Speaking God’s Truth in Your Generation
Dannah Gresh: Do you feel insignificant? Kim Cash Tate has an important reminder.
Kim Cash Tate: Serving God’s purpose is not about numbers or followers or having big influence.
Dannah: Welcome to the Revive Our Hearts podcast for Friday, October 27, 2023. I’m Dannah Gresh. Our host is the author of Adorned, Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth.
Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth: Well, if you missed yesterday’s Revive Our Hearts, you need to go to the app or toReviveOurHearts.com and pick up the program from yesterday.
We began the first of a two-day series with Kim Cash Tate who’s taking us to an Old Testament prophet you’ve probably never heard a message on, (if you have, it’s been a while) to the prophet Micaiah. She’s going to take us into the Word.
We’re seeing how this prophet swam upstream, against his culture, against the majority, but he’s the one whose name we …
Dannah Gresh: Do you feel insignificant? Kim Cash Tate has an important reminder.
Kim Cash Tate: Serving God’s purpose is not about numbers or followers or having big influence.
Dannah: Welcome to the Revive Our Hearts podcast for Friday, October 27, 2023. I’m Dannah Gresh. Our host is the author of Adorned, Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth.
Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth: Well, if you missed yesterday’s Revive Our Hearts, you need to go to the app or toReviveOurHearts.com and pick up the program from yesterday.
We began the first of a two-day series with Kim Cash Tate who’s taking us to an Old Testament prophet you’ve probably never heard a message on, (if you have, it’s been a while) to the prophet Micaiah. She’s going to take us into the Word.
We’re seeing how this prophet swam upstream, against his culture, against the majority, but he’s the one whose name we remember. The 400 prophets who just told the king what they thought he wanted to hear . . . we don’t know any of their names. They have not stood the test of time.
But here’s a man, Micaiah, who served God’s purpose in his generation, which is what we want to do. That’s why I love this text.
Kim, you have been a friend to this ministry. You are a writer, a teacher, a Bible teacher. (I’m looking at Kim’s Bible as I speak, and she’s got color coding and markings. It’s much neater than mine. But it’s got similar kinds of markings.)
Here’s a woman who for twenty years has been soaking in the Word of God since she came to faith in her late twenties. And now she’s feeding us and teaching us out of the Scripture. I love that!
So, if you want to know more about her ministry, we’ll have a link to that at ReviveOurHearts.com. If you haven’t read her books, you’ll want to do that.
One book is called Cling which is the name of her ministry, Cling Ministries, and that has to do with . . .
Kim: Intimacy with the Lord in your walk with the Lord.
Nancy: Clinging to God.
Kim: Yes, absolutely.
Nancy: We cling to all kinds of things. We are clingers by nature. Right?
Kim: Yes. We are clingers by nature. We’re going to cling to something, but we want to cling to God and His Word.
Nancy: Every time I’ve been around you, that’s been the message you keep taking us back to. It’s like wherever you are in the Bible, that’s what it’s coming back to. I love that.
So, you’ll want to get more acquainted with her and with her ministry. Kim, we’re so thrilled to have you here.
And, Lord, I pray that You would give fresh oil to this servant of yours and that You would give us ears to hear and hearts to receive what You are saying so that we might be women who serve Your purpose in our generation. We don’t have any other generation we live in, and we don’t have any higher calling than to serve Your purpose.
So whatever we think is our purpose, I pray that You do some adjusting today so that we may say, “Yes, Lord,” to the purpose You have for us in our lives.
Bless this servant, and give her freedom as she opens Your Word for us. I pray in Jesus’ name, amen.
Kim: Amen.
We are in one of my favorite chapters in the Bible, although admittedly, I have a lot of favorite chapters. But this is my favorite because of what we can learn from the prophet Micaiah, who boldly and fearlessly served the purpose of God in his own generation.
That wording, “served the purpose of God in his own generation,” comes from Acts 13:36, where it was said of David. And how glorious would it be if the Lord would say that of you or of me, “She served the purpose of God in her own generation.”
So, we’ve been looking at 2 Chronicles 18 and gleaning what we can about what it means to serve the purpose of God, even what it looks like to not serve God’s purpose, as we see from the 400 prophets and from Ahab in this chapter.
We haven’t gotten too far into the chapter. Micaiah hasn’t even entered the scene yet, but the scene is fascinating thus far.
