Why Can’t I Feel My Faith Growing? The Hearing Problem Christians Miss

If faith came from information, every theology student would be a saint. If it came from emotional experiences, every worship concert would produce lasting transformation. If it came from personal discipline, the most organised Christians would be the most spiritually alive. But Romans 10:17 reveals faith comes from something else entirely—something we’ve neglected while chasing spiritual productivity and content consumption. This reflection diagnoses why contemporary Christianity produces so much religious activity yet so little actual faith, and offers the prescription Paul gave two thousand years ago that remains the only cure.

Daily Biblical Reflection – Verse for Today (11th October 2025)

Forwarded every morning by His Excellency, Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan, upon whom Johnbritto Kurusumuthu wrote reflections.

Scripture: “So faith comes from what is heard, and what is heard comes through the word of Christ.” — Romans 10:17

Video Link: <https://youtu.be/Q5AC9p2DWJg?si=oyauC7WrYRVZHKDp&gt;

1. Immersive Opening Scene / Hook

There’s a moment I remember from my teenage years that returns to me now like a photograph slowly developing in water. I was fifteen, sitting in the back corner of our small parish church during a particularly unremarkable weekday Mass. The ceiling fan circled lazily overhead. My mind was elsewhere—calculus homework, an argument with a friend, the usual turbulence of adolescent life. Then Father Sebastian began reading from Romans, and one sentence broke through the static of my distraction like a clear bell: “Faith comes from what is heard.”

I looked up. Why that moment? Why those words? I had heard Scripture read thousands of times before, but that morning, something shifted. The words didn’t just pass through my ears—they landed somewhere deeper, like seeds finding soil.

That experience taught me something I’m still learning: we can hear without listening, and we can listen without truly receiving. But when we genuinely hear the word of Christ—when we allow it to penetrate the noise and numbness of our daily existence—something miraculous happens. Faith doesn’t arrive as a bolt from the blue or a reward for intellectual assent. It comes through the patient, persistent practice of listening.

2. Prayer of Stillness

Lord of the whisper and the storm,  

quiet the chaos within me.  

Still, the voices that compete for my attention—  

the anxieties, the distractions, the endless noise.  

Open the ears of my heart  

that I might hear You speaking  

in this moment, through these words.  

Let faith take root where Your voice lands.  

Amen.

3. Invitation to Journey

My friend, today I invite you into something more than a Bible study exercise. This isn’t about analysing a verse for theological correctness or extracting a moral lesson. Today, we’re exploring the mystery of how God actually reaches us—how faith, that most essential element of spiritual life, makes its home in human hearts. We’re examining the sacred mechanics of divine-human communication, the way Christ’s word travels from eternity into the particularity of your Saturday morning, your current struggles, your specific longings.

What you’ll discover here might challenge some assumptions. It might also explain why certain moments of prayer feel electric while others feel empty, why some sermons change lives while others evaporate before the closing hymn, and why faith sometimes feels robust and other times fragile as morning frost.

4. Scripture in Focus

“So faith comes from what is heard, and what is heard comes through the word of Christ.”  

— Romans 10:17 (NRSV)

Let these words settle. Don’t rush past them toward interpretation. They’re describing something foundational about how God has chosen to work in the world.

5. Context in Motion

Paul wrote these words to a community caught between worlds. The Roman Christians lived in the empire’s capital, surrounded by competing philosophies, mystery religions, and the overwhelming propaganda of Caesar’s divinity. Many were Jewish believers trying to understand how their ancient faith connected to this new revelation in Christ. Others were Gentile converts navigating entirely unfamiliar spiritual terrain.

In Romans 10, Paul addresses a burning question: How does anyone come to faith? The answer matters because it determines everything—who can believe, how communities form, what missionaries should actually do. Paul’s answer is simultaneously simple and profound: faith comes through hearing the word of Christ.

