
BIG Life Devotional | Daily Devotional for Women
Religion & Spirituality Podcasts
Daily Devotional with Pamela Crim | BIG Life Mentor
Location:
United States
Description:
Daily Devotional with Pamela Crim | BIG Life Mentor
Language:
English
Website:
https://biglifehq.com/blog/
Episodes
2109 Names of God – El Ro’i
5/5/2026
Through studying the names of God, we understand our God is a personal God. In the past 9 devotionals, we’ve seen 10 names and we now know so much more about our God.
As YHWH, God has revealed himself to be so near that he’s our very breath.
As Adonai, God reveals that he is our Master, and therefore responsible for our care and our protection.
As Elohim, God reveals he is our Creator who continues to create and make us a new creation even today.
As El Shaddai, God reveals he is the Almighty one whose hand is in everything.
As Yahweh Rapha, he tells us we can count on him to be the LORD who meets us in the bitterest of places in life and heal us.
As Yahweh Mekaddishkem, God makes us forever good enough by calling us his own, making us holy and then teaching us to rest in him.
God has revealed himself as a Shepherd, caring for his sheep.
Through Jesus, God is revealed as Abba, Papa.
Then Jesus goes on to call him Holy Father and Righteous Father.
We now have 10 names for God, each that reveal his character, his power and his heart towards us. Have you been using these names in your conversations with him? Have you been calling on him by specific name according to how you need him to show up for you? He promises to respond.
Now, we go even deeper. Beyond these 10 names, we read of dozens of other names given to God by people in the Bible who have had a personal encounter with him. The names they give God define how they’ve met him and what he has done for them. And my friend, if God did something for them, he can do something for you. What he did then, he can do today. We’re in relationship with the same God of the Bible.
In Malachi 3:6, God says, “I am the LORD, and I do not change.” God showed up for people personally in the stories in your Bible, and he can and will show up for you personally now.
Remember that as we study the names of God given by other people in scripture – he’s revealing what he did for them personally and what he can do for even YOU personally. He is the same God and he hasn’t changed. He has a personal encounter waiting for you too.
One person in scripture who had a very personal encounter with God is Hagar. Yes, a woman. In these times, a woman was a second-class citizen. She didn’t have rights. She didn’t have her own life. She was completely dependent on the man of the family to care for her. And for a woman, if there was no man to care for her, she was in a truly desperate situation.
Hagar didn’t have a man, she was only used by a man. (Perhaps you can relate.) But Hagar wasn’t only used by a man, she was used by everyone in her entire life to get what they wanted. She was a totally unimportant character in everyone else’s story.
Have you ever felt that way? Like you’re not important enough for your own dreams, your own desires, or your own story. Like you’re stuck in the story of someone else and you’re always just along for the ride. Like the life you live isn’t your own. Like you’re forever forgotten – forever overlooked – forever unimportant.
That was Hagar – that was her life and that was her story. In Genesis 16, Hagar was the slave of a woman named Sarah. Sarah was the wife of Abraham. They were a couple who had been unable to have children, and now in their old age, they had lost all hope for the family they so badly wanted. That’s wasn’t Hagar’s fault or Hagar’s problem – but she became their solution. Hagar’s boss lady, Sarah, decided she would use Hagar to give her the baby she had always wanted. Sarah sent her husband Abraham to sleep with Hagar, and so she became pregnant.
It wasn’t love. It was ownership. Sarah owned Hagar, and Hagar’s body was used to get what she wanted.
This wasn’t Hagar’s choice. It wasn’t her dream. It wasn’t her plan. But it became her life as she was used in someone’s else’s story.
While Hagar is pregnant, Sarah begins to treat her so harshly that Hagar finally runs away. Now remember, where they are is surrounded by nothing but wilderness....
Duration:00:20:23
2108 Names of God – Holy Righteous Father
5/4/2026
Jesus not only tells us to call God our Father, Abba, Papa and we see Jesus personally calling God by this name. God is his Father. Jesus is deeply connected with God – they are one and they always have been – while at the same time he is the Son and God is the Father. They’re as close as they can possibly be. They have the same mind, the same will, the same love, the same power. Jesus is 100% familiar with God in every way … however, he doesn’t lose his awe of God just because he has this closeness.
Yes, Jesus teaches us to be close to God. Yes, he teaches us to trust him as our Papa God and we as his beloved children … but Jesus also teaches us how to be in absolute AWE of God still. He shows us his awe of the Father in two specific descriptive names: Holy Father and Righteous Father.
Jesus calls God ‘Holy Father’ in John 17:11, “Now I am departing from the world; they are staying in this world, but I am coming to you. Holy Father, you have given me your name; now protect them by the power of your name so that they will be united just as we are.” Jesus is praying these words right before he is betrayed, arrested and led to the cross. And understand, he is praying these words for you and I. He’s calling on the name of Holy Father, that we would be protected by the power of his name – that is HOLY FATHER.
Do you know the power of this name? Holy Father.
This is actually the only place in scripture where Jesus directly combines these two words when addressing God.
• Holy = completely set apart, pure, transcendent
• Father = relational, close, personal
We tend to lean towards one of these – either God is completely set apart, distant and intimidating to us, or he is so personally close that he’s become familiar and expected. Jesus shows us how to hold both in awe, reverence and confidence. God is both perfectly holy and perfectly relational at the same time.
Last night I watched a documentary on Hulk Hogan. I’m a bit of a documentary junkie. I love the behind the scenes look at real lives that we often miss. Hulk was this larger than life character with a handle bar mustache and bleach blonde hair known for ripping his shirt off. But at home, he didn’t rip his shirt off. At home, he was a husband and dad named Terry and he played in the floor with his children. He was both, but the true man was only seen behind closed doors. The rest of the world only knew the character making a scene in the ring. He was one or the other, but he couldn’t be both at the same time. So, it caused a split in his life and a loss of his true self.
But the Holy Father is not split. He is the same behind the scenes and on the scene. He is forever both completely set apart and completely up close and personal. He is beyond understanding and personally understanding at the same time. He is Holy and he is Father – and not just for Jesus, but for us too.
