystical experiences, but through the Word He authored. As Paul wrote:

“We have received… the Spirit who is from God, so that we may know the things freely given to us by God.”
1 Corinthians 2:12

The Spirit does not give new revelation but illumines what has already been given. He opens our eyes to behold (Psalm 119:18), convicts us of truth, and teaches with clarity. No theologian or denomination can replace His voice.


The Anointing That Abides

“You have no need for anyone to teach you… but His anointing teaches you about all things…”
1 John 2:27

This doesn’t reject godly teachers—it rejects dependence on man. The Bereans didn’t check with Paul’s résumé; they tested his message with Scripture, led by the Spirit. The early Church walked in the same pattern, trusting the Spirit’s conviction above the authority of men.


The Spirit Knows the Mind of God

He is not merely a Helper; He is God. He searches the deep things of God (1 Corinthians 2:10–11), and He helps us pray, read, and discern according to the will of the Father (Romans 8:27). When we read Scripture with the Spirit, we’re not just gathering knowledge—we are encountering the very thoughts of God.


The Spirit and the Word Are One

“The words that I have spoken to you are spirit and are life.”
John 6:63

The Holy Spirit will never contradict the written Word because He authored it. If a “revelation” or interpretation conflicts with Scripture, it is not from the Spirit. The Spirit always leads us back to Jesus, the Word made flesh, and He always glorifies the Father through obedience and truth.


Walking in Spirit-Led Reading

  • Pray before reading. Invite the Spirit to teach, correct, and reveal.
  • Read with surrender. Revelation follows obedience (John 7:17).
  • Let Scripture interpret Scripture. The Spirit wrote a unified message.
  • Test all things. Even beloved teachings must align with the Spirit’s Word.

Return to the Spirit. Return to Illumination.

We do not open the Bible to master it—we open it to be mastered by Christ through the Spirit. The early Church knew this. They did not walk by the traditions of men but by the illumination of the Holy Spirit through the Scriptures.

Let us walk as they walked. Let us read with the Author as our Teacher.

Return to the Word. Return to the Spirit. And find truth that transforms.


2–3 minutes

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Biblical Interpretation, Editor's Picks, Kingdom Discipleship

How to Read the Bible — Returning to the Way of the Bereans and the Ante-Nicene Church

How to Read the Bible Series

You hold the Bible in your hands.
Sixty-six books. One Author. One Spirit. One unfolding story of redemption. And yet, for many, it’s a confusing book—wrapped in mystery, buried under layers of tradition, or filtered through man-made systems. But that was never God’s design.

The earliest Christians didn’t read the Bible through denominational creeds or theological filters. They read it with open hearts, under the teaching of the Holy Spirit, and in the context of their Jewish and first-century world. They tested everything by the written Word—and followed it with their lives.

It’s time to return to their way.


Scripture Focus:

“Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.”
Psalm 119:105, NASB1995


Reading with the Author, Not Just About Him

The Bible is not a dead text. It is living and active (Hebrews 4:12) because it is breathed out by the Holy Spirit (2 Timothy 3:16). Without the Spirit, Scripture becomes information. With Him, it becomes transformation.

The Bereans didn’t rely on theological systems or traditions to interpret the Word. They relied on the Spirit and the Scriptures themselves. Their example calls us to read with reverence, discernment, and dependence—not on man, but on God.


The Early Church Read the Word as One Unified Story

They saw the Old and New Testaments not as opposites but as one unfolding plan of God. They understood the Jewish idioms and culture behind the text. They read the Word in its historical context, through Hebraic lenses, and with spiritual hunger.

They didn’t force Scripture to fit their beliefs. They submitted their beliefs to the Word.


Principles for Spirit-Led, Scripture-Faithful Reading

  1. Context Is King
    Who wrote it? To whom? What is happening? What covenant are they under? Read what’s there, not what tradition has imposed.
  2. Culture and Language Matter
    Jesus spoke as a Jew to Jews. Many truths are deeply rooted in Hebrew idioms and first-century thought. Misreading the cultural setting leads to misapplying truth.
  3. Scripture Interprets Scripture
    Isaiah 28:10 and 1 Corinthians 2:13 remind us: truth is confirmed in multiple witnesses across God’s Word. Don’t hang doctrines on isolated verses.
  4. Avoid Allegory Unless the Text Demands It
    The early Church read Scripture literally unless it clearly indicated symbolism (such as in visions or parables). They let the Spirit—not philosophy—determine meaning.
  5. Reject Traditions That Override Scripture
    Jesus warned about this (Matthew 15:9). When tradition silences the Word or redefines its meaning, we must return to the text and the Spirit.

Walking as the Early Church Walked

To read the Bible rightly, we must return to how it was written: in context, by the Spirit, and for the Church. The Bereans searched the Scriptures daily to test everything. The Ante-Nicene believers treasured the Word, often at the cost of their lives.

