God Provides for Those Who Give

AMY TURNER

Many people hesitate to give because they worry they will not have enough left for themselves. This fear comes from forgetting what God has already promised. Scripture tells us that the Now He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will supply and multiply your seed for sowing and increase the harvest of your righteousness. God is the source of every resource.

If He is the One who creates and sustains life, then we can trust Him not to abandon those who choose generosity. The call to give is not about losing, but about trusting that God will continue to provide.

God enriches us in many ways so that we can use those blessings to be generous.

And my God will supply [a]all your needs according to His riches in glory in Christ Jesus.

Philippians 4:19

Understanding the Warning About God’s Grace

JEFF TURNER

In 2 Corinthians 6:1, the Apostle Paul gives a strong warning to the church in Corinth about not receiving God’s grace without purpose. Paul’s message is clear: believers must not treat God’s gift of grace as something worthless or without effect.

This warning can be understood in two important ways. First, Paul may be addressing those in the church who did not truly believe. He encourages the Corinthian Christians to carefully examine themselves to be sure they really have faith. Some people in the church might have heard the gospel but never truly accepted it, so the grace of God had no real impact on their lives.

Second, Paul could also be warning true believers who had accepted God’s grace but were beginning to live by strict rules instead of by faith. He asks if they are now trying to be made perfect by following the law. He reminds them that salvation comes through the Holy Spirit’s work, not by human efforts or legalism. In other words, some believers might reject the freedom found in grace and try to earn God’s approval through their own actions.

Paul’s message shows that grace must be received sincerely, either by truly believing or by continuing to rely on God’s Spirit rather than human effort. Christians should avoid treating grace as meaningless and instead live in the freedom and power it offers.

Jesus answered and said to them, “This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent.”

John 6:29

Growing a Heart That Listens to God

FLOYD ROGERS

Learning to hear God is not something that happens by accident. It takes effort and intention. If we want to listen to Him, we need to treat it as a central part of our relationship with Him. When we read the Bible or pray, we should be asking, “Lord, help me hear Your voice.”

This kind of listening doesn’t come overnight. It requires a heart that is open, and a mind that is willing to be taught. We must ask God to help us become better listeners and keep practising it through prayer and reflection.

For parents, this is one of the most meaningful lessons they can pass on to their children. Teaching them to listen to God means they will not be left without guidance when they grow up and leave home. God will continue to lead them, because they’ve learned how to hear Him.

The one who has ears to hear, let him hear.

Matthew 11:15

Jesus Above All Things

AMY TURNER

In his letter to the Colossians, Paul explains that Jesus is first in every way. He describes who Jesus is, what he has done, and what he continues to do. Paul ends with the clear truth that Christ stands over everything else in creation.

Because of Paul’s words, I believe it’s not possible to speak too much about Jesus. Any words we use will always fall short of his true worth. No subject is more important than him, and no one deserves more of our time, love, or attention.

Shouldn’t our response to God’s love be to worship him without end?

so that at the name of Jesus every knee will bow, of those who are in heaven and on earth and under the earth,

Philippians 2:10

The Steady Gift of Hope

CHERYL QUIGG

Hope can appear in quiet and simple ways. It can rise in moments when nothing else seems certain. Here’s a short story as an illustration. Two men were out at sea when one of them was thrown overboard. Alone in the dark water with no life jacket and no way to call for help, he had every reason to believe he would not survive. Yet he found a small idea to hold on to. He used his boots as makeshift flotation devices and waited. Hours later, after long searching, rescuers found him alive. What kept him going was a faint but stubborn belief that help could still come.

A lot of us know this kind of waiting. Hope can be a flicker of light when everything feels heavy. Now, in the season leading to Christmas, many people reflect on hope in a deeper way. This time teaches that hope is not only an emotion but also a promise. It connects the past, the present, and what is still ahead.

A well-known account from the first chapter of Luke shows how hope can come to people who have waited for years. Zachariah and Elizabeth lived faithfully, yet they carried the pain of not having children. They were older now, long past the age when change seemed possible. Still, they lived with steady devotion. Then, on an ordinary day, everything changed. A message came announcing that their long prayers had been heard. They would have a son, and his life would prepare people for the work of the Lord.

Their story reminds us that hope does not expire. It may take time before it becomes clear. It often grows slowly, shaped by patience. Many generations before them had longed for God to complete his promise. People faced times of peace and times of struggle. Yet through all of this, the promise of a coming Saviour stayed alive.

Prophets spoke of this future. They described a child who would bring peace and justice, one who would carry the very presence of God. These words carried forward through hundreds of years.

When the message finally came to Zachariah, it renewed the hope that people had held onto for generations. Though he struggled to believe at first, the news spread quickly among the people. Their waiting was not wasted. Their hope was not empty.

Today many people still wrestle with hard questions. What does hope mean in illness, broken relationships, financial strain, or deep loss? What does hope offer when answers do not come quickly? The message at the heart of this season is that hope is not based on perfect circumstances. It is rooted in the presence of God, who stays near in the darkest places.

Scripture shows that God meets people in their fear, pain, and loneliness. There are moments when hope feels far away. Many people sit quietly with fears they never speak aloud. But hope is still offered. It comes through Jesus, who entered this world not simply to inspire, but to save. He came to restore what sin has broken and to bring life that does not end. The hope he gives does not depend on how strong we feel. It depends on who he is.

For those who have never placed their trust in him, hope begins by receiving what he offers.