Sometimes it seems safer to have just enough God to get to heaven, but not so much that he radically alters our lives.
— Chris HodgesObedience is the key ingredient in living out God’s plan for you.
— Elizabeth GeorgeGod will fight your battles if you just keep still. He is able to carry you through. Trust Him. Keep standing, keep believing and keep hoping.
— Germany KentDear God, Thank you for waking me up today and for your everlasting love and never ending mercy and for my blessed day ahead.
— Germany KentEverything that is online is not necessarily in line.
— Johnnie Dent Jr.If you're reading this, I hope God opens incredible doors for your life this year. Greatness is upon you. You must believe it though.
— Germany KentLet your life reflect the faith you have in God. Fear nothing and pray about everything. Be strong, trust God's word, and trust the process.
— Germany KentThe Bible is the most important part of your faith.
— Elizabeth GeorgeThe Christian has been drawn unto Christ. Those who wish to boast in having something to do with their salvation, or who insist that the final decision lays with man, resist the clear meaning of Christ's words, 'draw.' But this is a wondrous term. It is beautiful to hear. Drawn in love. Drawn in mercy. Drawn unto the one who died in my place. It is sovereign action, undertaken by the one who holds the entire universe by His power. It is an irresistible drawing, most definitely, but is a drawing of grace. The one drawing loves the one who is being drawn. And those drawn can never be thankful enough to God who brought them out of darkness into the marvelous light of Christ.
— James R. WhiteWho gets to be the judge of reality? If it was deeply felt, believed, spoken about often or altered your life course, then it was real enough. Faith doesn't get the luxury of all those things one hundred percent of the time, but we call that normal behavior based on a gut feeling.” I said. I looked at his wife and she busted out laughing. Her husband was trying to catch invisible butterflies above his head—dementia. My patients teach me the most sobering of truths: Why wreck his smile. If I could see them, I would want to catch them too.
— Shannon L. Alder