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free ebook Bible study on resilience

October 7, 2020 · In: inspiration

Is God growing your faith and character to be more resilient? A new eBook Bible study on resilience for your personal times with God. 

This year keeps bringing about the same question: why?

We’re grappling with a lot of difficult things as a society – a pandemic, racism, unrest, a particularly draining election season. And I’m not sure if it’s this way for you, but it seems like individually we are being hit hard as well. Illnesses (Covid or otherwise), mental health trouble, and bad news, right in our own homes.

Why? Why are we going through these things? 

Those can tend to be my first questions. And then, what are you doing, God? I want to know; I want to understand. Romans 8:28 easily springs to mind: “For we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him.”

I believe it. And yet…it doesn’t feel good. I just want 2020 to be over, as if putting up a new calendar will magically change our circumstances. 

Here’s one thing God is doing in this time: he is growing our resilience. 

Resilience means “the capacity to recover quickly from difficulties; toughness” and also “the ability of a substance or object to spring back into shape; elasticity,” according to Oxford Languages. 

And like training your memory or your muscles, it’s not something that happens magically overnight. 

The Bible tells us plainly we won’t always have it easy in this life. Jesus tells his disciples in John 16:33 – “In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.” 

God knows that our broken world comes complete with decay, with brokenness, with struggle. He knows our own sinful natures will drag us down. He’s not surprised and doesn’t get overwhelmed by bad news. 

So what does he do? He redeems our darkest and most challenging moments and use them for the purpose of growing us to be more like him.

A Bible Study on Resilience

This has been on my heart for a long time. A while back, I wrote a blog post focusing on Bible verses about resilience. But it just wasn’t enough. This is something to really dig deep into. We need to better understand: 

  • God’s eternal qualities
  • Jesus’s resilience
  • what resilient faith does for us
  • God’s purpose for resilience and how he teaches us
  • his divine promises when it comes to the hard things in life

I hope this Bible study will help focus your thoughts on the resilient faith God is building in you, and encourage you when life seems overwhelming. I know this year has been anything but easy, but I believe that good things are coming. A revival is coming, and we can end this year stronger than when we started.

To get your free eBook, sign up for the What You Make It email list.

Once you subscribe, you’ll get access to our free Member’s Resource Library, which comes with printables, journaling pages, planning pages, eBooks and more. Emails go out about once a month, and include updates, new posts, and usually a fun freebie, too. 

Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV® Copyright ©1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.

Photo Credit: 

1 – Jake Melara on Unsplash

2 – Nicole Geri on Unsplash

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I’m Jenn - contemplative thinker, lover of words and the Word, wife and mom. You're invited to wonder, wander, and wrestle with God -- without guilt.

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For the one who knew all the answers in Bible triv For the one who knew all the answers in Bible trivia…

The one all the parents made their kids invite to their birthday parties (because you were the “good example”)

The one who carried a Bible in your backpack and wore your WWJD bracelet to school

The one who self-censored all the songs and movies

Are you in for your era of healing, expansive faith?

You’re not alone in the de/reconstruction journey. Follow along for more. 

#deconstruction #faithjourney #spiritualgrowth #theology #christianliving
Today, on Ash Wednesday, we remember we are made u Today, on Ash Wednesday, we remember we are made up of tiny particles, star dust, breathing in and sustained by the very Spirit of God. 

We are limited, finite, temporary, beloved, chosen, made perfect by Christ, and being made holy and whole.

I didn’t practice Lent or the liturgical calendar growing up, and I’m finding such solace in it in recent years. This intentional time is to lament, be still, go slow, and embrace surrender and sacrifice. 

At the end of the day, I can show up in the presence of God as all that I am, and not be too much or not enough. Same for you.

May you find comfort in these thoughts today. Do you practice Lent? 

#faithjourney #holyspirit #spiritualformation #godwithus #womenoffaith
Even though I would have told you all day about Go Even though I would have told you all day about God’s goodness, I didn’t really believe God’s goodness applied to ME.

Promises like, “for my yoke is easy and my burden is light” (Matthew‬ ‭11‬:‭30‬ ‭NIV‬‬) or “there is no condemnation in Christ” (Romans 8:1) drove me crazy.

(TL;DR: comment below for a link to a free Bible study on promises of God.)

Why? Because even though I knew them by heart, they didn’t feel real to me. More often they did for other people, people who were free and confident in their faith, but not for me.

Here’s what changed: I started holding tightly to the promises in God’s Word, by reading them and choosing to believe they applied to me (even if I didn’t feel like it). 

I meditated on those verses, copied them down, used them to contradict the lies in my mind—and they started to take root. 

It wasn’t a quick hack and didn’t happen overnight. It was a constant practice of choosing to take God at his Word, to believe I wasn’t the exception to his promises.

What if you could find that kind of confidence and security? I wrote a 30-day study of Biblical affirmations and promises to start re-framing your perspective, with some simple prompts.

Let me know below, and I’ll send it your way. 

#biblestudymoments #biblestudytools #godsword #godspromises #faithjourney
Saturday I was able to serve at a women’s event Saturday I was able to serve at a women’s event by being part of a prayer team. That meant intentionally praying with people, for people, and over the event. It was heavy, but oh so meaningful, so holy, to sit with others in their pain. It was a privilege.

Sometimes you’re the person who needs prayer, and sometimes God gives you the words to pray with someone else.

But we’re all going through a lot right now. It’s okay to be shaken. It’s okay to be grieving. It’s okay not to bypass it for the “faithful answers”. (If you’ve been around here for a while, you know we’re no longer about right answers.”)

As I was wrestling through this myself, feeling shaken in my faith, I kid you not, these scriptures sprang to mind. They met me, and I hope they meet you too. 

#bibleverses #godsword #walkbyfaith #godwithus #jesusfollower
In light of some recent conversation about empathy In light of some recent conversation about empathy, 

here are 4 things I learned about compassion when writing my book She’s Not Your Enemy, ones that shocked me to my core:

1. Out of all his attributes, God is called compassionate over and over again in the scriptures. The New International version has 81 verses with the word “compassion”. All but nine refer or relate to God or Jesus. 

2. “Compassionate” is the first word he uses to introduce himself as he passes by Moses—“the Lord, the Lord, the compassionate and gracious God…” - Exodus 34:6 NIV. The first things he wants to be known for? His compassion and graciousness towards us. 

3. The Hebrew word for compassion (rachum) shares a root with the Hebrew word for womb (rechem). God’s compassion for us is deeply personal and intimate, a miraculous mystery, the closest relationship, a connection not unlike motherly love.

4. We use compassion and sympathy and empathy interchangeably, but they’re actually different. 

Sympathy is a mental understanding of someone’s pain;

Empathy is knowing the same hurts or a similar feeling to them; 

Compassion is going through something with someone, sitting in the pain with them, feeling what they feel. In Latin, it literally means “to suffer with”. And that’s who God is.

Not only is empathy not a sin, but God takes it a step deeper to actually walk through our pain with us.

They’ll tell you compassion is a trick.
But your compassion makes you look more like your Creator.
❤️

#empathymatters #compassioninaction #walkwithgod #faithjourney #godwithus

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