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April 22: 2 Corinthians 3:18 — Look To Him (Today's Reading: My Utmost for His Highest)

  2 Corinthians 3:18 “We all, with unveiled face, beholding…the glory of the Lord…” There are seasons when the Lord allows the lights around us to fade. People who once encouraged us grow quiet. Those who once stood beside us drift away. It feels like loss, but it is actually God’s mercy. He is teaching us to build our faith on the One who never leaves, never dims, and never fails. When the familiar lights go out, we learn to look directly to Him. Not to people. Not to support systems. Not to the voices we once leaned on. We learn to look into the face of God for ourselves — for truth, for direction, for strength, and for the steadying of our inner life. This is where real growth happens. This is where faith becomes personal. This is where the servant’s life is formed. A Christian does not live by borrowed light. We live by beholding Him. And when we look to Him first — before speaking, before responding, before teaching, before deciding — something quiet and real begins to...

Present (John 14:9)

Today's Reading: My Utmost for His Highest Devotional of the Day — Home Page John 14:9 "Have I been with you so long, and yet you have not known Me, Philip?" ...He that hath seen me hath seen the Father; and how sayest thou then, Shew us the Father? Philip stood in front of Jesus and still asked to see the Father. Jesus told him that seeing Him was seeing the Father. God was right there, and Philip didn’t recognize Him. We are the same way. God is with us, guiding us, steadying us, revealing Himself in quiet ways — yet we often look for something dramatic. Faith is trusting the God we cannot see, the God who is already here.   Philip wasn't asking out of rebellion.  Philip was asking out of longing — the same longing we feel. But Jesus’ response reveals something deeper:  “Have I been with you so long, and you still don’t know Me?” We want to see God with our eyes, hear Him with our ears, and sense His nearness the way we sense another person in the room. That is hum...

April 20: 2 Corinthians 1:20 — Measured by His Promises (Today's Reading: My Utmost for His Highest)

2 Corinthians 1:20 "All the promises of God in Him are Yes, and in Him Amen ..." We misjudge ourselves most when we measure our spiritual capacity by anything other than God’s promises. Jesus’ parable of the talents wasn’t about natural ability or personality; it was a warning about how easily we shrink back when we forget the power of the Holy Spirit given to us. When we look at our limitations, our education, or our intellect, we will always conclude, “I can’t.” But when God gives His Spirit, He expects the work of His Spirit to be seen in us. The servant in the parable excused himself by accusing his master: “You expect more of me than You gave me the power to do.” We do the same when we worry, hesitate, or assume God has placed us somewhere without help. Worry is not harmless; it quietly implies that God has left us unprotected, that His promises are unreliable, that His expectations exceed His provision. But our capacity is not measured by what we bring. It is measu...

April 19: 1 Kings 2:28 — When Strength Becomes A Snare (Today's Reading: My Utmost for His Highest)

  1 Kings 2:28 "Joab had defected to Adonijah, though he had not defected to Absalom" The danger is rarely where we expect it. Joab stayed loyal through the greatest test of his life, yet stumbled in the place he thought was safe. The same pattern can touch any of us. After a breakthrough, after a crisis, after a season of obedience, the least likely temptation can slip in quietly. It doesn’t come with force; it comes with familiarity. The areas where we feel strongest can become the very places we stop paying attention. The only safety is staying alert before God — not fearful, not self‑examining in dread, but steady, watchful, and kept by His power. "...kept by the power of God ..."—that is the only safety.   (1 Peter 1:5). Prayer  Lord, keep me vigilant and yielded before you;  keep my feet steady. In Jesus name, Amen. ~ Quil Share God with someone today: The Quill and Me—A Devotional Blog... Visit the Free PDF Resource Library on this blog. Enjoy  ~ Quil ...

April 18: Exodus 3:4 — Ready? (Today's Reading: My Utmost for His Highest)

  Exodus 3:4 "God called to him ....And he said, 'Here I am' " God called, and Moses was ready — He answered immediately.  Readiness means living in a right relationship with God so that when He speaks, you are already present, already available, already yielded. It isn’t about waiting for a dramatic assignment or a meaningful moment; it is the steady posture of a surrendered will that makes no distinction between the small and the large, the obscure and the visible. When the heart is yielded, there is no scrambling to prepare, no hesitation, no negotiation — only the quiet, immediate response that says, “Here I am,” because the will is already His. Prayer Lord, keep my heart yielded and ready for whatever You ask today.  Here I am. In Jesus name, Amen Be ready ~ Quil Share God with someone today: The Quill and Me—A Devotional Blog... Visit the Free PDF Resource Library on this blog. Enjoy  ~ Quil Scripture References: “God called, and Moses was ready — he answe...