We have the king of Israel and the king of Judah both present, which rarely happens in the pages of Scripture. These kings, King Ahab and King Jehoshaphat, are allied by marriage, and Jehoshaphat is visiting him in Samaria.
King Ahab wanted him to go to war with him to reclaim Ramoth-gilead, but Jehoshaphat tells him, “My people will be with you, but first, let’s inquire of the Lord”—which was interesting that he would agree to go before inquiring of the Lord. And we talked about the rebuke he would later receive from the Lord.
So our first lesson from this chapter was this: serving God’s purpose means seeking God’s will.
Ahab gathers 400 prophets, none of whom speak for the Lord, but it makes for quite a scene. All 400 say, “Yes, go up! The Lord is with you. He’ll give the enemy into your hand.”
Jehoshaphat said, “Are you telling me there’s not one person here who can inquire of the Lord?”
Ahab admits, “Well, yes, there is one man by whom we may inquire. Micaiah, son of Imlam, but I hate him because he only prophecies evil concerning me.”
Which gave us our second and third lesson:
- Serving God’s purpose means there will be people who don’t like you.
- If you’re serving God’s purpose, you should be known as serving God’s purpose.
Ahab hated Micaiah, but he knew that Micaiah was a man of God.
So let’s continue with this story. We’re in 2 Chronicles 18. We left off at verse 7 where Jehoshaphat responded to Ahab’s words about Micaiah by saying, “Let not the king say so.” In other words, “I know you hate him. He never prophesied good concerning you, but go get him.”
So, verse 8:
Then the king of Israel [Ahab] called an officer and said, [with a sigh] “Bring quickly Micaiah, Imlah’s son.”
That’s just how I imagine him saying it. He did not want to see this man. So, verse 9:
Now the king of Israel and Jehoshaphat, the king of Judah, were sitting each on his own throne, arrayed in their robes, and they were sitting on the threshing floor at the entrance of the gate of Samaria; and all the prophets were prophesying before them.
Now, we get a wide shot of this scene with even more detail. Not just two kings together. Two kings arrayed in their robes, sitting on their thrones. They’re at the gate of Samaria, which was the ancient custom of holding court, and 400 prophets prophesying before them. This is a sight to behold!
Verse 10:
Zedekiah the son of Chenaanah made horns of iron for himself, and said, “Thus says the Lord, ‘With these you shall gore the Arameans until they are consumed.’ All the prophets were prophesying thus, saying, “Go up to Ramoth-gilead and succeed, for the Lord will give it into the hand of the king.”
Note that these false prophets are using the name of the Lord, unlike the prophets of Baal that Elijah contended with. They were prophesying in the name of Baal. But just because you use the name of the Lord and purport to speak for Him does not make it so. They appear to be serving the purpose of God. But God is nowhere in it.
Verse 12:
Then the messenger who went to summon Micaiah spoke to him saying, “Behold, the words of the prophets are uniformly favorable to the king. So please let your word be like one of them, and speak favorably.”
He applied pressure to conform, undoubtedly following Ahab’s direction. “Be one one accord with all of the rest of the prophets.”
Have you ever felt pressure to be on one accord with others around you? It might be people you work with, people in your family. Their voices are all in agreement about something, and you’re the only one who thinks differently. It’s uncomfortable to say the least.
Now, imagine there are 400 of them on the other side. This is what Micaiah is facing. Let’s see how he responds in verse 13.
But Micaiah said, “As the Lord lives, what my God says, that I will speak.’”
That right there is why I turn to this chapter time and again. That boldness, that fearlessness brings us to lesson number four: serving God’s purpose means walking in the power of the Holy Spirit.
Micaiah is not moved by the fact that his contemporaries are all speaking favorable words to the king. He didn’t flinch, didn’t stutter, didn’t say, “Give me some time to think on that.” His answer was immediate. “I am only speaking what God gives me to speak.” He knew his purpose and did not hesitate to walk in it.
Notice he says, “As the Lord lives.” Micaiah is clear. He serves the Living God. And don’t you love that he said, “What my God says.” Relationship. He was showing, “I am in a relationship. He is my God. He is my God.”
Listen, if we want to serve God’s purpose in our generation, we have to know our God, and we have to walk in the power of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit gives us power to be fearless. We have no need to fear when the Lord is with us.
I didn’t say we won’t feel fear. If we’re in a situation where people don’t want to hear about Jesus or the truth of the Bible—and that’s the time we’re living in—but we’re called to give it in the situation, those feelings of fear may rise up. But like Micaiah, we can stand boldly knowing our Lord lives, knowing He is with us, and knowing that that is our purpose to glorify Him.
