I Choose Today...

I Choose Today: To Be Seen and Loved

“God can’t use me—I’ve done so many bad things! How could a holy God ever love and accept me?” Does that sound familiar? I know it does for me. I’ve had those same thoughts and conversations with others over the years. It’s easy to believe the lie that our past disqualifies us from God’s love and purpose. But the truth is, God sees us differently. There’s a man in the Bible whose story reminds me of this. His name was Zacchaeus. By common standards, Zacchaeus was a sinner—a man who had made choices that earned him wealth at the expense of others. Though he was rich, he was despised, isolated, and deeply empty. Then one day, Jesus came to town. And everything changed. While Zacchaeus climbed a tree to catch a glimpse of Him, Jesus stopped, looked up, and called him by name. Instead of seeing Zacchaeus for what he had done, Jesus saw him for who he was. With compassion and love, Jesus invited Himself into Zacchaeus’s life. That encounter turned everything around. Zacchaeus went from being a man weighed down by sin to someone transformed by grace. This story reminds us of an incredible truth: Jesus didn’t come

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I Choose Today to be Divinely Defined

As many of you know from past posts, I have endured intense trauma in my life—belittlement, isolation, abandonment, stolen innocence, being ignored, and oppression. So how can a person who has gone through so much trauma be used to encourage others, be set apart, and fulfill God’s purpose? I have learned that I am not defined by my trauma, my past experiences, or the labels others try to place on me—not even by my own mistakes. No, I am already defined by the blood of Christ! He says I am enough. He says I am worth His shed blood. He says who He created me to be… It is Christ who gets the last say because He died to give me freedom and the ability to live divinely defined! While we live in a severely broken, self-obsessed world, where trauma may come at the hands of others’ selfish desires and sins, the perpetrators and the experiences do not define us. Instead, God can use these moments to refine us. He can take what the world meant for evil and meld it into us to be used for good and His glory. Joseph, from the Bible, experienced some horrible things at

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I Choose Today to be Christ’s Hands and Feet: Servanthood

There is a saying in Christian circles about being, or wanting to be, Christ’s hands and feet. We mention this in conversations, in prayer, and even to ourselves. But what does it really mean to be Christ’s hands and feet? What did He do with His hands? Where did His feet take Him. Over the next few blogs, we are going to explore what Jesus actually did with His hands and feet, and how we can follow His example. Today we are going to examine what He did with His hands, explained in His own words, ”…Whoever wants to be a leader among you must be your servant, For even the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve others and to give his life as a ransom for many.” Matthew‬ ‭20‬:‭26‬, ‭28‬ ‭NLT‬‬ Think about it, Jesus came down from His is royal place in heaven to serve. He used His hands to serve others in so many ways: washing the feet of His disciples, healing, feeding thousands. He used His hands to bless and serve others. This past week, our small group traveled to North Carolina to be Christ’s hands and serve those who “go into

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I Choose Today to do my part

In describing the motivational gifts that God gives, it is describing characteristics of Christ. He is the perfect example of all those gifts; He embodies these gifts. We, as the body of Christ, represent parts of Christ. The same chapter, Romans‬ ‭12‬:‭4‬-‭5‬‬‬, tells us, “Just as our bodies have many parts and each part has a special function, so it is with Christ’s body. We are many parts of one body, and we all belong to each other.” We each need to do our part. We are all different and have different gifts to complete the whole.  But it start with us knowing the gift God has made us with, and develop and use it for His glory. We are born with a bent toward one of these gifts, but we need to do our part in developing and working them to maturity, to being useful in its intent. The Israelites experienced this when God gave them the gift of food in the way of manna. Manna wasn’t bread; it was a seed. Numbers tells us that, “The manna looked like small coriander seeds, and it was pale yellow like gum resin. The people would go out and gather it

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