Welcome To Grace Journal

You didn’t land here by accident.
Whether you’re walking through fire or walking by faith, this space was made for you.

I write what the Holy Spirit puts on my heart.
No fluff. No formula. Just truth in love — one post at a time.

If you need encouragement, direction, or rest for your soul… you’re in the right place.

🪶 What are Grace Notes?
Grace Notes are Spirit-led reflections, journal entries, and devotionals poured straight from the heart. They don’t follow a set schedule or structure—what you read each day is simply what’s been placed on my heart to share. It may seem random, but I trust the Holy Spirit to guide the words, the timing, and the reach.
This isn’t neat, polished, or packaged—this is me, offering what I have with grace, truth, and openness.

Erica W. Erica W.

Does God Love Unconditionally?

Is God’s love truly unconditional? This devotional explores how the Bible defines love, why repentance matters, and what it means to be loved like a child—corrected, redeemed, and never abandoned.

🔹 1. The Question We All Ask

Does God love me… no matter what I do?

It’s one of the most repeated ideas in Christian and secular circles alike: “God loves you unconditionally.”
But what does that actually mean?

Because in today’s world, “unconditional” love is often misused as code for:

“Love me, leave me alone, and let me live how I want.”

That’s not biblical love. And that’s not the love God gives.

🔹 2. The World’s Definition vs. God’s

📖 Dictionary Definition of Unconditional Love:
“Affection without any limitations; love without conditions or qualifications.”

Sounds good. But here’s the issue—biblical love has no limits, but it does have standards.

“The Lord disciplines those He loves…” – Proverbs 3:12
“Those whom I love I rebuke and discipline.” – Revelation 3:19

God’s love doesn’t mean anything goes.
It means He never lets go—even when He corrects you.

🔹 3. God’s Love Is Not Passive

If God’s love were passive, He would sit back while we destroy ourselves. But His love is active. Protective. Transformational.

He sent His Son not to affirm us—but to redeem us.

“While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” – Romans 5:8

That’s not passive love. That’s pursuing love.

🔹 4. A Parent’s Love: A Holy Comparison

Picture a parent with a child who’s gone down a dark path.

The child lies, steals, maybe even ends up in jail. There are consequences. Serious ones.

But does the parent stop loving their child? Not at all.

They may be grieved. They may set boundaries. But love? It’s still there. Still burning.

God’s love is like that—but perfect.

He doesn’t ignore sin. He doesn’t enable destruction. But He never walks away.

🔹 5. Grace Isn’t Permission—It’s Power

“Shall we continue in sin so that grace may abound? Certainly not!” – Romans 6:1–2

Grace is not permission to live recklessly. It’s power to live differently. God’s love reaches you in your sin—but it never leaves you there.

🔹 6. True Love Calls for True Repentance

There’s a big difference between confession and repentance.

🗣️ Confession says: “God, forgive me.”
But too often, it’s followed by repeating the same behavior—on purpose.

Like when someone drinks too much and prays: “God, get me through this hangover and I’ll never do it again,”
...only to do it again next weekend.

That’s not repentance. That’s regret.

🔄 Repentance means you turn.
Not perfectly—but intentionally.

It’s not about earning God’s love.
It’s about responding to it.

“God’s kindness leads you to repentance.” – Romans 2:4
“Produce fruit in keeping with repentance.” – Matthew 3:8

🔹 7. Final Truth: God’s Love Is Real—But It’s Not Soft

God’s love is fierce.
It’s holy.
It’s patient.
It’s parental.

It covers sin, yes.
But it also calls it what it is.
Because you matter too much to Him to stay bound.

📓 Grace Journal Prompts

  • Have I confused God’s patience with approval?

  • Am I confessing sin—or repenting from it?

  • How can I reflect God’s love with both truth and mercy?

📖 Key Verse

“If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” – 1 John 1:9

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Erica W. Erica W.

🌿 Living Water: A Well That Never Runs Dry

She came for water—but left filled with truth.
In John 4, Jesus meets a Samaritan woman at a well and offers her Living Water—something that could quench her soul’s thirst once and for all.

This isn’t just her story. It’s ours too. Read the full devotional on what it means to meet the Messiah—and how to spot His voice in a noisy world.

John 4:1–26

Have you ever been thirsty—spiritually dry—and not even realized it?
You’re functioning. Showing up. Doing the daily. But deep down, your soul is parched.

That’s exactly where the Samaritan woman found herself. She came to the well carrying a water jar, but left carrying something far greater—truth, hope, and a personal encounter with the Messiah.

🔹 He Had to Go Through Samaria

Jesus had to pass through Samaria (John 4:4). That wasn’t normal. Jews avoided Samaritans. But this wasn’t about geography—it was about divine appointment.

Jesus waited at Jacob’s well. Weary from His journey, He rested—but His mission never paused. He sat down not just to catch His breath, but to change a life.

And isn’t that how He still operates?

He steps into our ordinary, into places others avoid, and meets us where we least expect Him.

🔹 He Broke Through Barriers

When the woman arrived, Jesus asked her for a drink.
She was shocked.
“You’re a Jew—and I’m a Samaritan woman. How can you ask me for a drink?” (v9)

Not only was He crossing cultural lines, but gender norms, moral assumptions, and racial divisions. Jesus wasn’t just talking to her—He was seeing her.

He doesn’t let rules, race, or reputation block redemption.

🔹 He Offered Living Water

Jesus shifts the conversation:

“If you knew the gift of God... you would have asked Him, and He would have given you living water.” (v10)

Living water—fresh, flowing, pure, eternal. Not like well water that grows stale.
This water revives the soul and quenches the spirit.

“Whoever drinks the water I give them will never thirst.” (v14)

He wasn’t offering religion.
He was offering relationship.

🔹 He Exposed, But Didn’t Shame

She wanted this water. She asked for it.
But Jesus paused and said, “Go, call your husband.”

Ouch.

He wasn’t being harsh. He was being honest.
She replied, “I have no husband.”
And He revealed her truth—five husbands, and a man who wasn’t hers.

But here’s the miracle: He didn’t flinch. He didn’t leave.
He uncovered her brokenness so He could cover her in grace.

🔹 From Religion to Revelation

The woman pivoted—tried to change the subject to worship styles:

“Our ancestors worshiped on this mountain…” (v20)

But Jesus gently corrected her:

“A time is coming… when true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth.” (v23)

Not about where you worship.
But how—and with what kind of heart.
God is not after performance. He wants presence.

🔹 He Said, “I Am He”

Finally, she says:

“I know that Messiah is coming…”

And Jesus responds:

“I who speak to you am He.” (v26)

This is the first recorded moment in Scripture where Jesus openly reveals He is the Messiah. And He says it to her.

Not to religious leaders.
Not to His disciples.
But to a rejected woman…
...from a rejected town…
...with a rejected past.

Because Jesus doesn’t reject those the world discards.
He reclaims them.

🧠 Reflect: Discernment in a World of Imitation

In today’s culture, many claim to be divine.
False prophets rise. Cults grow.
People twist truth and masquerade as messengers of God.

But the woman at the well knew she was in the presence of someone different.
How?

Because truth pierced through her defenses.
Because light flooded her hidden places.
Because grace didn’t excuse sin, but offered a Savior.

That’s how we know we’ve met Jesus.
Not just emotionally… but eternally.

💧 Living Water Still Flows

You don’t have to carry your water jar anymore.
You don’t have to chase people, approval, success, or even religious habits hoping they’ll quench your thirst.

Jesus still sits at wells.
Still speaks truth.
Still satisfies the soul.

And if you’ve ever doubted He would show up for someone like you—
Look again.

He already has.

📓 Grace Journal Prompt

  • What "wells" have I been drawing from that leave me empty?

  • What truth is Jesus gently revealing in this season?

  • Have I truly met the Messiah—or just heard about Him?

