The Bible calls us to believe in God who can change the impossible to the possible. He calls us to continue to walk in the path to His promises. What impossible are you believing for? Here are tips to continue on believing HIs impossible
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calling
You feel you’ve arrived. Your obedience to God has brought you to be famous in the eyes of men. If God has given you victories and conquer your battles for you, keep giving the glory to Him. You never become too successful to talk to God. You never become too prominent to surrender to God…
Have you ever questioned everything you thought you knew about life--your purpose, work, and your significance?. Though I was living in my “Ikigai”, I still felt unhappy as if something was missing. But this quarterlife crisis brought about an incredible clarity to my quarterlife calling
I wanted to run away from my calling. it has been an extremely difficult path that constantly humbles me to my knees.
Fear has taken a grip on me. The fear is not fearing personal failure as it once had been. It’s the fear of risking the livelihood of 30 other people in the team.
These are 3 things to hold on to when you want to quit your calling:
You’re in your mid-20s, thinking you would have things figured out post-college. yet you’re still clueless? You compare your life and FOMO kicked in? Aka you’re in a quarter-life crisis. So you search for your calling, but what is this calling?
The higher the climb, the greater the dependence, and the greater the discipline.
Leadership is scary. How freeing then, that in our fears, all God calls us is to be obedient and attentive as He lead us into the good future He has for us (Jer 29:11).
This heart of learning He plants. This spirit of His He stored. This body of mine He prepared for His Kingdom come. I am planted not buried.
Often, we think of calling as “the voice coming down from heaven in thunders”. That might be the case for Paul on the road to Damascus. For many of us today, calling is to be discovered one day at a time.
“What kind of job should I pursue?”,“How do I define success?”, “What should my motivation be?” After almost 20 years being in a system where my achievements are graded with clear expectations, I never had to worry where life was headed. When that constant is taken away, I was left with these questions.
I convinced myself “I am doing it for the glory of God!”, but this was nothing but self-deceit. Behind my “cloak of righteousness” was the drive to “be significant”—to be served, not to serve. We tend to forget that our worth is not found in self-actualization, but in dependency.