Now transport this to our world. We live in an age of unprecedented information access yet profound spiritual deafness. We’re drowning in content—podcasts, videos, notifications, streams—but starving for the kind of hearing that produces faith. We confuse data accumulation with spiritual formation, information with transformation. Paul’s words challenge our assumption that more content equals deeper faith. They suggest instead that what matters isn’t the volume of religious information we consume but the quality of our listening to Christ’s living word.

6. Language & Insight

The Greek word Paul uses for “what is heard” is “akoē”—a term that encompasses both the act of hearing and the content of what is heard, the message itself. It’s the root of our word “acoustic.” But “akoē” in biblical Greek carries a richer meaning than our English “hearing” suggests. It implies receptivity, understanding, and response—not just auditory registration but transformative reception.

When Paul says faith comes from “akoē”, he’s describing something active and relational. This isn’t passive consumption. It’s the kind of hearing that requires our participation, our attention, our willingness to be changed by what we receive. It’s the difference between hearing traffic noise and hearing your name called by someone who loves you.

7. The Core Message

Here’s the beating heart of Romans 10:17: Faith isn’t self-generated; it’s received. And it’s received specifically through hearing the word of Christ proclaimed.

This verse dismantles several common misconceptions about faith. Faith isn’t primarily an intellectual achievement (though it engages the mind). It isn’t primarily an emotional experience (though it touches the heart). It isn’t primarily inherited tradition (though it passes through communities). Faith emerges when the living word of Christ encounters a receptive human spirit—when divine speech meets human hearing.

The word of Christ—the gospel, the good news about who Jesus is and what He has accomplished—comes to us as sound, as proclamation, as something spoken into our existence. And we, in turning our attention toward that word with openness and expectancy, find faith awakening within us not as our accomplishment but as God’s gift through that encounter.

8. Historical Echoes

Consider the early Christian communities scattered throughout the Roman Empire. Most believers couldn’t read. Printed Bibles wouldn’t exist for over a millennium. How did these communities nurture faith? Through gathered worship where Scripture was read aloud, where the gospel was proclaimed, and where testimonies were shared. Faith flourished in communities that prioritised proclamation and collective listening.

The Psalms were sung from memory. The prophets were recited. The stories of Jesus were told and retold until they became part of the community’s shared consciousness. These believers understood something we’re rediscovering: faith thrives in oral-aural cultures—communities shaped by speaking and hearing—not just literate consumption.

9. Liturgical Pulse

Throughout the Church calendar, we find this principle embodied. Every Sunday liturgy centres on the Liturgy of the Word—Scripture read aloud to the gathered community. We don’t simply download Bible apps. We gather to hear God’s word proclaimed in community, believing that something happens in the hearing that cannot happen in silent reading alone.

During Ordinary Time (which we find ourselves in now, in October), when the Church focuses on Christian growth and discipleship, this verse reminds us that spiritual maturity doesn’t come through private study alone but through consistent, communal hearing of Christ’s word. The readings cycle through, year after year, forming us gradually through repeated listening.

10. Symbolic Threads

In Scripture, hearing represents the posture of a covenant relationship. “Hear, O Israel” begins the Shema, the central prayer of Judaism. To hear is to acknowledge God’s sovereignty, to place oneself in the position of a beloved student before a wise teacher, a child before a parent, a friend listening to a friend’s heart.

Hearing also implies trust. When we truly listen to someone, we’re trusting that what they’re saying matters, that they’re worth our attention, that their words might change us. Faith-generating hearing requires this vulnerability—the willingness to let Christ’s word reshape our understanding of reality.

11. Scriptural Bridges

Romans 10:17 echoes throughout Scripture:

John 10:27 — “My sheep hear my voice. I know them, and they follow me.” Jesus emphasises that the relationship with Him is fundamentally auditory and responsive. His people are characterised by their hearing.

Hebrews 11:1 — “Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” Faith deals with the unseen realm, which makes hearing—not seeing—the primary sense through which we encounter God. We walk by faith, not by sight, which means we navigate by hearing Christ’s voice.

