Rick Warren's Blog, page 324

February 4, 2021

Four Strengths in Vulnerability

“God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble.”


James 4:6 (NLT)

Your vulnerability is not a weakness. In fact, vulnerability is a strength! God can take your vulnerabilities and make you spiritually empowered, emotionally healed, relationally attractive, and formed for leadership. Here’s how.

First, being open and honest with other people about your weaknesses is spiritually empowering because it opens the door to God’s grace: “God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble” (James 4:6 NLT). Grace is the power you need to change and break through your bad habits and weaknesses.

Vulnerability is also emotionally healing. James 5:16 says, “Admit your faults to one another and pray for each other so that you may be healed” (TLB). If you want to just be forgiven, you don’t need to confess your sin to anyone other than God. But if you want to be healed, you’ve got to share your weaknesses with somebody else. God has wired you in such a way that revealing your feeling is the beginning of healing.

Next, vulnerability is relationally attractive. The Bible says, “We all stumble in many ways” (James 3:2 NIV). James even included himself in that statement. When someone tells you that they mess up too, they become more relatable. Nobody wants to be married to or friends with a narcissist. But when you’re vulnerable—when you admit your weaknesses and maybe even laugh at yourself—you draw people in.

Being vulnerable doesn’t just give you spiritual power, help you heal, and make you more attractive. It’s also a requirement for leadership. If you can’t be vulnerable, you’re not a leader; you’re just a boss. “If you are wise and understand God’s ways, prove it by living an honorable life, doing good works with the humility that comes from wisdom” (James 3:13 NLT).

As you gain God’s wisdom, you also become humbler. “Humble yourselves before the Lord, and he will lift you up” (James 4:10 NIV). God honors your humility and vulnerability and uses them to form you into a leader.

The Bible can really be countercultural, can’t it? The world tells you to keep your guard up and not appear weak. But God says to boast in your weaknesses—because they reveal his power and make you more dependent on him.

Will you let your guard down so that your weaknesses can point others to Jesus Christ?

PLAY today’s audio teaching from Pastor Rick >>

Talk It Over


What do you think of people who make themselves vulnerable by sharing their weaknesses with others?
Why does getting God’s wisdom make you humbler?
Are you more interested in making known your strengths or God’s power? How is evidence of your answer revealed in your life?

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Published on February 04, 2021 00:30

February 3, 2021

Cómo Gozarse en la Bondad de Dios hacia los Demás

“Gócense con los que se gozan y lloren con los que lloran”.   Romanos 12:15 (NBLA)

Cuando vemos a Dios siendo bondadoso y mostrando gracia a otros, podemos responder con gozo en lugar de resentimiento.

En la parábola de los trabajadores de la viña, eso es exactamente lo opuesto de lo que hicieron: “Por eso cuando llegaron los que fueron contratados primero, esperaban que recibirían más. Pero cada uno de ellos recibió también la paga de un día. Al recibirla, comenzaron a murmurar contra el propietario… ¿Es que no tengo derecho a hacer lo que quiera con mi dinero? ¿O te da envidia de que yo sea generoso?” Mateo 20:10-11,15 (NVI).  Las personas que trabajaron todo el día recibieron exactamente lo que se había acordado. No fueron estafados; y a pesar de ello demostraron resentimiento que otras personas que únicamente trabajaron la última parte del día, recibieron la misma cantidad. En vez de alegrarse de su pago, los trabajadores se resintieron.

En Romanos 12:15, la Biblia dice, “Gocémonos con los que se gozan y lloremos con los que lloran” (RVC). La segunda parte de este versículo es mucho más fácil de hacer que la primera parte. Es fácil llorar con los que lloran. Cuando alguien está teniendo una etapa difícil, es fácil sentir empatía.

Pero es mucho más difícil regocijarnos con alguien que tiene éxito. A menudo no manejamos muy bien el éxito de otras personas. De hecho, a menudo nos sentimos amenazados por él, y lo resentimos. Eso es porque en nuestras mentes pensamos que el mundo es un pastel gigante que está dividido en rebanadas. Pensamos, si la rebanada de alguien es un poco más grande que la mía, eso debe significar que mi rebanada será más pequeña.