They didn’t read to affirm a system. They read to know and follow Christ.


Return to the Word. Return to the Spirit.

The Bible is not meant to be interpreted by the wisdom of men, but by the One who wrote it. The Holy Spirit still teaches, still convicts, still opens eyes. You don’t need a new method—you need the old path.

Read with prayer. Read with surrender. Read with the Spirit. And you will find Christ in every page.

2–3 minutes

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Featured & Foundational, Featured Article

God Is Love: The Everlasting Compassion of Our Father

In a world full of brokenness, confusion, and unanswered questions, one truth remains unshaken: God is love. This declaration is not a passing sentiment or poetic phrase—it is the very nature of the One who created us. Scripture reveals this truth plainly, consistently, and powerfully from Genesis to Revelation. Yet, some theological perspectives have raised the question: Does God only love those who are already His?

Let us answer that not with human reasoning, but with the full counsel of God’s Word.

“The one who does not love does not know God, for God is love.”
— 1 John 4:8

The statement “God is love” does not mean that God merely shows love, but that love is the essence of His being. He cannot be anything other than who He is. His justice, His mercy, His holiness—all flow out of His perfect love. This love is not conditional upon our worthiness or position. It is who He has always been, even when we were still far off.

“But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.”
— Romans 5:8

God’s love is not triggered by our faith—it is revealed in His initiative. He sent His Son to die while we were still sinners. That means God’s love was extended to us even when we were lost, rebellious, and unbelieving. It is because of that love that we even had the opportunity to repent and believe.

“For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life.”
— John 3:16

The word “world” speaks of humanity as a whole—fallen, undeserving, and estranged. And yet, God so loved this world that He gave what was most precious to Him. This was not selective love for a few, but a sacrificial love offered to all. The passage does not say God loved “the righteous,” or “the believing,” but the world.

“When He approached Jerusalem, He saw the city and wept over it…”
— Luke 19:41

Jesus, the visible image of the invisible God, wept over those who rejected Him. He lamented their unwillingness to receive the peace He came to bring. Does God grieve over those He does not love? No. His tears were the overflow of divine compassion, even for the lost.

“But I say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven; for He causes His sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous.”
— Matthew 5:44–45

Jesus commands us to love our enemies because our Father in heaven does. He pours out kindness on both the righteous and the unrighteous. He is not distant or detached from the hurting, the stubborn, or the rebellious—He is actively showing them patience, kindness, and love, even as they resist Him.

“The Lord is not slow about His promise… but is patient toward you, not wishing for any to perish but for all to come to repentance.”
— 2 Peter 3:9

If God did not love those outside of Christ, there would be no reason for Him to be patient. But His patience flows from His loving desire that all would come to repentance. He tarries, not out of indifference, but out of longing.

“What man among you, if he has a hundred sheep and has lost one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine… and go after the one which is lost until he finds it?”
— Luke 15:4

The parable of the lost sheep paints a vivid picture of a Shepherd who seeks—not because the sheep earned it, but because they are His and He loves them. God does not wait for the lost to find Him. He seeks, rescues, and rejoices over the one who is found.

It is because God loved us in our sin that we now walk in grace. It is because He extended mercy to us when we were blind that we now see. And it is because His love is faithful and true that we can proclaim His name to every tribe, tongue, and nation—offering the same love to all, without partiality.

“We love, because He first loved us.”
— 1 John 4:19

The love of God is not only something we receive—it is something we are called to reflect. The more we understand that God loved us while we were enemies, the more we are compelled to love others in the same way. This is not a suggestion. It is the way of the Kingdom.

When Jesus said to love our enemies, He wasn’t offering a lofty idea for a peaceful society. He was describing the culture of Heaven. To love our enemies is to act like our Father. It is to see people not as threats or failures, but as souls for whom Christ died.

On the cross, in agony, Jesus prayed, “Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing” (Luke 23:34). He loved not only His disciples, but those who mocked Him, beat Him, and drove nails through His hands. He did not wait for their repentance—He extended love while they were still enemies.

Stephen, the first martyr, followed the same example. As he was being stoned, he cried out, “Lord, do not hold this sin against them!” (Acts 7:60). Paul later wrote, “Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse” (Romans 12:14). This was not mere moral advice. It was the manifestation of a heart transformed by God’s love.

The early Church understood this well. From the time of Pentecost to the rise of imperial Christianity, they lived under persecution. Yet they were known—even by their enemies—as a people marked by love. Tertullian recorded that outsiders marveled, saying, “See how they love one another!” They prayed for their captors, forgave their executioners, and blessed their persecutors. Their love, even for enemies, testified to the power of the Gospel and turned the world upside down.

