17.12.25

The Outsider Models Great Faith

DECEMBER 18, 2025





JOSHUA 2:12


"Now then, please swear to me by the LORD that you will show kindness to my family, because I have shown kindness to you. Give me a sure sign.”


HEBREWS 11:31

By faith the prostitute Rahab, because she welcomed the spies, was not killed with those who were disobedient.

JAMES 2:25

. . . was not even Rahab the prostitute considered righteous for what she did when she gave lodging to the spies and sent them off in a different direction?





Rahab. Do you know her name and story? This is one of the great stories in the bible that displays faith, grace, and salvation.

Rahab is introduced in Scripture as an innkeeper and a prostitute living in the city of Jericho, a woman who lived under the protection of the king. Yet her heart had been shaped by stories she had heard, stories of the God of Israel who parted the Red Sea and delivered his people from Egypt. When two Israelite spies arrived in Jericho and were being hunted by the king’s men, Rahab made a bold and dangerous choice. She hid them on the roof of her house, trusting that the God they served was greater than the king she feared.

When questioned by the king’s soldiers, Rahab denied seeing the spies and sent the men off in the wrong direction. With this courageous act of kindness, she protected the spies at great personal risk. If she had been discovered, her life would have been lost. Still, Rahab acted in faith, placing her trust in the God of Israel and demonstrating her belief through generous action.

Her faith led to two remarkable outcomes. First, Rahab and her family were spared when the Israelites later advanced on Jericho. 

Second, her story did not end there. Rahab became an ancestor of King David. Matthew includes her in the genealogy of Jesus. James points to her as an example of faith expressed through hospitality, and Hebrews names her among the great heroes of faith, alongside Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, and Moses. Rahab, once an outsider, becomes part of our spiritual family. She recognized that God was doing something new in the world, and she trusted him enough to step into that story.

Through God’s grace and mercy, Rahab stands as a powerful model of faith. Her story reminds us that Israel was not chosen because of strength or greatness, but because of God’s compassion, kindness, and mercy. That same mercy reached Rahab, and it still reaches us .

As we journey through Advent and prepare for Christmas, we remember that God continues to do something new in the world. By faith, we trust our Creator who sent his Son to establish a kingdom that knows no boundaries. Soon we will celebrate his birth, and with hopeful expectation we look forward to his return, when he will reign forever.

Come, Lord Jesus.

Let's Pray

Gracious God,

we thank you for the witness of Rahab, for her courage, her trust, and her willingness to act in faith when the future was uncertain. Through her story, remind us that your grace reaches beyond boundaries we create and that no one is outside your redeeming love.

Give us hearts that listen for where you are at work in the world today. When faith requires courage, strengthen us. When obedience feels risky, remind us that you are faithful. Open our eyes to the new things you are doing among us. Shape us into people who welcome your kingdom with hope, generosity, and bold faith.


16.12.25

THE "10" WORDS

DECEMBER 17, 2025





EXODUS 19:5-6

“Although the whole earth is mine, you will be for me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation. These are the words you are to speak to the Israelites.”

EXODUS 20:1-2

And God spoke all these words:
2 “I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery….


1 PETER 2:9

9 But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.



Most of us grew up calling them the Ten Commandments, but a better name might actually be God’s “Ten Words.” These weren’t just ideas Moses scribbled down, Scripture says God wrote them with His own finger, not once but twice. In Exodus 34:28 they’re even called “the covenant.” They mattered so much that they were placed inside the Ark of the Covenant itself. You may recall that the Ark of the Covenant was a central sign of faith and a reminder of God’s presence among his people. The Ten Words were meant to lead God’s people to understand and embrace the heart and structure of the entire covenant relationship.

People understood them as Ten Words of wisdom, a way to live well and help a whole community thrive. They were also Ten Words of revelation, showing what God is really like: good, fair, compassionate, and deeply invested in everyone’s wellbeing. And they were Ten Words of re‑creation, God bringing His order into our chaos, His way of life into our world. All of this was meant to form a people who would be a “kingdom of priests” and a “holy nation,” showing the world a better way to live.