Ese tipo de pensamiento está equivocado. ¡Porque Dios mantiene lleno al mundo! No se le acaban las bendiciones. A Él no se le acaba la gracia. Hay más que suficiente para todos, y solo porque Dios bendice a alguien no significa que no tiene para bendecirte a ti. Él quiere bendecirte, pero es posible que sea de una forma diferente.

La principal cosa que hace la envidia es evitar que participes en la felicidad de otras personas. Como resultado, no disfrutas mucho de las cosas que suceden en el mundo. La envidia te convertirá en una persona miserable.

Pero si eliges regocijarte en la bondad de Dios hacia otros, puedes estar gozoso todo el tiempo –porque siempre le está sucediendo algo bueno a alguien.

Reflexiona sobre esto :

¿Cómo puedes ver la mano de Dios formando bendiciones en tu vida, específicamente para ti?Piensa en las formas en las que Dios ha bendecido a las personas en tu vida recientemente. ¿Cómo te puedes hoy regocijar con ellos?

The post Cómo Gozarse en la Bondad de Dios hacia los Demás appeared first on Pastor Rick's Daily Hope.

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Published on February 03, 2021 00:45

God Can Use Your Weaknesses for Good

“I am with you; that is all you need. My power shows up best in weak people.”


2 Corinthians 12:9 (TLB)

God can use all things for good—even your weaknesses. Here are four ways he uses your weaknesses for good.

Your weaknesses prevent arrogance. When you realize you’re not perfect—that you don’t have it all together—you will become a much humbler person. And being humble makes you more like Jesus Christ.

God did some great things in and through the apostle Paul. But Paul had something in his life that kept him from becoming arrogant. He called it a “thorn in the flesh” and asked God to take it away: “Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you’” (2 Corinthians 12:8-9 NIV). God’s grace will always be enough for you too.

Your weaknesses help you value others. It’s okay if you don’t have all the gifts, talents, or answers. That just makes you appreciative of and dependent on the people in your life and their gifts and talents. We need each other. Your weaknesses may be the way you learn to live in biblical community. The Bible says in 1 Corinthians 12:22, “Some parts of the body that seem weakest and least important are actually the most necessary” (NLT).

Your weaknesses make you more dependent on God. A different translation of 2 Corinthians 12:9 says, “I am with you; that is all you need. My power shows up best in weak people” (TLB). If you had no weaknesses, you wouldn’t think you needed God. You’d spend your life being self-sufficient—and that’s no way to live. Paul says, “Now I am glad to boast about how weak I am; I am glad to be a living demonstration of Christ’s power . . . for when I am weak, then I am strong—the less I have, the more I depend on him” (2 Corinthians 12:9-10 TLB).

Your weaknesses give you a ministry. God doesn’t want to use only your strengths in ministry. He also wants to use your weaknesses. God “comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves receive from God” (2 Corinthians 1:4 NIV). After God helps you go through a problem or learn to live with a weakness, you can then help somebody else with the same difficulty.

That’s the kind of God you serve. He weaves even the bad stuff in your life to make good. God will use your weakness to make you more like Jesus as you depend on him and the family of believers.

PLAY today’s audio teaching from Pastor Rick >>

Talk It Over


Can you name your weaknesses as easily as your strengths? Why is it important to be able to identify your specific weaknesses?
How can you use your greatest weakness for ministry to others?
Why do you think God designed people with a need to be interdependent in order to thrive?

The post God Can Use Your Weaknesses for Good appeared first on Pastor Rick's Daily Hope.

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Published on February 03, 2021 00:30

February 2, 2021

Conoce a las Personas para que no las Envidies

“Se presentaron los obreros que habían sido contratados cerca de las cinco de la tarde, y cada uno recibió la paga de un día. Por eso cuando llegaron los que fueron contratados primero, esperaban que recibirían más”.   Mateo 20:9-10 (NVI)

La clave para no sentir envidia es dejar de compararte con los demás.

La comparación es la raíz de la envidia. Este fue el primer error que se cometió en la parábola de los trabajadores del viñedo, se compararon con los últimos que fueron contratados. “Se presentaron los obreros que habían sido contratados cerca de las cinco de la tarde, y cada uno recibió la paga de un día. Por eso cuando llegaron los que fueron contratados primero, esperaban que recibirían más”  Mateo 20:9-10 (NVI). En otras palabras, ellos hicieron comparaciones. “Miren lo que ellos están recibiendo, así que, nosotros vamos a recibir más. Nosotros merecemos más”.

