2025-07-04

Behold and Become - Freed by the Spirit to Reflect Christ - 2 Cor 3:16-18

 Title: Behold and Become - Freed by the Spirit to Reflect Christ

Scripture: 2 Corinthians 3:16-18 (NLT)
"But whenever someone turns to the Lord, the veil is taken away. For the Lord is the Spirit, and wherever the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. And all of us... can see and reflect the glory of the Lord. And the Lord—who is the Spirit—makes us more and more like him as we are transformed into his glorious image."

1. Freedom from Deception: The Spirit Enlightens Us

When we turn to Christ, the Spirit shatters the veil of lies blinding us – lies about God’s character, our identity, or sin’s bondage (John 8:32). True freedom begins here: not self-reliance, but liberation to see Truth Himself. We exchange darkness for light, bondage for surrender.

2. Freedom to Behold: Our Sacred Responsibility

With unveiled hearts, we are freed for one task: to fix our eyes on Christ’s glory (Hebrews 12:2). This is active, worshipful attention – gazing at Him in Scripture, prayer, creation, and His Church. Like Moses on Sinai (Exodus 34:29-35), we position ourselves in His presence. Our work isn’t self-transformation, but steadfast beholding.

3. Freedom to Reflect: The Spirit Transforms Us

As we behold Christ, the Spirit does what we cannot: He transforms us "from glory to glory" into Christ’s likeness. This is supernatural growth – the Spirit reshaping our desires, thoughts, and actions (Galatians 5:22-23). We don’t achieve Christlikeness; we receive it as we abide in Him through:

  • The Word (seeing Christ in Scripture, John 5:39)
  • Prayer (communing with His presence)
  • Community (reflecting Him together, Ephesians 4:15-16)
  • Obedience (yielding to His work in trials, Romans 8:28-29)

"We are mirrors that brightly reflect the glory of the Lord. And as the Spirit of the Lord works within us, we become more and more like him." (2 Cor 3:18 TLB)

The Spirit’s Process:
Veil Removed (Freedom) → Beholding Christ (Faith) → Transformed by the Spirit (Glory)


Application Questions

  1. Veil Check: What lie (about God, yourself, or sin) is the Spirit exposing? How does truth bring freedom?
  2. Beholding Practice: How will you intentionally fix your eyes on Christ today? (e.g., meditating on a Scripture about His character)
  3. Means of Grace: Which "channel" for beholding (Word/prayer/community) needs renewal? How can you engage it to encounter Christ, not check a box?
  4. Trusting Growth: Where are you striving to change yourself? How can you surrender that to the Spirit today?

A Prayer

Holy Spirit, tear away every veil of deception.
Fix my eyes on Jesus –
show me His glory in Scripture, prayer, and His people.
I surrender my self-reliance.
Transform me as I behold Him:
Renew my mind, soften my heart,
and make me a radiant reflection of Christ.
Do in me what only You can do.
To the glory of the Father, Amen.


Key Themes Unified

Your Core Insight

Integrated Truth

"Our job is to see the Lord"

Active beholding is our responsibility – fighting distraction to gaze on Christ.

"Spirit gives us growth"

Transformation is the Spirit’s work – we yield, He renews.

"Not by our own strength"

Grace-driven means (Word/prayer) position us to receive growth, not achieve it.

Freedom from deception

Lies bind; Truth liberates us to see & surrender.

This version preserves your emphasis on seeing Christ as our work and Spirit-led growth as God’s work, while weaving in the original themes of freedom, glory, and practical grace. The structure moves from freedom from (deception) → freedom for (beholding) → freedom to become (transformation).

 

p.s. This post is from DeepSeek responding to the following prompts:

Improve and complete the following devotion:

 

Freed to be Like Him by the Spirit

 

2 Cor 3:16 But whenever someone turns to the Lord, the veil is taken away.

17 For the Lord is the Spirit, and wherever the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom.

18 So all of us who have had that veil removed can see and reflect the glory of the Lord.

And the Lord—who is the Spirit—makes us more and more like him as we are changed into his glorious image.

