“SEEING LIFE FROM GOD’S PERSPECTIVE”
MARCH THEME
“SEEING SCRIPTURE FROM GOD’S PERSPECTIVE”
Beats From Your Pastor’s Heart
ASK, “WHAT DOES GOD SAY ABOUT THIS?”
Psalm 119:105, “Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.”
Most of us do not struggle with knowing right from wrong—we struggle with slowing down long enough to let truth guide our response. Life comes at us quickly: a tense conversation, an unexpected bill, a disappointing moment, or a sharp word from someone we love. In those moments, we tend to react instead of respond. We lean on what we feel, what seems fair, or what others say, but we often skip the most important question: What does God say about this? God never intended His Word to be reserved for church services or quiet moments alone. It was given to guide real decisions, real reactions, and real-life situations. The difference between a life led by peace and one led by pressure is often found in that one question.
Reactions Reveal Who Is Leading You
Your first response in a situation often reveals what voice has been shaping you. When frustration leads to anger, when pressure leads to panic, or when offense leads to withdrawal, it is not just a reaction—it is a revelation. It shows that something other than God’s Word has been leading your thinking. The truth is, we do not rise to the level of our intentions in difficult moments—we fall to the level of what has been filling us. If God’s Word is not already in your heart, it will not guide your response in the heat of the moment. That is why learning to pause and ask, “What does God say?” is not weakness—it is spiritual maturity.
God’s Word Brings Light Into Confusing Moments
The Bible says His Word is a lamp and a light—not a spotlight that reveals everything at once, but a steady guide that shows you the next step. Many times, we want immediate clarity for the entire situation, but God gives direction one step at a time. When you stop and seek His Word, it brings clarity where emotions bring confusion. It reminds you to answer softly when anger rises, to trust when fear speaks, to forgive when hurt lingers, and to wait when impatience pushes. Without that light, you will interpret situations incorrectly. You will call delay denial, correction rejection, and pressure abandonment. But when God’s Word speaks, everything comes back into proper perspective.
Asking God’s Perspective Changes Your Response
The moment you ask, “What does God say about this?” you shift from reacting naturally to responding spiritually. That question slows you down, centers your heart, and invites God into the situation. Instead of being controlled by your emotions, you begin to be led by truth. Instead of escalating conflict, you bring peace. Instead of making decisions you regret, you walk in wisdom. Over time, this becomes a pattern—not just something you do occasionally, but a way you live daily. And the more consistently you seek God’s perspective, the more stable, steady, and spiritually grounded your life becomes.
Imagine walking through a dark path at night with no light. Every step feels uncertain, every shadow feels threatening, and every movement causes hesitation. Now imagine holding a lamp in your hand. The path itself has not changed—but your ability to walk it has. You step with confidence, avoid obstacles, and move forward with clarity. That is what God’s Word does in your daily life. The situations may not change immediately, but your ability to walk through them with wisdom and peace does.
The issue is not that God is silent—the issue is that we often respond before we listen. Every situation you face today is an opportunity to either react from emotion or respond from truth. One leads to instability, the other to peace. One leads to regret, the other to wisdom. The difference is found in a simple but powerful habit: Ask, “What does God say about this?” When His Word becomes your first response, your life will begin to reflect His peace, His clarity, and His direction.
Warfare Prayer:
Father, in Jesus’ name, I take authority over every impulsive reaction, every emotional response, and every voice that tries to lead me outside of Your truth. I reject fear, frustration, anger, and confusion as my guide. I declare that Your Word will be the loudest voice in my life today. Train my heart to pause before I respond, to seek You before I speak, and to follow truth instead of feelings. Let every decision I make be anchored in Your Word. Bring Your light into every situation I face, and give me wisdom, clarity, and peace. I choose Your voice over every other voice. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Daily Challenge:
Today, when something frustrates, pressures, or unsettles you, pause before you respond. Ask, “What does God say about this?” Then take one intentional step to respond according to His Word instead of your feelings.
NEXT SUNDAY
If it were announced that Jesus Himself would be speaking this Sunday, there would be no empty seats—only standing room. Schedules would be cleared, distractions would be pushed aside, and nothing would be allowed to keep you from being present. You wouldn’t debate it—you would make sure you were here. Well… He is speaking. Sunday at 10:30 AM, we will gather for a powerful and eye-opening service centered on one truth we cannot afford to overlook—God has given us His Word, and what we do with it will determine the direction, strength, and outcome of our lives. In a world full of noise, opinions, and confusion, the Bible is not just a book to carry—it is the voice of God to follow. Yet many believers own it, read it occasionally, but never truly live by it. To have access to the eternal, unchanging truth of God and not apply it is one of the greatest losses a believer can experience. The very voice we would run to hear is already speaking—and too often, it is the voice we neglect. This service will challenge you, realign you, and call you back to seeing Scripture not as optional, but as essential. If other voices have become louder than God’s voice in your life, this is your moment to reset. Bring your Bible, bring your family, and bring a heart ready to hear and respond, because the voice of Jesus is not absent—it is available, and what you do with His Word will determine the life you live.