The New Testament tells us that Jesus came to establish God’s kingdom in a whole new way. One of the first things He announced was that “the kingdom of God has come near.” Everywhere He went, He showed what that kingdom looks like, healing, welcoming, restoring, lifting up people from every background. Through Jesus, God’s rule takes root in ordinary people like us, shaping us again into that “kingdom of priests” and “holy nation.” And Jesus taught us to pray that this kingdom would keep breaking in: “Your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as in heaven.” If you read Exodus 20 and imagine a world that actually lived out those Ten Words, you get a glimpse of what Jesus was talking about.

So during Advent and Christmas, we remember that God didn’t stay distant. He came close. The Word became flesh. Jesus stepped into our messy world to bring order to our chaos and light to our confusion.

Maybe this season is an invitation to let your understanding of Jesus grow a little wider.

And maybe it’s a chance to ask yourself: in what ways does my life point toward that “better way” the kingdom of God offers?


Let's Pray


Gracious and Holy God, 

In Jesus Christ, your Word became flesh. He drew near to heal, to welcome, to restore, and to show us what your kingdom looks like. Through Him, you are forming us again into a holy nation, a kingdom of priests, a people who point the world toward your better way.

As we journey through Advent and celebrate Christmas, let your light break into our chaos, let your order shape our lives, and let your kingdom come among us. Make us faithful witnesses of your covenant love, so that our words, our actions, and our communities reflect your will on earth as it is in heaven.

We pray this in the name of Jesus, Amen.

15.12.25

STAND FIRM .... BE STILL


DECEMBER 16, 2025






Exodus 14:13-14

“Do not be afraid. Stand firm and you will see the deliverance the Lord will bring you today… The lord will fight for you; you need only to be still.”



God's People begin the march in Exodus out of Egypt, but they soon found themselves in a crisis: the Red Sea stretched before them, and the Egyptian army pressed in behind. Have you ever felt caught in a moment like that, trapped between obstacles with no clear way forward?

What strikes me is God’s response in that fearful, road‑blocked situation. He tells His people, “I’ve got this. Stand firm. Be still.” Honestly, that is not my natural reaction when I feel cornered. Is it yours? More often, we scramble for solutions, rush into action, and live by the motto, “Don’t just stand there—do something!”

Yet today’s reading insists that the way through is not frantic activity but faithful stillness: “Stand firm … be still.” Why? Because “the Lord will fight for you.”

I’m realizing more and more that I need to practice this posture of standing firm and waiting on the Lord. To trust that God, in His love, grace, and power, will do what He does best, care for His people. Perhaps God is saying to us today, “Don’t just do something—stand there.” And when we do, we become witnesses to His astonishing works.


PSALM 37:7

"Be still before the LORD and wait patiently for him; do not fret . ...."


Isaiah 40:31

“But they who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles; they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint.”


Psalm 33:20-22

“Our soul waits for the Lord; he is our help and our shield. For our heart is glad in him, because we trust in his holy name. Let your steadfast love, O Lord, be upon us, even as we hope in you.


AMEN!

14.12.25

The Walk to Freedom


DECEMBER 15, 2025





Exodus 6:6

“‘I am the Lord, and I will bring you out from under the yoke of the Egyptians. I will free you from being slaves to them, and I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and with mighty acts of judgment.”



We ended our devotions last week with Moses receiving a calling and some wonderful words of assurance. "I will be with you," God promised. Over the next few days we will spend some time with Moses' story and God's purposes and plans through him. We began this series of devotions saying that the Christmas story, began with Creation and stretches across history, reminding us that God has always been faithful and that His promises always find their fulfillment in Jesus.



For generations, the Israelites endured the weight of slavery. Their strength was depleted, and their hope nearly gone. Yet into that situation of despair, God spoke a promise: I will set you free.” The fuller context in Exodus shows us that through extraordinary signs and wonders, God demonstrated His power and faithfulness, ultimately leading to the peoples deliverance from Egyptian bondage.

Moses carried this message of hope, announcing God’s intention to set his people free. Yet, the depth of their suffering made it difficult for them to receive the promise. Scripture tells us, “They refused to listen anymore. They had become too discouraged by the brutality of their slavery” (Exodus 6:9, NLT).

Many of us know what that feels like. There are seasons when the pressures around us become so overwhelming that believing God’s promises, or even noticing God’s presence, feels nearly impossible. Circumstances can distract or blind us, making it hard to hear when God speaks. In such moments, just as God continued to pursue Moses and the Israelites, God continues to pursue us.

