Good Morning Sunshine! Digging For What You Cannot Yet See!

This devotional series was birthed from a moment that marked me deeply. On November 16th, my Assistant Pastor, Elder Lee, preached a message called “Digging in a Drought.” 2 Kings 3:12-17, his words stirred something in my spirit so strongly that I knew God was speaking directly to me. I am truly grateful.

That message became the seed for this 10-day journey. It connected to the theme God already had us in the Season of Rebuilding but added a deeper layer: before you rebuild, you must dig. And sometimes God calls you to dig when nothing around you shows signs of rain, relief, or breakthrough. In 2 Kings 3:9–20, God told the kings to dig ditches in a dry valley even though there was no wind, no rain, and no visible reason to expect water. Yet obedience made room for the miracle. The water came because they dug.

This series will take you through the same spiritual rhythm: Digging in surrender * Digging in darkness * Digging while waiting * Digging under pressure * Digging even when you feel unprepared * Digging until overflow comes.

Each day is designed to strengthen your faith, stretch your obedience, and prepare your heart for what God is about to release. My prayer is that these devotions will encourage you to dig again to dig deeper and to dig with expectation. Because God still fills what you prepare, and He still sends water to every ditch carved out in faith.

What you cannot yet see, God is already preparing. All He asks is that you dig. May these next ten days awaken your obedience, revive your hope, and enlarge your capacity for what God is about to pour. And may every miracle that comes forth be traced back to one truth, You dug before you saw it and God filled what you made room for!

Good Morning Sunshine! You Are Digging for What You Cannot Yet See! Don’t Stop Digging!

2 Kings 3:16–17 (KJV) ~ “And he said, Thus saith the Lord, Make this valley full of ditches. For thus saith the Lord, Ye shall not see wind, neither shall ye see rain; yet that valley shall be filled with water, that ye may drink, both ye, and your cattle, and your beasts.”

Welcome to Day One of this new 10-part devotional journey, a series divinely aligned with the season God has declared over you, the season of Rebuilding. Just as our previous multi-day journey prepared your heart for deeper surrender, this series will prepare you to rebuild with intentionality, vision, and spiritual depth. And we begin where rebuilding always starts, digging. Not digging for immediate results. Not digging for something visible. But digging for what you cannot yet see. Digging because God said dig. Digging because the valley needs capacity before Heaven releases supply. Digging because obedience is the foundation of rebuilding.

In 2 Kings 3:9, the three kings wandered for seven days and reached a point of dryness so severe that their strength was failing. This is the place where many rebuilding journeys begin, in the valley of exhaustion, in the wilderness of confusion, in the absence of resources. You don’t rebuild from a place of abundance; you rebuild because something has been broken, something has run out, something needs restructuring. Just like these kings, your rebuilding begins when you acknowledge that what you have is not enough for where you are going. As the kings faced the threat of defeat, one leader panicked and one leader prayed. The king of Israel said they would all perish, but Jehoshaphat shifted the atmosphere with a single question: “Is there not here a prophet of the Lord?” (v. 11). Rebuilding begins where panic ends and where divine instruction becomes more important than human assumption. When you are in the valley, the answer is not more control, it is more God. It is a return to His voice. It is a search for His strategy. It is the recognition that without Him, you dig blindly, but with Him, you dig prophetically.

Elisha’s entrance into the story marks the moment God interrupts human effort with divine order. Before he even speaks a word from the Lord, he calls for a minstrel (v. 15), because rebuilding requires atmosphere. You cannot rebuild in noise. You cannot rebuild in panic. You cannot rebuild in emotional chaos. You must shift your environment so God can shape your instructions. Worship becomes the shovel that breaks the first layer of hard ground in your heart. Then the word of the Lord comes: “Make this valley full of ditches” (v. 16). This instruction is the anchor of our devotional series. God told them to dig before giving them water. He told them to make room before releasing supply. He told them to work in what looked like waste. This is the essence of rebuilding, God will ask you to create capacity in a dry place long before you see the reason for it. Digging is not glamorous. Digging is not convenient. Digging is not comfortable. But digging is essential. Because God will only fill what faith prepares.

Verse 17 is where God reveals His divine pattern, “Ye shall not see wind, neither shall ye see rain; yet that valley shall be filled with water.” This is where we learn that God does not operate like man. Humans wait on signs; God waits on obedience. Humans look for confirmation; God looks for surrender. Humans expect visible progress; God expects faith-filled preparation. You dig even when you don’t see clouds. You dig even when you don’t feel rain. You dig for what you cannot yet see because God’s word is enough to justify the work. Verse 18 declares that what looks impossible to you is “but a light thing in the sight of the Lord.” God wants you to know that rebuilding is not a burden to Him, it is His specialty. Your valley does not intimidate Him. Your dryness does not overwhelm Him. Your emptiness does not exhaust Him. When God commands digging, it means supply is guaranteed. And when God commands rebuilding, it means restoration is already written in your story.

Everything shifts when we reach Verse 20, “And it came to pass in the morning… behold, there came water.” Notice this, the water came after the digging was complete. The water came from an unexpected direction, not from the sky, not from a cloudbank, not from a predictable place but “by the way of Edom.” God is actively teaching you in this season of rebuilding that your supply will not come through normal channels, familiar systems, or common sources. When God sends water, He will do it in a way that proves only He could have done it. This is why today’s devotional is titled “Digging for What You Cannot Yet See.” Rebuilding starts with obedience that precedes evidence. It starts with preparation that precedes manifestation. It starts with spiritual groundwork before physical changes ever appear. Over the next 10 days, God will teach you to dig deeper, trust harder, surrender wider, and rebuild stronger. And every ditch you dig, every place where your faith forms space will become a container for the water God has already appointed to your life.

So today, begin with the shovel in your hand. The ground may feel dry, but your obedience is wet with promise. The valley may look empty, but God is preparing to fill it. Dig for what you cannot yet see, because the God who sends water without wind or rain is the God who meets you in the depth of your obedience.

Let’s Pray:

Father, I come before You today at the beginning of this journey with a heart ready to obey, a spirit ready to dig, and a life ready to be rebuilt by Your hands. I confess that there are valleys in me that have run dry, places where hope has thinned and strength has weakened. But today I choose to believe that dryness is not the end it is the place where You command me to dig. Lord, teach me to dig even when I see no sign of rain. Teach me to trust Your word more than my senses. Teach me to surrender my need to see before I obey. Help me understand that the shovel in my hand is not a burden, but a blessing, a tool You gave me to prepare for the water You have already ordained. Shift the atmosphere of my heart the way You shifted the valley through Elisha’s minstrel. Remove panic. Remove doubt. Remove fear of the unknown. Fill my environment with worship, with stillness, with clarity, with sound that prepares my spirit for new instruction. Let my rebuilding begin from a surrendered place. Father, break every pattern in me that seeks surface-level rebuilding. Remind me that true rebuilding requires depth, in prayer, in faith, in trust, in obedience. Help me to dig past the first layer of emotions, past the layer of excuses, past the layer of hesitation, and into the depths where transformation begins. God, I embrace Your unorthodox ways. I accept that my blessing may not come from where I expected it. I surrender the way I thought You would answer, the timing I expected You to move, and the method I assumed You would use. I trust the God who does not need wind or rain to bring water. I trust the God who fills ditches dug in the dark. Rebuild my faith in this season. Strengthen the places in me that have weakened under the pressure of waiting. Restore the confidence I once had in Your voice. Lift the weight of discouragement, disappointment, and delay. Let every ditch I dig become evidence of renewed trust. Father, when the water comes, from unexpected directions and supernatural sources, let me not miss it. Let me recognize Your hand. Let me celebrate Your faithfulness. Let me rise in the confidence that if You filled the valley once, You will fill it again. And let that water not only sustain me, but prepare me for victory over every enemy that has stood against me. I enter this rebuilding journey with expectation, with obedience, and with a heart ready for transformation. Dig in me, God, as I dig for You and may water meet me in every place I have prepared by faith. In the Name of Jesus Christ, Amen!

Nugget: Your obedience becomes the container for what God is about to pour.

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean…

Good Morning Sunshine! God Has Rebuilt What’s Inside Of You For His Glory And It Is Radiant!

Psalm 126:1–2 (NKJV) ~ “When the Lord brought back the captivity of Zion, we were like those who dream. Then our mouth was filled with laughter, and our tongue with singing. Then they said among the nations, ‘The Lord has done great things for them.’”

