04/06/2026
TAKE CARE OF YOUR BODY, DRESS WELL AND SMELL GOOD || GBILE AKANNI Welcome to THE REAL GOSPEL TV We create videos that will change yo...
Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Soldiers in the Lord's Army Nondenominational, 100, Itu Road, Uyo.
04/06/2026
TAKE CARE OF YOUR BODY, DRESS WELL AND SMELL GOOD || GBILE AKANNI Welcome to THE REAL GOSPEL TV We create videos that will change yo...
14/05/2026
CHRIST’S FLESH FOR HUMAN LIFE
(The End of Self and the Gift of True Life)
“…and the bread that I will give is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world.” (John 6:51b, KJV)
Continuing from our previous Dose where Christ revealed Himself as the living Bread that must be received inwardly, this latter part of the verse now unveils the cost of that life. “The bread that I will give is my flesh…” points directly to the sacrifice of Christ upon the cross. Life could not come to fallen man until Christ sacrificed Himself completely. This means eternal life is not cheap, it was purchased through Christ’s suffering, sacrifice, and death. The Son of God gave His flesh because we were spiritually dead and incapable of saving ourself. The cross was not an addition to Christianity; it is its foundation (Isaiah 53:5; 1 Peter 2:24).
If Christ sacrificed Himself for the life of the world, how can we claim to receive that life while still refusing to offer ourself back to Christ as a living sacrifice? Many want the benefits of the cross without crucifying the flesh. They want salvation without surrender, eternal life without dying to the flesh, and Christ as Savior without allowing Him to become the Lord of their life. But the flesh of Christ was given to end the old life of the flesh and begin the a new life in Christ. The cross was not only meant to forgive sin, it was also meant to crucify the rule of self, pride, rebellion, lust, hypocrisy, worldliness, and every work of the flesh within us (Galatians 5:24).
Giving the bread “for the life of the world” reveals the depth of God’s mercy, Christ gave Himself as a sacrifice so men might truly live. Yet that life only becomes reality in us when we receive the cross personally. To feed on this bread that was given by Christ is to embrace the death of the old man and the life of the new man. Many admire the cross outwardly but resist its inward work. But where the cross is truly received, self begins to die, obedience begins to grow, and the life of Christ begins to manifest. The Bread that was given must now become the life that governs us (2 Corinthians 5:15; Romans 6:6).
Beloved in Christ, receive not only the blessings of Christ, but the death and life found in Him. Do not claim the blessings of Christ while rejecting His cross. You can't claim His cross while preserving the flesh He died to destroy. Let the sacrifice of Christ bring you into full surrender, genuine transformation, and a life completely yielded to God. For the Bread was given so that men might truly live. Christ gave Himself completely for us, and we must now yield our whole life fully to Him.
MEDITATION: Only a life that passes through the cross can carry the life of Christ.
PRAYER: Heavenly Father, I thank You for the sacrifice of Christ given for the life of the world. Let the power of the cross work deeply within me until self, pride, rebellion, and every work of the flesh lose their hold over my life. Teach me to truly receive the life of Christ through surrender and obedience, in Jesus’ name. Amen.
Take time to prayerfully meditate on today’s scripture again. Also prayerfully read and meditate on: Isaiah 53:5; 1 Peter 2:24; Galatians 5:24; 2 Corinthians 5:15; Romans 6:6.
If this Daily Dose has blessed you, please share it with others and remind them that Christ gave Himself so that men might truly live. God bless you as you do so.
Good morning, and may the power of the cross be deeply formed in your life today.