At the time of Jesus praying this prayer in the book of John, everyone knew holiness was associated with distance. There was a system in the temple and only priests could approach God’s holy presence. If you did it wrong, you died. Holiness meant you couldn’t casually approach God. But then on the other hand, ‘Father’ implies direct access through relationship and belonging. Jesus is normalizing closeness with a HOLY FATHER, and he’s literally praying you and I can have that closeness too.
Will you allow God to be both for you, both Holy and Father? Will you grow close in relationship with the Father while remaining in reverent awe of his holiness? He isn’t one or the other – he is both, always, forever, and fully.
Jesus prays, “Protect them by the power of your name.” What was that name Jesus just spoke? Holy Father. This is where your personal protection comes from. God’s holiness means absolutely nothing impure can stand against him. No evil will prevail. His holiness protects you from every scheme and attack of the enemy. And God’s fatherhood means he actively cares for...
Duration:00:16:46
2107 Names of God – Abun, Abba, Father, Papa
5/1/2026
Jesus gives us a name to use for God. Matthew 6:9: “This, then, is how you should pray: Our Father…”
Right there. The first two words of the prayer. Our Father.
Before anything else… before the structure, before the requests, before the “give us” and “forgive us”… Jesus starts with identity and relationship. Our Father. That’s how He teaches us to approach God. He is our Father and we are his beloved daughter.
Now here’s something really beautiful – It is believed Jesus originally spoke this in Aramaic, the everyday language of the people he was speaking to. The word would have been “Abun.” Later, when written in Greek, we see the word “Abba.” And these words “Abba” and “Abun” weren’t formal, distant titles. These were words a child would use for their father.
Daddy. Papa. A word of closeness. A word of trust. A word of belonging.
So when Jesus says, “This is how you should pray,” He is saying… come to God like this. Come as a child comes to a loving Father. Not distant. Not afraid. Not trying to impress. But close. Known. Loved.
Now let me ask you…. Who is this God we pray to? Are we bothering Him with our requests? Are we even doing it right? Does the Creator of the universe really hear us… and if He does, does He really want to?
Scripture tells us to talk to God about everything—all the time. Not with fancy or showy words, but with our real, everyday language. Philippians 4: 6-7, “Don’t worry about anything; instead, pray about everything. Tell God what you need, and thank him for all he has done.”
And this conversation with our Father, our Abba, our Papa hold tremendous power! James 5:16 says, “The earnest prayer of a righteous person has great power and produces wonderful results.” That’s you. Righteous not because of what you’ve done, but because of your faith in Jesus. And your earnest prayer—the sincere one, the one that comes from relationship and not obligation—that prayer has power. Power to move mountains. Power to break chains. Power to make the impossible possible.
But so many of us miss out on that power because we don’t really understand who we’re talking to. I missed out for years, and maybe you are too. All too often we approach God like we’re interrupting Him… like we should keep it short, wrap it up, or say it just right. But Jesus tells us there’s a different way and a better way to approach God … “Our Father.” That’s our Abba. Our Papa.
Not a distant God. Not an annoyed ruler. Not an angry man with a stick. Our Father.
I sometimes listen to the teaching of a man named Bill Lokey. At the time of his latest recording, he had been battling cancer for several years, continually given only weeks to live. And this man decided, if he was only going to live a very short time, he would actually LIVE! His final recording was just 2 weeks before what he referred to as “a step from the boat to the dock”. Yes, his final breath and step into eternity. I’m literally listening to a man in his final 2 weeks of life teach me how to truly LIVE.
I’m learning many things from Bill and his legacy, but the one thing that has impacted me most is an interaction he had with God during his private prayer time. He was in the car, and he began praying as he normally did, and God interrupted him and said, “I want you to call me Papa.” This man had followed Jesus for over 60 years, and he said in that moment, he experienced a whole new level of relationship with his Creator. He’s not just God. He’s not just the Maker of Heaven and Earth. He’s not just the God of all gods. He’s not just the Almighty. He is your Father, and he wants you to call him Papa.
Papa. Let that settle into your soul right now.
Romans 8:14–16 (MSG) says,“This resurrection life you received from God is not a timid, grave-tending life. It’s adventurously expectant, greeting God with a childlike ‘What’s next, Papa?’ God’s Spirit touches our spirits and confirms who we really are. We know who he is, and we know who we are: Father and children.”
Oh… to...
Duration:00:23:46
2106 Names of God – Shepherd
4/29/2026
Yesterday I gave you a new name you couldn’t pronounce, but a powerful promise from our God through a name he reveals. Remember, Yahweh M – God’s promise of actively sanctifying you to make you holy simply by relationship with him. Not through your perfection, but through his. Not by your works, but the works already done for you. And because of this, you can surrender and find sweet rest.
Now today, we will study a name you really know. A name you can pronounce. A name you can understand. And we will see God’s perfect fulfillment of this name in the work of Jesus.
Psalm 23:1 (You complete the sentence) – “The LORD is my …. SHEPHERD”
Yes, God is our shepherd, meaning he is our guide, our provider, and our protector. He is present, and he is personally aware of YOU. This is your game changer!
Recognize, you are the sheep. The one created and designed to need help. You were never intended to know the way. You were never expected to get there on your own. You simply can’t – you’re the sheep. You were designed to need a shepherd.
Ezekiel 34:11-12, This is what the Sovereign LORD says, “I myself will search and find my sheep. I will be like a shepherd looking for his scattered flock. I will find my sheep and rescue them from all the places where they were scattered on that dark and cloudy day.”
Have you ever had one of those dark, cloudy days? One of those days that rocked your world and caused you to get lost in the darkness? One of those days that made you question everything you thought you knew. Yes, those are the days when sheep tend to get scattered. We run and hide in our thoughts and try to isolate from the pain. And my friend, don’t you know that’s when you are in the most danger? Running and hiding is never your answer.
