The Pioneer (Dependence Part 3)
Our prayers shouldn’t be ones of defiant boldness, but of confessed dependence.
Our prayers shouldn’t be ones of defiant boldness, but of confessed dependence.
Our prayers shouldn’t be ones of defiant boldness, but of confessed dependence.
We should create and experiment and feel out the edges of what’s next. But we must do this and all things out of being rooted and established.
The deeper life within us creates a sense of full assurance and confidence, and yet leads us into a total surrender and dependence.
If there is a God, you would assume that he is great. The shocking twist is that he is good.
Desperation shouldn’t lead us to deny the reality we’re facing, rather, it should make us remember the hope that will hold us through it.
If you want to know him and the power of his resurrection, then you must share in the fellowship of his sufferings and even his death.
In a world that promises anything and everything, Jesus commands us to pursue one thing.
Hunger and thirst train our affections, appetites, and even allegiances around the unseen, eternal, and renewing glory of God.
Our hope is not in the promise that our situation will change. Our hope is in the promise that God will never change.
Through revelation our eyes are opened to the truth, but its full implications is often a process of discovery.
Jesus’ call to self-denial isn’t actually about the self at all. It’s about him, and the confession that he is your everything.