12/05/2026
THE BREAD THAT KEEPS MEN ALIVE
(The Need for Daily Dependence on Christ)
“Your fathers did eat manna in the wilderness, and are dead. This is the bread which cometh down from heaven, that a man may eat thereof, and not die.” (John 6:49-50, KJV)
Flowing from our previous Dose where Christ revealed Himself as the true Bread from heaven, these verses now expose the danger of spiritual experiences without continual dependence on Him. “Your fathers did eat manna… and are dead” shows that yesterday’s encounter cannot sustain today’s life. Israel ate manna daily, yet many still died because their hearts never truly depended on God. They received provision outwardly, but inwardly continued in unbelief, murmuring, rebellion, and attachment to the old life. In the same way, many believers today survive on past encounters, old revelations, former zeal, or occasional spiritual moments while neglecting daily fellowship with Christ through His Word and obedience (1 Corinthians 10:1–5).
“This is the bread which cometh down from heaven, that a man may eat thereof, and not die” reveals that the life we live depends on the life of Christ we have received. Our spiritual life cannot be sustained occasionally. Just as our body weakens without daily bread, so our spirit weakens without daily feeding on Christ through His Word, prayer, surrender, and fellowship with Him. Many want spiritual strength while neglecting the very source of life. They feed constantly on worldly distractions, fleshly desires, entertainment, anxiety, and self-interest, yet give little or no room to the Word of God. Then dryness, inconsistency, prayerlessness, weakness against sin, and spiritual emptiness begin to grow within (Matthew 4:4; Colossians 3:16).
This now calls us to critically check ourself. What is sustaining your spiritual life daily? If we only visit Christ occasionally we will never walk consistently in His life. The reason many fluctuate spiritually is because their dependence on Christ has become casual instead of continual. But if our soul feeds daily on Christ through His Word, we begin to carry a life of stability, conviction, strength, purity, discernment, and indwelling of Christ. Christ is not bread for emergencies alone, He is the Bread that must sustain our every day. Anything less will eventually leave the soul weak and vulnerable to spiritual death (John 15:4-5; Psalm 1:2-3).
Beloved in Christ, this is a call to depend daily on Christ. Do not attempt to sustain spiritual life through occasional encounters or outward religious activity. Feed continually on His Word, remain in fellowship with Him, and let His life nourish your soul every day. For the Bread from heaven was given not merely to touch us occasionally, but to keep us alive continually in Christ.
MEDITATION: The Spiritual life can only remain alive through daily dependence on Christ and continual feeding on His Word.
PRAYER: Heavenly Father, I thank You for giving Christ as the Bread that keeps me alive. Forgive me for every form of spiritual negligence and self-dependence. Create in me a deep hunger for Your Word and a continual desire for fellowship with You. Teach me to depend on Christ daily until His life strengthens, preserves, and governs me completely, in Jesus’ name. Amen.
Take time to prayerfully meditate on today’s scripture again. Also prayerfully read and meditate on: 1 Corinthians 10:1-5; Matthew 4:4; Colossians 3:16; John 15:4-5; Psalm 1:2-3.
If this Daily Dose has blessed you, please share it with others and remind them that only daily dependence on Christ can sustain spiritual life. God bless you as you do so.
Good morning, and remain spiritually energized as your soul feed continually on Christ. Have a pleasant day.
11/05/2026
I AM THAT BREAD
(Christ: The Only Source of True Life)
“I am that bread of life.” (John 6:48, KJV)
Flowing from our previous Dose where Christ revealed that true belief brings a man into the reality of eternal life, this verse now declares Christ Himself, the source and sustenance of that life. “I am that bread of life” means that our spiritual life is not sustained by religious activities, emotional experiences, or occasional zeal, but by feeding continually on Christ. And Christ is chiefly revealed through His Word. This is why a believer who neglects God’s Word will gradually become spiritually weak, empty, unstable, and vulnerable to the flesh. Just as natural bread sustains our body daily, the Word of God sustains the life of Christ within us daily (Matthew 4:4).