La Biblia dice una y otra vez que nunca debes compararte con nadie, por dos razones:

Primero, tú eres único. Dios te hizo especial. No hay nadie como tú. Él hizo el molde, y luego lo rompió. No eres semejante a nadie más.

En segundo lugar, si empiezas a compararte siempre vas a llegar a uno de estos dos pecados: el orgullo o la envidia. Cuando te comparas con los demás, vas a pensar “estoy mejor que ellos”, y te llenarás de orgullo, o si piensas “ellos están mejor que yo”, te llenarás de envidia. El orgullo y la envidia son pecados.

Además, la envidia ocurre cuando no conoces realmente a alguien. Puedes ver los puntos fuertes y los éxitos de una persona desde lejos, pero solamente cuando te acercas a ella puedes ver sus heridas, hábitos y sus problemas emocionales. Todo el mundo tiene un dolor oculto. Cuando miras a la gente de lejos, es mucho más fácil no darse cuenta de sus miedos y defectos.

No hay una mejor forma de conocer a las personas más de cerca y de forma personal, que en un grupo pequeño. Oí hablar de una mujer con esclerosis múltiple y lupus que le dijo a su grupo pequeño: “si todos juntáramos nuestros problemas en una pila grande en el centro de esta habitación los miraríamos y al final de la noche probablemente tomaríamos esos problemas y regresaríamos a casa”. Cuando conoces a las personas de cerca, no los envidias, sino que aprendes a orar por ellos.

La envidia nos aísla. El compañerismo nos une y nos ayuda a conocernos mejor para que podamos dejar de compararnos con los demás.

Reflexiona sobre esto:

¿Qué necesitas hacer para conocer a otros en un nivel más profundo?¿Qué dones te ha dado Dios que te hace único?¿Quién es la persona a quien envidias o envidiabas antes? ¿Qué puedes hacer para conocer mejor a esa persona?

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Published on February 02, 2021 00:45

God Can Restore You After You Sin

“If you return to me, I will restore you so you can continue to serve me.”


Jeremiah 15:19 (NLT)

When you become a believer in Christ, you are born again into God’s family, and you cannot be unborn. Although fellowship with God can be damaged by sin, the relationship is still there. You’re only one step away from returning.

So, what should you do when you sin? One word: Return! Come back to Christ. It’s that simple.

Isaiah 1:18 says, “No matter how deep the stain of your sins, I can take it out and make you as clean as freshly fallen snow” (TLB).

On the night Jesus was arrested, his disciple Peter denied knowing and following Jesus three times. If ever there were a sin you’d think was unforgivable, it would be that! But Jesus knew Peter would deny him, and he knew Peter would come back to him. In fact, before it even happened, Jesus said to Peter in the Upper Room, “I have pleaded in prayer for you that your faith should not completely fail. So when you have repented and turned to me again, strengthen and build up the faith of your brothers” (Luke 22:32 TLB).

Jesus knew Peter’s ministry would be more effective after his denial than it was before. And, sure enough, it was! Peter wrote the two books of the Bible that we call 1 Peter and 2 Peter. Then he shared his memoirs with a relative, and that’s the gospel of Mark.

You may think God has forgotten you. He hasn’t. The Good Shepherd leaves the 99 sheep to go after the one. He knows how you’ve fallen away. Maybe it happened in one giant step, or perhaps it was a series of small, tiny steps. Whatever it was, you’re not as close to Christ as you used to be.

You need to pray what David prayed when he came back to God after committing adultery. He said, “Restore to me the joy of your salvation” (Psalm 51:12 NLT). David did not have to pray, “God, restore to me my salvation,” because he hadn’t lost his salvation. He had lost the joy.

Why not come home to Christ today?

PLAY today’s audio teaching from Pastor Rick >>

Talk It Over


What keeps you from returning to Christ after you’ve sinned?
What do you need God to restore in your life that has been broken because of sin?
How can you be more effective for Christ by returning in repentance to him? What do you want to accomplish for God’s Kingdom?