1 Thessalonians 2:13 — “When you received the word of God that you heard from us, you accepted it not as a human word but as what it really is, God’s word, which is also at work in you believers.” Paul celebrates how the Thessalonians heard the gospel as divine speech, and that hearing produced active faith.

12. Voices of the Saints

St. Augustine, in his “Confessions”, describes his conversion moment: “I heard the voice of a child in a nearby house chanting as if in a game: ‘Take and read, take and read.’” This prompting led him to hear Romans 13:13-14, which transformed his life. Augustine understood that God speaks through various means—sometimes Scripture, sometimes circumstances, sometimes the voice of a child—but always calling us to hear and respond.

St. John Chrysostom, the golden-tongued preacher, wrote: “The Scriptures are called ‘letters sent to us from God.’ When we receive letters from beloved friends, we eagerly open them and read them. Yet when God speaks to us through Scripture, we are indifferent. When we stand in church and hear the Gospel, let us imagine that Christ Himself is speaking to us.” Chrysostom grasped that hearing Scripture read aloud isn’t just information transfer but an encounter with the living Christ.

13. Faith in Motion

What does this look like practically? Imagine you’re a high school student dealing with intense anxiety about college applications. Your future feels uncertain, pressure is mounting, and your mind races with worst-case scenarios. You attend Mass on Sunday morning (perhaps reluctantly, still exhausted from the week). During the readings, you hear Philippians 4:6-7 proclaimed: “Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”

You’ve read these verses before. But this morning, in the context of communal worship, proclaimed aloud while you’re vulnerable and open, they land differently. They don’t just inform you—they address you. The word of Christ meets your anxiety, and faith stirs: “Maybe God actually does care about my future. Maybe I can pray instead of panic.” That’s Romans 10:17 in action. Faith comes through hearing.

14. Personal Narrative

I remember a particularly dark season during my early twenties when doubt felt like a constant companion. Theological questions I couldn’t answer multiplied. Prayer felt hollow. I wondered if faith was just wishful thinking, a psychological crutch I’d eventually outgrow.

During this period, a friend invited me to a weekly Scripture study—nothing fancy, just a small group reading through Mark’s Gospel together, out loud, and discussing what struck us. I went reluctantly. But week after week, something happened. As we heard the stories of Jesus—the way He noticed the overlooked, touched the untouchable, spoke truth to power, wept at death, blazed with righteous anger, laughed at dinner parties—faith began returning not as certainty but as recognition. I heard in these stories a voice that resonated with the deepest truths I sensed about reality, even when I couldn’t prove them.

Faith didn’t return through argument or apologetics (though those have their place). It returned through hearing the word of Christ in community, repeatedly, until it became real again—or perhaps real for the first time.

15. Interfaith Light

The practice of sacred listening appears across religious traditions. In Islam, the Quran is meant to be recited aloud; its very name means “the recitation.” Muslims believe the Arabic pronunciation carries spiritual power beyond cognitive understanding. In Buddhism, sutras are chanted in communal practice, and students listen carefully to teachers’ words, understanding that enlightenment often arrives through hearing dharma talks. In Hinduism, the Vedas are shruti—“that which is heard”—emphasising auditory transmission of sacred knowledge.

These parallels remind us that humans across cultures have intuited something profound: the sacred often reaches us through the ear before it reaches the intellect, and communal hearing practices shape spiritual communities in ways silent reading cannot.

16. Ethical Echo

Hearing the word of Christ produces not just personal piety but moral courage. When Paul speaks of faith coming through hearing, he’s describing the birth of a community that will eventually turn the Roman Empire upside down—not through violence but through transformed lives.

Consider the abolitionists who heard the gospel’s proclamation of human dignity and could no longer tolerate slavery. Think of the civil rights leaders whose moral courage flowed from hearing the prophetic tradition call for justice. Remember the ordinary believers in Eastern Europe whose faith, nurtured through decades of hearing God’s word in underground churches, outlasted Soviet oppression.

Attentive hearing of Christ’s word produces ethical transformation because it realigns our values with God’s kingdom. We begin to see people as Christ sees them, value what Christ values, and oppose what Christ opposes.