April 17: John 21:7 — The Will (Today's Reading: My Utmost for His Highest)

  "When Simon Peter heard that it was the Lord, he put on his outer garment ... and plunged into the sea"  John 21:7 Peter didn’t hesitate. The moment he recognized Jesus, he moved. Chambers uses that moment to expose something deeper in us: the crisis of the will — the internal point where surrender is chosen from within, independent of emotion or circumstances. Peter didn't think about it — he acted. He chose. He moved. He committed his will in one direction. That is the crisis of the will: a decisive moment where you yield yourself fully, without hesitation. His action wasn't emotional, it was decisive. Chambers is pointing to Peter's immediate surrender of self-preservation. The crisis of the will is internal, not external. True surrender happens inside, long before any outward action. But when the will is truly yielded, outward action follows naturally. Peter's leap into the sea is a living example of what Chambers calls the crisis of abandonment — a mom...

If You Will Come — Inspired by Oswald Chambers

  John 7:37 “If anyone thirsts, let him come to Me and drink.” There is a gentleness in Jesus that many people never see. He never forces Himself into a life. He never pushes His way into the will. He never demands obedience or control. He simply speaks truth — and His words often begin with one small condition: if . “If anyone would come after Me…” “If you love Me…” “If you abide in Me…” “If anyone hears My voice…” The “if” matters. It protects the truth about who He is. It shows us that the Spirit does not overtake or dictate. He does not overwhelm, or control. He never forces Himself forward. He works quietly, and when the heart turns toward Him, He steps in and leads. Some people imagine the Spirit as a force that overrides the person. But Jesus never works that way. He honors the will He created. He calls, but He does not coerce. He knocks, but He does not enter uninvited. He leads, but He never forces the way forward. The “if” is the doorway into discipleship. ...

April 16: John 12:36 — The Mountain (Today's Reading: My Utmost for His Highest)

  John 12:36 "While you have the light, believe in the light ..." There are moments when God gives us an unusual insight — a mountaintop moment when everything feels bright, strong, and simple. We often wish we could stay there, but those moments were never meant to be permanent. They are glimpses of truth we are called to carry back into ordinary days. The real test is not how we feel on the mountain. The test is whether we will live by what God showed us once the feeling fades. Many believers struggle here. We wait for another emotional high, another surge of motivation, another “special moment,” instead of acting on what we already know. Chambers warns us not to let those insights evaporate. When God shows you something, respond. Don’t put it on a shelf. Don’t wait for a better mood. Don’t talk about what you plan to do — do it. Much of our spiritual laziness hides behind our desire for another mountaintop experience. We crave the feeling instead of the obedience. God ...

April 15: 2 Chronicles 15:17 — High Places (Today's Reading: My Utmost for His Highest)

  2 Chronicles 15:17 "The high places were not removed from Israel. Nevertheless the heart of Asa was loyal all his days" Israel’s “high places” were altars built on hills where people worshiped anything and everything except the Lord. God had told His people to remove them, yet many remained standing. They were visible reminders of divided loyalty — places where obedience stopped short. Asa loved God. Scripture says his heart was loyal. But even with a loyal heart, he left certain things untouched. That gap is what this passage exposes. It is possible to be sincere and still hold on to areas we quietly excuse. A “high place” today isn’t a stone altar. It’s any part of life we protect even though God has already spoken to us about it. It may be something outward and obvious, or something inward and hidden. It may sit on a shelf, in a drawer, in a habit, or in an attitude. The issue is not the object itself — the issue is the obedience we withhold. God is patient. He keeps...

April 14: Matthew 11:29 — Learning His Strength (Today's Reading: My Utmost for His Highest)

  Matthew 11:29 "Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me ..." The Yoke When Jesus speaks of a yoke, He is using an object that once meant strain, pressure, and forced labor. The physical yoke was heavy and rigid, pressing on the necks of animals who had no choice in the matter. That image stirs compassion in me, because it reminds me how harsh the world can be and how heavy life can feel when we carry everything alone. But Jesus takes that old meaning and turns it into something entirely different. When He says, “Take My yoke upon you,” He is inviting us into partnership, shared strength, guidance, rest, learning, and gentleness. He is offering a joining — His life beside ours, His strength supporting ours, His steps steadying ours. The spiritual yoke He offers brings a different kind of weight: a shared burden, a steadying presence, a clear direction, a companionship that holds, a rest that settles the heart, and a peace that fills the inner life. This yoke is union — your l...