If we want to serve God’s purpose in our generation, as the Spirit leads, we have to be willing to speak truth, no matter how unpopular or unwelcome it may be. I love that Micaiah models that for us here.
Okay, what happens next? Verse 14:
When he came to the king, the king said to him, “Micaiah, shall we go up to Ramoth-gilead to battle, or shall I refrain?” And he said, “Go up and succeed, for they will be given into your hand.”
Can’t you just hear the sarcasm in Micaiah’s voice? Ahab heard it, too. So he said in verse 15:
“How many times must I adjure you to speak to me nothing but the truth in the name of the Lord?”
Ahab is compelled here to have Micaiah speak the truth, because in the providence of God, Micaiah had the only word from the Lord for this situation.
Continuing in verse 16:
So he said [Micaiah],
“I saw all Israel
scattered on the mountains,
like sheep which have no shepherd;
And the Lord said,
‘These have no master;
let each of them return to his house in peace.’”
Then the king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, “Did I not tell you that he would not prophesy good concerning me, but evil?” (vv. 16–17)
So Micaiah let it be known, Ahab will not survive, and Ahab immediately understands the prophecy. But Micaiah is not done.
Micaiah said, “Therefore hear the word of the Lord. I saw the Lord sitting on His throne, and all the host of heaven standing on His right and on His left. The Lord said, ‘Who will entice Ahab king of Israel to go up and fall at Ramoth-gilead?’
Then one said this, while another said that. Then a spirit came forward and stood before the Lord and said, “I will entice him.” And the Lord said to him, “How?” He said, “I will go and be a deceiving spirit in the mouth of all his prophets.”
Then He [God] said, “You are to entice him and prevail also. Go and do so.” Now therefore, behold, the Lord has put a deceiving spirit in the mouth of these your prophets, for the Lord has proclaimed disaster against you. (vv. 18–22)
Micaiah said this in front of two kings sitting on their thrones in the midst of 400 prophets, boldly and fearlessly. This is amazing!
So, that’s the earthly scene—the thrones and the prophets and everybody. It’s remarkable, but Micaiah has been given a vision of the heavenly scene that preceded this one.
It’s reminiscent of the scene in Job where the angels are before God, Satan among them, and Satan needs God’s permission to come against Job. God is the sovereign ruler over heaven and earth, over holy angels and fallen angels.
He had already pronounced judgment against Ahab prior to all of this, and this is how that judgment would come to pass.
God is so sovereign that even the thought that entered Ahab’s mind to go up against Ramoth-gilead was part of His sovereign plan.
But let’s notice something important: the earthly scene was daunting, fearsome even. Micaiah had to come before those two powerful kings, arraigned in their robes, sitting on their thrones. But you know why he could walk fearlessly? He already had a vision of the Lord on His throne.
Lesson number five: serving God’s purpose means keeping your eyes fixed on Jesus.
If our eyes are fixed on the things of the earth, we will be easily shaken. We will stumble when it comes to walking out God’s purpose because it gets challenging.
Opposition is always present. The enemy is ever scheming to keep you from walking out God’s purpose. He wants you to be fearful and doubtful. He’ll put people in your path to cause you to question:
- “Am I doing too much?”
- “Do I have too much zeal for the things of God?”
- “Maybe I am being too dogmatic about my convictions.”
- “There’s room to compromise.”
But Hebrews 12:1 and 2 tells us that in order to run the race set before us, we have to fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of faith, who for the joy set before Him, endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.
Colossians 3:1–2, I love these verses and turn to them often:
Therefore, if you have been raised up with Christ, keep seeking the things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your mind on the things above, not on the things that are on earth.
Micaiah’s mind was set on things above, not on what he could see at that gate in Samaria. He kept his gaze on his God, and nothing compares to the glory of the Lord. We are strengthened when we fix our eyes on Jesus. We’re reminded of our hope and reminded of our eternal purpose.
So Micaiah tells them this incredible vision. What happens next? Verse 23:
Then Zedekiah the son of Chenaanah [this is that enthusiastic one who made the horns of iron he] came near and struck Micaiah on the cheek and said, “How did the Spirit of the Lord pass from me to speak to you?”
Micaiah said, ‘Behold, you will see on that day when you enter an inner room to hide yourself.” Then the king of Israel said, “Take Micaiah and return him to Amon the governor of the city and to Joash the king’s son; and say, “Thus says the king, ‘Put this man in prison and feed him sparingly with bread and water until I return safely.’”