17. Community Resonance

Faith nurtured in isolation tends toward distortion. We need the corrective of communal hearing—different voices reading Scripture, different perspectives in discussion, the collective wisdom of the Body of Christ helping us hear what we might miss alone.

In healthy Christian communities, the word of Christ is heard not just during Sunday services but around dinner tables, in mentoring relationships, through pastoral counsel, in small groups, even in difficult conversations about sin and reconciliation. The community becomes a resonance chamber where Christ’s word echoes and amplifies, where we help each other hear more clearly.

18. Modern Lens

We live in an age of curated silence. We wear noise-cancelling headphones. We skip ads. We scroll past content that doesn’t immediately grab us. This creates a spiritual problem: we’re losing the patient’s capacity, attentive listening.

Digital Christianity often falls into the same trap—brief inspirational quotes, three-minute devotionals, Bible verses as aesthetic wallpaper. None of these is inherently bad, but they’re insufficient for faith formation. Romans 10:17 challenges our content-consumption approach to spirituality. It suggests we need to recover practices of deep listening: attending worship services where Scripture is read at length, sitting with biblical books long enough to hear their arc, listening to thoughtful preaching that opens the text rather than just offering encouraging thoughts.

The most countercultural thing Christians can do today might be simply showing up consistently to hear God’s word proclaimed, resisting the urge to multitask, and allowing Scripture to speak without immediately reaching for our phones to fact-check or share.

19. Theological Lens

The Reformed tradition speaks of the “means of grace”—ordinary practices through which God delivers extraordinary gifts. Word and sacrament, preaching and Eucharist, are means by which God conveys grace to believers. Romans 10:17 supports this understanding: God has chosen to work through the proclamation of Christ’s word. This isn’t limiting God—God could work any way He chooses—but honouring how God has actually revealed His preferred method of building faith.

Theologian Karl Barth emphasised that preaching isn’t merely talking about God but becomes God’s speech when done faithfully. The proclaimed word doesn’t just point to Christ; Christ speaks through it. This is why preaching remains central to Christian worship despite cultural shifts. It’s not old-fashioned tradition but recognition that God speaks through proclamation.

20. Common Missteps

One common misunderstanding: “If faith comes from hearing, I just need to consume more Christian content—podcasts, sermons, books—and my faith will automatically grow stronger.”

But Romans 10:17 isn’t about content volume. It’s about a transformative encounter. You can listen to dozens of sermons weekly while remaining spiritually unchanged because you’re consuming information rather than receiving Christ’s living word with openness and obedience.

Another misunderstanding: “Hearing is passive; what matters is what I do with what I hear.” Actually, the kind of hearing Paul describes is profoundly active—it requires focused attention, humility, receptivity, and willingness to be changed. This hearing is itself a spiritual discipline, a form of obedience.

21. Emotional Core

When we truly hear the word of Christ—when we let it pass our defences and intellectual objections—it addresses our deepest fears and longings. The gospel speaks directly to the inner voice that whispers we’re not enough, that we’re too broken for repair, that we’re alone in our struggles.

Hearing “You are loved” from a friend is comforting. Hearing it from Christ through Scripture, proclaimed in worship, witnessed in the lives of fellow believers, is transformative. That hearing doesn’t just inform us; it heals us. Faith emerges as we hear ourselves addressed by the One who knows us completely and loves us unconditionally.

For those wrestling with doubt, hearing the word of Christ offers not proof but presence. For those carrying shame, it offers not condemnation but cleansing. For those facing loss, it offers not explanations but companionship. This is why we return again and again to hear the old, familiar stories—because we need their truth to penetrate deeper, to reach places that remain resistant or wounded.

22. Silent Space

Pause here. Close your eyes. Take three slow breaths.

In the quiet, ask yourself: “When did I last truly hear—not just listen to—the word of Christ? What might I need to release or quiet within myself to hear more clearly? What is Christ speaking to me right now, in this moment?”