This final day in the Rebuilding and Glory series is a reflection on the journey we’ve walked together, ten days of restoration, renewal, and revelation. From Day One: The Great Exchange, Trading Worthless Things for the Worthy One, we learned that nothing we’ve built or achieved compares to knowing Christ. From Day Two, Nothing Compares to the Treasure of His Presence, we discovered that surrender isn’t loss, it’s the pathway to treasure. From Day Threw, The Rubbish That Reveals the Reward, God taught us that even in the ruins, His hands are at work. Each step since has been a piece of the puzzle that reveals His unshakable love and the promise of greater glory.

We then moved to Day Four, When What’s Left Is Still Enough, where God reminded us that His grace begins where our strength ends. Day Five, The Beauty Beyond the Broken showed us that ashes are not the aftermath but the altar from which He rebuilds beauty. Day Six, The Strength of What Remains reminded us that the remnants still carry power and promise, and that what’s left is always enough for God to use. With Day Seven, The Rebuilding of Glory, we declared that the glory of the latter will be greater than the former, as God fills the new structure of our hearts with peace.

Day Eight, When Glory Finds You in the Rubble reminded us that we no longer have to chase the cloud, His presence meets us where we are, filling every broken space. Then Day Nine, The Weight of His Presence carried us into a deeper realization that His glory doesn’t crush, it covers. It brings unity, peace, and purpose that human effort could never achieve. And now, here at Day Ten: The Rebuilt and the Radiant, we stand not as broken builders but as restored temples, filled with the same glory that once filled Solomon’s sanctuary, radiating from within us.

Psalm 126 captures this moment perfectly. The people of Israel had been in exile, stripped of joy and hope, and then, suddenly, God restored them. It felt like a dream. That’s what restoration feels like: surreal, divine, and overflowing with gratitude. It’s the realization that the same God who allowed the breaking has orchestrated the rebuilding. The laughter of this psalm is not the sound of denial; it’s the sound of deliverance. It’s the sound of people who saw ruins turn into revelation.

Every tear sown in the first nine days has become a seed that births joy. Psalm 126:5–6 says, “Those who sow in tears shall reap in joy.” Your tears of surrender on Day One, your digging through debris on Day Three, your standing in weakness on Day Four, and your rising in faith on Day Seven, all of it has led to this harvest. God was never wasting your pain; He was watering your promise. You are standing in the field of fulfillment, and heaven is rejoicing over the restoration that has taken root in you.

The laughter and singing of Psalm 126 symbolize a full-circle moment. Where there was once heaviness, there is now hallelujah. Where there was rubble, there is rejoicing. The nations looked at Israel and said, “The Lord has done great things for them.” The same will be said of you. Every area that seemed barren will bloom again, every space that once felt empty will overflow with His glory. You are now the living testimony of His rebuilding power.

This entire journey, from loss to glory, reveals one powerful truth: God’s glory doesn’t just rebuild what was broken; it redefines what wholeness means. The first temple may have been impressive, but the latter one carried the presence of Christ. Likewise, the new you carries something deeper than what you lost, the indwelling presence of His Spirit. Ephesians 3:20 reminds us, “Now to Him who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that works in us.” That power is already at work, rebuilding from the inside out.

You are no longer the same person who started this journey. The Great Exchange changed your perspective. The Treasure of His Presence refined your desires. The Rubbish revealed your strength. The Remnant reminded you of grace. The Rebuilding restored your focus. And now, in this final day, the Radiance of His glory rests on you as a seal of completion. What began in surrender ends in strength. What began in ashes ends in anointing. What began in rubble ends in radiant glory.

God wants you to know that this is not the end, it’s the unveiling of what’s been forming within you all along. 2 Corinthians 3:18 says, “But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory.” This is your glory to glory moment. You are not who you were ten days ago. You have been lifted, filled, refined, and renewed. The Spirit has carried you from rebuilding to reigning, from surviving to shining.

So now, stand tall in what remains. You are the living temple where His glory dwells. You are the evidence of Ezekiel’s vision, the manifestation of Haggai’s promise, and the fulfillment of Nehemiah’s rebuild. What God has rebuilt in you will stand as a monument of His mercy. What He has filled in you will overflow into others. And as you carry this glory into the world, remember that the same God who rebuilt your ruins will use you to help rebuild others.

Let’s Pray:

Father, I stand before You today in awe of how far You have brought me. Ten days ago, I came with broken pieces, and now I stand in rebuilt peace. You have exchanged my rubbish for revelation, my tears for triumph, and my ruins for radiance. Like the psalmist, I can say with joy, “The Lord has done great things for me, and I am glad.” Lord, thank You for teaching me through every day of this journey. From Day One, You showed me that nothing compares to knowing You. From Day Two, You revealed that Your presence is my greatest treasure. Day Three taught me to find You even in the rubble. Day Four reminded me that Your grace is enough. Day Five birthed beauty from my ashes. Day Six gave me strength in what remained. Day Seven restored glory to my ruins. Day Eight reminded me that Your glory finds me even in brokenness. And Day Nine filled me with the weight of Your presence. Now, Lord, on this final day, seal every lesson in my spirit. Let these words not just be devotionals I read, but declarations I live. Let my life be the rebuilt temple where Your glory dwells continually. Let laughter replace loss, and let worship rise from every place where pain once lived. Holy Spirit, continue to lift me as You lifted Ezekiel. Carry me deeper into the inner courts of Your presence. Keep my heart united, my hands clean, and my worship pure. May every part of my being echo, “Glory to the Lamb who was slain.” Let Psalm 29:2 be fulfilled in me, “Give unto the Lord the glory due to His name; worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness.” Father, let others see the transformation You’ve done in me and glorify You. Let my restoration become a ripple of redemption for those still standing in their ruins. Anoint me to speak life, to build faith, and to carry Your light into dark places. Thank You that Your glory doesn’t fade, it grows. Each new day, take me from glory to greater glory, from strength to deeper surrender, from faith to fuller fulfillment. Keep me anchored in Your peace and adorned with Your presence. Lord, I release this journey back to You. Every lesson, every tear, every breakthrough belongs to You. May my life forever testify that what You rebuild, You also refill, and what You restore, You also glorify. And now, I close this series with gratitude. The rubble has become revelation. The broken has become beautiful. The ruins have become radiant. Truly, the glory of the latter house is greater than the former. In Jesus’ glorious name, Amen.

As we come to the end of the “Rebuilding and The Glory of God” may your heart remain anchored in the truth that what God rebuilds, He also fills. Every moment of surrender has made room for His strength, and every broken place has become a doorway for His presence. The ruins are no longer reminders of loss but testimonies of grace. I pray that over these ten days, you have encountered God’s Peace, His Power, His Presence and His Glory in deeper ways than before. May you continue to walk in the confidence that the same God who began this rebuilding in you will carry it to completion. The glory of your latter will be greater than your former!

Nugget:

Every ruin has become revelation, every loss has become light, this is the glory after the rubble, the peace after the pressing, the promise after the rebuilding. May His Presence dwell richly within you, today, and always. I pray this series has blessed you and drawn you closer to the heart of the Rebuilder Himself!

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean…

Have A Great Weekend…

Good Morning Sunshine! The Weight Of His Presence Is Where The Glory Dwells!

2 Chronicles 5:13–14 (NKJV) ~ “Indeed it came to pass, when the trumpeters and singers were as one, to make one sound to be heard in praising and thanking the Lord… that the house, the house of the Lord, was filled with a cloud, so that the priests could not continue ministering because of the cloud; for the glory of the Lord filled the house of God.”

There are moments when words fail and worship takes over, moments when the Presence of God becomes so tangible that it silences every distraction and fills every space. That’s what happened in Solomon’s temple in 2 Chronicles 5. The priests and musicians came together, not to perform, but to praise, and as their hearts aligned, heaven responded. A cloud filled the temple, and the ministers couldn’t even stand, it wasn’t chaos; it was consecration, it wasn’t noise; it was unity, the weight of His Presence made human effort unnecessary, because the Glory of the Lord had taken over.

The Glory of God is not a concept to be studied; it’s a reality to be experienced, it is an encounter that you will never forget. In Scripture, the Hebrew word for glory, kabod, literally means “weight” or “heaviness.” It’s the tangible expression of God’s majesty resting upon His people. When His glory fills the room, it doesn’t just touch you, it transforms you. What was ordinary becomes sacred, what was heavy becomes holy, and what was impossible becomes inevitable! His presence doesn’t add pressure; it replaces it, when God’s Glory enters your space, burdens lift because His weight outweighs them all.

