When the Process Feels Personal
It’s easy to feel like the delay is punishment. But God refines sons, not slaves.
🔥 The Joseph Anointing reveals the purpose in the pressure. Order your copy today.
It’s easy to feel like the delay is punishment. But God refines sons, not slaves.
🔥 The Joseph Anointing reveals the purpose in the pressure. Order your copy today.
Theme: The palace will tempt you — but your integrity determines your legacy. Not every test comes in the form of hardship. Some come dressed in opportunity.Joseph’s greatest test wasn’t the pit—it was the palace. When Potiphar’s wife pursued him, she wasn’t just offering forbidden pleasure—she was offering fast favor, influence without integrity, and position…
Day 2 – When Everything Feels Like It’s Falling Apart “They saw him from afar, and before he came near to them they conspired against him to kill him.” — Genesis 37:18 (ESV) There are moments in life when it feels like everything we thought we knew is suddenly shaken. Joseph was favored by his…
Letting Go to Move Forward “And now do not be distressed or angry with yourselves because you sold me here, for God sent me before you to preserve life.” — Genesis 45:5 (ESV) There is a key that unlocks every prison, releases every bond, and dissolves every wall when you hold it out in faith….
Theme: Joseph was chosen before the pit. So were you. Before the betrayal, before the pit, before the palace — Joseph dreamed. He didn’t earn the dream. He was marked by it. Some people are dreamers because they read books or chase success. But then there are those of us who carry dreams that we…
Trusting God in the Quiet Places “And Joseph remained in prison…” — Genesis 39:20 (paraphrased) There’s a kind of silence that feels holy. And then, there’s the kind that feels like heaven forgot your name. Joseph knew both. After the pit and the false accusations, Joseph landed in prison. No dreams. No visions. Just time….
Theme: Identity over influence. When Joseph was brought into Pharaoh’s palace, everything around him changed—his clothes, his language, his title. But something far more powerful remained unchanged: his identity as a son. He may have looked like an Egyptian, but he still thought like a Hebrew. He was adorned like royalty, but he still carried…