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GOD NAMES | DEVOTIONAL

Shub Nephesh - Renewer of Life

If you’ve had a loved one die, you know the pain of grief, and you’ve also brushed up against the great mystery of life. What is this immaterial essence or spirit that animates us? Where did it come from? And where does it go when we’re gone?

If you’ve had a loved one die, you know the pain of grief, and you’ve also brushed up against the great mystery of life.

What is this immaterial essence or spirit that animates us? Where did it come from? And where does it go when we’re gone?

The Bible tells us. God, in creating humanity, did much more than bring together assorted body parts, tissues, and organs.

He did do that, but Genesis 2:7 says that He took that lifeless creature and “breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being.” From the opening pages of Scripture, we see that God is the source and giver of life.

And God doesn’t just animate us physically; He also desires to see us come alive spiritually. He wants to renew our lives, to give us eternal life—that is, a life that consists of knowing Him through Jesus Christ (see John 17:3).

Jesus insisted He came to offer His followers life “to the full” (John 10:10). The idea should evoke imagery of a life impossibly abundant, incredibly rich, and sloshing over with blessing regardless of the ups and downs of life.

This is not to say that a life in God or a life with God is easy and free of trouble—far from it. We live in a broken world full of broken people. We face hardships and endure suffering. Many of the psalms suggest this.

One day God will renew everything, but in the meantime, we will experience trouble and tears. And so we must make the choice to live in God’s presence and to rely on His promises.
The New Testament expands on this idea.


We serve a God—more importantly, we are loved by a Savior—who not only sustains our lives but, as the apostle Paul asserted, “is our life” (Colossians 3:4).

This is the life of faith. We cling to Christ as if He were our oxygen—our invisible but indispensable source of life.

Seeing Christ as our life is recognizing our need for Him every moment and depending on Him at every turn. And it is not a life of fear-filled desperation but a life of loving devotion.

This focus on Jesus won’t make our problems disappear, but it will put them in perspective. Our God is the source and sustainer of life—not just a “get by” life, but the life we really want.

The renewed life God offers us is—in quantity and quality—beyond our wildest dreams.
To what extent is the statement “God is my life” true of you?



This Christmas season, let’s remember to thank Him for His most precious gift to us: Himself.

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

The Gift of Himself

David Jeremiah
Long ago, there ruled a wise and good king in Persia who loved his people and often dressed in the clothes of a working man or a beggar so he could visit the poor and learn about their hardships.
Father, as we honor the birth of your Son, let us think on mercy, healing, and reconciliation. Amen.

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

Healing Time

J. Stephen Lang
1868: On this date a political leader who grew up poor, had no formal education and was illiterate until his wife taught him to read and write, issued Proclamation 179 “granting full pardon and amnesty for the offense of treason against the United States during the late Civil War.”
Christmas means you have an eternal home waiting for you. That should make more than the angels sing!

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

A Personal Promise

Charles Stanley
Jesus came to earth with the view of offering you salvation. He wanted you to have a restored relationship with the Father, a relationship that was so close, so intimate, that you would have your special place in the Father’s house (John 14:1–4).
The only people in Israel who did recognize Christ at His birth were humble, unremarkable people.

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

The Unexpected Savior

John MacArthur
Scripture records that when John the Baptist began his ministry, “The people were in expectation, and all reasoned in their hearts about John, whether he was the Christ or not” (Luke 3:15).
In the incarnation, God spanned the vast chasm of fear that had distanced him from his human creation

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

Reflections on the Incarnation and Freedom of God

Philip Yancey
Think of the condescension involved: the incarnation, which sliced history into two parts had more animal than human witnesses. Think, too, of the risk. In the incarnation, God spanned the vast chasm of fear that had distanced him from his human creation.
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