~Dear God With Love~

C D Swanson

~Dear God With Love~

DEAR GOD: Your Path Is Where I Want To Go~

Many Paths To God

Your Path Is The Path Of Life
by C D SWANSON

“The simple believeth every word: but the prudent man looketh well to his going.” — Proverbs 14:15 (KJV)

This verse speaks with surprising sharpness about the insipid, the unthinking, the easily swayed—those who drift through life without depth, discernment, or intention.

Life is a vast landscape, rich with meaning for those who seek it and strangely hollow for those who do not. Scripture often contrasts the wise with the simple, not to demean, but to awaken. The “simple” in Proverbs are not merely uneducated; they are unanchored—people who move through the world without reflection, conviction, or spiritual grounding. They accept whatever comes, believe whatever is spoken, and follow whatever path is easiest. Their lives become insipid not because they lack potential, but because they lack pursuit.

Humanity has always wrestled with this tension. We are capable of profound thought, yet often settle for shallow distractions. We are created for purpose, yet drift into patterns that numb the soul. The insipid life is not a life without activity; it is a life without depth. It is motion without meaning, noise without truth, existence without transformation.

Proverbs calls us to something higher. The prudent person “looketh well to his going”—a poetic way of saying that wisdom requires intention. It requires pausing long enough to question, discern, and choose. It requires resisting the gravitational pull of the trivial and instead anchoring oneself in what is eternal.

God invites us into a life that is anything but insipid. His call is one of depth, richness, and clarity. When we seek Him, life gains texture. When we pursue truth, our days gain weight. When we walk with purpose, even ordinary moments become sacred.

The contrast between the simple and the prudent is ultimately a call to awaken—to refuse the thinness of a life lived on the surface and instead embrace the fullness of a life shaped by God’s wisdom.

“LORD- give me discernment to rise above the shallow things of life, and guide me into a deeper walk with You, filled with wisdom, purpose, and truth. In Jesus name, Amen”

DEAR GOD: We Are Living With Clarity In Your Vision~

A GOD GIVEN VISION – Palmetto Baptist Church

  “The Lord directs the steps of the godly. He delights in every detail of their lives.” — Psalm 37:23 (NLT)


In the quiet rhythm of morning light, when the world is still and our hearts are tender, this verse reminds us: God is not distant. He is deliberate. He watches over each step we take — not just the grand leaps of faith, but the small, sacred motions of daily life. He delights in our routines, our responsibilities, our quiet offerings.

To live honestly and with clarity in the Lord’s vision is to invite Him into the ordinary. It is to fold laundry with reverence, to prepare meals with love, to speak truth even when silence would be easier. It is to let our yes be yes, and our no be no — not out of pride, but out of peace.


🌼 Ways to Walk in His Vision Daily

  • Begin with prayer: Invite the Lord to order your steps before the day begins.
  • Speak truth gently: Honesty is not harshness; it is light wrapped in grace.
  • Honor small tasks: Every duty — from sweeping floors to answering emails — can be a form of worship.
  • Pause for discernment: Ask, “Is this aligned with God’s peace?” before making decisions.
  • Bless your boundaries: Saying no can be holy when it protects your calling.
  • Celebrate integrity: Even unseen acts of honesty echo in heaven.
  • Offer your work: Say, “Lord, I give this to You,” whether it’s caregiving, writing, or selling legacy items.

🙏🏽 A Prayer for Clarity and Honesty

“LORD – In the quiet corners of my day, meet me with Your light. Help me walk with integrity, speak with clarity, and serve with joy. Let my tasks be touched by Your presence, and my choices reflect Your peace. May I honor You not just in worship, but in work, not just in prayer, but in presence. Direct my steps, delight in my details, and dwell in my heart. In Jesus name, Amen.”

DEAR GOD: We Love Living In Your Love~

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“And this I pray, that your love may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all judgment; That ye may approve things that are excellent; that ye may be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ.” –Philippians 1:9-10


Overflowing Love with Discernment: A Prayer for Sincere Living

 Paul’s prayer in Philippians 1:9–10 is a profound invitation to a love that is not blind or vague but deeply rooted in knowledge and discernment. He’s not merely asking that believers feel more affection or kindness—he’s praying for a love that grows in wisdom, clarity, and spiritual insight. This is love that sees clearly, chooses wisely, and walks sincerely.

