Saturday, July 4, 2026

FREDDY THE FROG EMBRACES CHANGE - A Children's Story

 

FREDDY THE FROG EMBRACES CHANGE

VALUE WE ARE LEARNING:

Adaptability means being willing to adjust when life changes. Change can sometimes feel uncomfortable, scary, or unexpected, but it often brings new opportunities, friendships, and experiences. People who are adaptable learn how to stay positive and flexible when things do not go exactly as planned. Adaptability helps us grow, learn, and become stronger. In this story, Freddy discovers that some of life's greatest adventures begin when we embrace change instead of fearing it.

MORAL OF THE STORY:

Change is a natural part of life and often leads to wonderful new opportunities. While change can sometimes feel uncomfortable or scary, it helps us grow and learn. Adaptable people understand that they cannot control everything, but they can control how they respond. A positive attitude makes change easier to accept and enjoy. New experiences often introduce us to new friends, skills, and adventures. Every ending can become the beginning of something exciting. When we embrace change with courage and optimism, we discover possibilities we never imagined. A flexible heart is ready for life's greatest adventures.

Freddy the Frog loved his home.

He lived beside Lily Pad Pond, a peaceful little pond surrounded by tall grass, colorful flowers, and shady trees.

Every morning, Freddy woke to the sound of singing birds.

Every afternoon, he leaped from lily pad to lily pad.

Every evening, he watched the sunset reflect across the water.

Life was comfortable.

Life was familiar.

Life was exactly the way Freddy liked it.

And that was the problem.

Freddy did not like change.

Not even a little.

If someone moved a rock near the pond, Freddy noticed.

If a new flower bloomed beside the water, Freddy noticed.

If his favorite lily pad drifted to a different spot, Freddy noticed.

And every time something changed, Freddy worried.

One spring morning, Freddy noticed a large wooden sign near the pond.

He hopped closer to read it.

"Pond Improvement Project Coming Soon."

Freddy blinked.

"Pond improvement?"

He hurried to find his friends.

Soon, Daisy the Dog, Benny the Bunny, Callie the Cat, Tommy the Turtle, Henry the Hedgehog, and Molly the Mouse gathered around the sign.

"What does it mean?" Freddy asked nervously.

Tommy studied the notice.

"It says the pond will be cleaned and expanded."

Freddy gasped.

"Expanded?"

Daisy smiled.

"That sounds exciting."

"It sounds terrible," Freddy replied.

The others laughed.

But Freddy was serious.

For the next several days, he worried constantly.

"What if they remove my favorite lily pad?"

"What if everything looks different?"

"What if I don't like it?"

No matter how much his friends reassured him, Freddy remained concerned.

Then construction began.

Workers carefully cleaned the pond.

They removed fallen branches.

They cleared overgrown weeds.

They deepened parts of the water.

They added new plants and flowers.

Every day, Freddy found something new to worry about.

One afternoon, he sat on a log staring at the pond.

"It doesn't look the same."

Tommy sat beside him.

"No."

"I don't like it."

Tommy smiled gently.

"Have you given it a chance?"

Freddy crossed his arms.

"No."

Tommy chuckled.

"Maybe you should."

Freddy wasn't convinced.

The following week the project was completed.

Everyone gathered for the grand reopening.

The pond looked beautiful.

The water sparkled.

New lily pads floated across the surface.

Colorful flowers lined the shore.

A small waterfall trickled into the pond.

Butterflies fluttered everywhere.

The other animals were amazed.

Freddy wasn't.

At least not at first.

He cautiously hopped onto one of the new lily pads.

Then another.

Then another.

As he explored, he discovered something surprising.

The pond wasn't worse.

It was different.

And different wasn't necessarily bad.

The new waterfall created a pleasant sound.

The larger pond offered more places to explore.

The new flowers attracted beautiful butterflies.

The additional lily pads created exciting new paths across the water.

By lunchtime, Freddy found himself smiling.

By afternoon, he was having fun.

By evening, he was laughing.

The next morning, he invited his friends to explore the new pond.

"This waterfall is amazing," Freddy said.