Notice that the glory didn’t come when the people were busy building or planning, it came when they were as one. Unity is a magnet for divine presence. Psalm 133:1–3 says, “Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity… for there the Lord commanded the blessing.” When hearts align and praise rises as one sound, heaven responds with manifestation. God doesn’t dwell in divided spaces; He inhabits united ones. That’s why the enemy loves to sow discord, because where there’s disunity, glory cannot rest. The priests couldn’t minister because God Himself took over the service. That’s what true worship looks like, when you no longer need to lead the moment because the moment is led by His Spirit! It is a sacred interruption! Sometimes you want to keep control, but glory requires that you surrender. When you step aside, God steps in, John 3:30 says, “He must increase, but I must decrease.” The less room you, take up, the more room the Glory of God can fill!

The cloud that filled the temple wasn’t just a symbol of His Presence; it was proof of His approval! God, was saying, “I’m here, and I’m pleased.” Every act of obedience, every sacrifice, and every prayer laid before Him had created an atmosphere ready for filling. In your life, the same principle applies. When your obedience becomes your offering, His glory becomes your covering. Isaiah 58:8 says, “Then your light shall break forth like the morning… and the glory of the Lord shall be your rear guard.” Glory not only fills you, it follows you. When His Presence rests upon you, ordinary moments become encounters. You’ll sense His nearness in the car, in the kitchen, at work, or in prayer. His glory isn’t confined to church walls; it travels with yielded hearts. Exodus 33:14 declares, “My Presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.” That means you can carry peace into pressure, joy into sorrow, and light into dark places. The glory of God becomes your atmosphere, not your occasion!

But to carry glory, you must also carry purity. Before the temple was filled, the priests sanctified themselves. 2 Chronicles 5:11 says, “And it came to pass when the priests came out of the Most Holy Place (for all the priests who were present had sanctified themselves, without keeping to their divisions).” Purity precedes presence. It is not about perfection, but about posture, a heart that says, “Lord, You can have all of me.” Glory doesn’t just rest on talent; it rests on trust. God fills clean vessels, not flawless ones. The beauty of this passage is that once the glory came, the people didn’t have to do anything else. They didn’t have to prove their worth or earn His Presence, He simply filled the space they made. That’s the secret to hosting glory, you don’t force it; you make room for it. Worship is the invitation; holiness is the preparation; unity is the foundation. When those converge, glory becomes habitation. Romans 11:36 says, “For of Him and through Him and to Him are all things, to whom be glory forever.” Glory always returns to the Giver. This same glory now lives within you. Colossians 1:27 declares, “Christ in you, the hope of glory.” What filled Solomon’s temple now fills your spirit. You don’t have to chase the cloud; you carry it. You are the temple where His glory dwells, the living sanctuary where heaven touches earth. Every time you yield, worship, and walk in obedience, His presence becomes visible through your life. The weight of His glory isn’t meant to crush you, it’s meant to cover you.

The day will come when that same glory will fill the whole earth as the waters cover the sea (Habakkuk 2:14). But until then, God chooses to fill human hearts with that same power. You are a walking testimony of what it looks like when glory meets grace, when presence meets purpose, when heaven meets humanity. So today, let your worship rise. Let your heart align. Make room for His glory again, and watch how the weight of His presence brings peace where there once was pressure, and divine fullness where there once was emptiness.

Let’s Pray:

Father, thank You for the power of Your presence. Thank You for reminding me that I don’t have to earn Your glory; I just have to make room for it. Like the temple of Solomon, I want my life to be a space You fill completely. Let everything within me harmonize with heaven until my worship becomes one sound before You. Lord, I ask You to unify my heart with Yours. Remove division, distraction, and double-mindedness. Teach me to walk in the kind of unity that attracts Your glory. Let Psalm 86:11 be my daily prayer, “Unite my heart to fear Your name.” Where my will has tried to lead, let Your Spirit now take the throne. I confess that I have sometimes tried to perform in Your presence instead of resting in it. Forgive me for mistaking activity for intimacy. Today I step aside and let You take over. Fill every part of me until my words, my thoughts, and my actions overflow with Your peace. Holy Spirit, fill my atmosphere with Your presence. Let my home, my work, and my heart be temples of Your glory. When I open my mouth in worship, let Your power fall fresh. When I’m silent in awe, let Your weight settle around me like the cloud that filled the temple. Lord, purify me. Cleanse me from every hidden motive or distraction that competes with Your presence. Let Psalm 24:3–4 define me, “Who may ascend into the hill of the Lord? Or who may stand in His holy place? He who has clean hands and a pure heart.” I want to dwell where You dwell, and walk where You walk. Thank You that Your glory doesn’t crush me, it covers me. When I feel the heaviness of life, let me remember that the weight I carry is not my own; it’s the weight of Your presence working through me. Let that presence shift everything around me into divine alignment. Father, help me to be sensitive to Your movements. When You fill the room, teach me to pause, to listen, to yield. Let me never rush past moments when heaven touches earth. Fill me again and again until my life becomes an altar where Your fire never goes out. Father, I declare that the same glory that filled Solomon’s temple now lives within me through Christ Jesus. Let Ephesians 3:19 be fulfilled in my life, “That you may be filled with all the fullness of God.” Fill me until I overflow, until others can sense Your peace just by being near me. Thank You, Lord, that Your glory goes before me and follows behind me. You are my rear guard, my covering, and my confidence. I trust that every place You fill, You also protect. Let Your presence establish peace wherever I go today. Father may everything I do bring glory back to You. Let my worship rise, my faith stand firm, and my heart remain open. You are worthy of all the praise, all the honor, and all the weight. Let the cloud of Your presence rest here, forever. In Jesus Christ Mighty Name, Amen.

 Nugget:

When His Presence rests on your life, you don’t have to push doors open, His glory carries the weight that moves everything and everything else must bow in divine order, because this is where glory makes its home and the Presence of God fills the room.

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Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean

Good Morning Sunshine! Don’t Panic, God’s Glory Will Find You Right Where You Are In The Rubble!

Ezekiel 43:5 (NKJV) ~ “The Spirit lifted me up and brought me into the inner court; and behold, the glory of the Lord filled the temple.”

There are moments in life when it feels like everything has fallen apart, the dreams you carried have crumbled, the prayers you prayed seem unanswered, and the pieces of your faith are scattered like debris after a storm. Yet it is in these very moments that God draws near. In Ezekiel’s vision, the prophet was taken by the Spirit into the inner court of a rebuilt temple, and there he saw something breathtaking, “the glory of the Lord filled the temple.” It’s a reminder that no matter how broken the structure, God still plans to fill it. The glory doesn’t avoid the rubble, it inhabits it.

Before the glory came, there had been devastation, the temple of Jerusalem had been destroyed, the people of God were in exile, and worship had ceased. Everything sacred seemed silenced, but in the midst of exile, God gave Ezekiel a vision of restoration. He showed him a new temple, a new order, and a renewed glory that would surpass the old. Just like Israel, you may feel scattered, misplaced, or spiritually exiled, but God hasn’t forgotten you. He’s preparing to lift you into the inner court, to a place of personal encounter that cannot be taken away.

The Glory of God doesn’t wait for perfect conditions; it shows up in surrendered ones. Ezekiel didn’t climb into the vision by effort, the Spirit lifted him and that’s what grace does, it picks you up from where you fell and carries you where you could never reach on your own. Psalm 3:3 declares, “But You, O Lord, are a shield for me, my glory and the One who lifts up my head.” You don’t have to manufacture revival; you only have to yield to the wind of His Spirit. The same God who lifted Ezekiel can lift you out of ashes into atmosphere. When the glory of the Lord filled the temple, it represented restoration and reentry. The people who once felt far from God were being invited back into intimacy. You may have walked through seasons where you felt God’s silence more than His presence, but silence is not absence. Isaiah 57:15 reminds you, “For thus says the High and Lofty One who inhabits eternity… I dwell in the high and holy place, with him who has a contrite and humble spirit.” The glory dwells where humility and surrender meet. It fills not proud spaces but open ones.

The temple in Ezekiel’s vision is also a mirror of your heart, you are the temple now and the dwelling place of His Spirit. 1 Corinthians 6:19 says, “Do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you?” God is not looking to dwell in buildings; but He’s looking to dwell in believers, like you. The cracks in your walls don’t disqualify you, they make space for His light. Every scar becomes a window through which His presence shines and His glory doesn’t hide from your history; it redeems it. As Ezekiel stood in the vision, he didn’t just see glory; he felt it. It filled the atmosphere around him, transforming the space completely. That’s what happens when God fills your life, He doesn’t come to decorate; He comes to dominate. He fills every empty place, every lonely corner, every wound that still aches. The same Spirit that filled Solomon’s temple with a cloud now fills your heart with the weight of divine love. The heaviness you once felt from sorrow is now replaced with the heaviness of His Glory!