Let’s break it down:

  • “That your love may abound yet more and more…” Paul begins with abundance. Love is not static—it’s meant to overflow, to stretch, to deepen. But this isn’t sentimentalism. It’s love that matures through truth.
  • “…in knowledge and in all judgment.” Here, Paul anchors love in two pillars: knowledge (epignosis—deep, experiential understanding of God) and judgment (aisthēsis—moral insight, discernment). This is love that knows what is good, what is harmful, what is holy. It’s the kind of love that can say “no” to compromise and “yes” to excellence.
  • “That ye may approve things that are excellent…” The word “approve” implies testing, discerning, and choosing what is best—not just what is permissible. In today’s world, flooded with options, opinions, and distractions, this verse calls us to spiritual clarity. Excellence here isn’t perfectionism—it’s choosing what aligns with God’s heart.
  • “…that ye may be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ.” Sincerity (literally “sun-tested”) means being pure, transparent, without hidden agendas. “Without offence” means not causing others to stumble, nor stumbling ourselves. Paul’s vision is for believers to live in such a way that their lives shine with integrity until Christ returns.

Application Today:

In our modern Christian walk, this passage is a call to:

  • Discernment in love: Not every act labeled “love” is godly. We must love with truth, boundaries, and clarity.
  • Spiritual maturity: As we grow, our love should become more wise, not just more emotional.
  • Choosing excellence: In media, relationships, work, and worship—are we choosing what is excellent or what is merely acceptable?
  • Living sincerely: In a world of filters and facades, sincerity is radical. It’s living in the light, with nothing to hide.
  • Preparing for Christ’s return: This isn’t just about today—it’s about eternity. Our choices now shape our readiness for the day of Christ.

Prayer:

Lord, may our love abound—not just in feeling, but in truth. Teach us to love with wisdom, to discern what is excellent, and to walk sincerely. Purify our motives, sharpen our judgment, and help us live lives that reflect Your holiness. May we be found without offence, radiant in Your grace, until the day You return. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

Reflective Question:

What does it mean for your love to grow in wisdom today?

 

DEAR GOD: You Are The Sacred Compass: Guarding the Heart Toward Eternal Peace”

Peace Of God

Proverbs 4:23 (NLT) –

“Guard your heart above all else,
for it determines the course of your life.”

 


This verse is a quiet call to sacred stewardship. The heart—seat of thought, emotion, and spiritual discernment—is not merely a vessel of feeling, but the compass of one’s entire life. To guard it is to tend it with reverence, to shield it from bitterness, distraction, and despair, and to nourish it with truth, grace, and peace.

The course of life does not begin with external circumstances, but with the inner terrain. When the heart is anchored in wisdom, the path ahead becomes clearer. When it is clouded by fear or woundedness, even the brightest road can feel uncertain.

This verse invites a daily practice of intentionality: to pause, reflect, and ask what is shaping the heart today. Is it love or anxiety? Faith or fatigue? The answer will ripple outward into every decision, every relationship, every moment.

To guard the heart is not to harden it—it is to honor its sacred role in shaping a life of purpose, peace, and eternal alignment.

The heart is not just the emotional center—it is the spiritual command post. It is where convictions are formed, where truth is weighed, and where the voice of God is either welcomed or drowned out. Scripture urges us to guard it “above all else,” because everything else flows from it: our words, our choices, our relationships, our legacy.

Guarding the heart is not a passive act—it is a daily discipline. It means choosing what we allow to enter through the gates of our eyes and ears. It means filtering every thought through the lens of God’s Word. It means refusing to let bitterness take root, even when wounds run deep. It means cultivating joy, even when circumstances feel heavy.

When the heart is guarded by grace, it becomes a vessel of divine clarity. Decisions are no longer driven by impulse or fear, but by faith and discernment. The course of life begins to reflect heaven’s rhythm—steady, purposeful, and full of peace. Even in seasons of uncertainty, a guarded heart remains anchored, because it is held by the One who sees the end from the beginning.

This verse also reminds us that the heart is where eternity begins. What we treasure there—whether it be God’s truth or worldly distractions—shapes not only our earthly path but our eternal destination. To guard the heart is to prepare it for glory, to make it a dwelling place for the Spirit, and to align it with the promises of God.

In a world that constantly pulls us in a thousand directions, this verse calls us back to center. It invites us to live from the inside out, to let God shape our inner life so that our outer life reflects His goodness. It is a call to sacred stewardship, to holy vigilance, and to unwavering trust in the One who knows our hearts better than we do.

“LORD- You are the Keeper of our hearts and the Shepherd of our souls. Teach us to guard the sacred space within us, to protect it from distraction, deception, and despair. Let Your Word be the filter through which every thought passes, and Your Spirit the guide for every decision we make. May our hearts be tender to Your leading, firm in Your truth, and full of Your peace. Shape the course of our lives according to Your will, and let every step reflect the beauty of a heart aligned with eternity. We praise You for Your faithfulness, for the gift of Your presence, and for the eternal reward that awaits those who walk with You. In Jesus’ name, Amen.”