 

#1 The Spirit enlightens us. He takes away the lies that bind us so that we can see the truth clearly, giving us freedom.

Freedom is about not being deceived and seeing the truth. John 8:32: "Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free."

#2 Freed by the Spirit, we can see first the glory of the Lord and then reflect His glory.

#3 This reflection is due to us growing more and more like Him. The steps are:

  removal of deception -> seeing the Him -> becoming like Him

 

Application Questions

 

A Short prayer

 

AND

Our job is to see the Lord, and the Spirit gives us the growth. We don't grow by our own strength but by applying the right method.

 

 

2025-07-03

How to See and Believe the Truth - John 20:29

How to See and Believe the Truth

Based on John 20:29 (NLT)

Then Jesus told him, “You believe because you have seen me. Blessed are those who believe without seeing me.”

1. Seeing Isn’t Always Believing

We often say "seeing is believing," but our senses can deceive us. Magic tricks create illusions, microscopes reveal invisible worlds, and scientists confirm realities like dark matter—none of which we can perceive unaided. Even Thomas’s faith in the risen Jesus was based on physical proof (John 20:24–28). Yet Jesus declares a greater blessing for those who trust beyond sight. This challenges our dependence on tangible evidence and invites us into a faith rooted in spiritual revelation.

2. How Do We Know the Truth?

If sight is unreliable, how can we discern truth? Jesus never asked for blind faith. He provided overwhelming evidence:

  • Miracles validating His divine authority (John 10:37–38),
  • Fulfilled prophecies confirming His identity (Luke 24:44),
  • Transformed lives of His followers (Acts 4:13),
  • The empty tomb and eyewitness testimonies (1 Corinthians 15:3–8).
    God also gives us His Word, the Holy Spirit’s guidance (John 16:13), and the witness of creation (Romans 1:20). Faith is reasonable—built on God’s consistent revelation, not wishful thinking.

3. The Blessing of Unseen Faith

Jesus calls believers "blessed" (Greek: makarios—deeply joyful, divinely favored) not because they ignore evidence, but because they embrace God’s revelation beyond the physical. This faith:

  • Deepens intimacy with God (2 Corinthians 5:7),
  • Transforms our perspective on trials (1 Peter 1:6–8),
  • Anchors us in eternal hope (Hebrews 11:1).
    Thomas’s faith began with sight; ours begins with the Spirit’s witness to the truth (John 15:26).

Application Questions

  1. Examine: Where do I demand "proof" from God instead of trusting His character?
  2. Reflect: How has God already provided evidence of His truth in my life, Scripture, or creation?
  3. Respond: What step can I take this week to strengthen my faith in God’s unseen work? (e.g., studying prophecy, journaling His faithfulness).

A Short Prayer
Lord, open my eyes to see Your truth beyond what is visible. Forgive my doubts, and anchor my heart in the evidence You’ve already given—Your Word, Your creation, and the cross. Help me to live as one “blessed,” trusting Your promises even when I can’t see the way forward. Strengthen my faith to believe, and in believing, find joy. Amen.

 =====

p.s. This post was the output from DeepSeek from my prompt:

Improve and complete the following devotion:

 

How to See and Believe the Truth

John 20:29 NLT

Then Jesus told him, “You believe because you have seen me. Blessed are those who believe without seeing me.”

 

#1 We believe because we see - "seeing is believing"

But magic shows tell us that what we see is an illusion.

Other times we need special instruments to see, such as microscopes, to see germs and viruses.

Certain things are not visible at all, like dark energy and dark matter.

So seeing may not be true, and not seeing does not mean it does not exist.

 

#2 So, what else can we do to make sure we are believing in the right things - the truth?

Jesus did not just tell us to believe what he claimed and said.