SUNDAY’S SERVICE SUMMARY
I was there—and I can honestly say I did not leave the same way I came in. I walked in carrying the weight of everything I had been hearing all week—the headlines, the tension about Iran, the uncertainty, the constant noise—and I didn’t even realize how much it had been shaping my thinking. But as the service began, something shifted. The music didn’t just fill the room—it redirected my heart. It took me back to Calvary and reminded me that what looks like chaos is never chaos to God. What looked like weakness at the cross was actually complete control, and in that moment, I realized that the same God who was in control then is still in control now. As the message unfolded, it felt like God was gently but firmly correcting my perspective. I had been looking at everything through fear, through opinions, through what everyone else was saying—but not through His Word. When Psalm 2 was opened, it was like a lens was placed over my eyes. I began to see that God is not shaken by what shakes me. Nations may rage, headlines may intensify, and uncertainty may grow, but God is still on the throne, still ruling, and still moving everything according to His eternal purpose. Hearing about how kingdoms have always risen and fallen—Babylon, Persia, Greece, Rome—and yet God’s plan has never once been interrupted, brought a peace I didn’t even realize I had lost. What changed me most was this: I stopped asking, “What is happening?” and started asking, “What does God say about this?” That one shift settled something deep in my spirit. I realized the real battle is not just out there—it’s in here. It’s the battle over what voice I’m going to believe. And I had been letting the wrong voices lead me. By the end of the service, I wasn’t filled with fear anymore—I was filled with faith. Not because the world had changed, but because my perspective had. I walked out knowing that I don’t have to understand tomorrow to have peace today. My confidence is not in governments, power, or outcomes—it is in the God who reigns, the God who is greater, and the God who holds tomorrow in His hands. And more than anything, I was reminded that this world doesn’t just need answers—it needs Jesus, the Prince of Peace. And the greatest war is not only happening in distant places—it’s happening in every human heart, including mine. And that day, I chose to let Him win.
TUESDAY’S PRAYER REQUESTS
Phillip Roach – Surgery Today
Mike And Paula Ferris And Family
Ann Stanley
Britany Smith ~ Breast Cancer
Mateen – Kim McClain’s Sister
Amy Garner’s Dad
Andrea Nix– Friend of the Shelnutt’s
Angela Bryan’s Sisters
Annette Ford
Bentley Smith – Broken Leg
Brando Echarte
Carol Lawhead – Riverside in Conyers
Christopher Kelley
Danny Jarrard
Darlene Kelley – Cancer Treatment
Darlene Wiggins
Debbie Foskey
Deon Lotter
Don And Carol Franklin – Mae’s Cousins
Don Franklin’s Daughter, Darlene, Son, David
Doris Loyd
Dr. and Mrs. Davis
Ed Adkins – Friend of Brian Edwards
Ed Franklin’s Son In Law – Heart Surgery
Eric Magnusson’s Mother
Eric Ward
Friend of Linda Hodge
Gayle Sparks
Gloria Young
Jake Jenkins
James Burnette
Jean Partee
Jean Partee’s Sister
Jessica Headrick
John McClain’s Mother
Joni Oberhage
June Cronan
June Cronan’s Sister
June Davis
Kailey Bateman
Kim McClain’s Daughter, Amanda
Kim McClain’s Mother
Kim’s Sisters – Ann & Brenda & Mateen
Lillianna Magnusson’s Mom
Linda Mays
Lonzo Christian
Lori Blount’s Mother
Mary Williams
Mary Williamson – Dana Jackson’s Mom
Mrs. Franklin
Nancy Brown
Nora Allison
Paul Bateman
Ron And Johnnie Barry – Friends Of Ashton & Glenda Bateman
Rose Fuller – Pruitt-Monroe Nursing Home, Forsyth GA
Roy Roach
Sandra Mitchell
Scott Lanier
Scotty Nix
Stephanie Seivers – Friend of the Shelnutt’s
Steve Michaels
Tammy Shelnutt
Tom Witcher