📖 Key Verse to Meditate On

“Whoever drinks the water I give them will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give them will become in them a spring of water welling up to eternal life.”
— John 4:14

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Erica W. Erica W.

“He Must Increase” — Humility and Purpose in John 3:22–36

This Grace Journal devotional from John 3:22–36 explores John the Baptist’s joyful surrender as Jesus’ ministry grows. Learn what it means to decrease so Christ may increase in your life, with reflection questions and a prayer.

“He must increase, but I must decrease.” — John 3:30 (KJV)

🌿 Introduction:

John the Baptist wasn’t threatened by Jesus’ growing influence — he rejoiced in it. In this passage, we see a man who knows his assignment and gladly steps aside when his work is done. What if we lived that way — content to play our role, even if the spotlight moves?

🔥 Reflection:

As Jesus begins baptizing (ref John 4:2, the disciples baptized), John's disciples come to him, concerned that more people are going to Jesus. But John reminds them — he is not the Christ, only the friend of the bridegroom. This isn’t a moment of rivalry; it’s a moment of release.

John makes a bold, freeing declaration:

“He must increase, but I must decrease.”
He doesn’t say, “We’ll share the stage.” He doesn’t try to hold onto influence or compare ministries. Instead, he yields with joy.

🧎🏾‍♀️ Devotional Thought:

Sometimes we hold on to roles, titles, or influence that God is asking us to release. We want to be needed, remembered, or revered — but Christ calls us to humble surrender. This passage isn’t just about John’s humility; it’s about our response to God’s will when it doesn’t keep us at the center.

Are we okay with God growing something we started... and finishing it without us?

🙏 Prayer Prompt:

Lord, teach me to decrease so that You may increase in every area of my life. Strip away pride, performance, and comparison. Let me find joy in Your name being lifted higher — even if no one sees me. Make me faithful in my assignment, and humble in my exit.

✍🏽 Journal Prompts:

  • What area of my life is God asking me to surrender?

  • Am I holding onto something out of pride or fear of being forgotten?

  • How can I celebrate Jesus increasing in someone else's life, even if it means stepping back?

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Erica W. Erica W.

When I Keep Rolling Over: Answering the Morning Call of God

Do you keep rolling over instead of rising when God calls? This honest devotional explores obedience, comfort, and spiritual discipline in the early morning.

“He awakens Me morning by morning, He awakens My ear to hear as the learned.”
— Isaiah 50:4, NKJV

💬 Confession of a Soul Who Knew Better

Lately, God has been waking me up at 6:00 AM sharp. No alarm. No chaos. Just that gentle tug—a stirring in my spirit that says,

“Come. Let’s walk. Let’s talk.” And I know it’s Him. But instead of responding, I’ve rolled over. Pulled the covers back up. And drifted off—again.

What happens next is predictable: I wake up rushed. The boys are up by 8:30. My day is loud and busy before I’ve even had a moment of silence with the Lord. By the time they nap, I try to squeeze in what I could’ve received uninterrupted hours before—peace, direction, and the Presence of God.

But the moment… passed.

🔥 It’s Not Just Sleep. It’s Disobedience.

I didn’t want to call it that at first.

I told myself, “You’re just tired.” But deep down, I knew.

The Holy Spirit wasn’t just inviting me into a peaceful morning—He was training me in responsiveness.
He would whisper,

“Take your shower now.”
“Get up—they’ll be awake soon.”
“Move—while it’s quiet.”

But I hesitated. Delayed. Ignored.

And here's the truth that hit hard:

Delayed obedience is disobedience.

Every time I roll over instead of rise, I’m saying,

“Later, Lord. I’ll come… on my terms.”

😔 Have I Made Sleep an Idol?

Yes.
That’s the hard truth I had to admit to myself.

Sleep—something good and God-given—became something I guarded more than His voice. I elevated it. I protected it. I let it decide when I moved and when I didn’t.

That’s an idol.

“You shall have no other gods before Me.” — Exodus 20:3
“Their god is their belly…” — Philippians 3:19

When I cling more tightly to my pillow than to His prompting…
When I shield my eyes from the morning light because I’d rather dream than receive…

That’s idolatry in disguise. Not loud. Not blatant. But deadly to spiritual growth.

🙌🏾 The Gentle Conviction of God

And yet… He’s so kind. He didn’t snatch me up. He didn’t condemn me. He kept waking me up.

Because conviction is not condemnation. It’s an invitation back into rhythm with Him.

He wants me to rise. Not because He’s tallying performance—but because He knows what’s waiting when I say “yes”:

  • Peace before the storm.

  • Instruction before the confusion.

  • Anointing before the assignment.

He’s not just calling me to be awake. He’s calling me to be alert.

🧎🏽‍♀️ My Personal Confession + Surrender

Lord, I repent.
You’ve been so gentle, so faithful… and I’ve ignored You. I’ve protected my sleep more than Your Presence. I’ve made comfort my compass instead of You.

But not anymore.

Today, I dethrone sleep. I tear down the idol I’ve built in the name of rest. I choose to rise when You call—even if I’m tired. Even if I don’t “feel” ready.

You are my rest. You are my strength. And You are worth the first moments of my day.

🕊️ If You’ve Been Rolling Over Too…

This is not condemnation. This is your wake-up call—literally.

The Lord is inviting you back to your morning assignment. He wants to meet you before the noise. Before the news. Before the children wake. He wants you whole—not just surviving.

Sometimes the cost of disobedience isn’t punishment—it’s missing the moment. So let’s stop trading revelation for rest.
Let’s rise when He calls.

✍🏾 Journal Prompts

  • What comforts have I been protecting more than God’s voice?

  • What has the Holy Spirit been prompting me to do that I’ve ignored?

  • Am I willing to rise—even when it costs me comfort?

✅ Try This: A Holy Morning Reset

  • 📱 Set an alarm for 5:55 AM. Label it: “He’s Waiting for You.”

  • 👟 Place your journal, Bible, and walking shoes by your bed.

  • 🙏🏾 Whisper before rising: “Yes, Lord. Speak—I’m listening.”

Even if you sit in silence, half-awake, with nothing but open hands and an open heart—that’s obedience. And obedience unlocks everything.

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Erica W. Erica W.

“The Temple Within: What Are We Feeding?”

In this heartfelt Grace Journal devotional, explore what it means to honor God with your body as His temple. Learn how the Holy Spirit’s presence should guide what we consume physically, emotionally, and spiritually. A reflection on surrender, self-control, and walking in reverence.

A Grace Journal Reflection on the Body, the Spirit, and the Struggle with the Flesh
“Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God?”
— 1 Corinthians 6:19

“It’s not what goes into the mouth that defiles a person, but what comes out…”
— Matthew 15:11

We all wrestle with the flesh in some form. For some, it’s food. For others, substances. For others, it’s lust, laziness, or chasing pleasure as a way to escape. And it’s easy to justify what we allow in our lives — especially when others are doing the same.

Recently, my brother and I had a heartfelt conversation about what it means to honor God with our bodies. We agreed that we should be mindful — but we didn’t fully agree on what that looks like.

He holds tightly to Old Testament dietary instructions. Clean and unclean foods. The Levitical list of what not to eat.

And I respect that.

But I’m also standing on the words of Jesus, who reminded us:

“It is not what enters the mouth that defiles a man, but what proceeds out of the mouth…” (Matthew 15:11)

Because what comes out — anger, lies, selfishness, gossip, rebellion — those are the symptoms of a deeper disease. One that’s only cured when the Holy Spirit presides within us.

💭 So What Does It Mean to Honor the Temple?

It’s not just about what we eat or don’t eat.
It’s about what rules us.

  • Is it sugar?

  • Is it alcohol?

  • Is it weed or pills?

  • Is it compulsive eating or constant neglect of rest?

Anything we consume to numb, avoid, or replace God is a flesh trap.
Even if it’s legal. Even if it’s socially acceptable. Even if it “tastes good.”