But before Glory fills, God rebuilds! Just as the physical temple required structure and order, your spiritual life requires surrender and alignment. God told Ezekiel the measurements, boundaries, and details of the new temple because glory rests where order exists. The same is true in your life, when you align your priorities, posture, and purpose with God’s Word, you make room for His Glory to abide. 1 Corinthians 14:40 says, “Let all things be done decently and in order.” Glory settles in spaces that are yielded, not chaotic. The filling of the temple in Ezekiel 43 is not just a one-time event, it’s a prophetic pattern, it represents what happens when God takes something destroyed and turns it into a dwelling place. You might feel like what’s left of you isn’t enough to rebuild on, but His glory doesn’t require grandeur; it requires availability, 2 Corinthians 4:7 reminds us, “But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellence of the power may be of God and not of us.” You are that vessel, imperfect, cracked, yet chosen to carry eternal glory.

When the glory fills, peace follows. The presence of God drives out confusion, fear, and striving. It’s the fulfillment of Haggai 2:9, which says, “And in this place I will give peace.” The peace of His presence is not passive; it is powerful. It rebuilds your confidence, renews your focus, and restores your courage. You begin to see that what you called ruins was really preparation. The same Spirit that lifted Ezekiel wants to lift you today, from desolation to habitation, from empty to filled, from rubble to radiant. The glory also commissions, Ezekiel didn’t experience the vision to stay in it, he experienced it to declare it. Every encounter with glory carries a purpose. Once you’ve been filled, you’re called to pour. Matthew 5:14–16 says, “You are the light of the world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden.” God fills you so that others can see His reflection in your life. The restoration you carry becomes the roadmap for someone else’s return. The inner court becomes the launching ground for outward impact.

The Glory of God always points back to the Giver! When Ezekiel said, “Behold, the glory of the Lord filled the temple,” he was witnessing God reestablish His presence among His people. That same glory, the manifest weight of who God is, now lives in you through Christ. Your broken places become holy spaces, and your story becomes sanctuary. The rubble doesn’t repel glory; it reveals where God intends to dwell. So don’t hide your ruins, invite His presence into them, because when His Glory fills the temple of your heart, what once was wrecked now becomes radiant again!

Let’s Pray:

Father, I thank You that Your glory still finds me, even in the rubble. You are not a distant God who waits for perfection, you are a present God who meets me in the mess. Just as You lifted Ezekiel by Your Spirit, lift me into the inner court of Your presence. Fill the empty places within me until every shadow is touched by Your light. Lord, I surrender the ruins of my life to You. What I thought was the end, You call the foundation. Let the broken places become the birthplace of beauty. Fill me like You filled the temple, with Your peace, Your power, and Your presence. I don’t just want to visit Your glory; I want to carry it. Holy Spirit, breathe over me again. Lift the heaviness, rebuild my strength, and restore my worship. Let Psalm 51:12 be my cry, “Restore to me the joy of Your salvation, and uphold me by Your generous Spirit.” Rekindle the fire that once burned in my heart. Let Your wind move through every weary corner of my soul. Father, align my life to Your divine order. Where there’s clutter, bring clarity. Where there’s confusion, bring peace. Where there’s fear, bring faith. Help me to establish rhythms that honor You, time in prayer, time in Word, time in worship, so Your glory has a home to dwell in. Lord, I ask You to make my life a temple for Your presence. Let the fragrance of Your Spirit fill my atmosphere. Let my words carry Your weight and my actions reflect Your holiness. May every room of my heart resound with Your glory. When I feel unworthy of Your presence, remind me of 2 Corinthians 3:18—that I am being transformed “from glory to glory.” You are not finished with me; You’re forming me. Every scar is a story of how Your grace rebuilt what life tried to destroy. Father, I pray that Your glory will not just rest on me but flow through me. Make me a vessel that pours into others, a living testimony that Your Spirit still revives the broken. Let Isaiah 60:1 come alive in me: “Arise, shine; for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon you.” Thank You for the peace that fills the places where fear once lived. Thank You for the joy that replaces sorrow and the strength that rises from surrender. You are the builder of broken things, and I trust You to make all things new. Father, let Your glory draw others to You through my life. Let my story echo the same words Ezekiel declared, “Behold, the glory of the Lord filled the temple.” Let everything I am become a reflection of everything that You are. Father, dwell richly within me. Let Your presence remain, not as a passing feeling but as a permanent habitation. I give You my heart, my life, and my ruins. Fill them all with Your glory until nothing remains but You. In Jesus Christ Holy Name, I pray, Amen.

Nugget:

You don’t have to chase what God has already appointed to find you, His glory shows up in the ruins and rebuilds you from the inside out.

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean

Good Morning Sunshine! You Are In The Rebuilding Phase And It Is For The Glory Of God!

Haggai 2:9 (NKJV) ~ “The glory of this latter temple shall be greater than the former,’ says the Lord of hosts. ‘And in this place I will give peace,’ says the Lord of hosts.”

The book of Haggai was written during a season of rebuilding. The temple of God had been destroyed, the people discouraged, and their passion for God’s house had faded. Yet through His prophet, God gave them a word of hope, “The glory of the latter temple shall be greater than the former.” Those words are not just historical, they are prophetic. They speak to every believer standing among ruins, wondering if what’s coming can possibly be better than what’s been lost. God’s answer then and now is the same: Yes, it will be greater.

This promise doesn’t mean the structure itself will be more beautiful; it means the Presence of God within will be more powerful. The former temple held gold, splendor, and wealth, but the new one would hold something the old could not, the Presence of the Messiah Himself. That’s the same exchange God makes in your life. He takes the outward glory that once impressed man and replaces it with the inward glory that transforms your heart. The rebuilding of your life is not about replicating what was; it is about revealing what is divine. Every time God restores, He increases. Job 42:10 says, “And the Lord restored Job’s losses when he prayed for his friends. Indeed, the Lord gave Job twice as much as he had before.” That is how God works, He never replaces; He multiplies. The ruins you see now are simply the raw material for a greater revelation. What was once torn down will rise again with strength, purpose, and peace that the old season could never contain.

The glory of the latter house also speaks to completion, God doesn’t leave His work unfinished; Philippians 1:6 promises, “He who began a good work in you will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ.” Even when it feels like everything has collapsed, Heaven has not stopped building, the blueprint for your life is still active and God is still building. Every delay, disappointment, and detour is being woven into the architecture of divine purpose, you are under construction for His Glory. This rebuilding season requires your faith to see beyond the debris. The people in Haggai’s time compared the new foundation to the grandeur of Solomon’s temple and wept because it looked smaller. But God reminded them, “Be strong, all you people of the land… for I am with you” (Haggai 2:4). The same is true today. The glory is not in the size of what is being built, it’s in the presence of the One who builds it. Don’t measure your future by what you see; measure it by Who is with you and who is within you!

God is not calling you to rebuild what was; He’s calling you to prepare for what’s next. Isaiah 60:1–2 declares, “Arise, shine; for your light has come! And the glory of the Lord is risen upon you.” When you rise from the ruins, you carry a radiance that can only be born from redemption. The ashes of old seasons become the backdrop for divine illumination. The same fire that broke you now refines you into something unshakable. The promise of the greater glory also carries the promise of peace. God said, “In this place I will give peace.” Peace is the divine seal of completion. It is not just the absence of conflict, it’s the presence of divine order. When peace comes, it’s the evidence that Heaven has touched the earth on your behalf. It’s the whisper that says, “You’ve been rebuilt, refilled, and restored.” Peace is not the prize of the end; it is the presence of the One who never left you in the middle.

Perhaps you’re still standing in the “in-between” not where you used to be, but not yet where you’re going. That’s okay, the latter glory begins long before the structure is finished. It begins the moment you invite God to fill the empty space with His Presence. 2 Corinthians 3:18 says, “But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory.” The glory is growing in you even now.

So don’t mourn what’s gone; magnify what’s coming! The former season was good, but the next will be glorious, just you wait and see. God is not rebuilding you for recognition, He’s rebuilding you for revelation! And when He is finished, what stands will not look like what fell, it will look like Him.

