エピソード

  • Decerning Devine Truth
    2026/04/09
    The Suring Divine Truth
    Rooted in John 17:14–17, The Suring Divine Truth is a devotional that calls believers back to the unshakable certainty of God’s Word in a world ruled by “relative truth.” Relative truth is shaped by personal opinions, experiences, and biases. It isn’t always malicious, but it is limited, fragile, and often misleading. It can distract, discourage, and even deceive us away from what God has spoken.
    In contrast, divine truth is absolute, eternal, and undefeated. It stands above every opinion and perception. In divine truth, we discover our God-given identity and purpose—the very works God has called us to do. This truth grounds us when life is unstable, focuses us when voices are loud and conflicting, and protects us from the subtle lies that aim to pull us off course.
    The Suring Divine Truth invites believers to learn the difference between relative and divine truth, to reject the deceptions of the enemy, and to cling to the sanctifying power of God’s Word. As we do, we are strengthened, empowered, and equipped to walk boldly in our divine purpose, refusing to let anything or anyone turn us away from what God has called us to do.

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    42 分
  • Living In Truth
    2026/04/08
    Living in Truth
    (John 4:21–24)
    “Living in Truth” is a devotional that explores the difference between living with the truth and living in the truth. In John 4, Jesus meets the Samaritan woman at the well and reveals the hidden reality of her life—five previous husbands and a man she is not married to. She never told Him her story, yet He speaks it openly. In that moment, she has a choice: deny what has been revealed, or accept it as divine truth.
    Living with the truth means knowing that God’s truth has been revealed, yet refusing to embrace it—hearing it, but pushing it aside. Living in the truth means recognizing that what God says about us is real, understanding that it is divine truth, accepting it, and then responding in obedience.
    The woman at the well chooses to live in truth. She acknowledges Jesus’ insight (“Sir, I perceive that you are a prophet”), receives what He reveals about her, and then runs back to her town to proclaim that the Messiah has come. Because she accepted the truth and acted on it, many in her town came to meet Jesus and were saved.
    This devotional invites believers to let God’s revealed truth about their own hearts—our sins, our habits, our hidden places—move us from mere awareness to transformation. God does not reveal the truth to condemn or destroy us, but to free us and reshape us. When we live in truth:
    • Grace abounds in our lives.
    • Our perspective changes; we look at others with compassion instead of judgment.
    • We recognize the real weight of what we once called “no big deal.”
    • The enemy’s deceptions lose power, because we know, understand, and accept what God has said.

    “Living in Truth” calls us to step off the wide road of comfortable self-deception and into the narrow way of honest, Spirit-led worship—“in spirit and in truth” (John 4:24)—where God’s revelation leads to repentance, renewal, and a life that draws others to Jesus.

    Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/rhm-morning-devotional--6860108/support.
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    39 分
  • Searching for Truth
    2026/04/07
    Searching for the Truth
    (Devotional on John 16:13)
    “However, when He, the Spirit of truth, has come, He will guide you into all truth…” – John 16:13 (NKJV)
    The world offers a kind of “truth” that is simple, limited, and shaped by personal experience. It is not always malicious; it is just incomplete. Picture four people at an intersection where a white car and a red car collide. When the police arrive, they question all four. Two say the white car caused the accident. Two say the red car is at fault. Each speaks honestly from what they saw, yet their testimonies conflict because each view is limited by perspective and experience.
    The officer must strip away bias and opinion, uncover the facts, and apply the law. That is a glimpse of what God does perfectly. Divine truth is God’s complete, unbiased understanding of reality and His righteous standard—His law—applied without error. Our truth is partial; His is whole.
    In John 16:13, Jesus promises that the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of truth, will guide us into “all truth.” If we claim to serve the Most High God, we cannot be satisfied with surface-level, worldly truth. We must seek the deeper, divine truth that only God reveals through His Spirit and His Word.
    As we pursue this truth, God’s standards begin to draw clear lines—boundaries we refuse to cross. His truth shapes how we live, choose, and relate to others. The challenge today is to move beyond the limited truth of human perspective and ask the Holy Spirit to lead you into God’s divine truth, letting His law and His Word become the final guide for your life.

