Catch this Week’s Faith Highlights
Welcome to the Week in Review—a collection of this week's most powerful insights to help you stand firm in faith and live boldly with purpose.
Saturday, January 31, 2026
MONDAY: Choosing the right cost.
Avoidance creates hidden debt, but obedience builds lasting peace. Faith helps you choose costs wisely by investing today in freedom, clarity, and spiritual growth.
TUESDAY: Welcoming the unexpected.
Careful planning is wise, but rigid control limits trust. Faith grows when we leave space for God to redirect, surprise, and shape us.
WEDNESDAY: Shared faith multiplies strength.
Faith was never meant to be lived alone. God strengthens endurance through shared commitment, friendship, and community, lightening the climb by adding people instead of removing the hill.
THURSDAY: The cost is forming you.
Obedience often feels costly before it feels clear. God uses weight, waiting, and surrender to form lasting strength, deep trust, and freedom we cannot yet see.
FRIDAY: Learning to walk unburdened.
What once helped you survive may now be weighing you down. God invites you to release old tools, trust Him again, and walk freely into the next season.
FRUIT OF THE SPIRIT
“Let the morning bring me word of your unfailing love, for I have put my trust in you.” (Psalm 143:8)
Devotion: Each morning is an opportunity to experience God’s unfailing love afresh. By trusting in Him, we find peace and strength to love others throughout the day.
Action: Give God’s word 10 minutes of your undivided attention this morning.
WATCH THE BIBLE COME TO LIFE
HEROES IN THE BIBLE: PAUL | PAUL VS. CAESAR
The exciting final episode in “Heroes in the Bible: Paul” with Michael Chandler is here!
This episode powerfully portrays unwavering faith, courage under persecution, and what it truly means to finish the race well.
Hit the image or the link below to watch now! 👇🏽
Watch Now



It's interesting how you frame the idea of 'the cost is forming you,' especially regarding obedience preceding clarity. From an analytical perspective, how do you see the process of distingushing genuine formative struggle from mere unproductive hardship, particularly when the path isn't immediately obvious?