Christ did not merely come to inspire us, He came to become our nourishment. To feed on Christ is to continually receive, believe, obey, meditate on, and live by His Word. But many desire spiritual strength while starving themselves of the Word. They feed their hearts with worldly entertainment, fleshly desires, human opinions, social distractions, and everything except the truth that gives life. Then they wonder why prayer is dry, conviction is weak, surrender is difficult, and spiritual consistency is absent. Whatever we feeds on will shape our appetite, strengthen our nature, and direct our life (Colossians 3:16; Psalm 1:2–3).
The question is; what are you truly feeding your soul with? We cannot continually feed on carnality and expect to carry spiritual vitality. The life of Christ grows where the Word of Christ dwells richly. When we truly received God’s Word, it confronts sin, breaks pride, renews our mind, purifies our desires, and strengthens our inner man unto obedience. But when we neglected the Word, the flesh gains strength and our spiritual hunger begins to die. A starving spirit cannot sustain a victorious Christian life (John 15:7; Romans 12:2).
Beloved in Christ, this is the call: feed continually on Christ through His Word. Do not live on occasional encounters while neglecting daily nourishment from the Scriptures. Let the Word of Christ dwell richly in you until it shapes your thoughts, governs your desires, directs your decisions, and forms His nature within you. For Christ alone is the Bread of Life, and only the soul that continually feeds on Him through His Word will remain spiritually alive, strong, and fruitful.
MEDITATION: Christ is the Bread of Life, feed on Him daily by receiving, obeying, and living by His Word.
PRAYER: Heavenly Father, I thank You for giving Christ as the Bread of Life. Create in me a deep hunger for Your Word. Deliver me from feeding on things that weaken my spirit and strengthen my flesh. Let Your Word dwell richly in me until the life of Christ is fully formed in me and my soul remains alive unto You, in Jesus’ name. Amen.
Take time to prayerfully meditate on today’s scripture again. Also prayerfully read and meditate on: Matthew 4:4; Colossians 3:16; Psalm 1:1-3; John 15:7; Romans 12:2.
If this Daily Dose has blessed you, please share it with others and remind them that Christ, the Bread of Life, is received and sustained through His Word. God bless you as you do so.
Good morning, and may your soul feed richly on the Word of Christ today.
02/05/2026
IS NOT THIS JESUS?
(When Familiarity Blinds the Heart to Truth)
“And they said, Is not this Jesus, the son of Joseph, whose father and mother we know? how is it then that he saith, I came down from heaven?” (John 6:42, KJV)
Continuing from our previous Dose where murmuring revealed inward resistance, this verse now shows how that resistance is justified through familiarity. “Is not this Jesus…” was not a question of inquiry, but of dismissal. They reduced Him to what they knew, and in doing so, rejected what was being revealed. The danger here is that mere natural understanding of Christ can becomes a barrier to receiving the true revelation of Him.
“Whose father and mother we know” reveals the root of their resistance. They defined Jesus by earthly knowledge. They were not lacking information, but they were limited by it. Because once the heart becomes settled in what it thinks it knows, it resists anything beyond it. This is how many miss God; not because He has not revealed Himself, but because they have already concluded who He is. Familiarity creates a false sense of understanding in us that closes the door to deeper truth (Matthew 13:55-58; 1 Corinthians 2:14).
“How is it then that he saith…” shows the conflict between revelation and reasoning. Instead of yielding to what Christ said, they measured it against their own understanding and rejected it. This is where many still stand. When the Word of God confronts their logic, background, or expectation, they question rather than yield. But we cannot receive divine truth through human reasoning; we must embrace it through surrender. What we insist on understanding naturally, we will never receive spiritually (Isaiah 55:8-9; Proverbs 3:5).
Beloved in Christ, examine your heart today. Have you reduced Christ to what you already know? Have you become familiar with His name, yet closed to His revelation? Do you question when truth goes beyond your understanding, or do you yield? Familiarity is dangerous; it makes one comfortable around truth, yet resistant to it.
Let us lay aside what we think we know. Humble our heart before God. Receive His Word beyond our reasoning. For only the heart that remains open and yielded will grow into the true knowledge of Christ and walk in the fullness of His life.