If you watch a few nature shows on Africa, you will quickly see the lesson play out. If there’s a group of zebra (which by the way are called a dazzle), and those zebra are being chased by a lion, they are safe as long as they stay together. But inevitably, do you know what happens – there’s one who strays from the dazzle and runs to hide by itself. THAT’S THE ONE THAT GETS EAT EVERY TIME. What’s the moral of the story? Don’t run and hide. Stay with your people.
I’ve intentionally created my own small zebra herd to go through life with. We are accountability sisters. We don’t let each other hide. If one is suffering, we all gather around. If one is struggling, we pick them up. We continually call on the God for each other. Because here’s the truth, our enemy is like a lion! 1 Peter 5:8, “Stay alert! Watch out for your great enemy, the devil. He prowls around like a roaring lion, looking for someone to devour.”
God tells us he is the shepherd finding his sheep that have scattered. He is rescuing them from the places where they run on their dark, hard days of life. Girl, if you’ve been hiding, he’s looking for you!
Ezekiel 34 goes on to say in verses 15-16, “I myself will tend my sheep and give them a place to lie down in peace, says the Sovereign LORD. I will search for my lost ones who strayed away, and I will bring them safely home again. I will bandage the injured and strengthen the weak.”
Wow, what a promise we have from God. He is our shepherd.
To study a shepherd is to study the ways of our God. A shepherd doesn’t just watch sheep, he LEADS his sheep. The shepherd knows what his sheep need and he knows where to find it. He knows where those green pastures are. He knows where those still waters are. Every step, he leads his sheep to what they need.
A shepherd fights for his sheep. There’s always a lion looking to devour that helpless sheep and without a shepherd to protect them, they will never survive.
Scripture talks about King David as a young boy being a shepherd to his father’s sheep. He became strong and ready for battle against the giant Goliath because he had been fighting off lions to protect his father’s sheep for a long time. A shepherd is actively fighting to protect his...
Duration:00:19:43
2105 Names of the God – Yahweh Mekaddishkem
4/28/2026
There is power when a specific name is called on. Hypothetically, let’s say we’re on a boat in Bali, charting to the island of Nusa Pineda. If you hear me say, “Girls, come over here”, you would think, “hmmm, am I a girl? Yes – she wants to show me something and maybe it’s something great I don’t want to miss. But let’s say we’re on that boat in Bali, chartering to the island of Nusa Pineda for great adventures and you hear me say, “NURSE!”, you know that means something totally different. That means if you’re not a nurse, this doesn’t apply to you. But that means if you are a nurse, I need you to come quickly and help with a medical situation.
That’s all in the calling of a name. The name defines who is needed.
You have many names perhaps. Friend, daughter, honey, mom, nurse, teacher … and each calls to you in a different way. For a mother, the sound of “Mom” turns every head in the grocery store. I’m Mom – what do you need? How can I take care of you?
Now think about God. He reveals his different names to us for a reason – he wants us to call on him for who we need. The more you know his names, the better you can call on him and the more you can trust him.
Remember, this study of the names of God comes from Psalm 9:10, “Those who know your name trust in you, for you, O LORD, do not abandon those who search for you.”
So far, we’ve studied 5 of the names of God. Let’s do a review.
Episode #2100: YHWH – The name you’ve always known since your first breath. A name not spoken, but rather breathed. LORD
Episode #2101: Adonai – Lord, Master. The one responsible for you.
Episode #2102: Elohim – Creator. The one who makes a new way when there is no way. The one who is making you new.
Episode #2103: El Shaddai – God Almighty. The one whose hand is in everything and pours out his blessings on you.
Episode #2104: Yahweh Rapha – The Lord who heals you – but not just your body, your mind, your heart, your relationships. Your entire life finds healing in him.
Now, today, the 6th name of God revealed by God himself in scripture. A name he wants you to know so you can call on him in a very specific. A name he gives you so you can trust him more.
Today’s name is likely one you’ve never even heard of. A name that is very hard to pronounce, so together we’re going to learn something new.
Repeat after me –
Mehhh
Ka
Desh
Kem
Together, Mehhh-ka-desh-kem. A name that tells you that you belong to him and he is actively shaping you. A name that gives you identity, value, worth, confidence and rest. A name that tells you to stop performing, stop trying to achieve so hard, stop trying to bend and contort yourself into perfection, and trust Yahweh Mekaddishkem to do his work in you.
Is that what you need today? Girl, you don’t have to figure this all out – you don’t have to force anything – and you don’t have to perform to please the Father. He’s actually already done the work for you.
We find this name in Exodus 31:3, but you won’t see it in your English translation Bible. Without studying the original text of Hebrew, you’ll completely miss this name God has shared of himself.
Here’s what you will see in your Bible: The LORD then gave these instruction to Moses: Tell the people of Israel: ‘Be careful to keep my Sabbath day, for the Sabbath is a sing of the covenant between me and you from generation to generation. It is given so you may know that I am the LORD, who makes you holy.”
The LORD who makes you Holy in Hebrew was YHWH Mekaddishkem.
Mekaddishkem comes from the Hebrew root “qadash” which means to sanctify, set apart, and to make you holy. So, what God is saying to his people here is I AM THE ONE WHO MAKES YOU FOREVER GOOD ENOUGH. It is my work in you that makes you holy. It’s on ME to sanctify you.
What does it mean that God will sanctify you? That’s hard to explain isn’t it? What does that really look like? My friend, it’s this simple and this incredibly unbelievable – You, in your totally flawed and imperfect state...
Duration:00:26:09
2104 Names of God – Yahweh Rapha
4/24/2026
If I told you I’m a nurse, you know you could come to me for health advice. If I told you I’m a dentist, you know you could come to me for your teeth. If I told you I’m an accountant, you know you could come to me for your taxes. If I told you I’m a banker, you know you could come to me for a loan. If I told you I’m a travel agent, you know you could come to me for your vacation plans. Who I tell you that I am directly tells you what could expect of me.
So, when God tells us he is something specific, we know specifically what we can come to him for. This is what we’re learning in the names of God.
How sweet for God to tell us he is our HEALER. What do you come to a healer for? HEALING, my friend. Yes, healing of your body – but more – healing of your entire being.
Restoration of what has been broken.
A healed mind that is damaged.