Let’s Pray:

Father, thank You for being the God who restores and multiplies glory. I praise You that the story is not over and that what You are building in me will shine brighter than what was lost. Help me to believe that Your promise in Haggai 2:9 still applies, that the glory of the latter house will indeed be greater than the former. Lord, I release every disappointment from past seasons. I lay down every dream that burned out, every plan that crumbled, and every hope that was delayed. I trust that what You are reconstructing in my life carries more purpose, power, and peace than what was before. Like the people in Haggai’s day, I will not despise small beginnings. Thank You for Your presence that fills every gap. Let Exodus 33:14 be my portion today: “My Presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.” Fill the unfinished spaces of my life with Your glory. Where there is still rubble, let Your Spirit breathe new life. Where there are ashes, let Your beauty begin to bloom. Father, teach me to see through the eyes of faith. Help me not to compare the new work You’re doing to the old things You’ve done. Let Isaiah 43:19 come alive in me: “Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth; shall you not know it?” Give me eyes to see the new thing and the courage to walk in it. Lord, I declare that my life will be a temple where Your glory dwells. Build me into a vessel that carries Your Spirit everywhere I go. Let the same glory that filled Solomon’s temple rest within my heart. Fill me until Your peace overflows and touches everyone around me. When doubt tries to whisper that the best is behind me, remind me of Your Word in Job 8:7: “Though your beginning was small, yet your latter end would increase abundantly.” I speak this over my life today; my latter will be greater. I will rise stronger, live deeper, and walk closer with You. Holy Spirit, breathe over every area that feels unfinished. Strengthen my hands to keep building and my heart to keep believing. When fatigue sets in, let Your joy be my strength. Let the sound of praise rise from the ruins and turn my rebuilding into worship. Father, seal this work with peace. Let Your presence settle over my life like fresh oil. Wherever confusion once lived, let divine clarity reign. Wherever heaviness once lingered, let joy return. Let Psalm 29:11 be fulfilled, “The Lord will give strength to His people; the Lord will bless His people with peace.” And when it’s all said and done, let every part of my life point back to You. May my testimony declare that the latter glory truly is greater, not because of what I’ve gained, but because of who You have become to me. You are my builder, my restorer, and my reward. In the Mighty Name of Jesus Christ, I pray, Amen.

Nugget:

What God restores, He fills with greater glory than before, your ending is just the unveiling of His beginning.

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean

Good Morning Sunshine! There Is Strength In What Remains, Trust The Process And Power Of God!

Revelation 3:2 (NKJV) ~ “Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain, that are ready to die, for I have not found your works perfect before God.”

There’s a sacred moment between loss and restoration where God whispers, “Strengthen what remains.” It’s the space between endings and beginnings, the quiet aftermath of a storm when you’re left with fragments, faith, and fatigue. In Revelation 3:2, Jesus speaks to the church in Sardis, urging them not to mourn what has gone but to revive in what’s left. It is a divine reminder that what remains still matters. The same breath that created worlds can breathe again into what feels weak, wounded, or withering.

Sometimes, God doesn’t rebuild by starting over in you, He rebuilds by reviving you. The ashes of your old season can become the soil of your next one. Isaiah 42:3 says, “A bruised reed He will not break, and smoking flax He will not quench.” That means God does not discard what is fragile; He restores it. You may feel like your flame is barely flickering, but His Spirit will fan it into fire again. He is not finished with you yet; He is fortifying you. The call to “strengthen what remains” means you must first recognize that something still does. When the enemy wants to make you believe it’s all over, God points to what’s left and says, “Start there.” In 2 Kings 4:2, Elisha asked the widow, “What do you have in the house?” Her answer seemed insignificant, “nothing except a jar of oil.” Yet that jar became the vessel for her miracle. God never asks for what you have lost; He works through what you still have.

Even if what is left feels small, you still need to surrender to it. A mustard seed of faith can move mountains (Matthew 17:20). Five smooth stones can take down a giant (1 Samuel 17:40). And a fragment of bread in Jesus’ hands can feed a multitude (John 6:11). You don’t need much, just what remains, placed in the hands of the Master. Your leftovers are God’s launching pad. There’s power in the remnant! Throughout Scripture, God worked through remnants, a small group, a surviving seed, a faithful few. After the exile, He preserved a remnant of Israel to rebuild His people. After Peter’s denial, He preserved a remnant of faith to restore His purpose. Romans 11:5 declares, “At this present time there is a remnant according to the election of grace.” You are part of that remnant, and the proof is that grace still chooses, restores, and reignites.

“Strengthen what remains” is not just a command; it is a call to hope. It means stop focusing on what died and start nurturing what is alive. It’s time to pray again, praise again, dream again. The small spark you feel is enough for God to ignite revival in your spirit. 2 Timothy 1:6 says, “Stir up the gift of God which is in you.” That word stir means to rekindle, to fan into flame. Don’t bury the ember, breathe on it with belief. God will often allow seasons of pruning to reveal what’s truly rooted. What was cut back wasn’t punishment, it was preparation. John 15:2 says, “Every branch that bears fruit He prunes, that it may bear more fruit.” The pruning proves there’s still life in the vine. What remains after loss is often the purest form of what God always intended. When you strengthen that, you align with His divine design.

Maybe the remains of your faith feel small, your hope feels thin, or your love feels stretched, but those are the very areas God wants to fortify. He is not looking for perfection; He is looking for persistence. Hebrews 10:23 says, “Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He who promised is faithful.” When you refuse to give up on what remains, Heaven releases power to multiply it. And here is the miracle, what remains after the breaking carries the anointing for your rebuilding. The leftovers of your struggle hold lessons, oil, and endurance that your untested seasons never could. You are not starting from zero; you are starting from wisdom. You are starting from grace. Philippians 1:6 assures us, “He who began a good work in you will complete it.” The pieces left in your hand are enough for God to finish what He started.

So, gather your remnants, the fragments of faith, the pieces of peace, the threads of hope, and lay them before Him. Breathe again, believe again, and build again. God does not need perfection; He needs participation. What’s left is not less, it is the launching point for what’s next. When you strengthen what remains, you step into the supernatural rhythm of resurrection, where what was fading begins to flourish again.

Let’s Pray:

Father, thank You for being the God of what remains. When I look at my life and see fragments instead of fullness, remind me that You’re not finished. You’re still breathing on the broken places and reviving what I thought was gone. You don’t discard weakness, you strengthen it. Lord, help me to recognize the value in what’s left. Teach me to see the miracle within the remnant. Like the widow with her jar of oil, help me to trust that You can multiply what seems small. Let Zechariah 4:10 echo in my heart, “Do not despise these small beginnings, for the Lord rejoices to see the work begin.” Father, I confess that there have been times I’ve focused more on what I lost than on what remained. Forgive me, Father, for losing sight of Your purpose in the pruning. Restore my faith to believe that You can rebuild with what’s still standing. Let Joel 2:25 come alive in me, “I will restore to you the years that the locust has eaten.” Holy Spirit, breathe upon the areas of my life that feel dry. Rekindle the fire that once burned brightly within me. Fan into flame the gifts You’ve given me. Strengthen the weary parts of my soul. Let Isaiah 40:31 remind me that “those who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength.” Father, teach me how to protect and nurture what remains. Help me to guard my peace, honor my purpose, and cultivate gratitude even in the middle of rebuilding. Show me how to turn remnants into resources and ruins into testimonies. Father, when doubt tries to whisper that it’s too late, silence it with Your Word. You said in Haggai 2:9, “The glory of this latter temple shall be greater than the former.” I believe that what’s coming is greater than what’s been lost. Let my faith rise with expectancy for what You are rebuilding in me. Father, help me to strengthen others who are walking through their own rebuilding. Let my testimony become a tool of encouragement. Use my remnants as a reminder that no one is beyond Your reach, and nothing is beyond Your restoration. Father, I declare today that what remains is enough. Enough for You to heal, enough for You to build, enough for You to move. You are the God who turns scarcity into sufficiency and remnants into revival. Father, Thank You for being faithful to finish what You start. I place the pieces of my life back into Your hands, trusting that Your grace will strengthen, sustain, and restore, because what is left belongs to You, and that’s more than enough. In Jesus Christ Name, Amen.

Nugget:

You may have lost much, but what is left in God’s hands is more powerful than what’s gone.

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean

Good Morning Sunshine! There Is Beauty Beyond What Has Been Broken!

Isaiah 61:3 (NKJV) “To console those who mourn in Zion, to give them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness; that they may be called trees of righteousness, the planting of the Lord, that He may be glorified.”