And Micaiah said, “If you indeed return safely, the Lord has not spoken by me.” And he said, “Listen, all you people.” So the king of Israel and Jehoshaphat king of Judah went up against Ramoth-gilead. (vv. 23–28)
Micaiah is punished for serving God’s purpose. We looked at that last time, the persecution that comes with serving God’s purpose.
Though Jehoshaphat wanted to inquire of the Lord and got a clear and direct word from the Lord through Micaiah, he goes off to battle anyway with King Ahab—clearly not serving God’s purpose. But though Ahab did not heed the message, it seems to have stayed with him.
Verse 29:
The king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, “I will disguise myself and go into battle, but you put on your robes.” So the king of Israel disguised himself, and they went into battle.
He thinks he can dodge the will of a sovereign God. So—you already know what happens even if you haven’t read the chapter. You know what’s going to happen because what God says He will bring to pass.
Now the king of Aram had commanded the captains of his chariots, saying, “Do not fight with small or great, but with the king of Israel alone.” So when the captains of the chariots saw Jehoshaphat, they said, “It is the king of Israel,” [because he’s the only one in his robes] and they turned aside to fight against him.
But Jehoshaphat cried out, [can’t you imagine Jehoshapat crying, “No! No! No! You’ve got the wrong one!”] and the Lord helped him, and God diverted them from him. And when the captains of the chariots saw that it was not the king of Israel, they turned back from pursuing him. (vv. 30–32)
And then, look at this:
A certain man drew his bow at random [not was random in his eyes] and struck the king of Israel in a joint of the armor. So he said to the driver of the chariot, “Turn around and take me out of the fight, for I am severely wounded.” The battle raged that day, and the king of Israel propped himself up in his chariot in front of the Arameans until the evening; and at sunset he died. (vv. 33–34)
You can not dodge the will of a sovereign God. Nothing is random. Nothing is chance. That was the sovereign God.
I want to end with this, and it is lesson number six: serving God’s purpose is not about doing something big.
I think social media has duped us into thinking that in order to serve God’s purpose, it has to be some big thing, which often means some public thing.
In this age of social media, we see stages and platforms and followers. We see how God is using certain people and what their purposes seems to be.
And we look at our own lives and think, But what’s my purpose?
And often what we’re really saying is, “Is this it? I work an average job. It’s not even full-time ministry.”
Or, “I’m just at home. Nobody knows me. Maybe once my kids are older I can start fulfilling my purpose.”
Serving God’s purpose is not about numbers or followers or having big influence. Look at Micaiah. Most of you in here had never heard of him. He’s in the Bible, but he’s not a big name in the Bible. How often do you hear people talking about Micaiah? Jehoshaphat didn’t even know who he was.
The prophets of his day were people like Elijah, Elisha, Isaiah. Isaiah got a whole book. Micaiah just got one chapter in a book.
In fact, when I read this account, and when Jehoshaphat said, “Is there yet a prophet by whom we may inquire?” I’m really curious where Elijah was at this time. He hadn’t been taken up yet by God.
But that’s the point: God was using Micaiah on this day, in this moment. We don’t know what Micaiah was doing before this, and he is not mentioned again. He served the purpose of God in his generation, though. We know that much about him.
Wherever you are, whatever you do, if you are doing it to the glory of the Lord, you are serving the purpose of God in your generation.
Whatever your job may be, God can use you there to be a light, to speak a word to someone.
When you’re at home and your home is your ministry and you treat it that way, changing diapers is serving the purpose of God. I am so serious! Don’t you let the enemy deceive you into thinking, I will serve the purpose of God down the road, that’s when it will really count.
Every day you get up and do all that it takes to care for your family, and your home, pouring into your kids as you train them in the things of God. You better know you’re serving the Lord.
When we think about it the right way, serving God’s purpose is doing something big in the sense that it’s significant. Anything we do as unto the Lord is big. It has eternal implications. It’s supernatural because it can only be done by His grace and by the power of the Holy Spirit.
So as we close, I would love for you to just pause and say, “Lord, I want to serve Your purpose in my generation. Show me where I’m already doing that and I don’t even realize it. Help me appreciate it and to praise You for where You’re already working. I pray that in every aspect of my life that You would show me how to serve Your purpose, and give me grace and strength to walk that out. Let me live for Your glory and honor and praise, in Jesus’ name, amen.”
