
Hosted by Gwinnett Church · EN

Many Christians spend their lives measuring themselves by whether or not they are obeying all the rules. That’s not what Jesus intended.

Somewhere along the way, many of us began treating God's love and approval as something to earn. That assumption quietly shapes our relationship with God more than we realize.

We often think freedom comes from having fewer obligations, but some of the most meaningful moments in life begin when we embrace a weight we never asked to carry.

Long before the storm arrived, Noah made a decision about whose wisdom he would trust.

Chaos rarely arrives all at once. It often begins with ordinary choices that seem reasonable until the consequences finally surface.

Chaos rarely arrives all at once. It often begins with ordinary choices that seem reasonable until the consequences finally surface.

Life can get confusing quickly. Between pressure, fear, relationships, and big decisions, it’s easy to feel lost or unsure of where to turn. In John 10, Jesus calls himself the Good Shepherd, reminding us that he is our guide and protector, and he wants to lead us into the life he created us for. This devotional explores how Jesus still speaks through Scripture, his Spirit, and the people he places around us—and why we can trust him even when life gets hard.

In Part 3 of Sit, Walk, Stand: A Study in Ephesians, Reed closes out by asking: “What does it look like to stand firm when life pushes back?” In Ephesians 6, Paul reminds us that the Christian life is not only about knowing who we are in Christ and learning how to live it out—it’s also a fight to stand firm in it. Through the armor of God, Paul shows us that we don’t stand in our own strength but in what Christ has already done for us. As fear, temptation, accusation, and lies push against our identity, we’re invited to stand firm in who God says we are.

In Part 2 of Sit, Walk, Stand: A Study in Ephesians, Reed challenges us to ask: “What does it actually look like to walk like Jesus?” In Ephesians 5, Paul reminds us that following Jesus is not about earning God’s love, but living from it. As dearly loved children of God, we are called to imitate Jesus by walking in love, living in the light, and choosing wisdom in our everyday lives. Over time, the closer we walk with Jesus, the more our lives begin to reflect him—not through perfection or performance, but through transformation.

In Part 1 of Sit, Walk, Stand: A Study in Ephesians, Reed Moore encourages us to ask ourselves this question: “Who do you think you are?” It’s a question that goes deeper than labels, roles, or achievements. Many of us might answer it with what we do, what we have, or what others say about us—but Jesus invites us to something more secure. Because what we believe, shapes everything. In Ephesians, Paul reminds us that before we do anything for God, we must first “sit” in who God says we are: chosen, adopted, forgiven, redeemed, and called his masterpiece. We don’t earn this identity—we receive it.