✍🏽 Note:

My brother is also walking out his faith — and I thank God for that.
We don’t always see everything the same, especially when it comes to things like what we should or shouldn’t eat.
He’s committed to the Old Testament dietary instructions, and I’ve been standing on what Jesus said — that it’s not what enters the mouth that defiles, but what comes out (Matthew 15:11).

But what I love is that we can open the Word together, challenge each other, and sharpen one another in love. None of us have it all figured out — but when the Spirit leads, He draws us closer to truth and to each other.

And here’s what I keep coming back to in my own walk:
We carry God’s Spirit inside of us. That’s not symbolic — it’s literal.
So every time I reach for something that comforts me more than Christ, I have to pause and ask:
“Is this honoring the temple — or polluting it?”

This isn’t about fear. It’s about reverence.
Not just, “Is this allowed?”
But, “Is this wise? Is this helping or hurting my purpose?”

📖 Scripture Support:

  • 1 Corinthians 6:19–20 – Your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit… therefore glorify God in your body.

  • Romans 8:13 – If you live according to the flesh, you will die… but if by the Spirit you put to death the misdeeds of the body, you will live.

  • Galatians 5:16 – Walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh.

🛐 Prayer Prompt:

Holy Spirit, You live in me. Give me discernment in what I consume — not just food, but media, thoughts, influences. Convict me when I’m leaning on something other than You. Help me honor You in my body and bring every part of me under Your Lordship.

📓 Journal Prompt:

  • What am I consuming that dulls my sensitivity to the Holy Spirit?

  • Am I convicted about something but still making excuses?

  • How can I better honor God with my body — not just in diet, but in devotion?

🌿 Final Whisper:

This is not about rules — it’s about reverence.
It’s not about guilt — it’s about awareness.
When you realize that God dwells inside you, it changes how you live outside.

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Erica W. Erica W.

A Cleansed Heart, A Born-Again Life

This Grace Journal devotional explores Jesus cleansing the temple and His conversation with Nicodemus. Discover what it means to be purified in worship and born again through the Spirit. A soul-stirring study of John 2:13–25 and John 3:1–21 with reflection questions and prayer prompts.

📖 John 2:13–25 & John 3:1–21
“Zeal for Your house will consume Me.”
— John 2:17

“Unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.”
— John 3:3

We often speak of Jesus as gentle, gracious, and full of compassion. He is. But in these verses, we see another side: zeal, righteous fire, and bold truth that calls for transformation.

Jesus isn’t just the Lamb — He’s also the Lion. And where He shows up, things can’t stay the same.

📖 Section 1: Zeal in the Temple – John 2:13–25

Jesus arrives at the temple during Passover. What should’ve been a holy place had become a marketplace — loud, transactional, tainted by greed and convenience.

“He found those selling oxen, sheep, and doves, and the money changers sitting there.”

“So He made a whip of cords…”

Yes. Jesus — full of grace — also made a whip. He didn’t ask politely. He drove them out.

Because true worship cannot coexist with corruption. Because what is sacred cannot be sold.

✍🏽 Note:

This shook me.
He wasn’t just cleansing the temple — He was cleansing the heart of worship. And now we are the temple.

So the question hit me hard:
What’s sitting in my temple that doesn’t belong?
What have I allowed to trade with my time, my trust, my focus?

The tables turned over in Jerusalem might need to be turned over in me.

💭 Reflection:

When Jesus enters, He doesn’t just comfort — He cleanses. And sometimes, love looks like flipping tables.

What would it look like for Him to walk through your life and call things out?
Would He find noise where there should be prayer?
Would He find distraction where there should be devotion?

🛐 Prayer Prompt:

Jesus, cleanse my heart like You cleansed the temple. Remove every idol, every distraction, every transaction that has replaced real worship. Make me a house of prayer again.

📖 Section 2: A Night Conversation – John 3:1–21

Nicodemus comes to Jesus at night — maybe afraid, maybe unsure.
But he came.

He didn’t lead with a question. He just acknowledged the truth:

“Rabbi, we know You are a teacher from God…”

Jesus cut straight through the surface:

“Unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.”

Nicodemus is confused.
“How can someone be born when they’re old?”

And Jesus answers with what still stirs hearts today:

“The wind blows where it wishes… so is everyone born of the Spirit.”

✍🏽 Note:

That image of the wind… it blessed me. You can’t see it. You can’t control it. But you can feel it. That’s how the Spirit works. Quiet. Powerful. Life-altering.

Jesus wasn’t talking about fixing your old life — He was saying, “You need new life entirely.” And the only way in… is through Me.

💭 Reflection:

We aren’t saved by tweaking our behavior. We are saved by surrendering our heart.

Jesus didn’t come to condemn us.
He came to rescue us — because He loved us.

“For God so loved the world that He gave His only Son…”
— John 3:16

You can’t be reborn without letting go of the old. Not patched. Not polished. Reborn.

🛐 Prayer Prompt:

Lord, breathe new life into me. I don’t want surface religion — I want true rebirth. I want to live by the Spirit, move by the Spirit, and walk in the light of Your love.

📓 Journal Prompt:

  • What in my life needs to be “cleansed from the temple”?

  • Am I seeking to improve my life — or surrender it completely for new life?

  • How has the Spirit moved in me recently like the wind?

🌿 Final Whisper:

Jesus is still turning over tables. Still calling us out of religion and into rebirth. Still inviting us to be filled with Spirit, not self.

Let Him cleanse what needs to go… And make room for the life only He can give.

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Erica W. Erica W.

Come and See the Glory

Explore this Grace Journal devotional as Jesus calls His followers and performs His first miracle. Learn how being seen by God and obeying simple instructions can reveal His glory in unexpected ways. Based on John 1:43–51 and John 2:1–12.

📖 John 1:43–51 & John 2:1–12
“Can anything good come out of Nazareth?”
— John 1:46

“Do whatever He tells you.”
— John 2:5

These two moments couldn’t seem more different — a skeptical comment under a fig tree and a quiet miracle at a wedding — but they reveal the same truth:

Jesus shows up where people least expect Him.
And when He does, everything changes.

📖 Section 1: Under the Fig Tree – John 1:43–51

Jesus finds Philip. Philip finds Nathanael.
And Nathanael… well, he’s not impressed.

“Can anything good come out of Nazareth?”

It’s a question loaded with assumptions — about places, people, and possibilities. But Philip doesn’t argue. He simply says:

“Come and see.”

That invitation carries power. Because when Nathanael comes near, Jesus speaks straight to his heart:

“Before Philip called you, I saw you… under the fig tree.”

✍🏽 Note:

That part right there stopped me.
Jesus saw him before he even knew to look for Jesus.
How many times has He seen me when I felt overlooked or invisible?

And Nathanael’s heart opened instantly. Doubt turned into worship.
“Rabbi, You are the Son of God…”

💭 Reflection:

God sees us — not just physically, but prophetically. He sees our rawness, our questions, our hiding places… and still calls us.

Jesus didn't rebuke Nathanael’s doubts. He revealed Himself in them.

🛐 Prayer Prompt:

Jesus, thank You for seeing me even when I don’t see You. Help me not to dismiss where You’re working just because it doesn’t look the way I expected.
Open my eyes to behold You in the ordinary.

📖 Section 2: The Wedding at Cana – John 2:1–12

Jesus attends a wedding. Not a temple. Not a throne room. A wedding.

The wine runs out — a quiet crisis.
Mary leans in with trust that only a mother could carry.
She doesn’t beg. She doesn’t pressure. She just turns to the servants and says:

“Do whatever He tells you.”

That’s the faith that moves heaven.

Jesus tells them to fill jars with water. Nothing fancy. No stage lights. Just obedience.
And in that ordinary act, a miracle unfolds:
Water turns to wine. Quietly. Abundantly. First-class.