Have you trusted Jesus for your salvation?


The Bible says we can only get to heaven by trusting in God through his Son, Jesus Christ. And we don’t have to earn God’s love or work our way into heaven. The Bible says, “It is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God—not by works, so that no one can boast” (Ephesians 2:8-9 NIV).



If you haven’t trusted in Jesus and committed to following him, why wait any longer? If you’re ready to step across that line and make a decision to believe in Jesus Christ and follow him, pray this prayer:



“Dear Jesus, you have promised that if I believe in you, everything I’ve ever done wrong will be forgiven, I will learn the purpose of my life, and you will accept me into your eternal home in heaven one day.



“I confess my sin, and I believe that you are my Savior. You have promised that if I confess my sin and trust you, I will be saved. I trust you when you say salvation comes by grace, through faith, and not by anything I do. I receive you into my life as my Lord. Today I’m turning over every part of my life to your management. You have the right to call the shots in my life.



“Jesus, I want to relax in your love. Thank you that I don’t have to earn it or work for it. I want to use the rest of my life to serve you instead of serving myself. I humbly commit my life to you and ask you to save me and accept me into your family. In your name I pray. Amen.”



If you just prayed to accept Jesus, please email me at
Rick@PastorRick.com and let me know about it. I’d like to send you some free materials to help you start your journey with Jesus.

The post God Can Restore You After You Sin appeared first on Pastor Rick's Daily Hope.

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Published on February 02, 2021 00:30

February 1, 2021

La Obediencia es un Acto de Adoración

“Dios mío, enséñame a cumplir tus mandamientos, pues obedecerlos me hace feliz; ¡los cumpliré toda mi vida! Aclara mi entendimiento, y los seguiré de todo corazón”.  Salmos 119:33-34 (TLA)

Dios sonríe cuando le obedecemos de todo corazón. Eso significa hacer lo que Dios te pide, sin reserva ni duda. No posponer y decir, “Voy a orar por ello”. Hacerlo sin demora. Todo padre sabe que la obediencia tardía, es desobediencia.

Dios no te debe ninguna explicación o razón de todo lo que te pide que hagas, el entendimiento puede esperar, pero no la obediencia. La obediencia instantánea te enseñará más acerca de Dios, que toda una vida de discusiones de la Biblia. En realidad, nunca entenderás algunos mandatos hasta que primero los obedeces. La obediencia abre el entendimiento.

A menudo intentamos ofrecerle a Dios una obediencia parcial. Queremos seleccionar las órdenes que obedecemos. Hacemos una lista de los mandatos que nos agradan y los obedecemos, mientras ignoramos los que nos parecen irrazonables, difíciles, costosos o impopulares. Voy a la Iglesia, pero no diezmo. Voy a leer mi Biblia, pero no voy a perdonar a la persona que me hizo daño. Así que, la obediencia parcial es desobediencia.

La obediencia incondicional se hace con alegría, con entusiasmo. La Biblia dice, “Adoren al Señor con gozo” Salmo 100:2a (NTV).

Esta es la actitud de David: “Dios mío, enséñame a cumplir tus mandamientos, pues obedecerlos me hace feliz; ¡los cumpliré toda mi vida! Aclara mi entendimiento, y los seguiré de todo corazón” Salmo 119:33-34 (TLA).

Santiago, hablando a los cristianos, les dijo: “Dios nos acepta por lo que hacemos, y no sólo por lo que creemos” Santiago 2:24 (PDT).

La Palabra de Dios es clara sobre que no te puedes ganar tu salvación. Es solo por gracia, no por tu esfuerzo. Pero como hijo de Dios, le puedes dar gozo a tu Padre Celestial, mediante la obediencia. Cualquier acto de obediencia es también un acto de adoración.

¿Por qué es tan agradable para Dios la obediencia? Porque prueba que realmente lo amas. Jesús dijo, “Si me aman, obedezcan mis mandamientos” Juan 14:15 (NTV).

Reflexiona sobre esto:

¿Cómo puedes discernir cuando Dios te está diciendo que hagas algo?¿En qué áreas muestras una obediencia parcial a Dios?¿Cómo cambias tu actitud de obediencia cuando consideras que es un acto de adoración?