Nancy: Amen. And Lord, I just want to add a prayer to what Kim just prayed. We’ve joined our hearts in with her. We’ve been challenged by Your Word. And You’re speaking to many of us about the season of life we’re in and how we can be serving You in this way, in this season, in our generation.
I want to pray that You would raise up an army of God-fearing, Christ-loving women who have a relationship with You. They may be one against 400, but I pray that You would raise them up to serve You, to fulfill Your purposes, and that the lives of true women of God around the world would be a great light in the darkness to point our world to Jesus.
So encourage women who maybe feel in small places and in lowly places and dark places. That’s where Micaiah was. That’s where we are today. But Your light, Your glory, You want to shine to our world through us.
So this is the vision. This is why You raised up this ministry, to be countercultural. Not to be the most popular, most listened-to podcast, or to have any great, huge, big platform. But just to be women who honor You, to glorify You, who represent You in our world to fulfill Your holy purposes, not only in our lives individually but through this ministry and the women who have connected to it.
We love You. I thank You for Your servant Kim. Thank You for her love for Your Word, for her fearlessness and boldness and just the way she’s connected to the passage and then helped to connect it to our lives. May that be a great example for us, too.
We love You, and we bless You and thank You, in Jesus’ name, amen.
Dannah: Amen! That’s our host, Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth, praying that we would live out the purposes of God for our lives as Kim Cash Tate was showing us today.
Now, some women were in our studio audience as Kim was teaching. Let’s listen to some of their comments now, starting with Stephani. (Now, it will help you to know that the Revive Our Hearts team shares a building with a ministry called Life Action. You’ll hear Stephani refer to that.)
Stephani: For forty-five years I’ve been with Life Action, and my husband and I are retiring early next year. I’ve seen a lot of growth, like in the National Day of Prayer and in prayer calls, things like that.
But it’s just so discouraging to see things keep getting worse and worse. You feel like you’re going out, and things are just getting worse. But God’s at work. It’s just encouraging to hear Kim remind us, “This is God’s time. This is your generation. (Now, I’m in the generation of old people.) But this is your generation, and God’s not done.” I don’t know God’s timetable, but not to give up.
Nancy: Ahab was such a wicked king in so many ways, but it’s a precious thing to me that God put a Micaiah in his life to speak truth with courage, not flinching. That didn’t necessarily change Ahab’s heart, but it made him a whole lot more accountable.
So Micaiah had his place. He had his role in Scripture and in God’s eternal redemptive story. We can look at it and say, “But Ahab didn’t change. He still didn’t believe the truth.” That’s not up to us. That’s up to God.
It doesn’t mean that if we are faithful we will change the hearts of the people around us who are wicked or unfaithful, even within our own families. We don’t have the power to change their hearts.
But we do have the power to listen to God, to speak the Word, the truth, in the power of His Holy Spirit. That may be all we’re supposed to do. God put us there to be that representative of truth for that moment, for reasons, in the big picture, that we can’t even begin to see.
So our calling is to be faithful, to be there, to know what the Word of the Lord is, and to speak it in our generation regardless of whether anything changes. We know in the end heaven wins. God wins and every knee will bow.
And so, we’re among those who are bowing now and saying, “Lord, we worship You. We trust You. We represent You, even if we don’t see visible fruit from the work that we’re doing.”
Woman: Thank you, Kim, for coming and speaking to us today. I appreciate the different ways you brought out Scripture that we sometimes like to pass over.
When you asked, “Does anybody know who Micaiah is?” And as you said the Scripture where it was referenced from, it was like, “Oh, wait! I do know this story because I just read it!” Thank you for making it more alive to us.
Thank you for showing how little is not necessarily unimportant, and our little is great in the eyes of the Lord because it brings glory to Him.
And then my other favorite thing was when you said, Oh, that’s one of my favorite verses, or one of my favorite chapters—and somebody will always say, ‘But you said that about the last one.’”
Kim: Whatever you’re reading at the time becomes your favorite!
Woman: So again, thank you for that because the Word of the Lord is precious.
Nancy: Let me so so far as to say, and Kim hinted at this, that God has a purpose for you in your generation that no one else can fill. It’s different than His purpose for anyone else. Now, that doesn’t mean that it’s different in every way. God uses many of us in similar ways, but there is some place and time in which God has placed you and the way He created you that is His purpose for you in your generation.