There’s a divine mystery in how God takes what’s broken and turns it into something breathtaking. In Isaiah 61:3, the Lord promises to exchange the ashes of sorrow for beauty, mourning for joy, and heaviness for praise. The ashes represent everything consumed, lost, or reduced to nothing, yet God looks at that pile of what seems useless and calls it beautiful. He doesn’t ignore the pain; He transforms it. Every ash that life leaves behind becomes an ingredient in His masterpiece of redemption.

When something burns, it cannot return to its former state. But that’s the beauty of God’s restoration, He doesn’t rebuild you as you were; He renews you as you were meant to be. What the fire consumes, grace recreates. 2 Corinthians 5:17 declares, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.” God is not afraid of your ashes; He specializes in bringing glory out of ruin. The very places that were once desolate can become gardens of grace. The process of transformation often feels painful because you were attached to what was. But the breaking is not punishment, it is preparation. The ashes of old seasons become the soil of new beginnings. Psalm 126:5 says, “Those who sow in tears shall reap in joy.” Every tear becomes a seed in God’s hands. You may not see it now, but there’s beauty germinating in the ground of your surrender. The very thing that broke you is birthing something blessed on the inside of you.

When Isaiah said God gives “the oil of joy for mourning,” it is to remind you that the oil flows from pressure. In ancient times, oil was extracted through crushing olives, a process that mirrors the pressure we experience in trials. Yet from that pressing comes an anointing that cannot be produced any other way. Romans 8:18 promises, “For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.” The oil you carry is the evidence that the crushing did not destroy you; but it released something greater in you.

The garment of praise replaces the spirit of heaviness, but you must choose to wear it. Praise is not a feeling, it’s a decision. When you lift your voice in worship amid pain, you’re declaring, “This fire won’t define me; God will refine me.” Praise builds strength in the middle of ashes. Habakkuk 3:17–18 beautifully declares, “Though the fig tree may not blossom, nor fruit be on the vines… yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation.” True beauty rises when faith chooses joy before the evidence appears! God calls those He restores “trees of righteousness.” Trees don’t grow overnight; they take root in seasons of both sunshine and storm. Your endurance is proof that you are the planting of the Lord. Jeremiah 17:7–8 says, “Blessed is the man who trusts in the Lord… for he shall be like a tree planted by the waters… and will not fear when heat comes.” Your roots have grown deeper in the soil of brokenness, and now the fruit of resilience is emerging. You are not just surviving; you’re thriving and flourishing in the garden of His Glory.

Sometimes the most profound beauty is hidden beneath layers of ashes. When a wildfire sweeps through a forest, it looks like total devastation. Yet within weeks, new growth begins to sprout, the heat activated dormant seeds that could not grow otherwise. Spiritually, the same happens with you. The fires of adversity awaken dormant purpose. Job 23:10 testifies, “But He knows the way that I take; when He has tested me, I shall come forth as gold.” What was destroyed is actually making room for what’s divine. The transformation God brings is not only personal, but it is also purposeful. Isaiah 61:3 ends with this phrase, “that He may be glorified.” Your story of ashes to beauty is meant to display His Glory to the world. When people see your peace after pain, your praise after loss, and your hope after heartbreak, they will know that only God could have done it. Your restoration becomes a revelation of His power. Every scar becomes a sentence in the story of His grace.

So, if you find yourself standing among ashes today, don’t despise them. Lift them to the One who knows how to make all things new. You may have lost much, but you haven’t lost Him and He is more than enough to rebuild your life. Psalm 30:11 declares, “You have turned for me my mourning into dancing; You have put off my sackcloth and clothed me with gladness.” The beauty is already being exchanged. The ashes are not the end; they’re just the evidence that something glorious is about to begin.

Let’s Pray:

Father, thank You for being the God who restores beauty from ashes. When I look at the ruins of what I’ve lost, help me to see them through Your eyes, filled with purpose and potential. You are the Master Rebuilder, and nothing in my life is beyond Your repair. I release my ashes into Your hands, trusting that You will exchange them for something beautiful. Lord, I confess that there have been moments when I’ve mourned more than I’ve trusted. But today, I receive the oil of joy You promised. I trade my mourning for gladness and my heaviness for praise. Let Psalm 34:1 be my declaration, “I will bless the Lord at all times; His praise shall continually be in my mouth.” Even when I don’t understand the fire, I will worship You in it. Thank You for the beauty that is forming even now. Though I may not see it yet, I know You are at work behind the scenes. Let Romans 8:28 anchor my faith, “All things work together for good to those who love God.” Use every trial, every tear, and every test as the foundation for something greater. Father, anoint me afresh with the oil that flows from brokenness. Just as olives are crushed to produce oil, let my pressing produce purpose. Saturate my life with Your presence until joy flows naturally from my pain. May the fragrance of my worship rise from the ashes and fill every space where despair once lived. Lord, help me to wear the garment of praise even when it feels heavy. Let my worship shift the atmosphere of my heart. Remind me that praise is not denial, it’s a declaration. I praise You not because everything is perfect, but because You are perfect in everything. Make me like the tree of righteousness described in Your Word, rooted, resilient, and radiant. Even when the winds blow; let my roots remain grounded in faith. Let Psalm 1:3 be fulfilled in me, “He shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water… whose leaf also shall not wither; and whatever he does shall prosper.” Grow me into the person You intended before the breaking. Father, when the enemy tries to remind me of what I’ve lost, remind me of what I have gained, Your grace, Your strength, and Your nearness. Turn my focus from the ruins to the Redeemer. Turn my ashes into an altar where Your glory dwells. Turn my sorrow into songs of joy that testify of Your goodness. Father, make my story a mirror of Your mercy. Let every healed wound become a word of hope to someone else who feels broken. Use me as a living testimony that nothing is wasted in Your hands. What once was ugly now carries Your beauty. What once was broken now bears Your fingerprints of love. Father, Thank You for being faithful even in the fire. You are the God who never abandons, never forgets, and never fails. I surrender the ashes of yesterday to embrace the beauty of today. I trust that what You are rebuilding will be stronger, wiser, and more radiant than anything else, In the Name of Jesus Christ, Amen.

Nugget:

God never leaves what He breaks unrepaired, He restores it stronger, purer, and more beautiful than before.

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean…

Have A Great Weekend…

Good Morning Sunshine! When What’s Left In You Is Still Enough!

2 Corinthians 12:9 (NKJV) ~ “And He said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore most gladly I will rather boast in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.”

When Paul cried out to God about the thorn in his flesh, he wasn’t asking for strength, he was asking for relief. Yet God didn’t remove the thorn; He revealed His grace. In that one divine response, “My grace is sufficient for you” God shifted Paul’s entire understanding of what it means to be strong. Sometimes God won’t take away what’s hard, but He will teach you how to stand in what’s holy. Weakness is not failure in the Kingdom; it’s an invitation for divine power to rest upon you.

In life, you often measure strength by what you can handle, but Heaven measures it by how much you depend on God. The moment you realize that what’s left in your hands is not enough, you’re standing on the edge of a miracle. God’s Grace begins where your strength runs out. When Paul said, “Most gladly I will rather boast in my infirmities,” he was declaring victory from the posture of a surrendered heart. He had learned that the rubbish of the human ability becomes the foundation for divine sufficiency.

The same truth echoes throughout Scripture; when the widow of Zarephath had only a handful of flour and a little oil, God multiplied what seemed insignificant (1 Kings 17:12–16). When five loaves and two fish fed thousands, Jesus proved that little becomes much in His hands (John 6:9–13). And when Gideon’s army was reduced from 32,000 to 300 men, God demonstrated that He doesn’t need the multitude to manifest His might (Judges 7:2–7). Each story carries the same message, what’s left is still enough when it’s surrendered to God.

Sometimes the greatest strength is found not in rebuilding what was lost, but in trusting that what remains is exactly what God intends to use. Romans 8:28 reminds you that “all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose.” That means even the broken pieces have purpose. God is not looking for perfection; He’s looking for yieldedness. The fragments in your life are not evidence of failure; they’re proof that His grace is still working. The Apostle Paul’s thorn wasn’t meant to destroy him; it was meant to display the sufficiency of Christ. Likewise, the areas in your life that feel weak are actually where His power desires to dwell. Isaiah 40:29 declares, “He gives power to the weak, and to those who have no might He increases strength.” When you stop hiding your weakness, you make room for His glory. Your transparency becomes a testimony of transformation.