He did miracles and many other things as evidence for our faith in Him.

 

#3 What did Jesus mean by "Blessed"?

 

Application Questions

 

A Short prayer

 

===========

Extra Devotion:

 I told DeepSeek: “From the evidence seen, can we believe the claims made?”

 You've touched on a vital biblical principle: Evidence validates truth claims, enabling reasonable faith. Jesus didn't ask for blind belief—He provided tangible proof to ground our trust. Here’s how this works:

1. Evidence Precedes Faith

  • Jesus performed miracles (healings, resurrections, nature miracles) to demonstrate His divine authority (John 20:30–31).
  • Fulfilled prophecy (e.g., Micah 5:2 → Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem) confirmed His identity.
  • The resurrection itself was verified by eyewitnesses, the empty tomb, and transformed lives (1 Cor. 15:6; Acts 2:32).

▶️ Key insight: God invites us to investigate evidence (Acts 17:11), not ignore our minds. Faith rests on God’s demonstrated reliability.

2. Evidence ≠ Compelled Belief

Even with overwhelming proof:

  • Some saw Jesus raise Lazarus but still plotted to kill Him (John 11:45–53).
  • Religious leaders witnessed miracles but dismissed them as demonic (Matt. 12:24).
  • Thomas saw the risen Christ but still needed to touch His wounds (John 20:27).

▶️ Why? Evidence alone can’t override a hardened heart. Faith requires humility to accept truth (John 5:44) and the Holy Spirit’s illumination (1 Cor. 2:14).

3. Unseen Faith is Evidence-Based Too

Jesus’ words to Thomas ("blessed are those who believe without seeing") don’t endorse baseless faith. Later believers rely on:

  • Apostolic testimony (John 20:30–31; 1 John 1:1–3)
  • God’s track record in Scripture (Rom. 15:4)
  • The Spirit’s witness (Rom. 8:16)
  • Creation’s testimony (Rom. 1:20)

▶️ "Believing without seeing" means trusting God’s reliable revelation despite lacking physical sight of Jesus—not ignoring evidence.


Application Questions

  1. What evidence for Jesus’ claims resonates most with you? (e.g., historical witnesses, transformed lives, fulfilled prophecy).
  2. Where might you be demanding new signs instead of resting on God’s established evidence?
  3. How does Hebrews 11:1 redefine "faith" beyond mere wishful thinking?

A Short Prayer

Lord, thank You for giving solid evidence of Your truth. Forgive me when I overlook Your past faithfulness or demand new signs. Open my eyes to see the proof You’ve already provided—in Scripture, history, and Your work in my life. Strengthen my trust in Your reliable character, even when I can’t see the next step. Amen.

"Faith is not a leap in the dark; it’s a step into the light of God’s proven faithfulness."

 Extra Devotion II

I told DeepSeek: "A problem: Devil can heal. God can heal. Healing alone does not imply the healer is a good God.".

DeepSeek:

You've identified a critical truth: Miraculous power alone cannot confirm divine character. Scripture explicitly warns that false prophets and evil forces can perform "signs and wonders" (Matthew 24:24; 2 Thessalonians 2:9). To discern whether healing (or any miracle) comes from God, we must examine deeper evidence. Here’s a biblical framework:


1. The Source Test: Who Gets the Glory?

  • God’s healings glorify Christ, affirm His Word, and call people to repentance and worship (Acts 3:8–9, 19; John 9:24–38).
  • Counterfeit healings draw attention to the performer, promote false doctrine, or enable sin (Acts 8:9–11, 18–23; Revelation 13:3–4).

"By their fruit you will recognize them" (Matthew 7:16).

2. The Consistency Test: Alignment with God’s Nature

  • God’s works reflect His holiness, love, and truth. He never contradicts His character or Word (1 John 4:1–3; Deuteronomy 13:1–4).
  • Satan’s power may mimic God’s outwardly but ultimately promotes deception, bondage, or destruction (John 8:44; 10:10).
  • Example: Jesus healed to restore (Luke 13:16); demonic forces may "heal" to control or corrupt.