MEDITATION: Familiarity without surrender blinds the heart, true revelation is received only by a yielded and humble spirit.
PRAYER: Heavenly Father, I thank You for revealing Christ to me. I ask that You deliver me from every form of familiarity that limits my understanding of You. Break every reliance on my own reasoning. Help me to remain humble, teachable, and yielded to Your Word. Let me receive truth fully and walk in the reality of who Christ truly is, in Jesus’ name. Amen.
Take time to prayerfully meditate on today’s scripture again. Also prayerfully read and meditate on: Matthew 13:55-58; 1 Corinthians 2:14; Isaiah 55:8-9; Proverbs 3:5.
If this Daily Dose has blessed you, please share it with others and remind them that familiarity can blind the heart from truth. God bless you as you do so.
Good morning, and may your heart remain open to His revelation today.
26/04/2026
EXPOSED, YET UNCHANGED
(When Revelation Does Not Lead to Surrender)
“But I said unto you, That ye also have seen me, and believe not.” (John 6:36, KJV)
Continuing from our previous Dose where Christ declared Himself as the bread of life, this verse now brings a sobering verdict; not on strangers, but on those who were closest to Him. “Ye also have seen me…” means they were not lacking revelation. They had heard His words, witnessed His works, stood in His presence. Yet in the face of all that light, the conclusion remains: “and believe not.” This is not ignorance, it is a deliberate withholding of the heart from the truth.
“Have seen me” strips away every excuse. We may not deny Christ, but have we yielded to Him? We may acknowledge truth, but have we submitted to it? It is possible to be deeply exposed to the things of God; His teachings, scriptures, encounters, but still remain inwardly unchanged. This is the danger of increased revelation without regeneration. The heart becomes accustomed to truth without being broken by it. What once convicted now passes without effect. This is how hardness begins; not suddenly, but through repeated exposure without response (Hebrews 3:15; John 12:37).
“Believe not” is the weight of the matter. This is not about what we say but about how we live. True belief is not agreement with religion; it is alignment Christ’s life. It is not observation laws but obedience to the Lord of the laws. So the question is not, “Do we believe?” but “Has what we have seen changed us?” Are we still holding on to our will? Still resisting His instruction? Still living outside what we know is true? Then this word stands: you have seen… and yet believe not. This is the most dangerous place. The danger is not what we have not seen, but what we have seen and still refused to obey; true belief is proven by a surrendered life. (James 1:22; Luke 6:46).
Beloved in Christ, do not escape this moment. Do not soften it. Let it search you. How much has been shown to you that you have not obeyed? How many times has your heart been stirred, yet you returned unchanged? This is not a small matter. The longer truth is resisted, the harder the heart becomes. And a hardened heart no longer responds, even when truth is clear.
Respond now: fully and without delay. Let what you have seen break you. Let it bring you to surrender. Yield your will. Align your life.
MEDITATION: The greatest tragedy is not lack of revelation, but refusal to respond to it; it is dangerous to be repeatedly confronted by truth and still remain the same
PRAYER: Heavenly Father, I thank You for the light You have given me. I ask that You expose every place where I have resisted Your truth. Break every hardness within my heart. Deliver me from hearing without obeying and from seeing without surrendering. Help me to respond fully, to yield completely, and to align my life with Your Word. Let my belief be real and evident in how I live, in Jesus’ name. Amen.
Take time to prayerfully meditate on today’s scripture again. Also prayerfully read and meditate on: Hebrews 3:15; John 12:37; James 1:22; Luke 6:46.
If this Daily Dose has blessed you, please share it with others and remind them that revelation without surrender leads to hardness. God bless you as you do so.
Good morning, and may your heart not resist the truth today.
