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Living in Christ Encouragement. Testimony. Pushing through the storms. Getting closer to God. Discipleship. Growing in Christ.

04/11/2026

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Calling all my winners!! Are you feeling lucky? Purchase a Fear Ain’t In This Heart t-shirt any time between April 1 - A...
03/30/2026

Calling all my winners!! Are you feeling lucky? Purchase a Fear Ain’t In This Heart t-shirt any time between April 1 - April 30th to entered into a raffle to win not one but THREE graphic t-shirts!!



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03/12/2026

Prayer of Release and Repentance

Heavenly Father,

I come before You with a humble heart. You know me completely—every thought, every motive, every place in my heart that I sometimes try to overlook or justify. Nothing in me is hidden from You.

Lord, if there is anything I am holding onto that does not honor You—any bitterness, pride, resentment, fear, or unforgiveness—please reveal it to me. I do not want to cling to anything that separates me from the closeness You desire with me.

If there are sins I have committed knowingly or unknowingly, I ask for Your forgiveness. Search my heart, God. Shine Your light into the places that still need healing, correction, and surrender.

Where I have been stubborn, soften me.
Where I have been wrong, correct me.
Where I have been wounded, heal me.
Where I have been holding on too tightly, teach me how to release it into Your hands.

I lay down every burden, every regret, every hidden struggle before You. I trust that Your mercy is greater than my failures and that Your grace is sufficient for me.

Create in me a clean heart, Lord, and renew a steadfast spirit within me. Help me to walk in obedience, humility, and love so that my life reflects Your goodness.

Thank You for being a God who does not delight in punishment but delights in restoration. Thank You that when we turn to You, You receive us with mercy.

Today I release everything that does not belong in my life, and I choose to walk forward in Your grace.

In Jesus’ name,
Amen. šŸ¤

03/12/2026

Sometimes people believe they’re stuck carrying the weight of their family’s past.

In Book of Ezekiel 18, God addresses this directly.

At the time, people were repeating a saying:

"The parents eat sour grapes, and the children’s teeth are set on edge."

In other words, they were saying:
ā€œWe’re suffering because of what our parents did.ā€

But God basically says: Stop saying that.

He explains something very clearly:

• A righteous father can have a wicked son.
• A wicked father can have a righteous son.
• Each person is accountable for their own choices.

You are not automatically condemned because of where you came from.

But then God takes it even further.

He says that if a wicked person turns away from their sins and chooses what is right, they will live. Their past will not be held against them.

And on the other hand, if a righteous person turns toward wickedness, their previous righteousness will not save them.

In other words:
God is not interested in your label.
He’s interested in your heart and your direction.

Then God reveals something that shows His heart toward humanity:

ā€œDo I take any pleasure in the death of the wicked? declares the Lord God. Rather, am I not pleased when they turn from their ways and live?ā€
— Ezekiel 18:23

God is not eager to punish people.

He wants people to turn around and live.

The message of this chapter is simple but powerful:

You are responsible for your choices.
Your past does not have to define your future.
And no one is too far gone to turn back to God.

God’s invitation is still the same today:

Repent and live.

02/26/2026

There is something undeniable about the combination of faith and favor.

Faith is what we carry. Favor is what God releases. And when the two meet, ordinary lives step into extraordinary outcomes.

Scripture tells us in Hebrews 11:1 that ā€œfaith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.ā€ Faith does not wait for proof. It moves because God spoke. It builds before rain falls. It walks before the sea parts. It obeys before understanding.

But faith alone is not the whole story.

In Genesis 6:8, the Bible says that Noah found favor in the eyes of the Lord. Noah had faith to build the ark in a dry season, but it was favor that preserved him when the flood came. Faith positioned him. Favor protected him.

Consider Esther. She fasted. She prayed. She risked her life by approaching the king uninvited. That was faith. Yet when she stepped into the court, the king extended the golden scepter. That was favor. Faith gave her the courage to enter. Favor moved the king’s heart once she did.

Then there is Mary in Luke 1:28. The angel greeted her, ā€œYou who are highly favored.ā€ She was already favored, but she still had to respond. ā€œBe it unto me according to your word.ā€ That was faith. Favor chose her. Faith agreed. And history shifted because of that agreement.

Faith without favor can feel like striving. Favor without faith can be forfeited. But when faith and favor align, doors open that effort alone could never unlock.

Joseph is a powerful example. He had faith in the pit, faith in the prison, faith when forgotten. Yet the Scripture repeats, ā€œThe Lord was with Joseph.ā€ That is favor. Favor made the prison a pathway. Favor turned betrayal into promotion. Faith kept him steady. Favor elevated him suddenly.

The same was true for David. He walked onto the battlefield with faith in the name of the Lord. But it was favor that guided the stone and secured the victory. Faith showed up. Favor finished it.

This is the divine partnership. We bring faith. God releases favor. We obey in the unseen. He manifests in the visible. We step forward trembling. He surrounds us like a shield, just as Psalm 5:12 declares: ā€œYou will bless the righteous; with favor You will surround him as with a shield.ā€

Faith positions. Favor accelerates.

Faith says yes before the details. Favor ensures the outcome fulfills God’s purpose. Faith is our movement toward Him. Favor is His movement toward us.

And when the two meet, what once seemed impossible becomes inevitable — not because we are powerful, but because we trusted the One who is.