“Sit with these questions for one minute before reading on.”

23. Family View

If you’re sharing this reflection with younger family members, try this approach: “Do you know how sometimes you hear me calling you for dinner, but you don’t really listen because you’re focused on your game or your friends? And then maybe I say your name a certain way and suddenly you really hear me—you stop and pay attention? That’s kind of what this verse is about. God speaks to us, especially through the Bible stories about Jesus. But sometimes we have to really listen—really pay attention—for that to build our trust in God. Faith isn’t something we make ourselves feel. It’s what happens when we hear God’s voice and recognise it’s true.”

For teenagers: “Think about the difference between background noise and a voice that matters. When your best friend needs to tell you something important, you put your phone down and really listen. Faith works similarly—it grows when we give God’s word that same focused attention, not just scrolling past it like another Instagram story.”

24. Artistic Lens

The hymn “O Word of God Incarnate” by William Walsham How captures this truth beautifully: “O Word of God incarnate, O Wisdom from on high, O Truth unchanged, unchanging, O Light of our dark sky: We praise you for the radiance that from the hallowed page, a lantern to our footsteps, shines on from age to age.”

The hymn recognises Scripture as more than text—it’s Christ’s living word, light for our journey, wisdom from beyond ourselves. When sung in community, it becomes both proclamation and prayer, a way of hearing the word together.

In visual art, Caravaggio’s painting “The Calling of Saint Matthew” captures the moment of hearing. Matthew sits at his tax table, surrounded by money and companions, when Jesus enters and calls him. The painting focuses on Matthew’s face—that instant when hearing becomes transformative hearing, when a voice breaks through and changes everything.

25. Voice of Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan

His Excellency often reminds us in his morning reflections: “Every word from Christ is a divine wake-up call—not to new information, but to new life. We hear the same Scriptures year after year not because God has nothing new to say, but because we have infinite depths still to plumb in what He has already spoken. Listen again. Listen deeper. Let the word do its work.”

This perspective challenges our novelty-obsessed culture. We don’t need endless new spiritual content; we need to hear the ancient word of Christ with fresh receptivity, allowing it to reach parts of us that remained deaf yesterday.

26. Questions for the Reader

First: What blocks your hearing? Is it distraction, doubt, busyness, or perhaps unconscious resistance to what you suspect God might be saying?

Second: When you participate in worship—whether Sunday Mass, personal prayer time, or Scripture reading—do you come expecting to hear Christ speak, or are you going through motions?

Third: Who in your life helps you hear more clearly? Which relationships, which communities, which practices sharpen your spiritual hearing?

27. Action Practice

This week, practice lectio divina—sacred reading—with a Gospel passage. Choose one story of Jesus (perhaps the Prodigal Son in Luke 15, or Jesus healing the blind man in Mark 10). Read it slowly, aloud if possible, three times. After each reading, sit in silence for three minutes.

Don’t analyse. Don’t study. Simply listen. Notice what word or phrase resonates. What is Christ saying to you through this particular story today? Write down what you hear.

This practice trains you in the kind of hearing Paul describes—not information gathering but transformative listening to the living word.

28. Virtue in Focus

The virtue awakened by Romans 10:17 is “attentive obedience”—the combination of focused listening and responsive action. In Hebrew, the word “shema” means both “hear” and “obey,” recognising that genuine hearing naturally produces obedient response.

This virtue opposes our culture’s fragmented attention and selective hearing. It requires humility (acknowledging we need to hear something beyond ourselves), patience (listening takes time), and courage (we might hear something that demands change).

Attentive obedience isn’t blind compliance but the kind of trust that says, “I’ll listen carefully to Your voice, and I’ll respond to what I hear, even when it’s difficult.”

29. Kingdom Vision

Romans 10:17 points us toward the ultimate hope: a kingdom where all barriers to hearing are removed. Revelation describes believers surrounding God’s throne, hearing clearly the voices of worship, the words of eternal life, and the song of creation redeemed. No more static, no more distortion, no more competing voices drowning out truth.