25/04/2026
I AM THE BREAD OF LIFE
(The End of All Emptiness in Christ)
“And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread of life: he that cometh to me shall never hunger; and he that believeth on me shall never thirst.” (John 6:35, KJV)
Continuing from our previous Dose where the heart was confronted with “give me” or “take me,” this verse now brings the final and undeniable answer: “I am.” Christ did not respond to their request with more provision; He presents Himself as the answer. This is where all hunger must be satisfied. The problem is no longer what we need, the question is whether we have truly received Him.
“I am the bread of life” is not symbolic but absolute. It means Christ Himself is the complete satisfaction of the soul. Not an addition to our life, not a helper to our desires; He should not just be a part of our life, He should be the life we must live. Yet many still remain empty, not because Christ is lacking, but because He has not been fully received. He is known, spoken of, even believed in words, but not embraced in surrender. And where He is not received as life, emptiness remains; no matter how much comes in. This is why many keep reading, hearing, and even speaking the Word, some may even be actively involved in routine religious activities, yet not come to the fullness of Christ. (John 4:14; Colossians 3:4).
“He that cometh to me… he that believeth on me…” reveals the way into this fullness. To come is to yield. To believe is to align. This is not a casual approach or verbal confession, but a life handed over, a will surrendered, and a heart brought under God's Word. And the result is final: "never hunger"... "never thirst". Not managed desire, not temporary satisfaction, but complete fullness. This is what many have not entered, because they have not truly come (Isaiah 55:2; Luke 6:46).
Beloved in Christ, this is the end of all excuses. If Christ is the bread of life, why is there still emptiness? If He has promised no hunger and no thirst, why the constant striving? The issue is not His sufficiency, it is our surrender. Have you truly yeilded (come)? Have you truly aligned (believed)? Or are you still near Him, yet not yielded to Him? Still following, yet not surrendered to Him.
Yield now! Come fully! Believe in the Truth. Let Christ be your life; not in confession alone, but in daily obedience and alignment with His Word. Not in service alone, but in total surrender to His will. For only in Him does hunger cease, thirst end, and the soul finally rest in complete satisfaction.
MEDITATION: Christ is the bread of life and only a life fully surrendered to Him will know true and lasting satisfaction.
PRAYER: Heavenly Father, I thank You for revealing Christ as the bread of life. I ask that You bring me into true coming and true believing. Deliver me from partial surrender and empty profession. Help me to yield completely, to align with Your Word, and to live by Christ daily. Let every hunger and thirst in my soul be satisfied fully in Him, in Jesus’ name. Amen.
Take time to prayerfully meditate on today’s scripture again. Also prayerfully read and meditate on: John 4:14; Colossians 3:4; Isaiah 55:2; Luke 6:46.
If this Daily Dose has blessed you, please share it with others and remind them that Christ is not to be a part of life, He is life itself. God bless you as you do so.
Good morning, and may your soul be fully satisfied in Him today.
24/04/2026
“GIVE ME” OR “TAKE ME”
(The Line Between Emptiness and Fulness)
“Then said they unto him, Lord, evermore give us this bread.” (John 6:34, KJV)
Continuing from our previous Dose where Christ revealed Himself as the bread of life, this verse now exposes a deep condition of the heart standing at a crossroads. Their words “evermore give us this bread” sound like desire, but they reveal a heart still operating from self-preservation. They were asking for provision while still refusing surrender. This is where many remain: close to truth, yet not yielded to it.
“Give me” represents the natural posture of a heart that wants help without handing over control. It seeks God’s gifts but resists God’s government. It desires relief, direction, and blessing, yet still holds tightly to self. This is the line where emptiness is sustained; not because God is absent, but because the heart is divided. We can ask repeatedly and still remain empty if surrender is withheld. A life centered on “give me” will always circle need without ever entering fullness (Isaiah 55:2; Luke 6:46).