DEAR GOD: I Have Victory Through Surender (In YOU)~

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For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds: Casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ.”
2 Corinthians 10:4-5 (KJV)


A Fresh Commentary

This passage reveals a profound spiritual truth: the Christian life is not a passive observance of belief—it is an active engagement in a war of the unseen, fought not with fists or flesh, but with weapons empowered by God. Paul challenges us to move beyond superficial religion and step into the inner sanctum where the real battle rages: our thoughts, our beliefs, our internal arguments.

“Strongholds” here don’t mean physical towers, but entrenched mindsets—lies, pride, fears, generational wounds, or worldly philosophies that resist the sovereignty and truth of Christ. These could manifest as:

  • A belief that I am too broken to be loved.
  • A justification that vengeance is better than forgiveness.
  • A cultural mantra that my truth outweighs God’s truth.

To “cast down imaginations” is to wage war against the ideas we’ve allowed to grow taller than our reverence for God. And “bringing every thought into captivity” means every stray, anxious, prideful, lustful, or rebellious thought is not to be entertained—it is to be captured, examined, and made to bow to Christ.


Living This Out in Christianity Today

In our present age of self-expression and digital noise, the battlefield is often our own mind and heart. The world tells us: follow your feelings, believe in yourself above all. But Christ calls us to test every thought by His truth—not our moods, not culture, not even our past.

Consider practical examples:

  • When anxiety says: “God won’t come through.” We reply: “But my God shall supply all your need…” (Philippians 4:19)
  • When bitterness whispers: “They don’t deserve my forgiveness.” We answer: “Even as Christ forgave you, so also do ye.” (Colossians 3:13)
  • When pride boasts: “I don’t need God’s help.” We kneel and declare: “God resisteth the proud, but giveth grace unto the humble.” (James 4:6)

The truth is, we are not helpless victims of our thoughts. In Christ, we are stewards of our minds.


Supporting Scriptures

  • Romans 12:2 — “Be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind…”
  • Ephesians 6:11–12 — “Put on the whole armour of God… For we wrestle not against flesh and blood…”
  • Philippians 4:8 — “Whatsoever things are true… honest… just… think on these things.”
  • Psalm 19:14 — “Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable in thy sight…”

Questions for Deep Reflection

  • What dominant thoughts have I allowed to shape my behavior more than Scripture?
  • Do I recognize when a thought is exalting itself over the knowledge of God?
  • Am I willing to surrender every imagination—even the ones that feel comforting but are spiritually false?
  • What truths of Christ do I need to memorize and hold like a sword when temptation strikes?

How Do We Take These Thoughts Captive?

  1. Name the Thought – Say it aloud. Bring it into the light. Is it rooted in truth—or in fear, anger, insecurity?
  2. Compare it with Scripture – Does this thought match what God says? If not, it must be resisted.
  3. Reject and Replace – Don’t just remove the lie—replace it with truth. Put verses in your heart like spiritual armor.
  4. Pray Immediately – Run to Jesus. Don’t delay. He is not annoyed by our mental battles—He’s present for them.
  5. Surrender it to the Throne – We don’t wrestle thoughts into submission alone. We bring them to Christ, placing them before His throne in humility and confidence.

 “Let us lay aside every weight… looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith…” (Hebrews 12:1–2)


“O’ LORD, You see the battlefield within us. You know the thoughts that rise like giants and the lies that try to build their fortresses. But we will not fight with carnal tools. We will not reason our way into peace. We will use Your Word, wield Your promises, and pray until our hearts remember who we are. Tear down what doesn’t belong. Cast out every fear, every prideful argument, every deceptive thought. We choose to bring them captive—to lay them before Your throne. Train our hearts to be warriors of love, warriors of truth, and warriors of peace. And when we feel weak, remind us: You are mighty, and You fight for us. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


A Final Reflective Invitation

What stronghold in your thoughts needs to be brought to Christ today—not with shame, but with bold, loving surrender?

DEAR GOD: Guard My Tongue & Season My Words~

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A soft answer turneth away wrath: but grievous words stir up anger. — Proverbs 15:1


Words carry weight. They build bridges or burn them, soothe souls or wound hearts. Proverbs 15:1 teaches a simple yet profound truth—how we respond to conflict determines its outcome. A gentle, measured response has the power to defuse anger, redirect hostility, and promote peace, while harsh words escalate disputes, deepening wounds and fueling division.