✍🏽 Note:

What moved me was how Jesus didn’t make a scene. He moved behind the scenes: no announcement, no spectacle — just transformation.

It reminded me: miracles don’t always look miraculous in the moment. But they always leave a mark.

💭 Reflection:

Jesus still turns water into wine today — not just in bottles, but in hearts, homes, and hopeless situations.
But the miracle begins with trust:
“Do whatever He tells you.”

🛐 Prayer Prompt:

Lord, I trust You with the things that have “run out” in my life. Joy. Strength. Patience. Direction. Fill the empty spaces, and turn the ordinary into something new.
Help me to obey — even when it doesn’t make sense.

📓 Journal Prompt:

  • What have I dismissed as “too ordinary” for God to use?

  • Have I been more skeptical than surrendered lately?

  • What does “do whatever He tells you” look like in my life this week?

🌿 Final Whisper:

Jesus is still calling.
Still seeing.
Still turning empty things into something beautiful.

All He asks is that we come near… and do whatever He tells us.

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Erica W. Erica W.

John 1:19–42 – Who Are You, Really?

Discover how John the Baptist's humility, obedience, and clarity of purpose reveal powerful truths about identity and calling. A soul-stirring devotional on John 1:19–42 with journal prompts and prayer.

📖 Scripture Focus: John 1:19–42

“Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world.”
— John 1:29

This chapter of John stirred something deep in me.

It reminded me how loud the world can be when it’s trying to define you… and how quiet you have to become to hear who God says you are. This passage isn’t just about John the Baptist preparing the way — it’s about identity, calling, and the courage to point others to Christ when the spotlight wants to land on you.

📖 Section 1: The Question of Identity (vv. 19–23)

The priests and Levites came straight to John and asked:
“Who are you?”

He could’ve said a lot. He was known. He had a following. But his answer?

“I am not the Christ.”
“I am not Elijah.”
“I am not the Prophet.”

And finally — when pressed — he said:

“I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness: Make straight the way of the Lord.”

No titles. No need to impress.
Just obedience.

💭 Reflection:

John didn’t define himself by his family name, his reputation, or public opinion. He didn’t grasp for validation. He defined himself by his purpose: a voice, not a name.

And that spoke so deeply to me.

We live in a world obsessed with personal branding, titles, and making a name — but in the kingdom, the goal is to make His name known.

✅ Knowing who you’re not is just as important as knowing who you are.
✅ Your assignment doesn’t require applause — just obedience.

✍🏽 Note:

“John’s humility and understanding of his purpose really struck me. He didn’t let others hype him up or call him something God didn’t. He knew his lane — and he stayed faithful in it.”

“Sometimes the most anointed thing we can do is stay in position. Not be the main character… just the voice that prepares the way.”

🛐 Prayer Prompt:

Lord, help me be content being a voice for You — not a name for myself. Strip away every false label. Make me bold in purpose, steady in humility, and faithful to the call You’ve placed on my life.

📖 Section 2: Behold the Lamb (vv. 29–34)

The next day, John saw Jesus coming toward him and said:

“Behold! The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!”

He didn’t introduce Him as “Jesus of Nazareth” or “my cousin.”
He spoke of His assignment — the Lamb sent to carry the sin of the world.

And then John said something that paused me in my spirit:

“I did not know Him…” (v. 31)

This is his own family. They likely crossed paths growing up.
But John still had to wait on the Spirit to reveal who Jesus really was.

✍🏽 Note:

“That humbled me. Sometimes we’re around Jesus — even in His presence, even doing His work — and still don’t fully know Him.
John was faithful to his assignment before the revelation came.”

“And because he didn’t chase a title, he was in position to see the truth clearly — and declare it boldly:
‘Behold the Lamb of God!’”

💭 Reflection:

Sometimes we want clarity before obedience…
But what if obedience is the road to clarity?

John stayed the course — baptizing, preparing, watching.
And when the Spirit descended like a dove, he knew.
That was the Lamb.
That was the One.

🛐 Prayer Prompt:

Lord, help me stay faithful while I wait.
Let my heart be soft enough to behold You when You pass by — even if I’ve seen You before.
Reveal more of Yourself to me.
I don’t want to just serve You — I want to know You.

📖 Section 3: Come and See (vv. 35–42)

The very next day, John pointed to Jesus again. This time, two of his own disciples followed Him.
Jesus turned and asked the question that still echoes in our hearts today:

“What are you seeking?” (v. 38)

They didn’t respond with theology.
They didn’t ask for signs.
They just said: “Where are You staying?”

They wanted to be near Him.
And Jesus simply replied: “Come and see.”

💭 Reflection:

That’s how it starts. Not with qualifications. Not with credentials. Just curiosity. They came and saw — and never turned back. One of them, Andrew, went and got his brother Simon. And when Jesus saw Simon, He called out something beyond what Simon knew about himself.

“You shall be called Cephas (Peter)”
— The Rock.

Before Peter ever preached. Before he failed. Before he followed —
Jesus saw the rock inside the man.

✍🏽 Note:

“There’s something so beautiful about how this all unfolds. John didn’t cling to his disciples. He let them go. And Jesus welcomed them without a résumé.
He just said, Come. And from there, a movement began.”

🛐 Prayer Prompt:

Jesus, I want to be near You — not for blessings, but because You’re worthy. Let me be the one who comes, who sees, who stays. Reveal who I really am — not who the world says, but who You call me to be.

📓 Journal Prompt:

Ask the Lord honestly:
“What am I truly seeking from You right now?”
Write down what comes up.
Then ask Him:
“What do You see in me that I don’t yet see?”

Sit quietly, and listen. The answer may change your life.

🌿 Final Whisper

You don’t need a spotlight to fulfill your calling.
You just need obedience, humility, and eyes to see the Lamb when He passes by.

Stay in position.
Speak when He tells you to.
And always — always — point to Jesus.

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Erica W. Erica W.

John 1:1–18 — The Light That Came Close

Discover the power of John 1:1–18 in this Spirit-led devotional on the Word made flesh. Explore what it means to receive Jesus, be born of God, and walk in the light that came close.

Series: The Word Made Known – A Journey Through John

“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.”
— John 1:1 (NIV)

“But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God,
to those who believe in His name: who were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.”

— John 1:12–13 (NKJV)

🌿 Why “The Light That Came Close”?

John opens his gospel with divine weight — not with a manger, but with eternity.
Jesus is the Word, eternal and creative, not just present at the beginning… but the beginning itself.

But He’s also called the Light:

  • “In Him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind.” (v.4)

  • “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.” (v.5)

  • “The true Light that gives light to everyone was coming into the world.” (v.9)

And in verse 14, that Light did something unimaginable:

“The Word became flesh and made His dwelling among us…”

God didn’t stay distant.
The Light came close.

That’s why this entry bears this name — because it reflects what Jesus did: He entered the world He created, not to condemn it, but to illuminate it… and to draw near to us in love, truth, and grace.

🕊️ Full Reflection:

Jesus, the eternal Word, was not a poetic idea or a distant deity.
He was with God, He was God, and He came for us.

He entered a world that was made through Him, yet rejected Him.

“He came to His own, and His own did not receive Him.” (v.11)

The heartbreak of rejection is real — and Jesus felt it.
But the story doesn’t stop there.

💛 And Yet... Redemption

“But as many as received Him…”

That phrase changes everything.

To the ones who did recognize Him — who received and believed — Jesus gave more than forgiveness.
He gave identity.
He gave access.
He gave rebirth.

✨ “He gave them the right to become children of God.”

Not born of family line…
Not of effort or intention…
But born of God — born again, by His Spirit.

We were all created by God, but not all are automatically children of God.
That comes by receiving Him — believing in His name — and being born of the Spirit, not the flesh.

🪞 Journal Prompts:

  • What does it mean to you that Jesus is the Word?

  • Have you fully received Him — or just acknowledged Him?

