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Showing posts from January, 2026

REMEMBER ME, LORD

Psalm 106:3-4 GNT Happy are those who obey his commands, who always do what is right. [4] Remember me, LORD, when you help your people; include me when you save them.   The cry for God to remember us is not a sign that He has forgotten, for He cannot forget. Instead, it is an appeal for His divine intervention—a request for Him to act, to show mercy, and to fulfil His covenant in our lives. When God remembers, He moves. His remembrance is an action, a demonstration of His faithfulness, just as seen in Genesis 8:1 when God remembered Noah and every living thing in the ark. He does not merely recall; He restores, delivers, completes processes, and aligns destinies. Often, the chaos around us makes us feel forgotten, but the Spirit of God is still hovering over every situation, just as He did in Genesis 1. The wind of God still blows to subdue waters, calm storms, and bring clarity where confusion once ruled. The Lord does not process time and events as we do, His remembra...

PIDGIN REMEMBER ME, LORD!

Psalm 106:3–4 Joy dey for pipol wey dey do well and always dey do wetin dey rite. 4 My God, wen Yu dey show yor favor to yor pipol, make Yu remember mi; make Yu kom near and save mi.   The cry make God remember us no mean say He don forget, because God no fit forget. Instead, na appeal make He act — make He show mercy and fulfil Him covenant for our life.  When God remember, He dey move. Him remembrance na action, a sign of Him faithfulness — just like for Genesis 8:1 when God remember Noah and everything wey dey inside the ark. He no just recall; He restore, deliver, complete process, and align destiny.  Many times, the confusion and wahala around us dey make us feel like say God don forget us, but Him Spirit still dey hover around every situation, just like for Genesis 1. The wind of God still dey blow to calm storms and bring order where confusion dey.  God no dey process time like us. Him remembrance no be like mental recall — na action wey show mercy...

CHILD-FRIENDLY REMEMBER ME, LORD!

Psalm 106:3-4 GNT Happy are those who obey his commands, who always do what is right. [4] Remember me, LORD, when you help your people; include me when you save them.   Asking God to “remember” us does not mean He has forgotten. God never forgets. It means we are asking Him to help us, show us mercy, and step into our situation with His power. When God remembers, He acts. In Genesis 8:1, God remembered Noah and everyone in the ark. He didn’t just think about them—He rescued them, calmed the waters, and brought them into a new beginning. Sometimes life feels confusing or difficult, and we may feel forgotten. But God is still working, just like His Spirit moved over the waters in Genesis 1. He brings peace where there is chaos and hope where things feel dark. God’s remembrance is not about memory; it is about timing. When God remembers you, it means it is time for Him to help you, bless you, and move you forward. God remembered Noah, Sarah, Rachel, and Abraham. When He ...

COMMUNITY VENTURE!

Genesis 26:12-16 TLB That year Isaac's crops were tremendous-100 times the grain he sowed. For Jehovah blessed him. [13] He was soon a man of great wealth and became richer and richer. [14] He had large flocks of sheep and goats, great herds of cattle, and many servants. And the Philistines became jealous of him. [15] So they filled up his wells with earth-all those dug by the servants of his father Abraham. [16] And King Abimelech asked Isaac to leave the country. "Go somewhere else," he said, "for you have become too rich and powerful for us."   Community ventures—whether spiritual, economic, or social—are rarely born in comfort. They emerge in the tension between promise and resistance, between God’s blessing and human insecurity. This is a vivid picture of the life of Isaac, who prospered in a land where he was a stranger, only to face opposition from those threatened by his growth. The passage opens with a striking statement in verse 12: “Isaac sowe...

PIDGIN COMMUNITY VENTURE!

Genesis 26:12–16 Isaak harvest plenty well-well and e rish hundred times of wetin e plant dat same year, bikos God don bless am. 13Isaak kon rish well-well. E dey prosper more-more until evribody know am. 14E get many sheep and kattle and en savant many well-well, so Filistia pipol kon dey jealous am. 15So Filistia pipol karry san-san kon kover all di well wey Isaak papa savants, dig for di time wey Abraham dey der. 16Den Abimelek kon tell Isaak, “Make yu komot from here go anoda place, bikos di pawa wey yu get, don strong pass awa own.”   Community venture, whether spiritual, business, or social one, dey ever start for comfort zone. Dem dey come from tension — between God promise and human wahala, between blessing and insecurity. This na clear picture of Isaac life. E prosper for land wey no be him own but still face opposition from people wey dey fear him progress. Verse 12 talk am well well: “Isaac sow for that land and reap for the same year hundredfold; the Lord bles...