The Church today must recover this radical, Spirit-filled love. Not a love that approves of sin, but a love that lays down its life in truth, compassion, and mercy—even for those who hate us. To love as He loves is not weakness. It is warfare against the spirit of darkness. It is how the Kingdom advances—not by sword, but by sacrifice.

“Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another.”
— 1 John 4:11

Let us be known—not for our arguments, strategies, or strength—but for our love. Not a love defined by the world, but by the cross. A love that prays for enemies, endures persecution, and reflects the character of our Father. The kind of love that can only be born of the Spirit.

This is the love that overcomes the world.

5–7 minutes

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Holy Days, Passover

🕊️ Passover: God’s Appointed Time

Passover was instituted by God Himself:


“Now this day will be a memorial to you, and you shall celebrate it as a feast to the LORD; throughout your generations you are to celebrate it as a permanent ordinance.”
Exodus 12:14, NASB 1995

Jesus honored the Passover with His disciples the night He was betrayed (Matthew 26:17–19). He did not replace it, but fulfilled its meaning as the Lamb of God (John 1:29; 1 Corinthians 5:7).

The early Church—especially Jewish believers and even many Gentile believers—continued to commemorate Christ’s death and resurrection in the context of Passover, not outside of it.


⚔️ The Schism: From Obedience to Imperial Power

🔹 Ignatius of Antioch (Early 2nd Century)

  • One of the earliest voices urging a departure from “Judaizing.”
  • He instructed believers to no longer observe “the Sabbath” as Jews did, but to honor “the Lord’s Day” (Sunday) instead.

This wasn’t merely honoring Christ’s resurrection—it became a repudiation of the Jewish calendar and practice.

🔹 Quartodeciman Controversy (2nd Century)

  • Quartodecimans (Latin for “Fourteeners”) observed the death of Christ on the 14th of Nisan, the biblical Passover.
  • Others (especially in Rome and Alexandria) preferred celebrating on a Sunday—regardless of the biblical calendar—to distinguish themselves from Jewish practices.

This dispute was widespread and intense. Yet the Quartodecimans were simply following the pattern found in Scripture—what the Apostles and early Church had done.

🔥 Council of Nicaea (AD 325)

This is where the divide became enshrined by law.

Emperor Constantine, who presided over the council (despite being unbaptized and still involved in pagan worship), said:

“…it appeared an unworthy thing that in the celebration of this most holy feast we should follow the practice of the Jews… Let us then have nothing in common with the detestable Jewish crowd…”
Eusebius, Life of Constantine, Book III, Chapter 18

They decreed that the resurrection should be celebrated on a Sunday, not according to the Jewish calendar, and thus severed the Church’s celebration of Christ’s death and resurrection from its biblical roots.


⚠️ The Result: Easter Replaces Passover

  • “Easter” eventually became associated with the pagan spring festival to the goddess Eostre (from which the English name derives).*
  • Biblical timing was replaced with ecclesiastical calendars.
  • Man-made tradition overtook God’s ordained moedim (appointed times).

“Thus you invalidated the word of God for the sake of your tradition.”
Matthew 15:6, NASB 1995


✝️ What Did the Early Believers Do?

The Ante-Nicene Church—those who followed Christ between the time of the Apostles and the Council of Nicaea—did not separate the crucifixion and resurrection from Passover. They recognized Jesus as the fulfillment of it, not a replacement.

They obeyed the appointed times (moedim) not as legalistic requirements but as prophetic celebrations pointing to Christ’s redemptive work.


🔥 Final Thoughts: Can Man Override God’s Calendar?

No.

Though councils may decree, emperors may impose, and theologians may rationalize, God’s Word stands.

“Heaven and earth will pass away, but My words will not pass away.”
Matthew 24:35, NASB 1995

God ordained the feasts as shadows of the substance in Christ (Colossians 2:16–17). They are not to be discarded, but fulfilled in truth and Spirit, not severed from their purpose.


✅ What We Know Historically

*The Name “Easter” Appears in English and German Only
The English word “Easter” is derived from the Old English Ēastre or Ēostre.

The 8th-century historian Bede (in De Natura Rerum and The Reckoning of Time) claimed that the month Ēosturmōnaþ (April) was named after a Saxon goddess called Ēostre, and that Christians adopted the name when celebrating Christ’s resurrection.

“Eosturmonath, which is now interpreted as the Paschal month, was once called after a goddess of theirs named Eostre…” — Bede, The Reckoning of Time, ch. 15

🔍 However:

Bede is the only ancient source who ever mentions this goddess.

There is no archaeological or written evidence (outside of Bede) for a goddess named Eostre being worshiped in Anglo-Saxon or Germanic paganism.

So, while the name might have originated from a springtime festival month, the goddess connection is weakly attested and largely speculative. Nevertheless, man-made tradition overtook God’s ordained moedim (appointed times).

3–4 minutes

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