“Take me” is the line of true transition. It is where the heart stops negotiating and begins to yield. It is the end of selective obedience and the beginning of full surrender. This is where Christ is no longer approached as a supplier, but received as Lord. Many want what He gives, yet resist what He is requesting; because “take me” means death to self-will. Yet this is the only doorway into fullness and complete satisfaction. Until the heart is fully yielded, Christ remains near, but not fully received. Why do we keep asking, yet remain unchanged? Why the repeated prayers, yet the same struggles? Why the desire for more, yet the resistance to obedience? The issue is not what we lack, it is what we refuse to lay down. We say “give me,” but avoid “take me.” And until that changes, nothing truly changes.(Luke 9:23; Galatians 2:20).
Beloved in Christ, this is the line you must face honestly. Are you still living in “give me”; asking, desiring, yet controlling your own life? Or have you crossed into “take me,” where Christ is Lord over all? The emptiness many feel is not a lack of provision, but a lack of surrender. God is not withholding fullness; He is waiting for the heart to yield completely. Stop asking Him to fill a life you are still controlling. Lay it down completely. Let your “give me” become “take all of me.” Yield your will, your desires, your direction. For only the life that is fully given to Christ will ever be truly filled by Him.
MEDITATION: True receiving begins when self yields completely; a heart that keeps asking without surrendering will ever remain empty and never enter fullness.
PRAYER: Heavenly Father, I thank You for revealing the true condition of my heart. I ask that You deliver me from a life centered on “give me.” Break every resistance to full surrender within me. Teach me to yield completely to You, to obey Your Word fully, and to live under Your lordship. Let my life cross from emptiness into fullness in Christ, in Jesus’ name. Amen.
Take time to prayerfully meditate on today’s scripture again. Also prayerfully read and meditate on: Isaiah 55:2; Luke 6:46; Luke 9:23; Galatians 2:20.
If this Daily Dose has blessed you, please share it with others and remind them that the line between emptiness and fullness is surrender. God bless you as you do so.
Good morning, and may your heart fully cross into Him today.
23/04/2026
FROM BREAD TO LIFE
(A Deeper Revelation of Christ)
“For the bread of God is he which cometh down from heaven, and giveth life unto the world.” (John 6:33, KJV)
Continuing from our previous Dose where Christ revealed the true bread from heaven, this verse now brings the revelation to its dept. What was first understood as bread is now unveiled as life itself. This is not a shift in language, but a deepening of truth. What they were seeking as provision is now revealed as a Person who gives life. Yet many are willing to receive “bread,” but resist the surrender required to receive “life.”
“For the bread of God is he…” removes every distance. This is no longer about what God gives, but who God has given. Bread speaks of supply, but life speaks of total dependence in Christ. To receive Him as bread may satisfy a need, but to receive Him as life brings total transformation, and this demands the surrender of self. This is where many draw back because they want Christ to meet their needs, but not to take over their lives. But Christ cannot be partially received; He is either our life, or He remains outside of it (Colossians 3:4; John 1:12).
“And giveth life unto the world” reveals both the provision and the tragedy. Life has been given to us; freely, fully, and completely in Christ. Yet not all enter into it. This is Because this life is not accessed by acknowledgment alone, but by surrender, obedience, and alignment with His Word. The life He gives is not theoretical but practical. It does not mend, repair, fix, or make our own self-life better; but it replaces it. It demands that we no longer live for ourself, but by Christ and through Christ who lives in us. Anything less leaves the soul still searching, still striving, still empty (Galatians 2:20; Luke 9:23).
Beloved in Christ, this is the moment of truth. Have you only received Christ as bread that meets needs when required, or have you received Him as life itself? Do not settle for partial reception. Do not reduce Him to provision. Yield fully. Let Him become your life, your source, your direction, your daily living. For only when Christ becomes our life will the emptiness cease, the striving end, and the fullness of His redemption be truly manifested in us.
MEDITATION: Christ is not just bread to meet needs, He is life itself, and must be received through full surrender and obedience.