There is something sacred about surrendering in the midst of insufficiency. Sometimes you want God to erase the evidence of struggle, but sometimes He leaves the thorn to reveal His touch and His Power. When Paul stopped begging for removal, he started receiving revelation. God’s strength wasn’t going to appear when the thorn was gone, it was already working through it. The same applies to you today, His power is not waiting for your perfection; it’s present in your pain. When you’ve lost much, it’s easy to believe that what remains can’t possibly be enough. But Zechariah 4:10 says, “Do not despise these small beginnings, for the Lord rejoices to see the work begin.” God loves to start with what seems insignificant. He takes the fragments, the leftovers, the weak places, and breathes life into them. The miracle isn’t in how much you have; it’s in how surrendered you are.

Like Nehemiah rebuilding among rubble, or Paul boasting in weakness, you too can declare, “What’s left is enough for God to move.” The enemy wants to make you feel disqualified by your deficits, but the truth is, your deficiency is what invites His divinity. Ephesians 3:20 assures you that He is “able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that works in us.” That power is not your strength; it’s in His Spirit. So, if today you find yourself holding fragments, faith that feels fragile, dreams that seem delayed, or strength that’s fading, remember this, His Grace never runs out, it is multiplied in the hands of the brokenhearted. When everything you built has crumbled, God begins to rebuild with what’s left. His grace is not barely enough; it’s abundantly sufficient. The rubbish of yesterday is the raw material of today’s testimony.

Let’s Pray:

Father, thank You for the gentle reminder that Your grace is more than enough for every weakness I face. When I feel empty, You fill me. When I feel broken, You restore me. When I feel inadequate, You remind me that Your strength is perfected right here, in the middle of my insufficiency. Lord, I surrender the areas of my life that feel like rubble, the places where I’ve run out of strength and strategy. Help me to see that Your power doesn’t require my perfection, only my permission. I give You access to the fragile places. Let Your Spirit breathe life into what seems small, empty, or unfinished. Forgive me for trying to rebuild without relying on Your grace. I confess that sometimes I’ve tried to perform for You instead of resting in You. But Your Word says in Psalm 46:10, “Be still, and know that I am God.” So today, I choose stillness. I choose trust. I choose to believe that You are working even when I cannot see it. Thank You, Lord, that weakness is not failure, it’s a doorway for Your power. Let Isaiah 41:10 become my truth: “Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you, yes, I will help you, I will uphold you with My righteous right hand.” Uphold me, Lord, when I feel I cannot stand. When I am tempted to despise what’s left, remind me that You are the multiplier. You took fragments and fed a multitude; You can do the same in my life. Let my little be much in Your hands. Transform what I’ve called “not enough” into a testimony of Your abundance. Father, help me not to hide my thorn, but to honor it as proof of Your sustaining grace. Make me bold enough to boast in my weakness so that Your power may rest upon me. Let my vulnerability draw others to see Your victory working through me. Lord, build my confidence not on what I can do, but on who You are. You are the God who turns scarcity into sufficiency, and pain into purpose. As Philippians 4:19 declares, “And my God shall supply all your need according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus.” Supply every need today, spiritually, emotionally, and physically. When discouragement tries to weigh me down, remind me that Your grace is the weight that lifts. Teach me to depend on You moment by moment, finding joy in surrender and strength in stillness. Fill my heart with gratitude that even in weakness, I am loved and chosen. Thank You, Father, for never wasting what I’ve been through. Use every broken piece as evidence of Your redemption. You specialize in taking what’s left and turning it into what’s needed. Today, I rest in Your sufficiency and rejoice that what’s left in my hands is more than enough for You to use. In Jesus Christ Mighty Name, Amen.

Nugget:

God can build something beautiful out of what feels broken, because His strength begins where yours ends.

Blessings…

Love Dr. Jean

Good Morning Sunshine! The Rubbish That You See Is What’s Revealing His Reward In You!

Nehemiah 4:10 (NKJV) ~ “Then Judah said, ‘The strength of the laborers is failing, and there is so much rubbish that we are not able to build the wall.”

There comes a time in every believer’s life when the rubble of the past seems overwhelming. Nehemiah and his people stood in the midst of broken stones, burnt gates, and scattered debris as they tried to rebuild Jerusalem’s walls. The ruins reminded them of loss, defeat, and destruction. Yet in that very place of discouragement, God was calling them to build again. The same God who helped Nehemiah clear physical rubbish is here helps you to clear the spiritual debris that clutters your heart. What you see as ruin, He sees as the beginning of restoration.

The people in Nehemiah’s day were tired, not only from physical labor, but from emotional weight. The rubbish was not just in the streets; it was in their spirits. That’s often how you feel when you try to rebuild after disappointment, loss, or sin. The remnants of what was once strong can make you believe that what is ahead is impossible. But Psalm 147:3 reminds you, “He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.” God never begins His work in a perfect place; He begins in a broken one. He meets you among the ruins and restores what was lost piece by piece.

Sometimes, before you can see the beauty of rebuilding, God must help you deal with the rubbish. That may include unhealthy attachments, pride, fear, or memories that still haunt you. It’s the spiritual debris that blocks your progress. Just as Nehemiah had to organize and remove the rubble to lay a new foundation, you must allow the Holy Spirit to clear away what no longer belongs. Isaiah 43:18–19 declares, “Do not remember the former things, nor consider the things of old. Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth.” The new cannot rise until the old is removed.

It’s easy to get weary when the work feels endless. Judah said, “The strength of the laborers is failing.” Have you ever reached that point, tired of rebuilding, tired of believing, tired of starting over? But the truth is, your exhaustion doesn’t cancel your calling. Galatians 6:9 encourages you, “And let us not grow weary while doing good, for in due season we shall reap if we do not lose heart.” God knows when you’re weak, and that’s when His strength becomes your supply. The rubble may be great, but His grace is greater.

The rubbish also represents the voices that try to convince you that rebuilding is useless. In Nehemiah’s story, opposition came from every side. Sanballat and Tobiah mocked the builders, saying their wall wouldn’t stand. Likewise, the enemy still whispers lies when you begin to rebuild your life, your faith, or your dreams. But remember Isaiah 54:17: “No weapon formed against you shall prosper.” God will silence the ridicule and establish your work in righteousness. What the enemy calls worthless, God calls worthy of His touch.

Sometimes you struggle not with external rubble but with internal remains, the clutter of self-doubt, regret, or comparison. These are the piles of spiritual debris that make it hard to see progress. But God’s word in 2 Corinthians 10:4–5 gives you a powerful tool, “For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal but mighty in God for pulling down strongholds.” You have divine power to demolish anything that stands between you and your rebuilding season. Let the Spirit tear down what’s holding you back, and let His peace rebuild what was broken.

Nehemiah’s story also teaches you that God sends help to the faithful. When the people grew weary, God sent encouragement through unity and leadership. The builders worked with one hand and held a weapon in the other. That’s what faith looks like, you build while you battle. You keep laying bricks of prayer and blocks of obedience even when it’s hard. Psalm 127:1 reminds you, “Unless the Lord builds the house, they labor in vain who build it.” When God is your builder, even the rubbish has purpose.

There’s a hidden beauty in the rubble, because it reveals what remains unshaken. What was destroyed exposes what still stands. Your brokenness uncovers the foundation of God’s faithfulness. When you look back and see what didn’t survive, don’t grieve over what’s gone; thank God for what endured. Lamentations 3:22–23 says, “Through the Lord’s mercies we are not consumed, because His compassions fail not. They are new every morning.” Every piece of debris is a testimony that you’re still here, God preserved what mattered most.

You may not see the full wall yet, but you’re further than you think. God specializes in turning what looks like rubbish into restoration. Romans 8:28 declares, “And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose.” Even your broken pieces are being repurposed for His glory. Don’t despise the process; it’s building something lasting. The ruins of yesterday are becoming the testimonies of tomorrow.