What an extraordinary truth this is!  Even in our discouragement, even when we struggle to trust or to listen, God keeps reaching toward us. His intentions for us are good, and His promises are meant for our flourishing. As we learn to lean in, to listen, and to trust, we begin to experience the reality of those precious promises. 

The same God who delivered his people in the book of Exodus, still speaks freedom today. And at Christmas, we celebrate the arrival of Jesus the Messiah, the Christ, the annointed One, who entered our world to set the captives free.

Let's Pray

God, We thank You for being the One who sees us, pursues us, and speaks freedom into our lives. When our circumstances feel heavy and our hope grows thin, remind us that Your promises remain steady and true. Open our hearts to hear Your voice, even when discouragement tries to drown it out. 

Just as You led the Israelites out of bondage, lead us into the freedom You desire for us. 

May the light of Christ, whose coming we celebrate, shine into every place where we feel weary or burdened, and may His presence bring renewal, courage, and peace.

Amen.


11.12.25

The ASSURANCE Boost We Need

DECEMBER 12, 2025




Exodus 3: 11-12

“Moses said, ‘WHO AM I to go to the king and lead your people out of Egypt?’ God replied, ‘I WILL BE WITH YOU.’”


In the context of our Bible verses today we see that Moses was hit with two big questions at the same time: “Who is God?” and “Who am I?” God was calling him to step up as a leader for His people, people who were stuck under the heavy, crushing rule of a brutal king. God’s plan was for Moses to help lead them out of Egypt and out from under Pharaoh’s tight grip.

Sounds like a massive assignment, and Moses knew it. In fact, he was quite sure he didn’t qualify at all. I imagine him looking around for an exit, hoping this whole calling might have been a mistake. Moses had just come back from years in exile, he’d been living as an ordinary shepherd, he was getting older, and on top of that, he wasn’t even from Egypt. From Moses’ point of view, Pharaoh had all the power and he had none.

God wanted Moses to shift his focus from his own limitations to the limitless power of what God could accomplish. God’s plan was to use Moses as part of something much bigger, to rescue His people. And then God gives Moses this bold, beautiful promise: “I will be with you.” In this honest converstaion, God was saying that He would guide Moses, sustain Moses, and make sure the story ended well.

We are not all that different from Moses, are we? I mean when we face tough or overwhelming situations, we start asking the same questions about who we are and who God is. And in those moments, haven't you found that God gives us the same reassuring promise that He gave to Moses: “I will be with you.”

During the Advent and Christmas season, our attention turns to Jesus, the Word made flesh, the promised Savior who came near. And in His coming, He tells each of us the same thing: He is present with us. Right now.

I wonder if we can be so focused on our perceived inabilities and shortcomings that we miss the great reality that God is our savior and is always present with us. Can we see God as our Redeemer and guide? Do we live out of the amazing truth of what the apostle Paul wrote about, “I can do all things through Christ who gives me the strength”?

So today, well everyday, let’s hold on to God’s promise.

“I will be with you.”











10.12.25

COMPASSION: Where You Least Expect it

DECEMBER 11, 2025






Exodus 2:6

“She… saw the baby. He was crying, and she felt sorry for him. ‘This is one of the Hebrew babies,’ she said.”


Last week and again so far this week we have been looking at the backstory to Christmas Day and the celebration of Jesus' birth. Advent as we have said is a period of waiting that keeps us from rushing to Christmas Day. God's purposes and plans unfold for us from creation, and we have been stopping to take in the episodes of this gradual unfolding revelation. 


Our verse today is part of the account of the Israelites being stuck under heavy oppression from the Egyptians. Pharaoh, the king, was paranoid, he thought if the Israelites kept growing in number, they might rise up against him. So he gave a brutal order: every baby boy born to the Israelites was to be thrown into the Nile.

One Israelite woman gave birth to a baby boy, but she managed to keep him hidden for three months. When she couldn’t hide him anymore, she crafted a little basket-boat, placed him inside, and set it among the reeds by the riverbank. That’s where Pharaoh’s daughter stumbled upon him. The baby cried, and in that moment her heart softened. She knew exactly who he was, one of the children her father had ordered to be killed. However, dispite what Daddy had ordered this daughter experienced compassion welling up inside her.

