Weekly Devotionals

Hello Beautiful Souls,

Each week, we’ll dive into a specific passage of God’s Word, inviting Him to speak directly to our hearts and reveal exactly what we need for that week. I want to share with you that there may be times when we stay in one passage for an entire month if that’s what the Holy Spirit leads us to do, as He knows what’s best for each of us.

This space is not just about reading but about encountering God’s presence in a real, personal way. I encourage you to share any thoughts, reflections, or revelations that God places on your heart as we journey together. I’m excited to see what He will reveal to us in this special time of connection.

  • Have You Lost Your Saltiness?

    Matthew 5:13; Mark 9:50; Luke 14:34–35

    Jesus tells us in Scripture, “You are the salt of the earth.” These are not casual words—they are a divine identity. As God’s children, we are uniquely designed, set apart, and anointed to represent Him in a world that desperately needs truth, love, and holiness.

    Salt in the ancient world was valuable. It preserved food, purified, healed wounds, melted coldness, and enhanced flavor. In the same way, your life—your witness, your compassion, your character—is meant to make a difference. When God says “Ye are the salt,” He is declaring that only those who belong to Him can carry this spiritual influence into the world. It is not simply what we do; it is who we are.

    The Danger of Losing Our Savour

    Jesus also warns us that if the salt loses its savour—its flavor, its purity, its influence—it becomes ineffective. As Christians, if the spiritual seasoning of God’s presence and obedience is no longer resting upon us, our ability to reach others becomes diminished.

    Herbert Lockyer beautifully explains,

    “Salt arrests corrupts; light dispels darkness.”

    Our lives are meant to prevent the spread of sin, not participate in it. When people see us, they should see the light of Jesus Christ shining from within—not a lifestyle that blends in with the corruption we are trying to rescue others from.

    Dr. G. Campbell Morgan adds:

    “Salt never cures corruption. It prevents the spread of corruption… While saints can never lose their souls, they can lose their savour.”

    We cannot stop all the evil in the world, but when the grace of God is active in our lives, we can stop corruption from spreading around us. We restrain darkness simply by being who Christ called us to be.

    Salt That Transforms

    Donald C. Fleming reminds us:

    “Salt can be used to preserve from decay and to give flavor… Christ’s people should have a similar effect upon the world.”

    He goes on to say that if God’s people fail to maintain this salt-like quality—through prayer, discipline, holiness, and obedience—they become of little use for the Kingdom.

    Salt adds flavor.
    Salt melts coldness.
    Salt heals.
    Salt preserves.
    Salt purifies.

    So does a Christian who is walking in the Spirit.

    Fleming concludes powerfully:

    “Salt in yourselves is the distinctive quality that marks the person devoted to God.”

    A Heart Check for Today

    Ask yourself today:

    • Does my life still carry the flavor of Christ?
    • Is my saltiness influencing the world, or has the world diluted my witness?
    • Do people see Jesus in me—my words, my character, my choices, my attitude?

    If you feel like you’ve lost your savour, the beautiful truth is that God restores. He can refresh your spirit, rekindle your passion, and renew your holiness so that you shine brightly and influence powerfully once again.

    Prayer

    Lord, restore the saltiness in my life. Help me to reflect Your character, resist the corruption of this world, and live as a true disciple filled with Your grace. Let my life preserve, heal, and bring flavor to the world around me. Amen.

  • The Woman and the Lost Coin

    Luke 15:8–10

    Have you ever misplaced something so valuable that your heart sank the moment you realized it was gone? Suddenly, everything else pauses. You retrace your steps. You search every corner. You move furniture, lift cushions, and call for help—determined not to stop until what was lost is found.

    This is the picture Jesus paints in the Parable of the Lost Coin.

    A Desperate Search

    In Jesus’ story, a woman has ten silver coins—each one precious and significant. When she loses one, she does not shrug it off as insignificant. Instead, she lights a lamp, sweeps the house, and searches carefully until she finds it.

    In the same way, God does not see any of His children as disposable or replaceable. When one soul drifts away, heaven does not rest. God lights the lamp of His grace, sweeps through the corners of our brokenness, and searches for our hearts with intentional love.

    You Are Not Forgotten

    The woman’s determination symbolizes God’s relentless pursuit of us. We may feel lost in the dark corners of life—buried under mistakes, shame, fear, or spiritual disconnection—but God never loses sight of us.

    Even when we feel unseen, God is still searching.
    Even when we feel unworthy, God still sees value.
    Even when we feel too far gone, God still calls us His own.

    A Celebration in Heaven

    When the woman finds the coin, she calls her friends and neighbors together saying, “Rejoice with me, for I have found the piece which I lost!”

    Jesus tells us that this is exactly how heaven responds when even one sinner repents. Angels rejoice. Heaven erupts in celebration. God delights not in perfection, but in repentance.

    This is the heart of the Gospel:
    God values the one. God seeks the one. God rejoices over the one.

    A Message for Our Hearts

    This parable reminds us that:

    • No one is too lost for God to find.
    • Every soul carries immeasurable worth in God’s eyes.
    • Restoration is always God’s desire.
    • Heaven celebrates every person who turns back to God.

    If you feel distant or hidden in this season, know that God is searching for you with intention, compassion, and unwavering love. And if you know someone who seems lost, continue praying for them—because heaven rejoices every time one heart returns to its Creator.