Devo Week 22

“Jubilee is simply the way things were created to be: eyes were meant to see and ears to hear; legs and feet were meant to walk, and tongues to speak. It’s a time of freedom for the captives and hope for the poor. Not only those things, but we were created to live in favor with God and each other. Jubilee signifies a new start for all people. What simple and yet profound Good News!”

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Blake StatonComment
Devo Week 21

“God's Son was displaced from heaven in order for the Good News of the Kingdom to come to earth. Jesus' birth marked a new era, releasing the full presence of God to dwell among all nations. Often displacement activates great faith and divine breakthroughs.”

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Blake StatonComment
Devo Week 20

“We discovered the Akha knew very little about the Holy Spirit, even though the Gospel had been presented to them some 25 years before we arrived. I was soon confronted with this. A simple analogy began to help the Akha understand and come to know the Holy Spirit as their Guide and Helper.”

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Blake StatonComment
Devo Week 19

“Encounters with God at places like the Garden of Eden, the Flood, and the Tower of Babel have created boundary events for human history. The same is true with the Jewish Feast of Passover. Names mean something in Jewish culture. Oftentimes they are a descriptive reality of a God encounter. The Passover represented the breaking-in of God as our Judge and Savior.”

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Blake StatonComment
Devo Week 18

“Symbols are important in every culture. They can assist powerfully in communicating the Gospel and other spiritual truths. Pay attention to the symbols among your people and where you live. Consider the meaning of symbols and what God might be speaking through them.”

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Blake StatonComment
Devo Week 17

“Jesus Himself is our great escape from sin. When we repent, Jesus as our scapegoat takes our sin upon Himself, carries it away by His life, and releases us from all its effects. The scapegoat ritual highlights the power of forgiveness and the exchanged life for all followers of Jesus.”

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Blake StatonComment
Devo Week 16

“Sometimes the deepest truths are the simplest and most obvious. Family is God's idea, beginning in Genesis and continuing until the end of time. Family is the common denominator of all nations or peoples. Family is God's strategy to spread His glory to all the earth. It is the incarnational way of the Kingdom.”

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Blake StatonComment
Devo Week 15

“Spiritual discernment is key. Not just for identifying what is bad, but also for what is good. When we affirm that which is good and true among a people, we tap into the evidence of "Melchizedek" among them. The Melchizedek factor derives from the encounter Abram had with Melchizedek in Genesis 14:17-24. There was evidence that God was already there when Abram entered the land of promise.”

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Blake StatonComment
Devo Week 14

“The cleansing of the temple was a wake up call to the purpose and expression of the Kingdom of God. True spiritual authority shifted from the temple to the person of Jesus, where it will forever remain. This is the revelation of God's new temple, His body.”

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Blake StatonComment
Devo Week 13

“The idea of transformation is like that of metamorphosis, when a caterpillar turns into a butterfly. The earthbound creature changes with striking beauty and the ability to fly. This story of Jesus and His disciples on the Mount of Transfiguration was the breaking of the cocoon -- the transition from the Old Testament (OT) to the New.”

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Blake StatonComment
Devo Week 12

“Sometimes words themselves are not enough. A familiar saying in English is "shine a little light upon the subject." In this devotion, we highlighted that rainbows are location-specific. This means rainbows are not seen everywhere at once. Similarly, analogies and metaphors within cultures can "shine a little light" and help bring revelation and understanding of the Gospel.”

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Blake StatonComment
Devo Week 11

“In Habakkuk's vision, he saw a time when the glory of God would fill the earth as the waters cover the sea. As we apply the whole of Scripture to our view of the end times, Habakkuk's vision informs our understanding that first the Gospel will be preached to all nations, and some percentage within every people group will receive Jesus.”

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Blake StatonComment