How To Discern God’s Best for You

How To Discern God’s Best for You

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Discerning God’s Best for You

How do you know who is truly right for you? With so many voices from family, friends, culture, and even your own emotions, it can be hard to tell the difference between a good option and God’s best. The truth is, not every good person is God’s person for you.

Someone can check all the boxes on paper, but they still may not be the right fit for your purpose. That’s why discernment is so important. It’s not just about what you want, it’s about seeking God’s wisdom and letting Him guide your heart.

What a Relationship from God looks like:

1. It Aligns with God’s Word

God will never bring someone into your life who pulls you away from Him. If a relationship is leading you to compromise your faith, walk in disobedience, or put someone else before God, then it’s not His best. A godly relationship should strengthen your faith, not weaken it.

“Do not be unequally yoked with unbelievers.” (2 Corinthians 6:14)

2. It Brings Peace, Not Confusion

You may not have all the answers when something is from God, but you will have peace. This doesn’t mean the relationship will be perfect, but it won’t leave you in constant anxiety or emotional chaos.

“For God is not a God of confusion but of peace.” (1 Corinthians 14:33)

3. It’s Rooted in Purpose, Not Just Feelings

Being attracted to your partner is great, but that isn’t enough to sustain a godly relationship. God’s best for you is someone who aligns with your purpose and encourages your growth. A person can be kind, loving, and even a Christian, but if they don’t align with what God has called you to do, they may not be the one.

“Can two walk together, unless they are agreed?” (Amos 3:3)

May God grant us more understanding!

What to do During Your Waiting Season

What to do During Your Waiting Season

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What to do During Your Waiting Season

There are different stages of life that man may experience a wait. This wait could be for a job, a spouse, the fruit of the womb, a breakthrough, relocation, or an answered prayer.

The in-between season is never easy, it can be frustrating and uncertain. But in God’s kingdom, waiting is never wasted.

One thing you have to understand first is that your journey is different. Do not let comparisons or complaints enter your conversation with God or man.

The likes of Abraham, Joseph, Hannah, Moses, David, etc… experienced waiting seasons, so yours isn’t the first.

Meanwhile, the waiting season is not just about patience, it’s about preparation, transformation, and deep trust in God.  

Below are four ways to maximize your waiting season:

1. Seek God Intentionally  

The waiting season is the perfect time to draw closer to God. This season is to deepen your prayer life and meditate on His Word. The Bible says in Lamentations 3:25, The Lord is good to those who wait for Him, to the soul who seeks Him.” Instead of complaining, cultivate a heart that seeks God daily.  

2. Develop Yourself  

While you wait, invest in personal growth. Learn new skills, read, and become the best version of yourself. Isaiah 40:31a says “But they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength…” This means waiting is not passive. It’s a time of renewal and preparation.  

3. Serve Faithfully  

Your waiting season can be a time of impact and blessing. So, engage in service to God and others. When Joseph was in prison, he didn’t waste his time, he served and interpreted dreams. This ultimately led to his elevation in Genesis 41:14.  

4. Hold onto Faith  

Waiting often comes with doubts, but remind yourself that God’s timing is perfect. Habakkuk 2:3 says, “Though it tarries, wait for it; because it will surely come.” Have a strong belief that God is aligning things in His divine way.  

Waiting season isn’t punishment, it’s preparation. So, embrace the process, trust God’s timing, and use this season wisely.

Affirm with me: Every waiting is working for my good! (Romans 8:28).

Shalom.

What God Wants Versus What You Want

What God Wants Versus What You Want

Reading Time: 2 minutes

What God Wants Versus What You Want

In the journey of life, whether you’re single or in a relationship, it’s easy to get caught up in our own desires and expectations.

We often find ourselves asking, “What do I want?” But as followers of Christ, we must also ask, “What does God want for me?”

The difference between these two perspectives can shape the direction of our lives, relationships, and spiritual growth.

