The Bible holds a great deal of practical instruction for helping us reach our goals. Let the wisdom of God direct you as your work toward whatever objective you have. This collection of messages from Dr. David Jeremiah provide insight into keeping Christ at the center of our goals, overcoming procrastination and discouragement, and seeing our goal through to the end.
Listen along as David Jeremiah presents an intriguing look at the role vision plays in determining how God accomplishes His will in and through us. In this message, “The Anatomy of a Vision,” we explore five reasons why we must live with vision. Covers selected Scriptures.
If you set some goals for this year, how are you doing? Can you explain the action steps you’re taking to achieve your goals? In this motivating message, David makes an appeal for believers to make reading the Bible daily our top goal. He explains that this discipline will shape the moral and social character of our lives more than any other factor. Covers selected Scriptures.
In this lesson we learn how it is possible to live a life of contentment. There is an innate human drive to want to reach farther, do better, and accomplish more. Finding the balance between where we are and where we’d like to be is the challenge of contentment. If we can be as joyful with nothing as with something because of Christ, we are learning to be content. Covers Philippians 4:10-23.
God wants you to see the dream He has for your life and then live out that dream every single day.
Without a blueprint, a house cannot be built. But without a picture of the house you want, a blueprint cannot be drawn up. The same holds true when it comes to making plans for the future. Without a compelling, God-given dream for your life, you will find yourself treading water, getting through this day just so you can get through the next.
In this message, Dr. David Jeremiah teaches us how to identify God's dream for us and give it the clarity it needs to develop the blueprint for our future. Covers
Luke 14:28, 31 and 1 Chronicles 28:20. From the series Forward.
With God's help, Gideon secured two triumphant victories; one over the Midianites and another over the Amalekites. He easily could have rested after these defeats; but Gideon was a leader who knew the importance of finishing well. Covers Judges 8:1-23
Trainers draw a distinction between strength and endurance and how to build both. Strength is needed occasionally in life; endurance is needed every day. Whether we are opposed by spiritual persecution or just the challenges of life, we need endurance: the power to persevere to the end. This message will help you discover six ways to help you build up the power of your spiritual endurance. Covers selected Scriptures.
The older we get, the easier it is to look back and see times when we “lost it.” We get distracted by the pressures of life and begin to make decisions on our own - leaving God on the periphery of our life. Proverbs has a prescription that will keep that from ever happening again. From the series Powerful Principles from Proverbs. Covers Proverbs 3:5-6.
In our goal-oriented culture, people often think they fail if they don’t achieve their planned-for result. But God is more interested in the process than the product. And prayer is the key to ensuring that our vision stays flexible enough to achieve God’s goals instead of ours. Covers Romans 15:22-33.
Have you been given a round Tuit, a small coin with the word Tuit engraved on it? It's for people who are always planning on getting around to it. We joke about procrastination, but it is no laughing matter. The results could be eternally devastating. Covers Acts 24:22-27.
In America, people are trying to retire at younger and younger ages. They work hard and save for thirty years so they can retire in their fifties. Caleb was a man who would have thought that strange. At age eighty-five, he experienced his greatest victory, still living a life wholly committed to the Lord. From the series Life Wide Open. Covers Joshua 14:6-15.
The announcement came at the proper time. His announcement was made to a prepared person, in a prayerful spirit, in a powerful statement, with a planned agenda and was concluded with praise to God. Covers Nehemiah 2:1-10.