Renewed peace where anxiety has taken root.
Mending of strained relationships.
Softening of a hardened heart.
Comfort for a hurting heart.
This is what God can heal – Your body, your heart, your mind, your family, your relationships, your circumstances. God is the great healer, you can call him Yahweh Rapha.
Exodus 15:26, God announces to his people, “For I am the LORD who heals you.” LORD is in all caps so we know the original spoken word of God was his name YHWH, and heals is Rapha. In Hebrew, I am Yahweh Rapha.
Rapha means to heal, restore, make whole and repair. If our God is Yahweh Rapha, we know we can come to him for healing, restoration, wholeness and repair in every way.
Notice precisely where God speaks these words, because it’s only spoken one time in scripture, then displayed hundreds of times in action.
Exodus 15 comes at a critical time for God’s people, the Israelites. They have been rescued from captivity in Egypt and set free. They have been supernaturally protected and guided right through the parting of the Red Sea, then turned around and watched their enemies be swallowed by the sea. And now they’re walking through an unknown wilderness and dying of thirst. They have gone 3 days without water. This is the limit of a human body in these harsh, hot conditions.
They finally find a small body of water, in this desert, but can you believe the water is bitter and undrinkable. Moses seeks God for help and God gives Moses a solution that turns the bitter water sweet, and the people are saved by having water to drink in their wilderness. And THIS is exactly where God introduces himself as Yahweh Rapha, the Lord who heals you. Here where God turned what was unbearably bitter into sweetness to not only satisfy but to save. God restored what had been corrupted. The water was corrupted with bitterness, but he restored it to sweetness with his healing touch.
This is where Yahweh Rapha meets us – in the bitterness we find unbearable, and he turns it sweet.
Oh what a threat bitterness was to God’s people there in the wilderness – and what a threat bitterness continues to be for us, his girls on our own journeys. Life has a way of being bitter sometimes. It stings. It stinks. It disappoints. And through it all, our hearts grow hardened, we become guarded, and bitterness creeps in. Yahweh Rapha wants to heal that!
Now, God reveals specifically how this healing is going to take place. Back up and read the beginning of Exodus 15:26, “IF YOU will listen carefully to the voice of the LORD your God and do what is right in his sight, obeying his commands and keeping all his decrees, THEN I WILL not make you suffer any of the diseases I sent on the Egyptians; for I am the LORD who heals you.” God is saying your healing will not come through a transaction, but through a relationship with me. A relationship where we have a role and he has a role. Our role is trust and obey him – his role is to bring healing.
Walk with God and you will live different. Live different and you will be healed. Healed of what? The very things that threaten your being with bitterness....
Duration:00:20:39
2103 Names of God – El Shaddai
4/23/2026
There is a name God reveals of himself for when things look absolutely over. When the world says it’s officially impossible. When you’re at your end, without further possibility or hope and in need of a true miracle. This is where God says he is “El Shaddai”.
El Shaddai. El means God and Shaddai means many things in many ways. It’s not just one thing … just as God is not one thing.
• Shaddai comes from the root word shadah which means to shed or to pour out. In this way, God is the one who pours out blessings, abundantly and continually.
• The Hebrew word shad means chest or breast. God is both the strength of a man’s chest and the all-sufficient nourishment of a woman’s breast.
• Shaddai also comes from the root word shadad, which means to display great power.
• And when Shaddai was translated into Greek, the word pantokrator was used – which in English is Almighty. Specifically, one who has His hand on everything.
Layers upon layers of deep meaning are in this name God reveals of himself. El Shaddai. He pours out blessings, he is strong with great power, he is more than enough, and his almighty hand is in everything, always. Girls, THAT IS OUR GOD!
We see God use this name in Genesis 17:1. Speaking to Abraham, he says, “I am El-Shaddai – ‘God Almighty.’ Serve me faithfully and live a blameless life. I will make a covenant with you, by which I will guarantee to give you countless descendants.”
The truth of this situation is Abraham is 99 years old and what God is saying is officially impossible. But God had made a promise to Abraham when he was 75 years old, a promise for descendants of his own. A man who had waited his whole life for children and he finally gets a promise from God in his old age, and then he’s left waiting again. Waiting and waiting and waiting. And while he’s waiting, God stops speaking. At this point, he’s been waiting on the promise for nearly 25 years and even worse, it’s been 13 years since the last recorded word from God to him. It was if God had gone silent and forgotten his promise. Abraham is 99, ain’t no way it’s happening now!
Have you ever felt like God has gone silent on you? Like he used to be so near and so clear, but you somehow lost that connection. And with this disconnect, you are left wondering if his promises still stand for you and your future. That’s a real feeling – one I have felt before and I bet you have too. My sister, God can handle those feelings. You don’t have to hide them from him, you can be honest.
This is where God meets Abraham – in the long waiting and wondering after years of silence and messy self-created problems. This is where God reveals that he is El Shaddai. Here, where the promise still hadn’t happened, Abraham’s body was incapable and Sarah’s womb had cobwebs. God introduces himself right here at this point of impossibility. El Shaddai, Almighty and All-Sufficient. He is the God who can override natural limits without permission, understanding or explanation.
And notice this … God waited all this time to reveal himself as El Shaddai. He waited for 25 years AFTER he made an impossible promise to Abraham. He waited for 13 years after he had last spoken to him. He waited in the painful silence and the impossible growing even more impossible. He waited until Abraham had absolutely no ability left whatsoever, and he waited until there was no hope left in that promise at all. And this is where El Shaddai comes on the scene.
Why? Because only the Almighty, All-Sufficient one could do anything about this situation.
Here’s the truth, you don’t need El Shaddai when you can work things out on your own. You don’t need El Shaddai when you have other options. You don’t need El Shaddai when there’s still time. You need El Shaddai when it’s humanly OVER. When the doctor says it’s incurable. When the door is not only closed, but dead bolted shut. When it’s 25 years past the deadline. When it’s so far gone there’s nothing but a pitch black tunnel...