May we have the courage to keep believing when we cannot see, and the humility to recognize that when doors swing open, it is not just our effort — it is the hand of God resting upon us.

Faith and favor.
Our obedience. His advantage.

And that combination changes everything.

01/30/2026

Inspired by the power of faith and the timeless message of 2 Timothy 1:7

Wear your faith fearlessly!

Visit us today at www.faithimpact.us!

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10/10/2025

All throughout this journey, God’s been doing open-heart surgery on me—not to harm, but to heal. He’s exposed what I buried. Tended to what I ignored. And invited me to be brave enough to look within.

Heart checks aren’t always comfortable. But they’re necessary. Because we can’t become who He’s called us to be if we don’t examine what’s beneath the surface. What am I believing about God? About myself? About love? About purpose?

This isn’t about perfection. It’s about posture. A heart that is willing. Soft.

Teachable. Honest. A heart that says, ā€œSearch me, Lord.ā€ A heart that trusts that even in its most fragile state, it is still held by the One who formed it.

This book may be ending—but the transformation is not. These reflections, these journaled prayers, these Selah moments—they’ve not only drawn me closer to God… they’ve brought me back to me.

And that’s a heart worth checking on—daily.

10/09/2025

Selah.

That simple word scattered throughout the Psalms. It means ā€œpause,ā€ ā€œreflect,ā€ or ā€œlift up.ā€ It’s a divine invitation to stop—to sit with what was just said, to let it settle before rushing on to the next thing.

And honestly? I need more Selah in my life.

I’ve prayed big prayers, cried deep tears, wrestled with hard questions. But I’ve also missed moments because I didn’t pause. I was chasing answers instead of absorbing His presence. I was so focused on the ā€œnextā€ that I didn’t cherish the now.

But Selah invites me to see God in the middle. Not just at the miracle. To pause before the promise arrives. To breathe between the ā€œwhat ifā€ and the ā€œeven if.ā€ These moments recalibrate me—remind me that God isn’t just in the resolution. He’s in the rhythm of waiting, in the whisper of worship, in the stillness of trust.
Selah isn’t just a break. It’s a blessing.

10/08/2025

There’s something sacred about a table—where meals are shared, stories are told, and hearts are laid bare. And that’s exactly where God invites me. Not to perform. Not to impress. Just… to sit. To talk. To be.

He prepares a table for me—even in the presence of my enemies. Even in the midst of doubt. Even in the long wait between the ā€œamenā€ and the answer. And what I’ve come to love most is this: He’s not in a rush. He’s not checking His watch. He just wants communion.

There have been mornings when my prayers felt like rambling… and He leaned in. Nights when I wept more than I spoke… and He still stayed. In every season, He has welcomed me to the table—not to fix me, but to fellowship with me.

This is the kind of relationship He offers: one where I can ask questions, cry freely, laugh without guilt, and be fully myself.

A table where mercy is the meal, grace is the drink, and love never runs out.

10/07/2025

There’s a difference between living for Christ and living inChrist. One is rooted in performance—the other in presence. One strives, the other abides.

I spent years trying to earn what was already mine: love, acceptance, access to God’s heart. I thought I had to get it all right to stay close to Him. But Jesus didn’t invite me into perfection—He invited me into relationship. Into rest. Into Himself.

Living in Christ means I’m not defined by my productivity, my pace, or my pain. It means I can be hidden and still held. Flawed and still favored. Waiting and still winning. It means I don’t have to have it all figured out to be found in Him.

I don’t just believe about Him—I breathe with Him. His Word is my anchor. His Spirit, my guide. His love, my covering. I don’t have to chase purpose when I’m rooted in the Person of Christ.

This is life more abundantly. This is life… in Him.

10/06/2025

There’s no expiration date on a word from God. No delay can void it. No detour can derail it. No enemy can destroy it.

If God said it—He will do it.

But I’ve had moments when that was hard to believe. When the promise felt like a distant dream and the process looked nothing like the prophecy. I’ve cried over unanswered prayers, doubted what I once rejoiced over, and questioned if I even heard Him right.

But faith reminds me: God's integrity isn’t based on my timeline. His character doesn’t change based on my circumstances. What He starts, He finishes. And what He promised, He will perform.

So I praise Him as if it’s already done. Because in Heaven’s eyes—it is. I may not know the ā€œwhenā€ or ā€œhow,ā€ but I know the Who. And that’s enough to keep believing, keep praising, and keep preparing.

10/05/2025

I didn’t just survive that season—I praised my way through it.

When I had nothing left but a whisper, I still said ā€œThank You.ā€ When everything in me wanted to shut down, I lifted my hands. And somehow, praise became my lifeline. It wasn’t pretty. It wasn’t loud. But it was real. Raw. Reckless in its surrender.

There’s a kind of praise that doesn't wait for the breakthrough—it births it.

It’s the praise that tells hell, ā€œYou don’t get the final say.ā€ The praise that confuses the enemy because I should’ve quit, but I didn’t. The praise that invites God into the pit with me—until I’m strong enough to climb out.

Looking back, I know now: my deliverance wasn’t just about time passing or situations changing. It was praise that carried me. Praise that sustained me. Praise that shifted the atmosphere even when the outcome hadn’t changed.
And I’ll never be the same.

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