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    33 分
  • Facing The Truth
    2026/04/06
    Facing the Truth – A Devotional on Proverbs 14:8
    “The wisdom of the prudent is to give thought to their ways,
    but the folly of fools is deception.” – Proverbs 14:8 (NIV)
    Facing the truth begins with facing ourselves.
    Proverbs 14:8 reveals more than a wise saying—it exposes a spiritual strategy. It shows us that the prudent person doesn’t just move through life on autopilot; they stop, think, and truly consider the path they are on. They seek understanding of who they are, where they are going, and what is actually happening around them. In contrast, the fool lives in self-deception, content with surface-level living and blind to deeper realities.
    We are born into a broken world, into sin, and from the beginning we are surrounded by lies—about God, about ourselves, about our purpose. The enemy has deployed a strategy against us, working to keep us distracted, deceived, and spiritually dull. He wants us to settle for the bare minimum: a little belief, a little effort, a little obedience—just enough to feel “religious,” but not enough to walk in truth and power.
    This proverb doesn’t simply tell us what to do; it reveals what is at work. It uncovers the contrast between a life guided by godly wisdom and a life lulled to sleep by self-deception. It presses us to ask hard questions:
    • Do I really understand where I’m going?
    • Am I honestly seeking God, or just going through the motions?
    • Am I aware of the enemy’s strategy against my life?
    • Have I settled for half-truths instead of pursuing the whole truth?

    God invites us into a deeper understanding of who we are in Christ and where He is leading us. The truth has been hidden, but it is not unreachable. Jesus promises that those who seek will find. If we are willing to face the truth—about our sin, our compromises, our distractions, and our calling—God will open our eyes.
    “Facing the Truth” is a devotional journey through Proverbs 14:8 that calls you to pause and reflect, to examine your ways, and to step out of self-deception into clarity. It is an invitation to move from spiritual autopilot to intentional pursuit of God’s truth, to recognize the enemy’s strategies, and to choose wisdom over folly.
    As you walk through this devotional, you will be challenged to:
    • Confront the lies you’ve believed
    • Discern the path you’re truly on
    • Expose the subtle strategies of the enemy
    • Deepen your love for and obedience to God

    This proverb is not just information—it is a mirror. It asks you plainly: Do you truly know where you’re going? Do you really know the truth? And are you ready to face it?

    Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/rhm-morning-devotional--6860108/support.
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    45 分
  • An Unearned Gift
    2026/04/01
    “The Un‑Earned Gift” is a devotional rooted in Ephesians 2:8–10, inviting us to see salvation and our identity through the lens of grace, not performance.
    “God saved you by his grace when you believed” (v. 8) reminds us that belief is far more than agreeing with facts about Jesus. It is coming into a deep understanding of who Christ is—His character of love, mercy, and holiness—and the mission He fulfilled through His life, death, and resurrection. When we truly believe, we confess not only that Jesus is the Son of God, but that His finished work is enough for us, right where we are.
    Verse 10 declares, “For we are God’s masterpiece.” From the moment we were conceived, God saw us as His carefully crafted work, uniquely designed with purpose, gifts, and a calling. At the same time, as David confesses in Psalm 51, we are sinners from birth. Both are true: we are deeply broken and yet deeply treasured. The world trains us to see only our flaws, failures, and shortcomings. Over time, we begin to define ourselves by what is “wrong” with us instead of by the truth of who God says we are.
    This devotional explores how grace changes that vision. When we come to know Christ’s character and mission, and we receive the grace offered to us in Him, our self‑perception is reshaped. We no longer live out of shame, insecurity, or the labels others have placed on us. Instead, we begin to live as God’s masterpiece—created anew in Christ Jesus to do the good works He prepared for us long ago.
    “The Un‑Earned Gift” invites you to see that grace:
    • Is not earned by good deeds, religious performance, or having it all together.
    • Meets you in your mess, darkness, and pain.
    • Unlocks your true identity and calling in Christ.
    • Transforms the way you interact with the world—not from a place of flaw‑fixation, but from the confidence that you are God’s handiwork.