  • Do you walk in the identity of a child born of God — with full access, intimacy, and purpose?

🙏🏽 Prayer:

Jesus, You are the eternal Word — the Light that came close.
You stepped into the world You created to bring truth, healing, and belonging.
Thank You for inviting me to be not just near You, but born of You — a child of the living God.
Help me live each day fully aware of who You are and who I am in You. In your Holy name,
Amen.

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Erica W. Erica W.

🌿 Releasing What’s Already Inside You

You were created with purpose. This devotional explores how to release what God placed in you—from the Potter’s wheel to spiritual discipline, intimacy with Christ, and bold obedience. Includes Scripture-based guidance, journaling prompts, and a printable to help you reflect and grow.

“We have this treasure in jars of clay…” – 2 Corinthians 4:7

There’s something powerful about realizing that when God formed us on the Potter’s wheel, He didn’t leave us empty. He shaped us with care, filled us with gifts, strength, identity, and purpose—everything we’d ever need to walk in Him.

But the question becomes: How do we release what He already placed within us?

This has been sitting on my heart lately. I want to grow. I want to be who He called me to be. And I know I can’t rely on emotion, motivation, or timing to get there. I need the Holy Spirit’s help to unlock what’s been planted.

So here’s what I’ve been learning on this journey:

1. Understand the Potter’s Intent

“Before I formed you in the womb I knew you...” – Jeremiah 1:5
“We have this treasure in jars of clay...” – 2 Corinthians 4:7

You were not created empty. You were created intentional. Formed by God’s own hands, He placed purpose, identity, gifts, and discipline within you. But just like a seed, what’s within needs conditions to grow and emerge.

🔑 Truth: Everything you need is in you, but not everything is active. That takes intimacy with the Source.

2. Study the Word (Fuel the Fire Within)

“Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.” – Psalm 119:105
“Be transformed by the renewing of your mind...” – Romans 12:2

The Word is both mirror and map. Studying Scripture reveals what’s in you and what’s hindering you. It renews your mind so your inner man can rise and your outer man aligns with heaven’s truth.

🛠 Tool: Make time for daily Word consumption—not for information, but transformation.

3. Develop Intimacy With God

“Abide in Me, and I in you... apart from Me you can do nothing.” – John 15:4–5
“Draw near to God, and He will draw near to you.” – James 4:8

The gifts inside of you are activated in His presence. Prayer is not just asking—it’s aligning. Worship is not just praise—it’s access. Time with God allows His Spirit to stir the gift, fan the flame, and release what He hid in you for such a time as this.

📿 Practice: Invite God daily to activate what He’s already planted.

4. Obey, Even When It’s Small

“If you are faithful in little, you will be faithful in much.” – Luke 16:10
“Do not despise small beginnings...” – Zechariah 4:10

Releasing what’s in you doesn’t require a spotlight—it requires a yes. Every act of obedience chips away what hides the glory within. Speak when He says speak. Write when He says write. Serve when He nudges.

🌱 Note: Obedience is how you release the river within.

5. Train the Flesh, Feed the Spirit

“The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.” – Matthew 26:41
“Discipline yourself for the purpose of godliness.” – 1 Timothy 4:7

The treasure is in you, but so are distractions. Spiritual discipline (fasting, prayer, worship, confession, community) quiets the noise so the still, small voice can lead. These practices stir up what lies dormant and sharpen your sensitivity to His direction.

🔥 Truth: Discipline is not denying yourself—it’s discovering yourself in Christ.

6. Speak Life Over What’s Inside

“Death and life are in the power of the tongue...” – Proverbs 18:21
“Fan into flame the gift of God that is in you...” – 2 Timothy 1:6

Sometimes, the activation comes by declaration. Speak what God says about you, even if your emotions or situation don’t agree. Stir the gifts with your words. Bless your hands, your steps, your mind, and your calling.

🎙️ Practice: Start your day with declarations of who you are in Christ and what He’s placed within.

Declaration Prayer

Father,
Thank You for forming me with care and placing Your treasure within me. I declare that I was made on purpose, with purpose. I release fear and embrace the spirit of power, love, and self-discipline. Fan into flame every dormant gift. Align my steps and train me in Your truth.
What You placed in me, I now release by obedience, faith, and intimacy with You.
In Jesus’ name, Amen.

✨ Journal With Me

If this resonated with you, I created a printable journal with scriptures, reflections, and space to write what God is doing in your heart.

📄 Download the Free Journal Here

💬 Let’s Grow Together

I’d love to hear from you. What has God placed in you that’s ready to be released? Leave a comment, or share how you’re walking this out.

Grace and peace,
Erica W.

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Erica W. Erica W.

Does the Bible Say That Just Believing Is Enough?

Is believing in Jesus enough? Let's go deeper into what the Bible says about faith, obedience, and truly following Christ.

The Bible makes it clear that faith is essential — but it also teaches that true faith produces obedience, transformation, and fruit. In other words, believing in God or Jesus is the foundation — but not the end.

Let’s break it down:

💡 1. Belief Alone Is Not Enough (Without Action)

🔹 James 2:19 (NIV)

“You believe that there is one God. Good! Even the demons believe that—and shudder.”

  • This is a strong warning. Demons believe God exists — but they don’t follow Him.

  • True faith goes beyond mental belief — it changes how we live.

🔹 James 2:17 (NIV)

“Faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.”

  • Real faith will always produce action — obedience, love, repentance.

💡 2. Jesus Calls Us to Follow, Not Just Believe

🔹 Luke 9:23 (NIV)

“Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.”

  • Belief leads to a life of discipleship — daily surrender, sacrifice, and trust.

🔹 John 14:15 (NIV)

“If you love me, keep my commands.”

  • Jesus connects love and belief in Him with obedience.

💡 3. Salvation Is By Faith — But Faith is Living and Active

🔹 Ephesians 2:8–10 (NIV)

“For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith — and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God — not by works, so that no one can boast.
For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.”

  • We are saved by grace, not our performance.

  • But true saving faith always leads us into a life of purpose and obedience.

💡 4. Jesus Warns Against Empty Confession

🔹 Matthew 7:21 (NIV)

“Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven.”

  • Saying "I believe" is not enough without doing the will of God.

✅ Summary:

  • Believing in Jesus is the starting point of salvation — and it is through His grace alone that we are saved.

  • But that belief is proven genuine through a life of repentance, obedience, and relationship with Him.

  • Faith that is alive walks, obeys, grows, and endures.

If You're Encouraging Someone:

“Believing in Jesus is not just about saying you believe — it’s about trusting Him enough to follow. Real faith walks with Him, listens to Him, and is transformed by Him.”

🙏 Prayer: A Heart That Believes and Follows

Heavenly Father,
Thank You for revealing Yourself to me — not just as a God to believe in, but as a Savior to follow, a Shepherd to trust, and a King to obey.
You are holy and loving, full of mercy and truth. I confess that sometimes I’ve been content with just believing, without becoming who You’ve called me to be. But I don’t want a faith that is passive or lukewarm. I want a faith that is alive, moving, and yielded to You.

Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me (Psalm 51:10).
Help me to take up my cross daily and follow You — not in words only, but in action, in humility, in trust, and in love.
Teach me to obey not out of fear, but out of delight — because I know that Your ways lead to life, freedom, and purpose.

Holy Spirit, stir up within me a hunger for Your Word and a desire to walk in it.
Let my belief in Jesus overflow into transformation.
Make me bold when I’m afraid, consistent when I’m weary, and faithful when I don’t understand.
Let my life be a reflection of true discipleship — not just belief, but daily surrender.

I pray for my family, friends, and all who read this:
That we wouldn’t just know about You, but that we would know You personally.
That we would not only believe in You, but also follow You — wherever You lead.
Because belief without obedience is incomplete — and obedience without love is empty.
But when we believe and follow You from the heart, we find the abundant life You promised.