Daisy grinned.

"We told you."

"And look at these flowers."

Callie laughed.

"We noticed."

"And there are so many new places to explore."

Tommy smiled knowingly.

Freddy laughed.

"Okay, okay. You were right."

A few weeks later, another change arrived.

A family of ducks moved into the pond.

At first, Freddy worried again.

"What if they take over?"

"What if they make too much noise?"

"What if I don't like them?"

But this time, something was different.

Freddy remembered the pond project.

Instead of assuming the change would be bad, he decided to give it a chance.

The ducks turned out to be wonderful neighbors.

They were friendly.

They were funny.

They shared interesting stories about places they had visited.

Soon, Freddy considered them friends.

As summer continued, Freddy began noticing something.

Many of the best things that happened that year started with a change.

The improved pond.

The new waterfall.

The duck family.

The beautiful flowers.

The expanded swimming areas.

The new adventures.

None of those things would have happened without change.

One evening, Freddy sat beside the waterfall watching the sunset.

Grandpa Frog hopped over and joined him.

"You seem happy."

"I am."

"What changed?"

Freddy laughed.

"Everything."

Grandpa smiled.

"And?"

Freddy looked across the pond.

"I learned something important."

"What?"

Freddy smiled.

"Sometimes change brings wonderful things."

Grandpa nodded.

"That's a valuable lesson."

Freddy watched the water sparkle.

For years, he had spent energy fearing change.

Now he realized something.

Change was simply part of life.

Sometimes it brought challenges.

Sometimes it brought surprises.

But often it brought opportunities.

And when you face change with an open heart, amazing things can happen.

From that day forward, whenever something new appeared in Freddy's life, he tried to remember the pond.

He remembered the waterfall.

He remembered the ducks.

Most importantly, he remembered that every ending can become the beginning of a wonderful new adventure.

MORAL OF THE STORY POEM:

Change may seem a little scary,

And sometimes make us cautious or wary.

But new adventures often start,

When we open up our heart.

New friends and opportunities grow,

When we are willing to go with the flow.

Be flexible, brave, and willing to see,

How wonderful change can truly be.

QUESTIONS FOR PARENTS AND CHILDREN:

  1. Why did Freddy worry when the pond began to change?
  2. What new things did Freddy discover after the project was finished?
  3. How did the duck family help Freddy learn about change?
  4. Can you think of a change in your life that turned out better than you expected?
  5. Why is it important to be flexible when things change?

 

 

THE TEN VALUES WE LEARNED FROM MY BOOK, PETS WE LOVE - A CHILDREN'S STORY

 

THE TEN VALUES WE LEARNED FROM MY BOOK, PETS WE LOVE

Throughout this book, our animal friends taught us ten important lessons:

🐶 Daisy taught us Loyalty

🐱 Callie taught us Curiosity and Learning

🐰 Benny taught us Courage

🐹 Ginny taught us Sharing

🐹 Holly taught us Responsibility

🐠 Goldie taught us Gratitude

🐢 Tommy taught us Perseverance

🦔 Henry taught us Respect

🐭 Molly taught us Self-Confidence

🐸 Freddy taught us Adaptability

These ten values can help children build strong character, strong friendships, and strong futures.

Never forget:

Be kind.

Be brave.

Be responsible.

Be grateful.

Believe in yourself.

And always keep learning.

Friday, July 3, 2026

A Blueprint for Encouraging the Flock: How Pastors Can Inspire Growth Without Making People Feel They Are Never Enough


A Blueprint for Encouraging the Flock

How Pastors Can Inspire Growth Without Making People Feel They Are Never Enough

For decades, millions of Christians have faithfully attended church services seeking hope, encouragement, wisdom, comfort, and a deeper connection with God. They walk through the church doors carrying burdens that few people see.

Some are grieving.

Some are battling illness.

Some are struggling financially.

Some are carrying guilt.

Some are fighting depression.

Some are trying to save a marriage.

Some are exhausted from raising children.

Some are caring for aging parents.

Some are simply trying to make it through another week.

Yet far too often, they leave the church carrying one more burden than they brought in.