So we can’t just go flying through life just trying to make sure we survive this torrent of evil around us and say, “Somebody else is going to do the good work. Somebody else is going to represent Christ.”
There are people that God wants you to represent Christ to that I don’t know and that will never hear anything I say or that Kim says or somebody else says. But God has put you in that workplace or in that dorm room or in that home or in that hospital room.
If you see, “God’s put me here for a purpose in these people’s lives for right now,” it gives you a whole different perspective because you’re not saying, “How am I going to weather this?” or “How am I going to get through this?” or “Am I going to survive?” or “What’s my next scan or report going to say?”
Yes, you care about those things, and we care about those things. But more you care about, “What is God’s purpose? What is He doing?”
So, Stephani, you’re going into a new season of life, and grandparenting, and you and your sweet husband, Mark, you guys are fixtures. You’ve been here forever in serving in this ministry and serving in beautiful ways.
What that looks like is going to change, and it may not be as visible. It may be more obscure, but it’s no less significant because it’s what God has for you in that season.
Don’t try to serve the purpose God has for somebody else. Like, if I could just have. . ., if I could be a speaker, if I could be a teacher, if I could have a podcast, if I could have a book. If God gives you that, then He’ll give you grace to do it well.
But He may have something totally different for you. It may be that meal you’re cooking tonight. It may be that job you’re faithfully going to day after day after day and just being the light of Christ in that office environment with people who will never listen to Revive Our Hearts.
- Don’t be envious or covetous of the time and the calling and the plan and purpose God has for somebody else.
- Don’t try to be another generation.
- Don’t try to be in another place.
- Don’t try to be another person.
- But say, “God, here I am. I just want to know You.”
And when the moment comes . . . Micaiah had no time to prepare for getting called out for this encounter. He had to already be prayed up and know the Word of God before he got in that situation.
So when you get to where you have an opportunity to minister, you better be sure you’ve been walking with God, you’ve been in His Word, you know in the moment what to say.
So this is a really important thing Kim has touched on to say, “Lord, here I am. I’m Your servant. Use me according to Your purpose for my life, for right now, for this generation.”
And if we all do that, we’ll be amazed at the victories God will win. We won’t see all of them. We may not see most of them. But we’ll look back from heaven, and we’ll say, “Oh, that’s what God was doing!” That’s what God was doing, Micaiah.
Who is like the Lord our God? We want our names to be people who see us, and they’re going to say, “I see her, and she points me to God. She makes me in awe of God.” And that can happen with you and you and you and you and you and each one of us.
God doesn’t need your name tag. I need your name tag because I’m getting old, and I forget names. But God knows who you are, where you are, what He’s equipped you to do, where He’s put you, for how long. It’s a good work. It’s an important work. Not because you have x number of followers or likes or audience or platform. That stuff is nothing. It’s just being faithful to where God has put you.
Dannah: What an encouraging word there from Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth, responding to a couple of comments from our studio audience.
We’re able to bring you teaching like this thanks to the prayers and donations from our listeners. That’s what we mean when we say we’re a listener-supported program. Thank you for praying. Thank you for giving. Your prayers and your donations are making a difference in the lives of women all around the world.
If you’ve never prayed for Revive Our Hearts before, well, there’s no time like the present. Would you take a moment sometime today to lift up this ministry before the Lord?
And while you’re at it, you could pray for the ministry I head up: True Girl, for seven to twelve year-old girls.
Pray that those in leadership at Revive Our Hearts and True Girl will make wise decisions. Pray that we know the best way to use the money that comes from precious friends like you. And pray that many lives would be challenged to serve God’s purposes in their generation, just like Kim Cash Tate was talking about today.
And if you do take a moment to pray, I just want to say thank you. It means so much.
Now, if God is leading you to make a donation to Revive Our Hearts, no matter how big or small it is, we want to show you our gratitude by sending you the set of thirty-one Advent tabletop cards from Nancy. They feature special verses for each day and helpful quotes from Nancy, too.
Request your set of the “Born a Child and Yet a King” tabletop cards when you contact us with your donation. You can do that on our website, ReviveOurHearts.com, or call us at 1-800-569-5959.
Next week we’ll hear from someone who’s doing her best to serve the purposes of God in her generation. Asheritah Ciuciu will be here to share some of her passion for helping others grow in the spiritual disciplines of prayer and reading God’s Word.
I hope your weekend is a great one, and I hope you can join us on Monday for Revive Our Hearts.
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