PRAYER: Heavenly Father, I thank You for revealing Christ not only as bread, but as life itself. I ask that You deliver me from partial surrender and from reducing Him to mere provision. Help me to yield fully, to live by Him, and to align completely with Your Word. Let Christ be my life in reality, not just in confession. Establish me in the fullness of what You have given, in Jesus’ name. Amen.
Take time to prayerfully meditate on today’s scripture again. Also prayerfully read and meditate on: Colossians 3:4; Galatians 2:20; Luke 9:23; John 1:12.
If this Daily Dose has blessed you, please share it with others and remind them that Christ is not only provision; He is life itself, and must be received fully. God bless you as you do so.
Good morning, and may your heart walk fully in His life today.
22/04/2026
THE TRUE BREAD FROM HEAVEN
(When God Offers What Truly Satisfies the Soul)
“Then Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Moses gave you not that bread from heaven; but my Father giveth you the true bread from heaven.” (John 6:32, KJV)
As we proceed from our previous Dose where Christ addressed our hearts on the trap of remaining satisfied with past experiences, this verse now brings us face to face with a greater reality; the true bread from heaven. What the people celebrated as provision was only a shadow. The manna sustained the body for a time, but it could not give life to the soul. Now Christ is revealing to us that the Father is giving something far greater; not temporary supply, but eternal substance. Yet the weight of this truth is that our heart must be willing to shift from what it is used to, into what is real.
“My Father giveth you the true bread…” reveals that God is not repeating the past but revealing fulfillment. The “true bread” is not a thing, it is a Person; the person of Christ Himself. Many today still seek what God can give, rather than receiving who He has given. God is not offering temporary relief; He has given the true bread from heaven. This bread is not meant to be admired, discussed, or occasionally received. We are meant to embrace it as life itself. Until our heart turns from seeking provision to receiving Christ, we will remain unsatisfied, no matter how much we gathers (John 6:35; John 1:12).
The manna was given daily, yet the people still died. This reveals the limitation of everything that is temporary. It sustains for a moment, but cannot complete. But the true bread from heaven does not just sustain; it transforms, fills, and establishes the soul in lasting life. This is where the Word of God becomes central, because Christ is revealed through it. As we read, meditate, and live the Word, our soul feeds on Christ and finds a satisfaction that leaves no emptiness, no restlessness, no constant craving for more options (Matthew 4:4; Jeremiah 15:16).
Beloved in Christ, today's Dose is calling you to examine what you are truly feeding on. Are you still living on what satisfies for a moment, or have you come into the reality of the true bread? Do not settle for temporary provision when the Father is offering you Christ Himself. Turn fully to Him. Receive Him through His Word. Live in Him daily. For only the true bread from heaven can satisfy the soul completely and establish you in a life that does not fade.
MEDITATION: The true bread from heaven is Christ Himself and only those who feed on Him through His Word will find lasting satisfaction.
PRAYER: Heavenly Father, I thank You for giving me the true bread from heaven in Christ. I ask that You turn my heart away from every temporary pursuit and draw me fully to Him. Teach me to feed on Your Word daily, to meditate on it, and to live by it. Let my soul be filled and satisfied in Christ alone. Remove every restlessness within me and establish me in the fullness of life You have given, in Jesus’ name. Amen.
Take time to prayerfully meditate on today’s scripture again. Also prayerfully read and meditate on: John 6:35; Matthew 4:4; Jeremiah 15:16; Colossians 2:6-7.
If this Daily Dose has blessed you, please share it with someone you love and God bless you as you do so.
Good morning, and may your soul be fully satisfied in Him today.
| Monday | 07:30 - 19:30 |
| Tuesday | 07:30 - 19:30 |
| Wednesday | 07:30 - 19:30 |
| Thursday | 07:30 - 19:00 |
| Friday | 07:29 - 19:30 |
| Saturday | 07:29 - 19:30 |