In Jesus’ name,
Amen.

Erica

✨ What spoke to you in today’s reflection? I’d love to hear your thoughts—leave a comment below! 🌿

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God’s Testing vs. Tribulations: Knowing the Difference

Understand the difference between God’s testing and the tribulations Jesus spoke about. Learn how both shape your faith, with scripture, encouragement, and reflection.

“In this world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world.”
– John 16:33 (ESV)

“God tested Abraham...”
– Genesis 22:1 (NIV)

Life is full of hardships—but not all hardship is the same. Sometimes we’re being tested by God, and other times we’re enduring tribulation from the world around us. Understanding the difference can help you respond with wisdom, faith, and peace.

🔍 What Is God’s Testing?

God’s testing is a divine process of refining and strengthening us. It’s not punishment. It’s preparation. When God tests us, He is revealing the depth of our faith and inviting us into deeper trust.

🕊️ Examples from Scripture:

  • Abraham was tested with the ultimate sacrifice—his son Isaac (Genesis 22).

  • The Israelites were tested in the wilderness (Deuteronomy 8:2).

  • James encouraged believers to embrace trials as growth opportunities (James 1:2–3).

✅ Purpose:

  • To develop perseverance

  • To reveal what’s in our hearts

  • To produce genuine, mature faith (1 Peter 1:7)

🌍 What Are Tribulations?

Tribulations refer to the hardships, suffering, or persecution that come simply from living in a fallen world. Jesus Himself warned us that they would come—but He also gave us hope: “I have overcome the world.”

💥 Examples from Scripture:

  • Early Christians faced persecution for their faith.

  • Paul endured beatings, shipwrecks, and prison.

  • Jesus spoke of “tribulation” as a reality of life (John 16:33).

✅ Purpose:

  • To drive us to rely on Christ

  • To remind us of our eternal hope

  • To allow God's strength to be made perfect in our weakness (2 Corinthians 12:9)

🪔 The Key Differences

Aspect God’s Testing Tribulations

Source Comes from God Comes from the world, sin, or Satan

Purpose To refine, strengthen, and mature us To oppose, discourage, or pressure us

Spiritual Goal Builds obedience and perseverance Deepens dependence on Christ

Biblical Examples Abraham, Job, James, Israelites Early Church, Paul, Jesus’ warning

God’s Role Initiator and Refiner Redeemer and Sustainer

🙏 What It Means for You

Whether you’re in a test or facing tribulation, God is with you. He doesn’t waste your pain. He uses both to prepare you, shape your heart, and bring glory to His name.

“And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him…”
– Romans 8:28 (NIV)

You may not be able to choose your trial, but you can choose your response: faith, surrender, and trust.

✨ Journal Prompt:

Are you currently in a test or a tribulation?
How can you tell the difference?
What is God teaching you in this season?

🙌 Prayer:

Father,
Help me discern the difference between Your testing and the tribulations of life.
Whether You are refining me or I am under pressure from the world, remind me that I am never alone.
Use every moment—every fire, every trial—for my growth and Your glory.
In Jesus’ name, Amen.

With grace,
Erica

✨ What spoke to you in today’s reflection? I’d love to hear your thoughts—leave a comment below! 🌿

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When God Tests Us: Refined by Fire, Held by Grace"For you, God, tested us; you refined us like silver." – Psalm 66:10 (NIV)

Discover how God uses testing to strengthen and purify your faith. Explore key scriptures, reflection, and a prayer for anyone walking through trials with purpose and hope.

🔥 A Heartfelt Reflection

Have you ever felt like your faith was being stretched thin—like the weight of your circumstances was more than you could carry? You’re not alone. The Bible is filled with people who faced seasons of deep testing, and yet those very tests were the soil where their faith grew strongest.

God doesn’t test us to trap us. He tests us to train us, to reveal what’s inside us, and to refine us for something greater.

  • In Genesis 22, Abraham was tested with the unthinkable—offering Isaac. But through it, his trust in God deepened.

  • In Deuteronomy 8:2, the Israelites wandered 40 years, not aimlessly, but under divine training to see what was in their hearts.

  • In James 1:2–3, we’re encouraged to find joy in trials because they produce perseverance.

  • And 1 Peter 1:7 reminds us that trials prove our faith genuine, like gold tested in fire.

So when you're facing the heat, remember: you are being refined, not rejected.

📖 Scriptures for Your Journey

  • Genesis 22:1 – “God tested Abraham…”

  • Deuteronomy 8:2 – “…to humble and test you…”

  • James 1:2–3 – “...the testing of your faith produces perseverance.”

  • 1 Peter 1:6–7 – “...so that the proven genuineness of your faith...”

  • Psalm 66:10 – “You refined us like silver.”

📝 Journal Prompt

What season of testing are you walking through right now?
Can you see how it’s growing you, even if it’s uncomfortable?

Write a prayer of surrender. Ask God to help you see the refining, not just the fire.

🙏 A Prayer to Carry You Through

Heavenly Father,
I don’t always understand the trials in my life, but I choose to trust You.
Refine me like silver. Teach me to walk in faith like Abraham,
To follow You daily like Israel in the wilderness,
To rejoice in hardship like James encourages us,
And to endure knowing that my faith is being made strong.
I surrender this season to You. Let it glorify Your name.
In Jesus’ name, Amen.

With grace,
Erica

✨ What spoke to you in today’s reflection? I’d love to hear your thoughts—leave a comment below! 🌿

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Faith in the Storm: When You Know the Word, But Still Waver

Even when you know God’s Word, storms still shake us. Learn how to anchor your faith in His truth—not your emotions—in life’s most trying moments.

Opening Reflection: Have you ever found yourself in a storm—not just a physical one, but a life storm—and realized that despite knowing God's Word, you're still panicking? It's that tension between head knowledge and heart trust. You remember the verses. You know what was just preached. But suddenly, the waves rise, the boat rocks, and fear creeps in.

You're not alone. Even the disciples, after hearing Jesus teach about faith and the Word falling on good ground, panicked when the winds picked up. And yet Jesus, calm and resting, reminded them (and us) that faith is more than memory—it's trust.

Scripture Foundation:

  • Mark 4:35–41: Jesus calms the storm. The disciples are terrified even after hearing Him teach.

  • Luke 8:22–25: The parallel account shows Jesus asleep in peace, while His followers tremble in fear.

  • Acts 27:21–44: Paul, in the middle of a terrifying shipwreck, stands in peace. He reminds everyone that God has spoken, and he believes Him.

Devotional Insight: Jesus had just finished teaching about the seed and the soil. The Word was sown, but when the storm came, the disciples' hearts showed just how shallow that soil still was. That’s not shame—it’s insight. It shows us where God wants to dig deeper.

Paul’s faith in Acts 27 is different. Tested. Mature. Anchored. When everything is falling apart, he doesn’t panic—he stands. Why? Because He believed what God said.

And that’s what we want: not just knowledge, but anchored faith. Faith that rests when life "lifes." Faith that sleeps like Jesus in the storm. Faith that stands like Paul when the ship breaks.

A Prayer When Life Starts "Lifing": Father, I believe Your Word. But sometimes, I forget when the winds rise. I want the kind of faith that rests in You—that remembers what You said even when it doesn't look like it's working out. Give me deep roots, not shallow soil. Let me sleep through storms, not because I don't care, but because I trust You that much. And when I need to stand, let me stand on Your promises. In Jesus' name, Amen.

Journal Prompts:

  • What storm are you currently facing?

  • What Word has God already spoken over that situation?

  • When storms come, do I react like the disciples or rest like Jesus?

  • How can I shift my focus from the waves to the Word?

Closing Encouragement: If you've found yourself forgetting what He just taught you, you're not failing—you're growing. God doesn't test us to break us. He allows storms to show us where we're rooted, and where He wants to deepen our faith. Keep going. Keep believing. Let faith rise.