Until that day, we live as people formed by hearing—communities shaped by gathering regularly to hear the word of Christ proclaimed, lives reoriented by listening to the gospel rather than the world’s cacophony. This hearing prepares us for eternity by teaching us now to recognise and respond to our Shepherd’s voice.

As we learn to hear Christ’s word with increasing clarity and responsiveness, we become agents of His kingdom, people whose lives proclaim what they’ve heard, whose actions flow from attentive listening to divine love.

30. Blessing / Sending Forth

“May the ears of your heart be opened today.”  

“May you hear, beneath the noise of the world,”  

“the steady voice of Christ calling your name.”  

“May faith rise in you—not forced, but received,  

“like breath, like morning light, like love.”  

“May you carry this word into your Saturday”  

“and let it shape your seeing, your choosing, your becoming.”  

“Go now as one who has heard,”  

“and let your life proclaim what your ears have received.”  

“Amen.”

31. Takeaway Statement

Faith isn’t manufactured through effort or inherited through tradition—it awakens when we truly hear the word of Christ, when we offer our attention and openness to the One who has been speaking our name since before we were born, and we finally, gratefully, answer: “Yes, Lord, I hear You.”

“For continued reflection and community discussion, join the Rise & Inspire morning reflection community where believers gather daily to hear and respond to God’s living word. Because faith, as Paul reminds us, comes from hearing—and the hearing that transforms us comes through the word of Christ.”

Rise & Inspire – Where Scripture Meets Life

Check the Rise & Inspire “Wake-Up Calls” archive at riseandinspire.co.in

© 2025 Rise & Inspire. Follow our journey of reflection, renewal, and relevance.

Word count:4099

How Can Abiding in Christ Transform Your Daily Life?

Wake-Up Call: The Power of Abiding in Christ

𝕎𝔸𝕂𝔼 𝕌ℙ ℂ𝔸𝕃𝕃 ☕

“നിങ്ങള്‍ എന്നില്‍ വസിക്കുവിന്‍; ഞാന്‍ നിങ്ങളിലും വസിക്കും. മുന്തിരിച്ചെടിയില്‍ നില്‍ക്കാതെ ശാഖയ്‌ക്ക്‌ സ്വയമേവ ഫലം പുറപ്പെടുവിക്കാന്‍ സാധിക്കാത്തതു പോലെ, എന്നില്‍ വസിക്കുന്നില്ലെങ്കില്‍ നിങ്ങള്‍ക്കും സാധിക്കുകയില്ല.”(യോഹന്നാന്‍ 15: 4)

“Abide in me as I abide in you. Just as the branch cannot bear fruit by itself unless it abides in the vine, neither can you unless you abide in me.” (John 15:4)

🔥🔥 GOOᗪ ᗰOᖇᑎIᑎG! ഈശോമിശിഹായ്ക്ക് സ്തുതിയായിരിക്കട്ടെ! 🙏🏻🔥🔥

Meaning of the Verse

In John 15:4, Jesus speaks about the essential relationship between Him and His followers. The metaphor of the vine and the branches emphasizes the importance of staying connected to Christ. Just as a branch must remain part of the vine to bear fruit, so too must we remain in Christ to live a life of spiritual abundance. Without this connection, we can do nothing of true value or lasting significance.

Jesus invites us to dwell in Him, assuring us that when we do, He will also dwell in us. This abiding relationship is not a mere connection but a deep, ongoing communion that sustains and nourishes our spiritual lives. The verse reminds us that our strength, growth, and ability to bear fruit come solely from remaining in Christ.