Speaking with the Wisdom of God

The Word of God consistently reinforces the importance of tempering speech with wisdom and grace.

  • Proverbs 16:24 — “Pleasant words are as an honeycomb, sweet to the soul, and health to the bones.”
  • James 1:19 — “Wherefore, my beloved brethren, let every man be swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath.”
  • Colossians 4:6 — “Let your speech be always with grace, seasoned with salt, that ye may know how ye ought to answer every man.”

These verses remind us that gracious speech is not weakness, but strength—a reflection of the wisdom that comes from God.


Examples from Scripture and Daily Life

Consider the example of Abigail in 1 Samuel 25. When faced with the reckless wrath of Nabal, she responded with wisdom, humility, and gentleness, preventing unnecessary bloodshed. Her soft answer turned away David’s anger, revealing the power of calm, Spirit-led intervention.

In our own lives, a kind response to a rude cashier, a patient word to a frustrated family member, or a loving approach to someone acting unjustly can shift the entire atmosphere. Though it is not always easy, responding with grace is a choice that honors God.


Living in the Light of His Word

Applying Proverbs 15:1 daily requires intentional surrender to God’s guidance. The tongue is a mighty force, capable of shaping relationships, influencing emotions, and directing our paths. As followers of Christ, we must ask:

  1. Do my words reflect the heart of God?
  2. Am I responding to offense with patience and wisdom?
  3. Is my speech seasoned with grace, even in difficult conversations?

Prayer

Heavenly Father, teach us to speak with kindness, wisdom, and restraint. May our words bring healing, not harm; peace, not contention. Help us to listen before we speak, and to reflect Your love even in moments of frustration. Let our tongues glorify You and draw others nearer to Your truth. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

DEAR GOD: Walking with Christ My Shepherd~

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Walking with Christ: His Spirit and Guidance

And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Helper, to be with you forever, even the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it neither sees him nor knows him. You know him, for he dwells with you and will be in you.” — John 14:16-17 (ESV)


The essence of Christ’s ministry was not merely His words or miracles, but the gift He left behind: the Holy Spirit. This “Helper,” as Jesus called Him, is a guide, comforter, and source of power for believers. Christ’s Spirit doesn’t just dwell in a faraway realm but is present within us, transforming our lives daily.

The Spirit as a Guide

Christ promised His Spirit to lead us in truth and righteousness. When we face moral dilemmas, uncertainties, or trials, the Spirit provides wisdom and discernment. For example, in moments where our path seems unclear, Paul’s words in Galatians 5:16 resonate: But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh.” (ESV). Through the Spirit, we are invited to live a life that reflects Christ’s example—humble, loving, and selfless.

Reflective questions:

  • Are there areas in your life where you’ve relied on your own understanding instead of seeking the Spirit’s guidance?
  • How do you actively listen for the Spirit’s leading in your daily choices?

The Spirit’s Transforming Power

The Spirit works to mold us into the likeness of Christ. This transformation is not instantaneous but a lifelong process, as described in 2 Corinthians 3:18: “And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit.” (ESV).

It’s through this transformation that we bear the fruits of the Spirit—love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control (Galatians 5:22-23). Each fruit reflects Christ’s character and draws us closer to God and to one another.

Reflective questions:

  • What fruit of the Spirit do you see most evident in your life? Which one do you feel called to cultivate more deeply?
  • How can the Spirit’s transforming work equip you to serve others?

Christ’s Spirit in Community

The Spirit not only guides and transforms us individually but also unites us as a body of believers. In Ephesians 4:3-4, Paul urges us to maintain unity: “eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. There is one body and one Spirit—just as you were called to the one hope that belongs to your call.” (ESV). The Spirit enables us to love one another despite our differences and to work together for the Kingdom of God.

Reflective questions:

  • How does the Spirit prompt you to foster unity within your community of faith?
  • Are there relationships in your life where you need the Spirit’s help to restore peace and understanding?

A Prayer for Guidance

“Heavenly Father, Thank You for the gift of Your Spirit, who dwells within us and guides us in all truth. Open our hearts to hear His voice and to follow His leading. Transform us into the image of Christ, that we may reflect Your love and grace in all we do. Unite us as one body, empowered by Your Spirit to serve You and others faithfully. May Your Spirit renew us daily, filling us with joy, peace, and strength. In Jesus’ name, Amen.”

The Spirit of Christ is not distant or impersonal but deeply involved in every aspect of our lives. When we surrender to His guidance, we find clarity in confusion, strength in weakness, and hope in despair. May you walk closely with Christ, empowered and guided by His Spirit, each day.

 

God Bless You All~