3. The Purpose Test: Why Is Power Displayed?

  • God’s miracles confirm His gospel (Mark 16:20), advance His Kingdom (Luke 11:20), and serve others (Acts 10:38).
  • Demonic power seeks to distort truthcreate dependency on humans, or divert worship (Revelation 16:14).

Jesus said, "Do not believe me unless I do the works of my Father. But if I do them, even though you do not believe me, believe the works" (John 10:37–38).
His works proved His alignment with the Father’s nature and mission.

4. The Ultimate Evidence: The Cross and Resurrection

  • God’s supreme sign wasn’t just healing—it was Jesus’ sacrificial death and resurrection (1 Corinthians 1:22–23). Satan has no power to redeem sin or conquer death.
  • True divine power is marked by suffering love, not just supernatural displays (Philippians 2:5–8).

How to Discern Authentic Divine Healing

Test

From God

From Evil Forces

Source

Glorifies Christ

Glorifies humans/creatures

Consistency

Aligns with Scripture

Twists/contradicts Scripture

Purpose

Leads to repentance/worship

Leads to deception/fear

Fruit

Produces holiness/freedom

Produces bondage/addiction


Application

  1. Ask these questions when encountering supernatural claims:
    • Does this affirm Jesus as Lord alone?
    • Does it align with God’s character in Scripture?
    • Does it produce lasting spiritual freedom?
  2. Study 1 John 4:1–6: Test spirits by confessing Christ’s incarnation.
  3. Anchor in the gospel: God’s greatest miracle—Christ’s resurrection—is the bedrock of discernment (Romans 1:4).

A Prayer for Discernment

"Father, open my eyes to see beyond power displays. Give me wisdom to test every spirit by Your Word and Your Son’s cross. Where Satan masquerades as light, expose the lie. Where You are truly at work, let me bow in awe. Keep me anchored in the resurrection—Your irrefutable proof of love, truth, and authority. Amen."

The enemy can counterfeit power, but he cannot counterfeit holy loveredemptive suffering, or resurrection life. True faith rests not in signs, but in the Person they point to (John 5:39).

===

 7 Keys for Discerning Truth


  1. Christological Test
    • "Does this glorify Jesus as Lord?" (1 John 4:2-3)
    • Satan distracts from Christ; God centers Him (Colossians 1:18).
  2. Scriptural Alignment
    • "Does it align with God's revealed Word?" (Isaiah 8:20)
    • God never contradicts Scripture; counterfeits twist it (Acts 17:11).
  3. Fruit Evaluation
    • "What lasting fruit does it produce?" (Matthew 7:16-20)
    • God's work brings freedom, holiness, love (Galatians 5:22-23); evil brings bondage, fear, confusion (2 Timothy 1:7).
  4. Motive Examination
    • "Who benefits? Who receives worship?" (Daniel 3:12-18)
    • God's power serves others; counterfeits seek control (Acts 8:18-23).
  5. Cross-Centered Lens
    • "Does it point to Christ's sacrifice?" (1 Corinthians 1:23)
    • Satan avoids the cross; God's power flows through weakness (2 Corinthians 12:9).
  6. Community Confirmation
    • "Do mature believers affirm this?" (Proverbs 11:14)
    • God confirms truth through His Body (Acts 15:1-29).
  7. Spirit Witness
    • "Does the Holy Spirit confirm this?" (Romans 8:16)
    • Test spirits through prayer and discernment (1 John 4:1).

Critical Questions to Ask

If someone claims divine power...

God's Authentic Work

Counterfeit Work

Source of Glory?

Christ exalted

Self/others exalted

Scriptural Faithfulness?

Aligns perfectly

Selectively uses Bible

End Result?

Freedom in Christ

Dependency on person

View of Jesus?