    Through this devotion, you will be encouraged to embrace the truth that the cross proves your worth to God. In Christ, you are forgiven, you are new, and you are His masterpiece—an un‑earned gift received by grace through faith.

    Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/rhm-morning-devotional--6860108/support.
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    45 分
  • The Illusion Of Success Part II
    2026/03/26
    The Illusion of Success – Part 2
    Rooted in Ecclesiastes 5:18–20, this devotional challenges our modern picture of “success” and calls us back to God’s design for a fulfilled life. While the world—and the enemy—push a vision of success measured by money, status, and exotic experiences, Scripture reminds us that it is “good for people to eat, drink, and enjoy their work… and to accept their lot in life” (v. 18).
    “The Illusion of Success – Part 2” explores how comparison and jealousy can quietly lead us to reject the very place God has planted us. When we chase someone else’s lifestyle, we resist God’s plan, acting out of selfish ambition instead of trust. But when we accept our God-given “lot in life,” our eyes open to the unique gifts He has placed within us.
    This devotional invites readers to redefine wealth—not as money or material gain, but as the intangible treasures God has given: the ability to serve, to give, to encourage, to build, to care. As we embrace who we are in Christ and where He has us right now, we discover a simpler, deeper success: enjoying our work, using our gifts, and living out true kingdom prosperity. In doing so, our testimonies grow stronger, our joy richer, and even in challenging times, we learn to fully enjoy the life God has planned for us.

    Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/rhm-morning-devotional--6860108/support.
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    55 分
  • The Illusion Of Success
    2026/03/25
    “The Illusion of Success” is a Bible devotional based on 1 John 2:15–17 that challenges how we measure and celebrate success. Too often, we only call it “success” when it looks like a promotion, a bigger paycheck, a new contract, nicer clothes, a better car, a larger house, or richer food and entertainment. Our celebrations reveal what truly matters to us—and many times, it’s what the world offers, not what the Father values.
    John warns us, “Do not love this world nor the things it offers you,” reminding us that cravings for pleasure, for what we see, and for status and possessions do not come from God. Worldly success is an illusion when it pulls our hearts away from Him. Real blessing comes from the Father, so our celebration of any success should honor Him, not just elevate our lifestyle.
    Drawing also from John 15:5–8, this devotional shows how we often start out seeking God—reading, praying, striving to be honest and faithful—only to drift away once the blessings begin to flow. Jesus, the true vine, says that apart from Him we can do nothing, and branches that do not remain in Him wither. With a real enemy working to lure us off the narrow road onto the wide path of materialism and pride, this devotional is a call back to our first love.
    “The Illusion of Success” invites you to reexamine what you celebrate, remember to whom you belong, and re-center every achievement—big or small—on abiding in Christ and honoring the Father.

    Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/rhm-morning-devotional--6860108/support.
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    55 分
  • Vision Changes Everything Part II
    2026/03/24
    Vision Changes Everything – Part 2
    Matthew 13:10–23
    In a world loud with wars, corruption, and injustice, it’s easy to see only what the world shows us—and miss what God is actually doing. This devotional, “Vision Changes Everything – Part 2,” calls believers to see with the eyes of Christ by living in His Word every day, not just on Sundays and Wednesdays.
    Focusing on Matthew 13:11–12 and 19, we explore Jesus’ promise that His followers are permitted to understand the secrets of the kingdom of heaven. Those who truly listen to His teaching receive increasing understanding and an abundance of knowledge, while those who only hear superficially lose even the little they have. We also examine the “seed on the footpath”—the message planted in hearts but quickly stolen by the enemy because it was never understood.
    This devotional challenges us to:
    • Align our minds and attitudes with Christ by consistently studying Scripture.
    • Recognize that spiritual blindness isn’t cured by church attendance alone, but by daily, intentional fellowship with Jesus.
    • Guard the word God plants in our hearts through understanding, so the enemy cannot steal our hope, confidence, or faith.
    • Shift our vision from fear of world events to confidence in the God who rules over them.

    When our vision changes—when we see the world as Christ sees it—our fears change, our priorities shift, and our hearts become firmly rooted in the kingdom that cannot be shaken.

    Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/rhm-morning-devotional--6860108/support.
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    54 分