Inside Out: Putting Anxiety in its Place
Inside Out: Joy penetrates the command center in Riley’s head, seizes the control panel, looks at Anxiety and declares, “Let her go.”
Inside Out: Joy penetrates the command center in Riley’s head, seizes the control panel, looks at Anxiety and declares, “Let her go.”
In Isaiah 31, we see God calling His people to stop trusting in man and to begin faithing by trusting in Him during a season of uncertainty.
In 1 Corinthians 12, Paul uses the brilliant illustration of the human body to relate the importance of Christ-followers working together for God’s kingdom purposes.
It’s been noted that you can be as unfaithful to God through worry as well as through worldliness.
Have you ever found yourself frustrated—even angry—at the prosperity of the wicked? It can be hard to navigate these emotions.
So many of us want to know: Is God on my side? Do I have the moral authority on an issue? That’s why Joshua 5 is so important.
God never puts us in a time and place to merely conform to our environment, but to “come out and be separate,” as a people who are different.
Psalm 112 speaks of a person with a Good News heart in a bad news world. His heart is fixed, trusting in the Lord.
There is a place of marvel that we enter into when our hearts are fully embracing the presence of God. This kind of worship is found throughout the Bible.
What makes people want to count others more significant than themselves? In Paul’s estimation, the answer is found in Philippians 2.