CHILD-FRIENDLY COMMUNITY VENTURE!

Genesis 26:12-16 GNT Isaac sowed crops in that land, and that year he harvested a hundred times as much as he had sown, because the LORD blessed him. [13] He continued to prosper and became a very rich man. [14] Because he had many herds of sheep and cattle and many servants, the Philistines were jealous of him. [15] So they filled in all the wells which the servants of his father Abraham had dug while Abraham was alive. [16] Then Abimelech said to Isaac, "Leave our country. You have become more powerful than we are."   Community projects don’t usually begin in easy times. They often start when things feel new, different, or even a little uncomfortable. This is what happened to Isaac. He lived in a land that wasn’t his own, but he trusted God and worked hard. Verse 12 tells us something amazing: “Isaac planted seeds in that land and in the same year he harvested a hundred times more, because the Lord blessed him.” Isaac didn’t wait for perfect conditions. He planted...

DIVINE SUPPLY!

2 Kings 4:1-7 TLB One day the wife of one of the seminary students came to Elisha to tell him of her husband's death. He was a man who had loved God, she said. But he had owed some money when he died, and now the creditor was demanding it back. If she didn't pay, he said he would take her two sons as his slaves. [2] "What shall I do?" Elisha asked. "How much food do you have in the house?" "Nothing at all, except a jar of olive oil," she replied. [3] "Then borrow many pots and pans from your friends and neighbors!" he instructed. [4] "Go into your house with your sons and shut the door behind you. Then pour olive oil from your jar into the pots and pans, setting them aside as they are filled!" [5] So she did. Her sons brought the pots and pans to her, and she filled one after another! [6] Soon every container was full to the brim! "Bring me another jar," she said to her sons. "There aren't any more!" th...

PIDGIN DIVINE SUPPLY!

2 Kings 4:1-7 One day, one woman wey en husband bi profet before e die kon kry go meet Elisha sey, “Yor savant my husband don die. Yu know sey yor savant dey follow God kommand. Naw, doz wey e dey owe money before e die, won kom take my two sons as slave.” 2Elisha ask di woman, “Wetin yu wont make I do for yu?” Make yu tell mi, “Wetin yu get for yor house?” Di woman ansa, “Yor savant nor get anytin escept one small oil.” 3Den Elisha tell am, “Make yu go borrow plenty empty gallon kom. 4Afta yu don borrow dem, make yu enter house kon lock yor door, den pour di oil put for all di gallons and wons one full, put am for korna.” 5So di woman leave am kon lock en and en sons wey bring di gallon, for inside dia house. Den e bigin pour di oil put for inside di gallons. 6Wen dem don full, e kon tell en sons, “Make una bring anoda gallon kom.” But di boys ansa, “All of dem don full.” So di oil kon stop to pour kom out. 7Den di woman go tell Elisha wetin happen and Elisha sey, “Go se...

CHILD-FRIENDLY DIVINE SUPPLY!

2 Kings 4:1-7 GNT The widow of a member of a group of prophets went to Elisha and said, "Sir, my husband has died! As you know, he was a God-fearing man, but now a man he owed money to has come to take away my two sons as slaves in payment for my husband's debt." [2] "What shall I do for you?" he asked. "Tell me, what do you have at home?" "Nothing at all, except a small jar of olive oil," she answered. [3] "Go to your neighbors and borrow as many empty jars as you can," Elisha told her. [4] "Then you and your sons go into the house, close the door, and start pouring oil into the jars. Set each one aside as soon as it is full." [5] So the woman went into her house with her sons, closed the door, took the small jar of olive oil, and poured oil into the jars as her sons brought them to her. [6] When they had filled all the jars, she asked if there were any more. "That was the last one," one of her sons answered. ...

UPROOT THE ROOT!

Matthew 15:13 AMPC He answered, Every plant which My heavenly Father has not planted will be torn up by the roots.   For this people’s heart is waxed gross, and their ears are dull of hearing, and their eyes they have closed…”  Jesus reveals that spiritual blindness and recurring issues begin in the heart, the root not the surface. God always deals with the source, not the symptoms. We must stop dealing with the surface issue if want a permanent solution. Many of us manage life only at the surface level. We trim the leaves, beautify the branches, and try to make the situation look presentable. But surface work never brings true change. We take actions that soothe the problem instead of healing the source. We fix what is visible but leave what is invisible untouched. Jeremiah 6:14 says “They have healed the hurt of my people slightly…” “slightly”! God calls this slight healing—temporary, shallow, incomplete. The Lord God wants to uproot what He did not plant b...