The burden of feeling inadequate.

The burden of feeling they are not doing enough.

The burden of feeling they are not praying enough, believing enough, serving enough, giving enough, witnessing enough, or trusting enough.

Most pastors do not intentionally create this feeling.

In fact, most pastors deeply love their congregations and sincerely desire to help them grow spiritually.

The problem is that many sermons unintentionally emphasize what people lack rather than what they already possess.

The congregation hears challenge after challenge.

Corrective message after corrective message.

Growth message after growth message.

Improvement message after improvement message.

Over time, people can begin to believe that Christianity is one endless self-improvement project where they never quite arrive.

The result is a congregation that is spiritually striving but emotionally exhausted.

A congregation that believes in God's grace intellectually but struggles to experience it personally.

A congregation that rarely hears the words:

"You are loved."

"You are forgiven."

"You are accepted."

"You are enough."

Not because they are perfect.

Not because they have arrived.

Not because they no longer need growth.

But because God's grace is greater than their shortcomings.

The purpose of this blueprint is not to eliminate challenge from the pulpit.

Challenge has its place.

Conviction has its place.

Correction has its place.

Spiritual growth has its place.

The purpose is to restore balance.

To help pastors create sermons that inspire growth while simultaneously affirming worth.

To help believers walk out of church feeling encouraged rather than defeated.

To help congregations leave with renewed energy, renewed hope, renewed faith, and renewed confidence in God's love.

If churches can learn to balance truth with grace, challenge with encouragement, and growth with acceptance, they will create healthier believers and healthier congregations.

The following blueprint provides a practical model that pastors can use every week.

The Seven Part Encouragement Model

Part One: Begin with God's Love

Before discussing what people should do, remind them who they are.

Children of God.

Recipients of grace.

People were created in God's image.

People worthy of love.

People who matter.

People who have value.

People who are not forgotten.

A congregation should never have to wonder whether God loves them.

Tell them.

Remind them.

Repeat it often.

Part Two: Celebrate What Is Going Right

Many sermons focus almost exclusively on what needs fixing.

Instead, spend time acknowledging what people are already doing well.

Recognize faithful parents.

Faithful spouses.

Faithful workers.

Faithful volunteers.

Faithful servants.

Faithful believers who continue showing up despite life's challenges.

People need affirmation.

Not flattery.

Affirmation.

There is a difference.

Part Three: Recognize Real Life Struggles

Pastors should demonstrate that they understand the realities people face.

Acknowledge grief.

Acknowledge fear.

Acknowledge financial pressure.

Acknowledge health concerns.

Acknowledge emotional exhaustion.

When people feel understood, they become more receptive to the truth.

Part Four: Teach Grace Before Growth

Growth should always be built upon grace.

Not the other way around.

People should never leave believing they must earn God's approval.

They already have God's love.

Growth becomes a response to grace rather than an attempt to earn grace.

This distinction changes everything.

Part Five: Present One Clear Life-Giving Challenge

Instead of overwhelming people with ten areas needing improvement, focus on one.

One practical action.

One spiritual principle.

One achievable step.

People are more likely to grow when they feel capable rather than overwhelmed.

Part Six: Paint a Picture of Hope

Every sermon should answer one question:

"What does a better tomorrow look like?"

People need hope.

Hope energizes.

Hope motivates.

Hope heals.

Without hope, challenge becomes discouragement.

Part Seven: End with Encouragement

This may be the most important part of every sermon.

Before people leave, remind them:

God loves them.

God sees them.

God understands them.

God has not abandoned them.

God is still working in their lives.

They are forgiven.

They are valued.

They are accepted.

They are enough because Christ is enough.

Send them into the world encouraged, not defeated.

The Pastor's Weekly Checklist

Before delivering any sermon, ask these ten questions:

1.     Have I clearly communicated God's love?

2.     Have I reminded people of grace?

3.     Have I acknowledged the challenges they face?

4.     Have I celebrated what many are already doing right?

5.     Have I avoided creating unnecessary guilt?

6.     Have I given people practical hope?

7.     Have I provided one achievable challenge rather than overwhelming them?

8.     Will people leave feeling valued?

9.     Will people leave feeling encouraged?

10.                        Will people leave believing that God is pleased to walk beside them today?

Imagine the impact if every church member left every Sunday feeling stronger instead of weaker.