Today, look around the rubble of your life and invite God into it. Ask Him to give you eyes to see beyond the debris. The rubbish is temporary, but the rebuilding is eternal. Once you let Him clear away what doesn’t belong, you’ll stand stronger than before. Like Nehemiah, you’ll finish the work and declare, “The joy of the Lord is my strength.” What looked like ruin will reveal His reward, the glory of a life rebuilt by grace

Let’s Pray:

Father, I come to You in the middle of my rebuilding season. Sometimes the rubble feels too heavy, and my strength feels too small. But I thank You that Your Word promises in Isaiah 40:29, “He gives power to the weak, and to those who have no might He increases strength.” You are my builder and my sustainer. Clear away everything in me that hinders Your work. Lord, help me to see that the rubbish in my life is not the end, it’s the beginning of renewal. Teach me to release the weight of old things, the debris of disappointment, and the remnants of regret. Let 2 Corinthians 5:17 be my reminder: “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.” Forgive me for the times I’ve grown weary in the rebuilding process. Help me not to despise small beginnings or slow progress. Strengthen my hands for the work, Lord. Let Philippians 4:13 echo in my heart: “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.” Father, reignite my faith to believe that the wall will stand again. When the enemy whispers that it’s too late or too broken, silence his lies with Your truth. You said in Jeremiah 30:17, “For I will restore health to you and heal you of your wounds.” Heal me, Lord, from the inside out. Replace every brick of fear with a stone of faith. Let my rebuilding glorify You. Thank You for being patient with me in the process. When I can’t see progress, remind me that You’re still working. Just as Nehemiah faced opposition but never quit, help me to persevere until Your promises come to pass. Let the joy of Your presence sustain me when my strength fails. Father, help me to identify and remove the spiritual rubbish in my life, bitterness, pride, and unbelief. Sweep through my heart and make room for Your Spirit. I want a clean foundation built on Your Word and Your truth. Let my life become a temple of praise, not cluttered by the past but filled with Your glory. Father, teach me to see purpose in every broken piece. You are the God who rebuilds ruins and makes all things new. When I look at the debris, let me see destiny. When I see ashes, let me expect beauty. Let Isaiah 61:3 manifest in my life, “to give them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness.” Lord, unite me with others who are rebuilding in faith. Surround me with encouragers, not critics, builders, not breakers. Make me a voice of strength to those still standing in their rubble. Help me to lift others while You lift me. Father, I thank You that You never leave any wall unfinished. What You start, You will complete. I declare Philippians 1:6: “Being confident of this very thing, that He who has begun a good work in you will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ.” I trust You with the process and praise You for the promise. In the Name of Jesus Christ, Amen!

Nugget:

Sometimes God allows what you once valued to fall apart so you can find what truly matters, Him!

Blessings…

Love Dr. Jean

Good Morning Sunshine! Nothing Compares To The Treasure Of His Presence In Your Life!

Matthew 13:44 (NKJV) ~ “Again, the kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field, which a man found and hid; and for joy over it he goes and sells all that he has and buys that field.”

Every true encounter with God redefines what you call valuable. Jesus told the parable of a man who stumbled upon a treasure buried in a field. Once he discovered its worth, he didn’t hesitate, he sold everything he owned just to buy that one field. To the casual observer, it looked foolish; to the man who knew what was buried there, it was wisdom. The same truth echoes from Paul’s confession in Philippians 3:8, everything else is rubbish compared to the priceless treasure of knowing Christ. When the heart finally recognizes His worth, surrender becomes joy, not sacrifice.

The treasure in this parable represents the presence of God and the transforming power of relationship with Christ. It’s hidden, not because God is hiding from you, but because intimacy with Him is discovered through pursuit. Proverbs 25:2 declares, “It is the glory of God to conceal a matter, but the glory of kings is to search out a matter.” God allows Himself to be found by the one who truly seeks Him. Every time you pray, worship, or open His Word with a yielded heart, you’re digging deeper into the field of His Presence, and what you find there will change how you see everything else.

The man who bought the field wasn’t mourning over what he sold; he was rejoicing over what he found. The same is true for those who encounter Christ. Once you’ve tasted His goodness, the world’s offerings lose their flavor. Psalm 34:8 says, “Oh, taste and see that the Lord is good; blessed is the man who trusts in Him!” When you discover the joy that comes from walking in God’s presence, no title, relationship, or possession can compare. He becomes your exceeding joy, your hidden treasure, your everything.

There’s a divine exchange that happens when you choose the field of faith. You may let go of comfort, convenience, or control, but what you gain is eternal. Matthew 6:21 reminds us, “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” The question for every believer becomes, where is your heart buried? Is it buried in earthly ambition, or hidden in the riches of His Glory? The man in Jesus’ parable wasn’t afraid of what he lost because he was too excited about what he gained. His sacrifice became an act of joy.

You often want God’s treasure without the transaction of surrender. But the truth is, every true treasure will cost you something. To follow Christ, you must let go of competing affections and divided loyalties. Jesus said in Luke 9:23, “If anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow Me.” Denying yourself doesn’t mean deprivation, it means discovering a greater delight. What you release for His sake multiplies in spiritual return.

There’s also a hidden truth in this parable, the man didn’t just buy the treasure, he bought the field. That means he accepted everything that came with it, thorns, rocks, and all. When you commit your life to Christ, you don’t just receive the glory; you embrace the growth, the process, and the pruning. But within that soil is something worth every cost, His Presence. 2 Corinthians 4:7 says, “But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellence of the power may be of God and not of us.” The treasure isn’t about you; it’s Christ shining through you.

As you walk with Him, you’ll realize that no degree, career, or possession can equal the peace that comes from being in right relationship with Him. Paul echoed this same truth when he said in Galatians 6:14, “But God forbid that I should boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.” When your heart is captured by His Glory, earthly applause feels small. You don’t need to prove your worth when you’ve already been purchased by His love. It’s easy to miss the treasure when life feels ordinary, but even the most hidden seasons carry divine value. Sometimes God buries His greatest treasures beneath everyday obedience. The man found the treasure while simply walking through a field. That’s how God works, He reveals Himself in the ordinary, transforming moments of faithfulness into miracles of discovery. Jeremiah 29:13 promises, “And you will seek Me and find Me, when you search for Me with all your heart.” The treasure is waiting for those who keep seeking.

As you meditate on this parable, remember that joy is the language of surrender. The man sold all he had with joy. True joy comes when you stop calculating what you’ve given up and start celebrating what you’ve gained. Christ is the treasure that can never be taken, tarnished, or traded. Psalm 16:11 declares, “In Your presence is fullness of joy; at Your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” Everything you need is found in Him.

So today, ask yourself, what field is God asking me to buy? What treasure is hidden in this season that I’ve overlooked because it’s buried beneath dirt, pressure, or difficulty? If you will dig again, you’ll find that His Presence still holds the richest reward. When you discover the treasure of knowing Christ, nothing else compares, because nothing else was meant to.

Let’s Pray:

Father, thank You for reminding me that Your presence is the greatest treasure I could ever possess. Help me to see beyond the surface and recognize the priceless value of intimacy with You. Open my spiritual eyes to discern the hidden treasures buried in my daily life, those moments where You reveal Yourself through the ordinary. Lord, I confess that I have sometimes chased temporary things, mistaking them for treasure. Forgive me for seeking satisfaction in what cannot last. Redirect my heart to the eternal joy of knowing You. Let my soul echo the psalmist in Psalm 73:25–26: “Whom have I in heaven but You? And there is none upon earth that I desire besides You. My flesh and my heart fail; but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.” Father, teach me the beauty of joyful surrender. Just like the man who sold everything with gladness, let me let go of whatever keeps me from gaining more of You. Help me to trust that when I lose for Your sake, I gain more than I could ever imagine. Your Word says in Mark 10:29–30 that no one who has left anything for Your name’s sake will fail to receive a hundredfold in return. I hold on to that promise today. Father, when I am tempted to compare my worth to worldly standards, remind me that my value was established at the cross. Help me to see that the greatest riches are not in possessions but in Your presence. Keep me grounded in gratitude and clothed in humility, knowing that You are my source and my reward. Holy Spirit, help me to dig deeper into the field You’ve placed before me. Whether it’s a season of waiting, serving, or healing, let me not overlook the treasure that’s hidden in it. You are the treasure in my field, the joy in my surrender, the reason for my praise. Father, renew my joy in You. When life feels heavy, it reminds me that the treasure still remains. Strengthen me to seek You wholeheartedly, knowing that every time I find You, I find peace. Let my worship rise not from what I have, but from who You are to me. Thank You for choosing me to carry Your treasure in this earthen vessel. I may not be perfect, but I am purposed. May my life reflect Your glory and draw others to dig for the treasure found only in You. Make me a living field where Your presence is planted and Your light shines through. Lord, I commit to trading my comfort for calling, my plans for Your purpose, and my ambitions for Your anointing. Let my priorities shift toward what matters most, Your will, Your way, and Your Word. Keep my heart anchored in eternity even as I walk through the temporary, I give You everything today, knowing that what I surrender is rubbish compared to what I gain. Jesus, You are my hidden treasure, my priceless pearl, and my everlasting joy. Teach me to love You more deeply, serve You more faithfully, and pursue You more passionately. In the Name of Jesus Christ, Amen!

Nugget:

The more you know Him, the less you need the world to recognize you.

Blessings…

Love Dr. Jean