Duration:00:14:49
2102 Names of God – Elohim
4/22/2026
The third stop in our names of God study brings us to Elohim, and it’s actually where it all begins. Genesis 1:1, “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” The Hebrew word used here for God is “Elohim”.
This is how we meet God, and before he asks absolutely anything of us, he reveals who he is. Who is he? He is Elohim, meaning he is the Supreme One, the Mighty One, the Creator. The name Elohim tells us our God is all power and absolutely zero limitation. Nothing and no one is above him and everything begins with him. Nothing exists without the Creator.
To understand our Elohim, look at his creation. Look at the magnificent universe and its perfect balance to sustain life. Look at the intricate details of life. Nothing is by accident, everything is the intentional thought and spoken word of Elohim, the Creator.
But you know that, right? You know he created all of this and holds all of this, but do you realize, Elohim doesn’t stop there. A creator doesn’t create once and never create again. He continues to create. He continues to make things new … for you!
Not only for you, but IN YOU. 2 Corinthians 5:17, “Anyone who belongs to Christ has become a NEW person. The old life is gone; a NEW LIFE has begun!” This is the work of Elohim, the Creator who is still creating new things in you. As long as you’re alive, he’s still creating in you. New things are growing and developing because of his continued work of creation in you.
Question – Where do you need Elohim to create something new in you?
God is working in you, and he’s working all around you. Elohim can work in anything and everything because it was all his original work anyway. The one who created it can change it or redesign it in any way he wishes. He alone holds that power.
Maybe what you need doesn’t even exist right now. Do you honestly think that’s a problem for Elohim, the Supreme One, the Mighty One, the Creator? Girl, he can create the solution for your problem. He can design the pathway through your impossible. He can make a brand new, never been seen before creation to meet your need. He is not limited to what has been before. He is not limited to what makes sense. He’s not limited to what you know or what you understand. He can make a new cure. He can make a new way. He can make a new solution.
Our God is a CREATOR. He creates things that have never existed before. Did you know you can call on him to create for you now?
Think about this – when Moses and the Israelites stood before an impassable Red Sea with their enemies closing in from behind, there was no way. There were no solutions. This was hopeless. So Elohim, our God the Creator, created a new way that had never been seen or imagined before. He created a dry path through the Red Sea by splitting the waters and making them stand on their ends. And let me tell you something you need to know – If God can do that then for them, God can do something radically new for you now!
Call on your Elohim. God, create a way for me.
Maybe what you need is a new opportunity. You’re at a dead end with no viable options and you feel desperate. You’ve looked for a different opportunity and found absolutely none. Well – LOOK AGAIN, Sis. For real, God can create a new opportunity for you that simply wasn’t there before … but it can be now.
In my journey of faith I’ve found this simple truth – God loves to show up for the one who is looking for him. Jesus tells us in Matthew 7:7, “Seek and you will find.” I believe Jesus really meant that and I believe Elohim can really back it up. If you look for him, you will find him … and you’ll find him doing new things for you all the time! Creating ways where there were no ways before. Creating new opportunities where old opportunities spoiled. Creating new solutions to impossible problems and letting you stumble right into them as you seek his hand.
Question – Where do you need Elohim to create something new for you?
You can trust God’s unlimited hand over...
Duration:00:15:19
2101 Names of God – Adonai
4/21/2026
Yesterday we learned anytime LORD (all caps) appears in your bible, the original Hebrew text was referring to YHWH, the name God revealed of himself to Moses. The name that wasn’t spoken, but rather breathed. The breath sound of Yah (inhale), weh (exhale).
So, what about the times in scripture Lord is not in all caps? Was this a translation of something different? Yes. Let’s find out what it meant then and what it means to us today.
Remember, we are studying the names of God to better understand his character, his ways, his nature, and who he is for us personally so we can confidently stand on his promises for us. Psalm 9:10 says, “Those who know your name trust in you, for you, O LORD, do not abandon those who search for you.” This is simply a study in getting to know God’s names so we grow in trust of him as he has promised to never leave us.
Lord (when NOT in all caps), is the English translation of another name for God in Hebrew, Adonai. We first see the introduction of the name Adonai in Abraham’s conversation with God about the promise of countless future descendants. And Abraham replies to God in Genesis 15:2 by calling him , “Adonai YHWH”. The English translation is often LORD God. Here, Abraham is recognizing God as not only his source of life by breathing his holy name YHWY, but also recognizing God as his Master by calling him Adonai.
Moses refers to God in this same way in prayer. So does King David, Ezekiel and Daniel. Look for it in your Bible. LORD God means Adonai + YHWH. We know YHWH, so let’s get to know Adonai.
The Hebrew root word here is “Adan” which means lord and master. When referring to a human master, they were called “adoni” (Ah-doh-NEE – rhyming with knee). But when referring to God as the supreme Master, he is called “Adonai” (Ah-doh-NAI – rhyming with eye).
In Biblical times, it was common for a household leader to be master over their servants or for a king to be master over his subjects, even a teacher to be a master over his students. As the master, they were not only in charge, but they were to be the provider, the protector and the decision-maker. The complete care fell as the responsibility of the lord and master. Yes, the master has authority, but the master also assumes responsbility.
Now, consider this – Abraham is standing before God as a fatherless old man with a barren old wife, receiving a promise of descendants that number as many as the stars, and Abraham calls him Adonai, Master. God, you have all authority and you are fully responsible for me. I am in your hands. You are in charge here, you are my provider, you are my protector, and you are the ultimate decision maker. Adonai, my Lord, my Master.
Every time you see Lord (not in all caps) in your Bible, God is being referred to as Adonai, Lord and Master.
Can you call him Lord? Will you call him Master? Is he your Adonai? The world tries to lord over us to control us, so naturally we resist. But God, as Adonai, is our Lord and Master to lead us to good plans of eternal destiny.
When you understand God by the name Adonai, you understand a relationship of true belonging. Your life is connected to your master. Your purpose is to serve the purposes of your master. Adonai is your everything, your reason for living – literally. And to the master, you are loyal. You serve not because you have to, but because serving your master is your complete identity. He is the lord over you.