Can you imagine what that moment felt like for her? Torn between loyalty to her father’s command and the undeniable pull to protect this tiny, helpless child. 
Do I obey? 
Do I rescue? 
What do I do?

We’ve all faced moments like that, when our heart says one thing and our head says another. What’s amazing here is how God worked through someone who didn’t even follow Him, someone from a family that actively opposed His people. Yet her compassion became the very thing God used to save Moses, setting His larger plan in motion.

That plan of God kept unfolding, eventually leading to another baby, born in Bethlehem, who would show us what compassion looks like in the middle of violence and brokenness. 

So here’s the question today for all of us, I believe, how might God use our compassion?

9.12.25

Mercy Over Revenge?

DECEMBER 10, 2025





GENESIS 50:20-21

"You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives …he reassured them and spoke kindly to them.”


Do you ever catch yourself comparing your life to someone else’s? Honestly, in the age of social media, it feels almost impossible not to. Think back for a moment, maybe to a time when jealousy got the better of you, or when someone else looked at you with envy.

That’s exactly the kind of tension Joseph faced. He grew up with a bunch of brothers, but their dad clearly favored him. The jealousy boiled over until his brothers did something unthinkable: they ganged up on him and sold him into slavery. Just pause on that for a second—they literally sold their own brother.

Fast forward through years of hardship, and Joseph eventually lands in a position of power. When his brothers come to him desperate for help, he doesn’t take revenge. Instead, he does the opposite, he shows them grace. He forgives. 

Joseph’s story is just a preview of something even bigger: the grace we see in God’s Messiah. Jesus shows us what it looks like to forgive when betrayal cuts deep. He teaches us to love the very people who hurt us, and to choose peace instead of payback.

I’ll be real, I don’t always live up to that example. But Joseph’s story, and Jesus’ life, remind me that grace is always possible.

Perhaps as a reminder for us today, the teaching that Apostle Paul gives us in I Corinthians 13:4-7 is worth pondering.

“no matter what I say, what I believe, and what I do, I’m bankrupt without love.

Love never gives up.
Love cares more for others than for self.
Love doesn’t want what it doesn’t have.
Love doesn’t strut,
Doesn’t have a swelled head,
Doesn’t force itself on others,
Isn’t always “me first,”
Doesn’t fly off the handle,
Doesn’t keep score of the sins of others,
Doesn’t revel when others grovel,
Takes pleasure in the flowering of truth,
Puts up with anything,
Trusts God always,
Always looks for the best,
Never looks back,
But keeps going to the end.”

8.12.25

NIGHT VISIONS

DECEMBER 9, 2025





Genesis 28:14-15

“…All peoples on earth will be blessed through you and your offspring. I am with you and will watch over you wherever you go… I will not leave you until I have done what I have promised you.”


Sometimes the weight of our choices and decisions can feel very heavy. This is certainly true for Jacob. As he leaves home to seek a wife and to find his place in the world, he carries the fear that his brother Esau might kill him for stealing both the birthright and the blessing. In the midst of this exile, Jacob encounters God in a dream. There, he hears the divine promise to include him in the covenant first given to Abraham and Isaac. God assures Jacob of a secure future, and though Jacob acknowledges the dream and declares the place holy, his response is rather striking, he vows that if God provides for his needs, then he will serve Him.

Before we are too critical of Jacob's self serving negotiation, lets consider the fact that his response is such a common human reaction to situations that result in fear and uncertainty. How many of us try to offer God our devotion if He will only help us out with our problems. 

Scripture shows us that Jacob’s life was far from peaceful. He faced hardship, fear, grief, and trial after trial. Yet what stands out most is that God’s promise to Jacob was always greater than Jacob’s problems. In moments of anxiety, Jacob clung to that promise, reminding himself, and even reminding God, that he was included in the covenant. In much the same way, many of us have wrestled with doubts about God’s faithfulness, only to look back and realize He was weaving good out of circumstances we never could have predicted. Who would have imagined that the fulfillment of God’s promise to Jacob would come in the most unexpected way, through the birth of a of a baby in an animal stall?

When it seems that God is not fulfilling His promises, how should we respond?  