Fully God and Savior

Diminished divinity


Discernment Prayer

"Father, give me wisdom to test every spirit (1 John 4:1). Anchor me in Your Word, sharpen my sensitivity to Your Spirit, and guard me from deception. When signs amaze me, turn my eyes to Christ's cross—Your ultimate proof of love and truth. Expose what is false, and confirm what is from You. Amen."

"Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God."
—1 John 4:1

 

 

2025-07-02

The Secret of a Long & Prosperous Life: Reverence for the God of Justice Scripture - Psalm 34:11–15

The Secret of a Long & Prosperous Life: Reverence for the God of Justice

Scripture: Psalm 34:11–15 (NLT)

11 Come, my children, and listen to me, and I will teach you to fear the Lord.
12 Does anyone want to live a life that is long and prosperous?
13 Then keep your tongue from speaking evil and your lips from telling lies!
14 Turn away from evil and do good. Search for peace, and work to maintain it.
15 For the eyes of the Lord watch over the righteous, and his ears are open to their cries...


#1 The Fear of the Lord: Rooted in His Just Character

True reverence for God begins with recognizing His holy justice (v. 15). He sees all actions—rewarding righteousness and confronting evil (v. 21). This isn’t terror of a tyrant, but awe for a Father who disciplines in love (Hebrews 12:6) and shields the faithful. To "fear the Lord" is to live with the sobering joy that every choice matters to a God who is both Judge and Redeemer.

#2 Reverence Lived Out: A Blueprint for Flourishing

God’s wisdom links our well-being to our integrity (vv. 12–14):

  • Guard your words: Silence deceit and slander (v. 13).
  • Redirect your actions: Reject evil; actively pursue good (v. 14a).
  • Champion peace: Be a relentless seeker and keeper of reconciliation (v. 14b).
    This is not mere morality—it’s worship. Our obedience flows from trusting God’s design for human flourishing.

#3 Ancient Wisdom Confirmed: Virtue Nourishes Life

"养生就是要养德"  ("To nourish life, one must nourish virtue.")
This Chinese proverb echoes Scripture: lasting prosperity is tied to ethical health. Just as a tree thrives in fertile soil, a soul rooted in God’s justice bears fruit in longevity and peace (Proverbs 14:27).



Application Questions

  1. Speech Audit: What patterns of speech (gossip, negativity, exaggeration) do you need to surrender to honor God?
  2. Action Check: Where is God calling you to actively replace a harmful habit with an act of goodness this week?
  3. Peacemaking: Is there a strained relationship you’ve avoided? How can you "search for peace" (v. 14) in humility?
  4. Trust in Justice: When wronged, do you seek revenge or trust God’s watchful care (v. 15)?

A Prayer of Reverence

Father, teach me to live in awe of You—the Just Judge who sees me and the Merciful Savior who hears me. Guard my tongue from evil; redirect my feet from harm. Make me a bold doer of good and a relentless builder of peace. I trust Your eyes are upon me and Your ears are open to my cry. Shape my life by Your wisdom, that my days may reflect Your eternal goodness. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

 

p.s. This post was the output from DeepSeek with my following prompt:

Improve and complete the following devotion:

 

The Secret of A Long & Prosperous Life - Fear the Lord of Justice

 

Ps 34:11 Come, my children, and listen to me, and I will teach you to fear the Lord.

12 Does anyone want to live a life that is long and prosperous?

13 Then keep your tongue from speaking evil and your lips from telling lies!

14 Turn away from evil and do good. Search for peace, and work to maintain it.

15 The eyes of the Lord watch over those who do right; his ears are open to their cries for help.

 

#1 The fear of the Lord is to know v15&21 He watch over people who do right or wrong and rewards or punishes them accordingly.

#2 It is shown in our behaviour. Speak no evil nor lies. Do good instead of evil. Seek peace and maintain it.