Adonai is not your equal. He is infinitely higher and greater than you. Adonai is not just your helper – He is your source of life, your divine designer, your destiny keeper. Adonai is not some angry, tempremental old fella sitting on some distant throne with a big stick, sometimes working for you and sometimes working against you – He is in complete control of his eternally good plans, and those plans include every day of your life before you ever took your first breath. When we call God Adonai, we are confessing, Lord, you are in charge – not me, and...
Duration:00:18:25
2100 Names of God – YHWH
4/19/2026
The names of God reveal his character, his ways and who he is for you personally. God has invited you into a relationship journey with him, and knowing all of his names mentioned in scripture will build your relationship with him. After all, he knows everything about you – don’t you think it’s important we learn all we can about him too?
Name are important in the bible. When a family named their child, it was with great thought and intention. That name would become their identity. God has an identity to share with us in his names. An identity that gives us promises.
Psalm 9:10, “Those who know your name trust in you, for you, O LORD, do not abandon those who search for you.” Now, let’s get to know his names so we can trust him even deeper.
First, the name God gives himself, YHWH.
The name YHWH appears over 6,000 times in Scripture, but in English we see it translated in a unique way – LORD (all caps). Every time you see LORD (all caps) in your bible, what you’re actually seeing is the ancient Hebrew, YHWH.
Look at Psalm 23:1, “The LORD is my Shepherd” it’s actually saying “YHWH is my Shepherd.”
Ancient Hebrew did not include vowels. It was hard to read and very few people knew how to read. So instead God’s word was heard and then memorized. While those original transcripts of Hebrew bible include the written name of God as YHWH, it wasn’t spoken and therefore lost.
Why wasn’t the name of God spoken? Jewish tradition was to never speak the name of God aloud out of reverence. (Exodus 20:7, “You must not misuse the name of the LORD your God. The LORD will not let you go unpunished if you misuse his name.”
What they wouldn’t even speak, we use so casually. Where is our awe? Where is our reverence?
Most scholars believe “Yahweh” is the closest reconstruction of how YHWH was originally pronounced,
This name, YHWH, the name of God ,sounds like breathing.
God gives himself a name we cannot speak, but instead we BREATHE. YHWH.
This name, YHWH, is made of breathy consonants with no vowels. It couldn’t be pronounced, but rather breathed in and breathed out.
Inhale YH
Exhale WH
In awe, in reverence. YHWH.
Later, we added vowels to make it a name we could pronounce, Yahweh, the name of our God.
This is a name introduced in Genesis 2 now appearing as LORD in all caps, but explained in Exodus 3: 15 when Moses asked God for his name and God answers with, “Yahweh, the God of your ancestors – the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.”
YHWH – Root word “to be” – the self-existing one, the ever-present one (the ONLY one who can say this)
Inhale YH
Exhale WH
The name of our God through breath.
Your breath is a God-given rhythm of dependence.
Genesis 2:7, “God breathed life into us.”
Without God, you don’t breathe. Without God, your lungs have no air. Without God, you simply do not exist. The moment he stops filling your lungs with his breath is the moment you no longer exist in this life. You are, and always have been, and always will be, completely dependent on God. It is the rhythm of your breath.
Inhale, God I need you. Exhale, thank you, I give it back to you. Now God I need you again, inhale.
Think of breathing like a game of catch. God throws you breathe, you receive it, then you give it back to him. And so the rhythm continues. Given and received, then given back, to receive again.
And this is NOT AN ACCIDENT. This is God-designed for his creation. A rhythm of dependence that speaks his holy name.
With your very first breath, you spoke the name of God. YHWH. –
Psalm 8:2 MSG, “Nursing infants gurgle choruses about you; toddlers shout the songs that drown out enemy talk and silence atheist babble.”
In every crisis that caused you to gasp for air, you spoke the name of God louder. YHWH.
With complete unawareness on an average of 20,000 times every day of your life, you’ve been speaking the name of God. YHWH.
And in your final breath, you will speak his name. YHWH.
All of creation is wired to...
Duration:00:18:26
2099 One Step At a Time
4/16/2026
God has a promise, and we possess the promise through HIS process
Exodus 23: 27-30
Exodus 23: 31-32
Ephesians 1:3
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Duration:00:19:00
2098 A Shortcut God
4/15/2026
Exodus 19: 4-8
Exodus 20: 1-5
Exodus 20: 22-23
Exodus 24: 3
Exodus 32: 1-8
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Duration:00:19:28
2097 Stand In the Gap
4/14/2026
Exodus 17: 8-16
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Duration:00:13:33
2096 No Matter What
4/13/2026
Exodus 17: 1-7
Psalm 95: 8-9
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Duration:00:16:39
2095 Made Right Again
4/10/2026
Luke 23:44
Luke 24:49
Acts 2
Exodus 33:3
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Duration:00:12:06
2094 Father, Forgive Them
4/8/2026
Luke 23:34, “Father, forgive them, for they don’t know what they are doing.”
Jesus didn’t wait for them to get it right – he loved them while they were getting it wrong. He shows supreme mercy. Forgiveness disarmed the enemy’s strategy.
Now, he asks us to do the same. Matthew 5:44, “Love your enemies! Pray for those who persecute you!” Disarm the enemy of his strategy against you with FORGIVENESS!
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Duration:00:16:36
2093 The In Between
4/8/2026
What actually happened between the cross on Friday and Jesus’ resurrection on Sunday?
1. Jesus’ body rested in the tomb
All four Gospels agree that Jesus was buried and remained in the tomb:
Matthew 27:59–60 – Jesus was taken down from the cross and his body was wrapped in linen and placed in a tomb. A great stone was set in front of the tomb, sealing Jesus’ body inside. Pilate assigned soldiers to guard the tomb to ensure Jesus’ body stayed inside. He was for sure dead and his body was for sure in the tomb.
This fulfills prophecy and shows that His death was real—not symbolic.
Jesus fully defeated death—from the inside. He didn’t avoid death—He entered it and overcame it. This means death is no longer the final authority.
No place is beyond Christ’s reach – no person is too far gone for Jesus. Even death, Jesus reaches beyond death.