Download the Free Printable: "Faith in the Storm" Devotional + Prayer Card 

With grace,

Erica

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Walk By Faith, Not By Sight

It’s not about what you see—it’s about Who you follow. Discover how to walk in purpose and peace by trusting God’s voice over your vision.

🌊 "For we walk by faith, not by sight." — 2 Corinthians 5:7 (NKJV)

This short verse from Paul’s second letter to the Corinthians holds profound truth for every believer. In just ten words, it reveals the foundation of a life rooted in the Spirit, not in the senses. It teaches us to move in obedience—not because we see the outcome—but because we trust the One who directs our steps.

To walk by faith means we let go of the need to understand everything. It means believing in God’s promises even when there’s no evidence yet. It means our confidence is not in what is visible, but in who is invisible.

"Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." — Hebrews 11:1

Sight is natural. Faith is supernatural. And the Christian walk requires us to lean not on what we can analyze, calculate, or control—but on God’s eternal truth.

This verse doesn’t minimize our human desire for clarity. It simply reminds us that God’s clarity comes through trust—not always visibility. He is trustworthy even when the road is foggy.

When Paul wrote this, he was enduring hardship, persecution, and uncertainty. Yet he declared: “We walk by faith.” That means forward motion. Movement. Momentum. Even when you can’t see clearly, you can keep walking—because faith is a lens that sees beyond the moment.

🙏 Prayer:

Lord, strengthen my faith to walk even when the path is unclear. Help me to lean not on what I feel or see, but on what You’ve said. Let Your Word be my compass and Your promises my anchor. I choose to walk by faith—step by step, day by day—trusting You fully. In Jesus’ name, amen.

📝 Journal Prompt:

  • In what area of my life am I relying more on sight than faith?

  • What promise of God do I need to hold onto right now?

  • How can I strengthen my faith through prayer, scripture, and action?

    📥 Download the Walk By Faith printable journal sheet: Click here to access your free reflection page — print it out, write it down, and walk it out.

Faith leads even when the eyes cannot.

With grace,

Erica

✨ What spoke to you in today’s reflection? I’d love to hear your thoughts—leave a comment below! 🌿

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Ask. Seek. Knock. A Promise Worth Pursuing

Explore the deeper meaning of Matthew 7:7—Ask, Seek, Knock—and discover how each step draws you closer to God. Includes visual reflection and prayer.

🔑 "Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you." — Matthew 7:7 (NKJV)

Have you ever felt unsure how to pray—or whether your prayers even matter?

Jesus answers that question with a simple, powerful invitation: Ask. Seek. Knock.

These aren’t passive suggestions. They’re active pursuits, grounded in faith and built on trust that your Heavenly Father hears and responds.

🙋🏽‍♀️ ASK — The Posture of Dependence

To ask means to admit you can’t do it on your own. It requires humility, faith, and courage to speak your need aloud—to say, "Lord, I need You." Whether you whisper it in weariness or cry it out in desperation, He hears you.

“If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father... give good things to those who ask Him!” — Matthew 7:11

🔍 SEEK — The Pursuit of His Presence

To seek God means to move closer. It means searching not just for answers but for intimacy. When we seek Him—through prayer, worship, fasting, and His Word—we discover the treasure isn’t just what we receive, but who He is.

“You will seek Me and find Me, when you search for Me with all your heart.” — Jeremiah 29:13

🚪 KNOCK — The Persistence of Faith

Knocking implies resistance. A closed door. An unanswered question. But it also implies action. Knocking means you didn’t give up. It means you're standing at the threshold of promise, believing that when it opens, it will be God who answers.

“To the one who knocks it will be opened.” — Matthew 7:8

🙏 Prayer:

Father, thank You for inviting me into this kind of relationship with You. Help me to ask boldly, seek continually, and knock faithfully. May I never lose hope when the answer is delayed. Teach me to trust Your timing and to rest in Your presence while I wait. In Jesus’ name, amen.

📝 Journal Prompt:

  • What am I asking God for right now?

  • Where is He inviting me to seek Him more deeply?

  • What door have I stopped knocking on that may still open by faith?

Keep knocking. You’re closer than you think.

📥 Download the Ask. Seek. Knock journal sheet: Click here to access your free reflection page — print it out, write it down, and walk it out.

With grace,
Erica

✨ What spoke to you in today’s reflection? I’d love to hear your thoughts—leave a comment below! 🌿

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Why Does Biblical Fasting Begin with Food? A Closer Look at the Scriptures

Curious why the Bible emphasizes fasting from food instead of entertainment or habits? Learn what fasting meant in both the Old and New Testaments and why it begins with food.

When we fast, why is it usually food that’s laid on the altar?

In today’s world, we often hear: “You can fast anything—TV, social media, even gossip.” While these are meaningful sacrifices, true biblical fasting has always started with something much deeper: food.

Let’s walk through the scriptures to understand why fasting in the Bible begins with food, and why that still matters today.

🍽️ What Does the Bible Say About Fasting?

The word "fast" or "fasting" appears around 70 times in the NKJV Bible. It’s most often used in the context of:

  • Seeking divine help (Ezra 8:23)

  • Repentance and humility (Jonah 3:5-10)

  • Spiritual warfare and breakthrough (Matthew 17:21)

  • Preparation for ministry (Acts 13:2-3)

Key Verse:

“Is this not the fast that I have chosen: to loose the bonds of wickedness... to let the oppressed go free?” — Isaiah 58:6

🥖 Why Food? Doesn’t It Nourish Us?

Yes—and that’s why it’s so powerful.

Food is our most basic physical need. When we fast from it, we challenge the flesh and declare that:

“Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God.” — Matthew 4:4

Fasting food breaks the cycle of self-reliance. It reminds us that only God truly sustains us.

📖 Examples of Food-Based Fasts in Scripture:

  • Absolute Fast – Esther 4:16: “No food or water for three days.”

  • Partial Fast – Daniel 10:3: “I ate no pleasant food.”

  • Corporate Fast – Joel 2:15: “Blow the trumpet… sanctify a fast, call a solemn assembly.”

  • Jesus' 40-Day Fast – Luke 4:2: “He ate nothing.”

These weren’t about self-control. They were about God-dependence.

📺 What About Other Forms of Fasting?

In the Old and New Testaments, people had entertainment—feasts, music, theater, and celebrations. But those weren’t daily essentials.

Food was universal. Everyone needed it. So fasting from food was a clear, collective act of devotion.

In modern times, fasting from TV, social media, or digital distractions can absolutely help refocus our minds—but these are usually supplemental fasts. They don’t carry the same physical sacrifice as food.

🔑 So Why Start with Food?

Reason Why It Matters

Dependency Food is necessary. Fasting reminds us of our need for God.

Sacrifice It costs something physical and spiritual.

Scriptural Pattern Nearly every biblical fast involved food.

Clarity Fasting food breaks fleshly habits so you can hear God clearer.

🙏 Final Reflection:

Ask the Lord what He is calling you to fast. Whether it's a full fast, a Daniel-style fast, or removing distractions—make sure it’s Spirit-led.

When God chooses the fast, the fruit always follows: healing, clarity, direction, and spiritual freedom.

“When you fast…” — Jesus (Matthew 6:16) — not if.

So yes—fasting begins with food. But it ends in freedom.

📥 Download the Fasting Start with the Heart journal sheet: Click here to access your free reflection page — print it out, write it down, and walk it out.

With grace,
Erica

✨ What spoke to you in today’s reflection? I’d love to hear your thoughts—leave a comment below! 🌿

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Erica W. Erica W.

Little Feet, Big Faith: Planting the Seeds of God’s Word in Young Hearts

In the middle of sticky fingers, sudden tantrums, and loud giggles, a legacy is being built. This post explores how to plant lasting seeds of faith in the youngest hearts—even during seasons of disruption and unexpected caregiving.