Application Questions

#3 The Chinese has a similar saying, 养生就是要养德 growing in virtues brings a long life.

 

Application Questions

 

A Short prayer

2025-07-01

The Alchemy of Suffering Love - Rom 8:37

Devotion: The Alchemy of Suffering Love

This is a devotion by DeepSeek based on my 3rd most viewed post in The Meaning of "More than Conquerors".

Scripture Anchor:
"No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us." (Romans 8:37)

Context:
"These things" are not minor inconveniences. They are the crushing realities Paul lists: tribulation, distress, persecution, famine, nakedness, peril, sword (Romans 8:35). He even quotes the stark reality: "For your sake we are being killed all the day long; we are regarded as sheep to be slaughtered." (Romans 8:36). This is the battlefield.

The World's Conquest vs. Christ's Conquest:
The world understands conquerors: those who crush enemies by force, eliminate opposition, and triumph through dominance. Their victory shouts, "I won!" But Paul declares a victory that operates within the slaughterhouse, amidst the suffering: "More than conquerors."

What Does "More Than" Mean?
It means transformation. It's not merely surviving the storm or overpowering the enemy. It's the supernatural alchemy of Christ's love working through our suffering to perform a miracle:

  1. Transforming Enemies into Friends: Like Jim Elliot, who chose love's surrender over the gun's conquest, knowing his death could be the bridge for his killers' salvation. His sacrifice became the seed for a tribe's redemption. The "enemy" wasn't destroyed; they were won over by the power of selfless love. (Think also of Stephen praying for Saul as stones fell).
  2. Transforming Threats into Opportunities: Like Joseph, who saw the evil of betrayal and slavery not as his end, but as God's strange pathway to save nations and reconcile a family: "You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good." (Genesis 50:20). Like Paul, whose shipwreck became a divine appointment to bring healing and the Gospel to Malta (Acts 28).
  3. Transforming Suffering into Glory: Like Jesus Himself on the cross. The ultimate act of apparent defeat became the ultimate victory, transforming sin, death, and humanity's relationship with God. His suffering was the conquest.

The "How": Through Him Who Loved Us
This "more than conqueror" status isn't mustered by our grit. It flows "through him who loved us." It is Christ's love in us, enabling us to:

  • Overcome evil with good (Romans 12:21), refusing the cycle of retaliation.
  • Seek the good of others, even those harming us (1 Thessalonians 5:15).
  • Trust the mysterious alchemy of Romans 8:28 – that God is working all things, even these horrific "things," together for good for those who love Him and are called according to His purpose. The "good" is often this very transformation – of us, of others, of circumstances – for His eternal glory.

The Call: Living as Transformers
Being "more than conquerors" isn't about avoiding the battle or passively receiving a trophy (like the boxer's wife). It's about entering the fray with a different weapon: sacrificial love. It's about being agents of redemption within the suffering, trusting that Christ's love working through our faithfulness can perform the impossible:

  • Turning curses into blessings.
  • Turning persecutors into brothers.
  • Turning prisons into pulpits.
  • Turning crosses into resurrections.

Reflection:

  • Where in your life are you facing "these things" – tribulation, distress, persecution, need, danger?
  • How can you shift your focus from merely surviving or overpowering to transforming?
  • Ask God to fill you with His love, to see your "enemies" or threats through His eyes, and to give you the courage to be a conduit of His redemptive power right where you are.

Prayer:
Lord Jesus, conqueror through the cross, fill me with the overwhelming reality of Your love. When I am in the midst of the fire, the battle, or the crushing weight, remind me that I am called to be "more than" a mere survivor. Help me to wield the weapon of Your love. Give me eyes to see the potential for transformation – in my own heart, in the lives of those who oppose me, and in the circumstances that threaten me. Empower me to trust that You are working all things together for good, even this, and use my faithfulness, even my suffering, as a catalyst for Your redemptive glory. Make me a transformer, an agent of Your "more than conqueror" love. Amen.