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Published on February 01, 2021 00:45

Why Doesn’t God Reject Sinners?

“[God] will not constantly accuse us, nor remain angry forever. He does not punish us for all our sins; he does not deal harshly with us, as we deserve. The LORD is like a father to his children, tender and compassionate to those who fear him.”


Psalm 103:9-10, 13 (NLT)

The Bible says there is no condemnation for our sin once we place our faith in Jesus. But it does not say there are no consequences.

Every time you disobey God, you hurt yourself and you hurt other people. You lose your fellowship with Christ. You lose your effectiveness and joy here on earth. You lose rewards in heaven. But you do not lose your salvation.

Why is that? Why doesn’t God just kick you out when you blow it? Why doesn’t God reject believers when we sin?

The first thing to understand is that God’s love is unconditional. He doesn’t say, “I love you if” or “I love you because”—just “I love you. Period.” God will never stop loving you, because you are a recipient of his grace.

Lamentations 3:22 says, “[God’s] compassion never ends. It is only the Lord’s mercies that have kept us from complete destruction” (TLB).

Your salvation isn’t based on your performance. The Bible says, “He saved us, not because of the righteous things we had done, but because of his mercy” (Titus 3:5 NLT). You can’t earn your way into heaven, buy your way into heaven, work your way to heaven, or bluff your way to heaven. The only way you ever have any hope of getting into heaven is by the grace of God.

Jesus has already taken your punishment. The law of double jeopardy in the United States criminal justice system says you cannot be tried for the same crime twice. That’s true in God’s book, too. People are not punished for the same sin twice.

Over two thousand years ago, Jesus stretched his arms out on the cross and took the punishment for your sin. He served your term. The price is paid in full—all you have to do is accept the gift of forgiveness and salvation that he offers!

Jesus understands your human weaknesses. God is sympathetic and understanding. He knows your frailties, your faults, and how you’re wired. And he is patient with you.

“This High Priest of ours understands our weaknesses, for he faced all of the same testings we do, yet he did not sin” (Hebrews 4:15 NLT). Jesus lived in human flesh for 33 years, so he understands your weaknesses.

God doesn’t keep grudges! The Bible says, “[God] will not constantly accuse us, nor remain angry forever. He does not punish us for all our sins; he does not deal harshly with us, as we deserve. The Lord is like a father to his children, tender and compassionate to those who fear him” (Psalm 103:9-10, 13 NLT). If you are a believer, God is not angry with you. Why? Because all of the punishment was taken on the cross.

You may be thinking, “You don’t know how far I’ve fallen. You don’t know what I’ve done.” No, I don’t. But God does. If you think you’ve strayed too far from God, this is what God says to you: “Come back to me, you unfaithful children, and I will forgive you for being unfaithful” (Jeremiah 3:22 NCV).

PLAY today’s audio teaching from Pastor Rick >>

Talk It Over


What does God’s love for you teach you about how to love others?
Why do you try to hide your sin from God even when you know he sees and knows everything?
What do you think it means to fear God?

The Bible says all people fall short of God’s perfect standard.


Yet God still loves you—even though you sin and are flawed. In fact, God loves you so much that he sent his Son, Jesus, to cleanse you from your sins and to bring you into the family of God.



If you’re ready to enter God’s family, here’s a prayer you can start with: “Dear God, I know that when I die I’m going to give an account of my life to you directly. I confess I have sinned against you, and I have lived by my plan, not yours. I want that to change, starting right now. I want to turn away from my sins toward you.



“Thank you for sending Jesus to die for all I’ve done wrong so I don’t have to pay the penalty. I know I don’t deserve your forgiveness. I know only your grace can save me, Lord.



“Jesus, thank you for loving me so much that you took all my guilt on yourself. You made me acceptable for heaven, and I humbly ask you to save me. I ask you to save me from the sins and the habits that are messing up my life right now. I believe in you, Jesus. And I believe you will keep your promise to save me instantly, certainly, completely, and eternally. In Jesus’ name. Amen.”



If you prayed the prayer above, please write and tell me at
Rick@PastorRick.com. I’d like to send you some materials as you begin your journey with Jesus.

