When we practice the principles found in Psalm 27, we will lead a balanced life.
When we practice the principles found in Psalm 27, we will lead a balanced life.
The world of the Ephesian Christians was filled with racial, social, financial, and religious barriers. Christ came with good news to break all barriers down so all could be one in Christ.
We wake up every day, thinking this day is like every other day we have lived, and walk through it without much thought about where we are walking. Paul reminds us that it truly is a life and death matter.
It seems that everyone wants to be rich. God gives everyone who truly believes in Him and obeys Him unthinkable riches.
In order for us to receive the blessings promised to God’s children, we must first be convicted of sin, then we are in a position to commit to God and only then do the blessings come.
Being a teen who cares for oneself and for others is not easy. Very often, adults do not take them seriously when they speak up and express their beliefs. Teens often feel isolated and overwhelmed. What can teens do to make a difference in the world? Where can they start?
If each of us set as a New Year resolution to be Christ centered, what would we gain in 2015?
In view of the end of a day, the end of a year, or the end of life, how should we live?
There are so many ups and downs for a Christian on the journey of life that we often feel defeated. In our down times we sometimes want to quit. May we never give up.
The “gift of life,” God’s special gift, is no less beautiful when it is accompanied by illness or weakness, hunger or poverty, mental or physical handicaps, loneliness or old age. Indeed, at these times, human life gains extra splendor as it requires our special care, concern and reverence. It is in and through the weakest…