Well, Proverbs 3:5-6 suggests the following response in such times:

Trust in the Lord with all your heart,  
and do not rely on your own understanding;  
in all your ways acknowledge Him,  
and He will make your paths straight.  

7.12.25

WAITING .... WAITING ..... FULFILLMENT

DECEMBER 7, 2025





Genesis 21:7

“Who would have said… that Sarah would nurse children? Yet I have borne [Abraham] a son in his old age.”


How many of you have gone through periods of waiting in your lives that seemed like they would never end? Most of us, if not all of us.The Bible is filled with inspiring stories of people who had to wait—wait to be delivered from their enemies, wait to enter a new land, and wait to meet the long-awaited Messiah.

Abraham and Sarah waited many years to have a child, and their story is truly remarkable. The Bible records, Sarah was 91 and Abraham was 100 when their long-awaited baby was born. Think about it, this incredible couple endured decades of heartache and disappointment before finally experiencing the joy of parenthood.

I feel, this long wait was even more difficult considering God’s promise to Abraham when he called him. Do you recall in Genesis 12 the covenant that God makes with Abraham includes the promise “I will make you into a great nation.” In Genesis 17 God again says to Abraham “You will be the father of many nations. ... 6 I will make you very fruitful; I will make nations of you, and kings will come from you.” In another place angels and the Lord came to Abraham and told him that "his descendants would be more than the stars in heaven.” Promises, promises. Still no kids.

Sarah was well past her childbearing years, yet God continued to give them an incredible promise. The waiting felt endless, but as we read their story, we see  that God was faithful to his promise.

Isaiah 30:18 encourages us by reminding us that,

the Lord waits to be gracious to you;
therefore he will rise up to show mercy to you.
For the Lord is a God of justice;
blessed are all those who wait for him.


See that beautiful promise? All who wait for him are blessed.

 I wonder what is your heart waiting and longing for? 
Where have you perhaps endured decades of heartache and disappointment?

Today we are reminded in the story of Abraham and Sarah that yes waiting, and waiting, is a struggle, with many questions and doubts, yet we can have confidence in the Faithfulness of God, our God is a "promise keeper"!! 

As we close today's devotion let's hear/read the words of God that are found in Isaiah 46:3-4. 

Since the day you were born,
I have carried you along.
I will still be the same
when you are old and gray,
and I will take care of you.
I created you. I will carry you
and always keep you safe.

4.12.25

No Way that's IMPOSSIBLE!


DECEMBER 5, 2025





Genesis 12:2-3

“I will make you into a great nation, and I will bless you… and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.”


Can someone at 75 years old still change the world? Abram’s life seemed to say no. For decades he worked the same job, in the same land, following the same path as his father. His story looked ordinary, destined to be forgotten in time, no son, no legacy, no lasting impact. But God had a different plan. Instead of choosing a mighty king to establish His nation, God called a childless, unknown man from Ur.

When God steps in, everything shifts. The barren couple becomes a family, the overlooked become honored, and the insignificant become world-changers. Scripture almost seems to delight in showing us that God chooses the ones everyone else would pass over.

That’s good news. It means His blessing isn’t bound by our résumé, our status, or our skill set. God’s power is not limited by human expectations.

Throughout history, God has worked this way:

  • He chose Abram and Sarah at 75 to begin a nation.

  • He chose the youngest son of Jesse to rule Israel.

  • He chose a teenage girl from a small town to bear the Savior.

  • He chose fishermen to ignite a movement that would reach the ends of the earth.

This is who our God is. From the least to the greatest, He calls and blesses because His ways are higher than ours.

And God is still inviting us today, into His “crazy, impossible, and amazing adventure.” The question is not whether we are qualified, but whether we will follow.








3.12.25

The Water Is High

DECEMBER 4, 2025





Gen. 9:13-15

“I have set my rainbow in the clouds, and it will be the sign of the covenant between me and the earth... Never again will the waters become a flood to destroy all life.”


When I read the story of Noah, I can’t help but think about how overwhelming it must have been for him. Imagine God assigning you the task to build a large Ark (boat), way before there was even a threat of heavy rain. Where would you even start? How do you gather that much wood? What do you say when people stop by and ask what on earth you’re doing? And on top of all that, would you wonder if there was any real hope for the future of creation after the occurance of such a massive flood?