📖 Opening Reflection:

There’s a holy weight in raising or even temporarily caring for young children—especially in a season of disruption. But what if this is the moment the roots of their faith are planted?

Right now, my days are filled with tiny footsteps, snack requests, and sudden outbursts—but underneath the noise is a quiet mission: to cover these little ones in love, prayer, and scripture until Jesus becomes the foundation of their lives.

📜 Key Scriptures for Spiritual Foundation

1. Deuteronomy 6:6–7 (NLT)

“And you must commit yourselves wholeheartedly to these commands... Repeat them again and again to your children. Talk about them when you are at home and when you are on the road, when you are going to bed and when you are getting up.”

📌 Teaching truth doesn’t require a classroom. It starts in the daily rhythms—when brushing teeth, sharing Cheerios, or calming a tantrum.

2. Isaiah 54:13 (NIV)

“All your children will be taught by the Lord, and great will be their peace.”

📌 Even in chaos, God promises peace to the children we bring before Him.

3. Proverbs 22:6 (NKJV)

“Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it.”

📌 The training doesn’t start when they’re old enough to read—it starts with lullabies filled with scripture, bedtime prayers, and spirit-led example.

🙏 A Prayer for the Grandmother (or Caregiver)

Heavenly Father,

Thank You for entrusting me with these little ones—even in a season I didn’t plan for. Cover them with Your presence. Let their tiny ears hear truth, their eyes see grace, and their hearts be softened for You. Help me show them Jesus not just through Bible stories but through how I love, protect, and speak to them.

Let this home become a sanctuary. Let laughter echo as worship and correction be laced with compassion. Make me a mirror of Your patience, even on the messy days.

And when I feel weary, remind me: I’m not just babysitting—I’m building a legacy.

In Jesus’ name, amen.

📓 Journal Prompt:

  • What spiritual practices can I begin, even in small moments, to help build faith in the children under my care?

  • What has God shown me about His patience through caring for little ones?

  • Where do I need to invite peace into my home today?

Tiny feet may run wild in your home, but big faith can grow there too. May we plant seeds that heaven waters and eternity honors.

With grace,
Erica

✨ What spoke to you in today’s reflection? I’d love to hear your thoughts—leave a comment below! 🌿

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Erica W. Erica W.

🕊️ Digging Deeper: Psalm 57 — Under His Wings

When the weight of life presses in, and we find ourselves hiding from what feels too big to face, Psalm 57 reminds us that we are never truly alone. In the dark, David finds a song—and so can we. This is a psalm for the cave-dweller, the warrior in hiding, the heart that is trembling and yet still trusting.

📖 Psalm 57 (NKJV)

Verses 1–3: A Cry for Mercy
“Be merciful to me, O God, be merciful to me! For my soul trusts in You; and in the shadow of Your wings I will make my refuge, until these calamities have passed by.”
“I will cry out to God Most High, to God who performs all things for me. He shall send from heaven and save me.”

David begins with repetition—"Be merciful"—because he's desperate. He knows God is his only safe place. The “shadow of Your wings” is a picture of closeness, protection, and divine care—like a mother bird shielding her chicks from harm. Even while hiding in a cave from Saul, David sees God's presence as his true refuge.

Verses 4–6: A Realistic Picture of Trouble
“My soul is among lions… they have prepared a net for my steps; my soul is bowed down.”

David doesn’t deny his fear or danger. He feels surrounded by enemies and even emotionally crushed. But instead of giving into despair, he declares God's greatness in verse 5:

“Be exalted, O God, above the heavens; let Your glory be above all the earth.”

This praise in the middle of trouble is the heartbeat of the psalm.

Verses 7–11: A Heart Fixed in Praise
“My heart is steadfast, O God, my heart is steadfast; I will sing and give praise.”
“Awake, my glory! Awake, lute and harp! I will awaken the dawn.”

Though still in danger, David decides to praise. His "heart is fixed"—immovable. He chooses worship before rescue. By verse 10, his perspective is heavenward:

“For Your mercy reaches unto the heavens, and Your truth unto the clouds.”

✨ Key Reflections

  1. You can worship in the waiting.
    David was still in the cave, yet his spirit soared in praise.

  2. God is your refuge, not the cave.
    The cave might provide temporary shelter, but God is the true hiding place. David trusted not in the walls of the cave, but in the wings of God.

  3. Pain doesn’t cancel praise.
    Even in deep fear, David lifted his voice—not because of what he felt, but because of who God is.

🪞 Journal Prompts

  • “Where is my ‘cave’ right now?”
    What situation feels dark, tight, or fearful in this season?

  • “What does ‘taking refuge in the shadow of His wings’ look like for me today?”
    Reflect on the places, people, or moments where you’ve experienced God’s protection.

  • “Is my heart fixed, or faltering?”
    Be honest—what helps steady your heart, and what shakes it?

  • “What praise can I offer in this cave?”
    Write a short praise declaration, even if the answer hasn’t come yet.

🙏 Prayer: A Cry and a Confession of Trust

Heavenly Father,
Be merciful to me, O God. In moments when I feel cornered, confused, or crushed, remind me that I am hidden not by chance, but by Your divine wings. Teach me to find safety in Your presence and to praise You before the breakthrough. May my heart be fixed on You—not on outcomes, not on fears, but on Your everlasting mercy and truth. Just as David praised You from the cave, may my song rise even from hard places. Be exalted, O God, above my feelings, above my circumstances, above all the earth. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

With grace,
Erica

✨ What spoke to you in today’s reflection? I’d love to hear your thoughts—leave a comment below! 🌿

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Erica W. Erica W.

Walking on Water Faith: Eyes on Jesus, Not the Storm

What does it mean to walk on water? It means keeping your eyes on Jesus even when life looks impossible. This post invites you to live with bold faith—focused, surrendered, and purposeful—every single day.

📝 Devotional: Walking on Water Faith

Have you ever felt the waves rising all around you—uncertainty swelling, wind howling, and fear creeping in? Life doesn’t always wait for us to feel ready. But “walking on water” faith isn’t about being fearless—it’s about focusing our eyes on Jesus in spite of the fear.

In Matthew 14:28–31, Peter steps out of the boat in faith. As long as his eyes were locked on Jesus, he walked on water. But the moment he noticed the wind, he began to sink. Jesus didn’t scold him for stepping out—He reached out and saved him when fear took hold.

That’s what walking on water faith teaches us:
Don’t look at the storm. Don’t get distracted by the waves. Keep your eyes on Jesus.

Some days, you might not hear clear direction from the Lord—but even in the silence, you can still walk with purpose. If you’ve committed your plans to Him (Proverbs 16:3), then carry them out with excellence, confidence, and a desire to glorify God in all you do.

And if your only prayer today is, “Lord, what would You have me do?”—trust that even the quiet moments are part of your calling.

You are an ambassador for Christ.
Your life is a living message of hope, peace, and truth in a broken world. Don’t shrink back. Walk forward. Even if it feels like water beneath your feet.

📖 Scriptures to Anchor This Message

  • Matthew 14:28–31 (NKJV) – “So He said, ‘Come.’ And when Peter had come down out of the boat, he walked on the water to go to Jesus.”

  • Proverbs 16:3 (NIV) – “Commit to the Lord whatever you do, and He will establish your plans.”

  • 2 Corinthians 5:20 (NLT) – “So we are Christ’s ambassadors; God is making his appeal through us.”

  • Isaiah 26:3 (NKJV) – “You will keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on You, because he trusts in You.”

  • Hebrews 12:2 (NIV) – “Fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith...”

📓 Journal Reflection Prompt

  • What does “walking on water” look like in your life right now?

  • Are you focusing more on your circumstances or on Christ?

  • Take a moment to write out today’s plans and commit them to God in prayer.

With grace,
Erica

✨ What spoke to you in today’s reflection? I’d love to hear your thoughts—leave a comment below! 🌿

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