Practical Tips for Daily Life

  1. Start Your Day with Prayer: Begin each day by consciously placing yourself in God’s presence. Ask for His guidance, wisdom, and strength to stay connected to Him throughout the day.
  2. Integrate Scripture into Your Routine: Reflect on verses like John 15:4 during your daily activities. Whether through morning devotions or a quick reminder during a busy day, let these words guide your thoughts and actions.
  3. Stay Connected through Community: Surround yourself with fellow believers who encourage you to stay rooted in Christ. Engage in meaningful conversations, study groups, or fellowship activities that nurture your faith.
  4. Make Decisions Prayerfully: When faced with decisions, big or small, turn to God in prayer. Abiding in Christ means inviting Him into every aspect of your life, seeking His will, and trusting His direction.
  5. Cultivate a Heart of Gratitude: Regularly thank God for the blessings and lessons of each day. Recognizing His presence in all circumstances helps keep you grounded in your relationship with Him.
  6. Reflect on Your Relationships: Consider how you can reflect Christ’s love in your interactions with others. By abiding in Him, you can be a source of kindness, patience, and forgiveness in your relationships.
  7. Personal Growth through Reflection: At the end of each day, reflect on how you’ve lived out your faith. Identify areas where you’ve stayed connected to Christ and areas where you need His help to grow.

Theological Exploration

mutual indwelling

John 15:4 is a profound call to a life of intimacy with Christ. Theologically, this verse speaks to the concept of “mutual indwelling“—a spiritual reality where the believer and Christ are united in a deep, life-giving relationship. This union is the source of our spiritual vitality, enabling us to bear fruit in all aspects of life.

In this passage, Jesus is emphasizing that true discipleship is not about outward religious observance but about an inward, continuous connection with Him. The “fruit” that we bear, whether in our character, actions, or influence, is the result of this abiding relationship. It’s a reminder that our efforts apart from Christ are ultimately unproductive, but with Him, our lives can be profoundly impactful.

This verse also encourages us to trust in God’s pruning process, which may involve challenges or discipline, to enhance our fruitfulness. Just as a gardener prunes a vine to produce more fruit, God shapes us through our experiences to grow in spiritual maturity.

Meditation and Prayer

As you reflect on John 15:4, find a quiet space to meditate on the depth of this relationship. Close your eyes and imagine yourself as a branch connected to the vine—Jesus. Feel the life and nourishment flowing from Him into every part of your being. As you breathe in, invite His presence deeper into your heart, and as you breathe out, let go of any anxieties or distractions.

Prayer: “Lord Jesus, help me to abide in You as You abide in me. Teach me to stay connected to You in every moment, trusting in Your strength and guidance. May my life bear fruit that glorifies Your name. Prune away anything that hinders my growth and deepen my relationship with You. Amen.”

Wake-Up Call Message from His Excellency, the Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

As we rise to a new day, let us remember the words of our Lord in John 15:4. He calls us to remain in Him, just as a branch remains in the vine. This is not a mere suggestion but a divine invitation to dwell in His presence continuously. In doing so, we open our lives to His grace, His wisdom, and His boundless love.

The world may pull us in many directions, tempting us to rely on our own strength or the fleeting promises of material success. But remember, without Christ, we are like branches disconnected from the source of life—unable to bear fruit that truly matters.

Today, let us renew our commitment to abide in Jesus. In our prayers, decisions, and interactions, let us seek to stay rooted in His love. And as we do, may we experience the fullness of life that comes from this sacred union.

May the Lord bless you and keep you connected to the true vine, now and always.

Blessings,
His Excellency, the Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan
Bishop of Punalur, Kerala, India

This blog post is an invitation to explore the richness of John 15:4 and apply its timeless wisdom to your life. As you abide in Christ, may you find strength, purpose, and peace, bearing fruit that reflects His love and grace to the world.

👉 Check out some of our earlier posts on ‘The Power of Abiding in Christ’ using the links provided.”

(1)http://riseandinspire.co.in/2024/07/05/can-faith-in-god-truly-bring-national-happiness/

(2) http://riseandinspire.co.in/2024/02/17/understanding-the-gravity-of-hatred-in-christian-beliefs/

For further insights and inspiration, visit Rise&InspireHub. The blog offers stories that touch the heart and spark the imagination.
Email: kjbtrs@riseandinspire.co.in

Reflect on it.

Jeffrey R. Holland

Amen🙏🌷