Try putting yourself in Noah’s place ("sandals" ) for a moment.
What would be going through your head?
What fears, doubts, or questions would you have?

Truthfully, the season of Advent can feel a little like that. The closer we get to Christmas, the more the “water” seems to rise. We’re running around trying to find the right gifts, track down ingredients for family recipes, attend dinners, finish up end-of-year tasks, decorate the house, and keep up with everyone’s expectations, especially our own. It can feel like the stress is piling up fast, almost like a flood. 

And yet… we keep doing it year after year.

Why?

Because underneath all the busy moments is something stable and secure, something beautiful: our Messiah has come. Advent gives us space to breathe, remember, and celebrate Jesus, our Savior, our Living Hope, our faithful Friend who never leaves us to face the flood alone.

And just like God didn’t leave Noah alone and unsupported, God doesn’t leave us without reminders of his presence either. God gave Noah everything he needed to build the ark, and when it was all over, God placed a rainbow in the sky as a sign, a promise that destruction, loss and ruin would never have the final word.

So as we wait for Jesus this Advent, maybe we can look for those same signs of hope.
Maybe, if we pause long enough, we’ll see the “rainbow” God is setting before us too.



2.12.25

Who Are You Going to Listen To?


DECEMBER 3, 2025





Genesis 2:16

“You are free to eat from any tree, but not the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.”


The saying “with great power comes great responsibility” is familiar to most of us, often this is exemplified in superhero stories where the central question is how the hero will use their special powers. Scripture reveals that humanity is the pinnacle of God’s creation, made for worship and work, and granted unique significance and privileges. No other creature possesses the breath of God’s life or bears His image. In the creation story, God took what can be seen as an extraordinary risk by granting humans the freedom to choose—to trust Him, take Him at His word, and follow Him willingly from the heart. This is because love given freely is love at its highest form. I believe, like superhero tales, God’s story centers on a question: What will humanity do with this extraordinary gift?

Turns out, humankind messed up! Genesis 3 shows the tough truth that humanity chose to doubt God and follow other so-called ‘wiser’ voices, opening ourselves up to the pull and harmful power of evil. Thankfully, God’s story does not end there. Its central theme is His plan to deliver us from the grip of evil, to eliminate its power from the world, to restore all things to a state even better than the beginning, and to grant us another opportunity to live as He intended. All this is made possible through Jesus, the pioneer of God’s new humanity and the evidence of His new creation.

Truth is we are bombarded by so called "wiser" voices too. So, I wonder if the question for us today may just be this:

“Whose voice have  we been listening to in our life?”

1.12.25

Finding Joy in Beauty


DECEMBER 2, 2025




Gen. 1:1 & 28

“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth...God saw all that he made, and it was very good.”


The Amazing story of Chrstmas begins . . . .

The opening chapters of the Bible make some bold statements, claiming that God created the entire universe simply by speaking it into existence—saying, “Let there be…” and it happened. Genesis 1 and 2 describe how God was deeply satisfied with His creation, filling it with beauty and purpose, and then stepping back to enjoy it, declaring, “It is very good.”

Jenny Toews shared the following personal story, she writes

“I remember one sunny morning when I was travelling along a beautiful route that wound its way between the rocky coastline and a towering mountain range. Traffic came to a complete stop along a bend and people stood outside their cars peering over the cliffs. My immediate thought was a terrible accident had just occurred. I, too, got out to look, but there was no accident. The morning rush hour was brought to a standstill by a large pod of dolphins diving in and out of the water and skipping along the surface. No one said a word, nor did getting to work on time seem to matter either. Everyone just stood there taking in this breathtaking sight. It was a special moment of strangers standing back to delight in beauty and to respond to something greater than themselves.”

Whether we acknowledge God’s hand in creation or not, we are all awestruck by the beauty of the world around us. Splendor tells us something about the heart of the Creator of beautiful things. Being awestruck suggests that wonder is a response of worship as we ponder the glory of our good world. Our Genesis reading today points to the source. "In the beginning God ...."

When was the last time you were awestruck by beauty?

Today, take a moment to offer a prayer of gratitude to God for all the beauty in our world. As you go about your day, observe the wonders of His creation around you and express a simple prayer of praise, such as "Thank You, God, for __________."