For singles, there may be moments when loneliness feels overwhelming, leading to impatience or even compromise. You might think, if only I had someone now, or why isn’t God moving faster? Yet, God’s timing is perfect, even if it doesn’t align with ours.

Proverbs 3:5-6 “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight.”

When we surrender our plans to Him, He uses those seasons of waiting to refine us, deepen our faith, and prepare us for His best.

Couples, too, face challenges where personal desires conflict with divine will. Perhaps one spouse prioritizes career over family time, or both partners struggle to agree on major decisions like finances or children. In such cases, seeking God’s guidance becomes essential.

Ephesians 5:21 encourages mutual submission out of reverence for Christ. This means putting aside selfish ambitions and choosing instead to honor God through love and selflessness in marriage.

Ultimately, what God wants transcends fleeting pleasures or temporary satisfaction. He desires intimacy—both with Him and within our relationships.

For singles, this means cultivating a deeper walk with Christ during times of solitude.

For couples, it involves nurturing unity rooted in a shared devotion to God. By aligning our hearts with His purpose, we experience lasting joy and fulfillment that worldly pursuits can not provide.

So today, take a moment to reflect: Are my choices reflecting what I want or what God wants?

Let us pray for discernment, patience, and trust in His sovereign plan. As we yield our wills to Him, He promises blessings far greater than anything we could dream for ourselves.

Should I Marry for Love or Purpose?

Should I Marry for Love or Purpose?

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Marriage is an institution created by God for a purpose. It’s one of the most significant decisions you will ever make. This is a world where emotions run high and destiny calls, but many singles still find themselves asking if they should marry for love or purpose.

Genesis 2:18 (NIV) The Lord God said, “It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable for him.”

The scripture gave us a reason why it is not good for a man to be alone which is why it said He will make him a helper suitable for him. The gospel truth is that love and purpose work together and every destiny decision must have a strong WHY.

The first thing Adam saw in Eve was her beauty. He was blown away and immediately gave her the name WOMAN. When he was to name the animals that God created, God had to give the instructions, but when he saw his wife, his purpose to oversee, to be fruitful and to multiply began to flow effortlessly, which made him name Eve immediately. Even though he was asleep when she was created out of his ribs, he got her name at first sight and followed through with sweet lines.

Genesis 2:23 (NIV)The man said, This is now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh, she shall be called ‘woman,’ for she was taken out of man.”

There has to be a complementation between you and your spouse that allows you to flow naturally in the fulfillment of your purpose with deep love.

So, leaving purpose out for love does not balance with the equation of God.

Here are reasons you should marry for love and purpose.

1. Love without purpose is risky

Love is a powerful force. It makes your heart race, gives you butterflies, and makes you believe in forever. But love alone is not enough to sustain a marriage. Feelings can be fleeting, and what happens when life gets hard? You will no longer feel the excitement you once had. When you make love a choice, your WHYs will reflect and you will be able to sustain better than relying on the feelings of love alone.

Proverbs 19:21 (NIV) “Many are the plans in a person’s heart, but it is the Lord’s purpose that prevails.”

Marriage without purpose is like a car without fuel. It may look good on the outside, but it won’t go far.  

2. Purpose without love is a struggle

On the other hand, marrying only for purpose, whether it’s for ministry, business, or societal expectations without genuine love can feel like a job instead of a joyful union. If you choose a partner just because they align with your calling but lack deep affection, your marriage may feel forced and duty-bound rather than fulfilling.  

Ecclesiastes 4:9-10 (NIV) “Two are better than one because they have a good return for their labor: If either of them falls down, one can help the other up.”

Purpose alone won’t carry you through the days when you need warmth, affection, and deep emotional connection.  

3. Balance love with purpose

The best marriages are those where love and purpose align. Love brings joy, intimacy, and companionship, while purpose gives direction, meaning, and a shared vision. God’s design for marriage is not just about romance or function, it’s about a divine partnership that glorifies Him.  

Before saying “I do,” ask yourself:  

● Does this person truly love me, not just in words but in action?  

● Do we share the same spiritual and life purpose?  