The post Why Doesn’t God Reject Sinners? appeared first on Pastor Rick's Daily Hope.

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Published on February 01, 2021 00:30

January 31, 2021

Obedece a Dios usando tu Cerebro

“Pero (José) al oír que Arquelao reinaba en Judea en lugar de su padre Herodes, tuvo miedo de ir allá. Advertido por Dios en sueños, se retiró al distrito de Galilea, y fue a vivir en un pueblo llamado Nazaret”.   Mateo 2:22-23a (NVI)

El devocional de hoy es por Tom Holladay, pastor de enseñanza en la iglesia Saddleback.

Mucha gente piensa que vivir una vida obediente de fe significa poner tu mente en neutro y dejar que Dios te dirija donde quiera, como si fueras un robot. Eso no es cierto en absoluto.

La Biblia dice: “Ama al Señor tu Dios con todo tu corazón y con toda tu alma, y ​​con todas tus fuerzas y con toda tu mente” Lucas 10: 27a (NVI). Tienes que involucrar tu cerebro con Dios y vivir el tipo de vida que Él quiere que vivas.

Esto es lo que José hizo cuando obedeció el mandato de Dios de regresar a Israel. “Pero (José) al oír que Arquelao reinaba en Judea en lugar de su padre Herodes, tuvo miedo de ir allá. Advertido por Dios en sueños, se retiró al distrito de Galilea, y fue a vivir en un pueblo llamado Nazaret” Mateo 2:22b-23a (NVI).

Nazaret es donde la Biblia profetizó que Jesús iba a vivir, así que José estaba exactamente en el centro de la voluntad de Dios. Y llegó allí mirando la situación —la política, el hijo de Herodes como gobernante. Se dio cuenta de que no era un lugar seguro para estar y dedicó su mente a Dios para tomar la decisión correcta.

Entonces, ¿dónde debemos obtener el mandato de Dios para nuestras vidas? Es posible que no tengamos ángeles que se presenten para guiarnos, pero sí tenemos cientos y cientos de páginas de la Palabra de Dios. Para vivir una vida de obediencia, necesitamos conocer lo que Dios nos ha dicho.

Jesús habló de esto en Mateo 7:24: “Por tanto, cualquiera que oye estas palabras mías y las pone en práctica, será semejante a un hombre sabio que edificó su casa sobre la roca” (LBLA).

Tenemos la Palabra de Dios para ayudarnos a vivir una relación con Él. No es un libro seco de direcciones. Es la carta de amor de Dios para nosotros, una carta de instrucción del Padre que nos muestra cómo vivir la clase de vida que quiere darnos.

Al leer la Palabra de Dios, te animo a orar el Salmo 119:34: “Dame entendimiento para guardar tu enseñanza; ¡quiero obedecerla de todo corazón!” (DHH). 

Reflexiona sobre esto :

¿Por qué crees que Dios quiere que involucres tu cerebro cuando le obedeces?¿Qué necesitas hacer para crear espacio en tu vida para estudiar la Palabra de Dios?¿Cómo revela tu vida que deseas la sabiduría de Dios?

 

The post Obedece a Dios usando tu Cerebro appeared first on Pastor Rick's Daily Hope.

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Published on January 31, 2021 00:45

Five Ways to Relax in God’s Grace

“Be careful that no one fails to receive God’s grace.”


Hebrews 12:15 (NCV)

How do you learn to “R.E.L.A.X.” in the liberating grace of God?

R—Realize nobody’s perfect.
Psalm 119:96 is a verse directed toward God, and it declares, “Nothing is perfect except your words” (TLB). What society tells you isn’t perfect. What popular opinion tells you isn’t perfect. What you learned growing up isn’t perfect. But God’s Word is perfect. When you get in the Bible and build your life on it, you will have a perfect foundation.

E—Enjoy God’s unconditional love.
The Bible says, “See how very much our heavenly Father loves us, for he allows us to be called his children—think of it—and we really are!” (1 John 3:1 TLB). When you become a follower of Christ, you take on a role of service to him—but you’re more than a servant! The Bible says you become a child of the King. A servant is accepted on the basis of what he does; a child is accepted on the basis of who he is. A servant starts the day anxious and worried that her work will please her master; a child rests in the secure love of her family. A servant is accepted because of his workmanship; a child is accepted because of his relationship.