Redemption reaches everywhere – No failure, darkness, or distance puts someone beyond redemption.
Here’s what else we know about these 3 days between crucifixion and resurrection:
2. His body was in the tomb, but His spirit was active. Jesus was actively proclaiming victory.
— “Christ suffered for our sins one for all time. He never sinned, but he died for sinners to bring you safely home to God. He suffered physical death, but he was raised to life in the Spirit. SO HE WENT AND PREACHED TO THE SPIRITS IN PRISON – those who disobeyed God long ago when God waited patiently while Noah was building his boat.”
Prison = Hades/Hell. Genesis tells us about a time when fallen angels (demons) mingled with humans bringing evil to the entire earth – that’s why God brought the flood to start over. Those demonic spirits are in the prison of Hell and Jesus went to preach to them – not to evangelize and bring them to salvation, but to proclaim victory over them. God won – they LOST! FOREVER!
This was a completion of Jesus’ triumph over evil. THAT’S WHAT JESUS WAS DOING – CONQUERING EVIL. DEFEATING SATAN AND HIS DEMONS. Christ is declaring victory over sin, death, and evil.
This allow us to live in victory today! Satan and his demons are defeated, and they know it! Jesus personally went to their Hell and proclaimed it!
This period represents a real, sacred pause. Between promise and fulfillment – Jesus had promised his followers that he would be die and be raised again in 3 days – but in between they waited and wondered. They had the promise but no fulfillment yet. Between suffering (cross) and victory (life).
These 3 days when we don’t see where Jesus is shows that God is still working—even when nothing seems to be happening.
His followers were in grief and confusion. The disciples were hiding and afraid. Hope seemed lost. Here we see this silence and uncertainty is part of the story.
What it means for us today: When life feels silent or uncertain – God feels absent – prayers seem unanswered – hope feels buried – GOD MAY BE DOING HIS DEEPES WORK IN THE SILENCE.
Jesus shows us that waiting is part of faith. The disciples had to live through a day where God’s promises seemed broken and nothing made sense. Yet resurrection was already underway.
Because of what Christ did in that time we know Death is not the end.
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Duration:00:17:25
2092 The Saved Mind
4/7/2026
There is a hill outside the city of Jerusalem called Golgotha or also called Calvary. Both words for this hill mean the same thing – “Place of the Skull”. This hill was given its name because of it s shape of a skull. Do you think that was an accident?
It was here on top of this skull shaped hill that Jesus was crucified on the cross. Have you ever thought about the meaning behind this? Why there? Nothing was by accident. God was in every detail as he sacrificed his one and only son so that whoever would believe in him would have eternal life. I believe this place was strategic.
The cross was on top of the skull because Jesus wants to give you victory over your mind!
Did you know it’s not only your soul that has been saved, but your MIND has been saved as well. The victory was won over your mind by Jesus on the skull! How absolutely strategic.
The evil one fights to take back what Jesus has claimed and most often what he gets is our mind. How successful has he been in your life lately? Have your thoughts been victorious or have they been fear filled, anxious, negative, defeated thoughts?
Jesus paid a high price for your victory, why would you ever allow the defeated one to defeat you in your head?
Your greatest asset is your mind. Your mind paints a vivid picture and your body responds with every emotion and energy to create the picture. Every choice you make, good or bad, was first a thought in your mind. So, of course your mind is under attack. A relentless, violent, brutal attack, and it’s happening every minute of the day.
Whatever gets your mind, gets you. Your thoughts are the guide, so the important question is, who is the author of your thoughts? Scripture warns us of strongholds on our mind.
2 Corinthians 10: 4-5, “We use God’s mighty weapons, not worldly weapons, to knock down the strongholds of human reasoning and to destroy false arguments. We take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.”
The word “stronghold” comes from the Greek word ochuroma. This is a Greek word used to describe a prison. The “strongholds” scripture refers to are lies that the devil has ingrained so deeply in your mind and in your belief system that they now hold power over certain areas of your life. These lies create a spiritual fortress of wrong thoughts which becomes your prison. As a prisoner to these thoughts, you begin to view life through the illusion of bondage Satan has put on your mind. Thoughts of worry. Thoughts of fear. Thoughts of anxiety. Thoughts of lack. And eventually, these tangled and twisted thoughts begin to take control of your life.
Now, you can’t seem to dismiss those thoughts. You can’t just shake it off. This stronghold on your mind has overwhelmed you. And if we allow this stronghold to continue, dismissing it as who we are and what we naturally struggle with, it becomes a trap where Satan mentally seduces you and imprisons you with your own thinking.
My sister, does this sound familiar? Have your thoughts become twisted and knotted with worry, fear, anxiety, or negativity? This is a strong hold and it is holding you back.
Holding you back, you say … from what? Holding you back from the freedom of being who you were created to be and living the life God created you to live. Holding you back from the joy of the Lord. Holding you back from your purpose and your destiny.
But remember, your mind is saved! Just like your soul has been redeemed, so has your mind. You are no longer a captive here. Any strongholds the enemy has established in your mind can and must be destroyed.
You have been equipped for this battle!
The weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh but have divine power to destroy strongholds.”
Ephesians 6:17 gives us a list of battle gear, and the first is the helmet of salvation.
Now how totally ironic is that … where was your salvation bought and secured? On a hill called Golgotha which means “skull”. And it is the helmet of salvation that protects your mind, your greatest...
Duration:00:17:31
2091 Full Access Granted
4/6/2026
Have you been hurt by Church? Me too. Is it a reason to pull away from God? It could be, but it shouldn’t be.
You know what Church is? Church is a gathering of totally imperfect people who claim to know they need Jesus. They’re not always going to get it right. They’re not always going to teach it right. And maybe they didn’t treat you right.
I grew up not knowing Jesus because as a little girl, the country church where my family went didn’t quite do things right. My parents were hurt, so they stopped going. When they stopped going, my access to the Bible was cut off. From the time I was 5 to the time I was 15, I heard nothing of God.
