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New to the Space Series
Called to Compassion
God is still calling people to go, serve, and respond with compassion. Discover how TLC is living out this mission in Guadalajara by bringing healing, building an orphanage, and caring for those in need.
Placing the Word of God into the hands of missionaries
Around the world, pastors lead churches with little to no resources. Through Light for the Lost and the Fire Bible, we can place God’s Word into their hands and equip them to reach their communities.
A Heart for the Mission of God
God’s mission is to make disciples in every nation, and every believer has a role to play. Discover how supporting and sending missionaries helps spread the gospel around the world.
Formed for Mission
A heart for missions doesn’t just appear—it’s formed. Discover how teaching children to pray, give, and go helps build a lifelong commitment to God’s global mission.
Faith Promise: Trusting God for Kingdom Advancement
Faith Promise is more than giving. It is a step of trust in God’s provision and a commitment to participate in His Kingdom work. Discover how generosity becomes a spiritual habit that advances God’s mission.
Reformed for Mission
Acts 2:47 reveals the result of a Spirit-formed church. As believers lived in devotion and unity, the Lord added to their number daily. Formation naturally overflowed into mission.
Devoted, Not Distant
Acts 2:42 shows that following Jesus is not about occasional inspiration but steady devotion. The early church committed themselves to truth, community, worship, and prayer—and that rhythm formed lasting transformation.
Transferred Allegiance
Acts 2:38 shows that repentance is more than regret. It is a transfer of allegiance. Peter calls people to turn toward Jesus as Lord, publicly identify with Him in baptism, and receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.
When the Gospel Cuts
In Acts 2:37, the crowd is “cut to the heart” after hearing Peter’s message. This conviction is not shame but the Holy Spirit exposing what needs to change so healing and repentance can begin.
The Throne Is Occupied
Acts 2:36 declares a reality that reshapes everything: Jesus is both Lord and Christ. The resurrection vindicated Him, the ascension enthroned Him, and now every life must reckon with the occupied throne.
From Presence to Participation
Pentecost began with wind and fire, but it settled into devotion. Acts 2 shows how the Spirit formed a community devoted to truth, fellowship, worship, generosity, and mission.
Admiration Is Not Allegiance
In Acts 2, the crowd was cut to the heart after Peter’s message and asked what they should do. The answer was not admiration but repentance, baptism, and surrender to Jesus as Lord.
Faith That Can Be Examined
In Acts 2, Peter does not ask people to believe blindly. He presents evidence. Christianity begins with claims rooted in history, eyewitness testimony, and the resurrection of Jesus.
Courage in the Street
When the Holy Spirit filled the disciples at Pentecost, their faith moved from the upper room into the streets. Acts 2 shows how the Spirit transforms private belief into public witness.
When God Moved In
Pentecost was not just a historic moment. It was a relocation. In Acts 2, God’s presence moved from sacred spaces to living people through the Holy Spirit.
Between Enthronement and Return
History is not drifting. It is moving toward Christ’s return. In today’s devotional from Acts 1, we explore what it means to live faithfully between Jesus’ ascension and His promised return.
What Waiting Reveals
Before wind and fire came prayer and unity. Today’s devotional explores how spiritual formation in waiting prepares hearts before visible breakthrough.
Why Power Is Dangerous
The Spirit gives power—but not for prestige. Today we examine the purpose of spiritual power and why influence must be aligned with humility and witness.
The Problem With a Visible Jesus
Why didn’t Jesus remain physically present after the resurrection? Today’s devotional explores how the ascension makes internal transformation possible through the Holy Spirit.
Why Evidence Matters
Christianity does not begin with metaphor—it begins with an event. In today’s devotional, we examine why the resurrection was presented as historical fact and why that changes everything about allegiance and surrender.
When Resurrection Became Identity
The resurrection doesn’t just change what we believe—it changes who we become. In today’s devotional, we explore how life with a living Savior reshapes identity, moves us out of fear, and sends ordinary people into God’s purpose.
When Doubt Met the Risen Christ
Thomas was not shamed for his doubt—he was met by the risen Christ. In today’s devotional, we explore how Jesus heals uncertainty not with pressure, but with proximity, inviting us to remain instead of retreat.
When Fear Lost Its Authority
Fear does not disappear overnight—but it loses its right to decide. In today’s devotional, we explore how the resurrection frees believers from slavery to fear and grounds courage in the living Christ.
When Death Lost Its Final Word
The Bible does not deny death—it calls it an enemy. But the resurrection makes a staggering claim: this enemy has been defeated. In today’s devotional, we explore how Jesus rising from the dead reframes grief, transforms fear, and declares that every grave is on borrowed time.
What Does the Resurrection Change?
The resurrection is not the sequel to the cross—it is God’s declaration that the cross worked. In this New to the Space devotional, we explore how Jesus’ resurrection confirms the verdict of forgiveness and reshapes how we stand before God every day—no longer hiding, no longer defending, but at peace.
When Love Refused to Protect Itself
Today’s New to the Space devotional reflects on a love that did not hesitate or protect itself. While we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Discover how covenant love absorbs cost, satisfies justice, and opens the way to real forgiveness.
The Curtain God Tore Himself
Today’s New to the Space devotional reflects on the moment the temple curtain was torn from top to bottom. The barrier that once warned, “This far and no further,” was removed by God Himself, revealing that access to His presence is not earned—but opened through Jesus.
The Day Someone Stood Where You Should Have
Today’s New to the Space devotional explores why inspiration was not enough—substitution was required. 2 Corinthians 5 reveals that Jesus did not simply model a better life; He stood in our place, taking the consequence of sin so we could receive righteousness and freedom.
Why Forgiveness Wasn’t Free
Today’s New to the Space devotional explores why God could not simply overlook sin. Romans 3 reveals that at the cross, justice was not canceled but fulfilled. Discover how forgiveness is free to us—because it was costly to God.
When Sin Is Finally Told the Truth
Today’s New to the Space devotional confronts an uncomfortable but necessary truth: sin is not a flaw to manage, but a condition that required rescue. Discover why Jesus’ death was not symbolic, but essential—and what that means for real healing.
Peace that doesn’t run
Today’s New to the Space devotional reflects on Jesus’ promise of peace in John 14:27. Biblical peace is not the absence of trouble, but the presence of God that trouble cannot remove. Discover how peace anchored in Christ steadies the heart when circumstances do not.
Not Left as Orphans
Today’s New to the Space devotional explores Jesus’ promise that His followers will not be left as orphans. Through the gift of the Holy Spirit, God’s presence moves from beside us to within us, sustaining faith not through willpower, but through abiding presence.
If You’ve Seen Jesus
Today’s New to the Space devotional addresses a deep and personal question: What is God really like? Jesus tells His disciples that to see Him is to see the Father, revealing that there is no harsher or hidden version of God beyond Christ—only grace, patience, and truth made visible.
The Way Is a Person
Today’s New to the Space devotional challenges a common assumption about faith. Jesus does not offer directions or principles for reaching God—He presents Himself as the way. Christianity begins not with a method to master, but with a Person to trust.
Who is the Christian God: God is not a guess
Today’s New to the Space devotional addresses a foundational question: Who is the Christian God? Rather than guessing or defining God by preference, Jesus reveals God through His own life, inviting us to trust what has been shown instead of what we assume.
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