L—Let God handle things.
What do you do about the uncontrollable things in life? “Cast all your anxiety on [God] because he cares for you” (1 Peter 5:7 NIV). When you’re fishing and you cast a line, there comes a point where you have to take your finger off the button and let it go. Just like the essence of casting is letting go, to overcome perfectionism you have to let go and let God do his work.

A—Act in faith, not fear.
Remember how you got into God’s family in the first place. Ephesians 2:8 says, “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith” (NIV). Grace is the only way to get into heaven. You’ll never be good enough, and you can’t buy your way in. It’s a free gift from God.

X—Exchange your perfectionism for God’s peace.
Perfectionism destroys peace. Jesus says in Matthew 11:28-29, “Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest . . . Learn the unforced rhythms of grace” (The Message). What a deal!

You’re going to fail a lot in life. But you don’t have to worry about it if you’ve received God’s grace. In fact, there’s only one failure you ever need to worry about: “Be careful that no one fails to receive God’s grace” (Hebrews 12:15 NCV). Receive it right now, and then relax!

PLAY today’s audio teaching from Pastor Rick >>

Talk It Over


What troubles, grudges, or guilt can you let go of when you remember nobody’s perfect?
What aspects of God’s love can help you relax?
How do you need to respond today to God’s offer of grace?

The post Five Ways to Relax in God’s Grace appeared first on Pastor Rick's Daily Hope.

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Published on January 31, 2021 00:30

January 30, 2021

Obedecer a Dios Requiere que Tomes Riesgos

“Después de que murió Herodes, un ángel del Señor se le apareció en sueños a José en Egipto y le dijo: «Levántate, toma al niño y a su madre, y vete a la tierra de Israel, que ya murieron los que amenazaban con quitarle la vida al niño»”. Mateo 2:19-20 (NVI)

El devocional de hoy, es por Tom Holladay, Pastor de enseñanza en la Iglesia Saddleback.

Tan incómodo como lo fue para José mover a su familia a Egipto, imagínate el temor tan grande que tendría al obedecer el mandato de Dios, de regresar a Israel. Sería como regresar a la boca del león. Él tendría que tomar a María y a Jesús de regreso a donde la vida de su hijo estaría en peligro. Pero debido a que José confiaba en Dios y lo que le estaba pidiendo, José aceptó el riesgo y obedeció debido a que Él sabía que era el lugar donde debería estar.

La Biblia dice, “Cuando siento miedo, pongo en ti mi confianza” Salmo 56:3 (NVI). Nota que este verso dice, “cuando siento miedo”, no “si llegara a tener miedo”. Tal vez queramos vivir una vida sin temores en este mundo, pero eso sólo sucederá en el Cielo. En esta vida, todos vamos a enfrentar temores de una manera o de otra.

Tenemos temores grandes y pequeños. Le tememos al futuro, le tememos a lo que sucederá con nuestros trabajos y nuestras familias, y tememos a cosas pequeñas como si dijimos lo correcto a una persona, o si la presentación estuvo bien, o aún para hacer una llamada telefónica.

En todas esas situaciones, tienes que tomar una decisión. ¿Vas a permitir que el temor te controle, o vas a tomar el riesgo de fe debido a que sabes que tienes un Dios que te ama?

Ese riesgo de fe, puede significar ir a un lugar donde nunca has estado o perdonar a alguien que no podías perdonar. Puede significar dejar tu trabajo. Un riesgo de fe también puede ser orar por algo o decidir confiando en Dios respecto a una situación o una relación que has estado sujetando fuertemente.

¿Qué riesgos como los que Cristo tomó, te está pidiendo Dios que tomes en fe?

Reflexiona sobre esto:

¿Cuál es el riesgo que has estado evitando que debes tomar en fe?¿Con qué quiere Dios reemplazar tus miedos?¿Qué has aprendido sobre Dios al tomar riesgos en el pasado? ¿Cómo te anima eso ahora?

The post Obedecer a Dios Requiere que Tomes Riesgos appeared first on Pastor Rick's Daily Hope.

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Published on January 30, 2021 00:45

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