Church isn’t always going to be right. One denomination says it has to be this way, while another denomination says it has to be their way. We create division and differences and make our own rules on the path to Jesus. People are hurt in the process. Families walk away. Little girls grow up not knowing about God.
So, what if instead of getting our doctrine from a gathering of imperfect people who need Jesus, or a person who has been hurt by people who need Jesus, or the Google or ChatGPT, or any other source of any kind … what if instead we look directly at God’s word for truth today.
What does it take to be saved? What is required to gain salvation? What can we do to gain access to eternity in Heaven with God? What are the steps? What is the right way? How can we be sure? And have you screwed up so much for so long, you’re now out?
We find our answer at the cross. Yes, the cross we just remembered on Easter. And it’s so simple, so pure, so powerful. For some reason, we’ve spent lifetimes twisting and contorting simple truths into rituals, rules and guidelines which Jesus came to fulfill and lift from us.
Before Jesus, the way to God was complicated. There were rituals. There were rules. There were people who could talk to God and people who could not. There were certain clothes that had to be worn, sacrifices that had to be made, words that had to be spoken. A temple was built to house the Spirit of God. Within the temple, there was thick curtain that kept ordinary people out of the holy space where God’s Spirit dwelt. Only the high priest could access this space of God’s spirit, and only once per year. A blood sacrifice was required for that yearly entry. So many ceremonial rules and regulations.
Back then, following God was scary. If you did it wrong, you would be struck dead.
So of course we’re confused on how we could ever be made worthy of access to God. Of course we’re uncertain of our right to approach God with our brokenness. Of course we question if we could ever be good enough to be guaranteed God’s spirit to guide us and God’s forgiveness to cover us for eternity.
But Jesus made everything so simple. We don’t have to complicate this.
When Jesus was hanging on the cross, in his final breath, something happened. We often read the story and miss the life altering change that happened in that moment. But today, we’re not going to miss it. We’re going to see it. We’re going to understand it. And we’re going to receive it.
Luke 23, Jesus is hanging on the cross between two criminals. Verses 44-46, “By this time it was about noon, and darkness fell across the whole land until three o’clock. The light from the sun was gone. And suddenly, the curtain in the sanctuary of the Temple was torn down the middle. Then Jesus shouted, “Father, I entrust my spirit into your hands!” And with those words he breathed his last.”
Tucked in between the miracle of the sky going completely dark from noon to 3, and Jesus breathing his last breath, is the sentence that changes everything. “Suddenly, the curtain in the sanctuary of the Temple was torn down the middle.”
This was the curtain that separated us from God. The curtain that only the high priest was allowed to go behind once a year to gain access to God. This curtain is what kept us out. The curtain was laws, rules and rituals. The curtain...
Duration:00:19:06
2090 So Much More
4/3/2026
We know on this day that Jesus died for us – but it was so much more than that.
He was beaten. He was whipped. He had a crown of thorns forced into his head. He had nails hammered through his hands. And he hung there on the cross until his final breath. But it was so much more than just that.
I think that’s what I’ve missed for all these years – the depth of what Jesus REALLY did for me. It was more than the cross. 35 years ago on Easter Sunday, I knelt at an alter in a little country church in Ava, Missouri and I accepted what Jesus did for me on the cross. But now, 35 years later leading up to this Easter Sunday, I believe I’m truly beginning to understand and receive ALL that Jesus did for me beyond just the cross. There’s just so much more!
Countless others in these days died on crosses as capital punishment. It wasn’t death on a cross that changed the world. In fact, on this very day, criminals hung on their own crosses on each side of Jesus. They died that day just like Jesus. It was more than the cross, more than the nails, more than the crown – so much more.
Before the cross was the garden. The garden where Jesus made his decision to be our substitute. This is where the battle took place and where Jesus surrendered to his unimaginable punishment for his perfect life. On the final night of Jesus’ life, he took his friends to a garden with him. He said, “My soul is crushed with grief to the point of death.” They’re in a garden, surrounded by beauty, all alone, and yet Jesus is saying his soul is crushed with grief. Why? Because he knew what was coming next.
While his friends continually fell asleep on him, he prayed in that garden and he said, “My Father! If it is possible, let this cup of suffering be taken away from me. Yet I want your will to be done, not mine.” The cup of suffering was so much more than death on a cross – it was the absolute weight of every sin in the world. This was what was being put on Jesus, crushing him with grief in the garden. Isaiah 53:6, “The Lord laid on him the sins of us all.”
The spiritual weight of every sin, every shame, every rebellion of humanity, placed on Jesus, crushing his soul. This is where the real battle was happening – before the cross, it was the garden.
Remember the garden is where humanity failed, where Adam and Eve were deceived by Satan and sin entered the world. Now, in this garden, full circle, Jesus was willing to make it right again. But not just Adam and Eve’s sin, mine and yours too.
Every lie I’ve ever told, every secret shame I’ve carried, every rebellious act, every hurtful thing I’ve said, every hateful, corrupted, twisted, wrong thing I’ve ever done – that was laid on Jesus in the garden on that final night. My cup of deserved punishment was taken for me.
With sin comes guilt and shame. Have you ever been weighed down by guilt? Knowing you were wrong is heavy. Shame can create an unbearable darkness. Imagine for a moment the secretly kept worst thing you’ve ever done being revealed publicly – how would that make you feel? Well, that’s what was piled on Jesus. Your guilt. Your shame. And mine. The perfect Jesus was crushed by the weight of these burdens.
And there in the garden as he prayed, willing to accept every once of sin upon himself, Luke 22:44 says, “He was in such agony of spirit that his sweat fell to the ground like great drops of blood.” Jesus sweat blood. This is a medical condition caused under extreme mental anguish. When a person is under such extreme pressure, extreme agony, extreme stress, extreme crushing, the blood vessels around the sweat glands can constrict to the point of rupture, and blood comes out of the skin through the sweat glands. This is what Jesus was enduring in the garden.
In a garden of olive trees where his friends were sleeping, Jesus was in absolute agony. Before the cross, there was a choice. Jesus was making the choice here – Not what he wanted, but what God wanted. Jesus surrendered there to the crushing...
Duration:00:22:44