● Will our marriage honor God and advance His kingdom?  

God’s plan for marriage includes love, partnership, and purpose to work together. If you marry only for love, you may wake up one day wondering why you’re together. If you marry only for purpose, you might feel emotionally disconnected and unfulfilled.

It’s only when love and purpose meet that you experience a marriage that is not only joyful but also God-ordained. So, love and the tendency of your purpose fulfillment have to be found in the person you’re choosing for marriage.

Shalom.

Misconceptions About Relationships

Misconceptions About Relationships

Reading Time: 3 minutes

SINGLES- Misconceptions About Relationships

Sandy has been frustrated over and over again. She has been involved in several relationships that kept breaking and she is beginning to think she is cursed. All her friends are married and she seemed to be the only one left. The more desperate she became, the more relationships and marriage were evading her. She has prayed, fasted, and cried, and she doesn’t know what to do again.

On the other hand, Ade had so many girls he sleeps with regularly, and he feels that is being a man. Sadly he is misinformed and confused. He fails to realize that he has been sucked into a cycle of sexual perversion with damning consequences and only God can save him if he is genuinely repentant. The more he did that, the more he frustrates and truncates the plan of God for him in this area.

Buddy and Angie are married but are not enjoying their marriage one bit. They got married without knowing the purpose of marriage, hence abuse set it. They are both well-read and educated, but unfortunately, you are not taught how to run a marriage in school. You are left with deliberate tutoring through self-development or through mentors.

So now, the question is “how do you know the purpose of a relationship/marriage is being abused?

1. Experimenting is not the Purpose of a Relationship.

You see, a relationship is not supposed to be an experiment. It is something you initiate deliberately and purposefully. It is an institution created by God, and as such, it should be held as sacred. When God began the marriage institution, he had something in mind. He was not performing an experiment, he was deliberately packaging a purposeful institution. So, the moment you do anything experimentally, you have moved away from the original intention, hence the consequences.

2. Pre-marital sex is not the Purpose of a Relationship

During friendship or courtship, it is the mind that should be aligned, not the body. When the body comes together in a sexual relationship before marriage, the light of God’s word is tampered with because of violation and confusion enters the soul!

One common statement you will hear from people who are compromising is “I am confused!” They know it is wrong, and yet they are held in the embrace of sin because an illegal bonding has been formed. It takes God and guts to break such.

3. Initiating a relationship while still hurting or bitter.

I have said it over and over again, you don’t begin a relationship immediately after getting off one because you want to prove a point or you want to get back at your ex. At that point, your reasoning is impaired and your definition of love has been warped by the recent experience. It is always good to take a break for about six months and allow yourself to heal. Wisdom says you should find out what went wrong with the first one before you dabble into another.

If you have had several relationships broken over and over again, it is not about a curse anywhere, it is just that you lack wisdom and you are abusing the purpose of a relationship. You don’t enter a relationship because you want the person to fill some emptiness in your soul. That is only what Jesus Christ can do by His Spirit! If you haul a job meant for God on a guy or a lady, you will end up frustrating that person!

After a broken relationship, take your time. Ask questions. Why did it go wrong? Don’t jump into the next available arms just to deal with hurts and wounds. When you do that, you will get hurt the more, because you have not followed the right process. Never ever try to give sex in order to get attention or love. It will never work that way. Young ladies, drum that into your head and carry yourselves with some dignity!

CONFESSION FOR THE DAY
I receive the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the discovery of my purpose, my role, and the purpose of marriage.

PRAYER FOR THE DAY
Father, Lord help me to function with grace in the area of my calling. Anoint me for my calling as a husband/ wife in my marriage

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY
We look at this Son and see the God who cannot be seen. We look at this Son and see God’s original purpose in everything created. –Colossians 1:15 (MSG)

ACTION PLAN FOR THE DAY 
Search every scripture on marriage in the bible to discover God’s mind and purpose for marriage.

BIBLE READING FOR THE DAY
Job 14-17



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