More hopeful instead of more discouraged.

More loved instead of more judged.

More accepted instead of more inadequate.

More energized instead of more exhausted.

The church should be the one place in the world where weary people are reminded that while none of us are perfect, all of us are deeply loved.

The Gospel is not primarily a message of inadequacy.

The Gospel is a message of redemption.

Not condemnation.

Grace.

Not performance.

Hope.

Not despair.

Love.

Not rejection.

Perhaps the greatest gift a pastor can give a congregation is not another reminder of how far they still have to go.

Perhaps it is a reminder of how far God's grace has already brought them.

And perhaps every believer should leave the church hearing these simple words:

"Keep growing."

"Keep trusting."

"Keep loving."

"But never forget this: God loves you today, right where you are, and His grace is sufficient for every step of the journey."

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Dear Pastor: Your Flock Needs Hope: A Biblical Appeal to Every Pastor, Priest, Elder, and Teacher of the Gospel

 

Dear Pastor: Your Flock Needs Hope

A Biblical Appeal to Every Pastor, Priest, Elder, and Teacher of the Gospel

Dear Pastor,

This letter is written with respect, gratitude, and appreciation for the difficult work you do.

Week after week, you stand before people carrying burdens they rarely share. You counsel marriages in crisis. You comfort families experiencing loss. You visit hospitals. You conduct funerals. You teach Scripture. You pray with the hurting. You carry responsibilities that most church members never fully see.

Your calling is not easy.

Yet because your calling is so important, it is worth asking a difficult question.

What are your people hearing from the pulpit?

More specifically, what are they feeling when they leave?

Are they leaving with hope?

Are they leaving with encouragement?

Are they leaving with a renewed understanding of God's grace?

Are they leaving with a deeper appreciation for God's love?

Or are they leaving feeling inadequate?

Are they leaving believing they are not praying enough, reading enough, trusting enough, giving enough, serving enough, witnessing enough, or believing enough?

Many faithful Christians have spent decades hearing sermons centered on what they should be doing better. While spiritual growth is certainly part of the Christian life, there is a danger when growth becomes the primary message and grace becomes the supporting message.

The Gospel is not primarily a message about what man must do.

The Gospel is primarily a message about what God has already done.

The Gospel is not primarily a story of human effort.

The Gospel is a story of divine grace.

The Gospel is not ultimately about earning God's favor.

The Gospel is about receiving God's favor through Christ.

This distinction matters because millions of believers are quietly exhausted.

They are trying.

They are serving.

They are giving.

They are praying.

They are struggling.

They are persevering.

Yet many still feel they are falling short.

The irony is that the very people who need encouragement often receive another challenge.

The very people who need hope often receive another reminder of their deficiencies.

The very people who need reassurance often receive another list of things they should be doing better.

Pastor, the Bible repeatedly describes shepherds as caretakers of the flock.

Shepherds guide.

Shepherds protect.

Shepherds encourage.

Shepherds comfort.

Shepherds lead sheep toward green pastures and still waters.

They do not continually remind sheep that they are inadequate sheep.

The purpose of this letter is not to criticize pastors.

The purpose is to remind pastors what Scripture says about their sacred responsibility.

This article will examine ten passages from Scripture that provide a blueprint for pastoral leadership.

These passages reveal a consistent theme.

God's people need truth.

God's people need growth.

God's people need correction.

But God's people also need grace.

They need hope.

They need encouragement.

They need reminders of God's love.

They need reminders that salvation is a gift.

They need reminders that Christ is enough.

And perhaps now more than ever, they need shepherds who help them leave church stronger than when they arrived.

Let us begin where every sermon should begin:

With the heart of God.

Ten Biblical Reminders for Every Pastor

1. Ephesians 2:8–9

Saved by Grace Through Faith

"For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith, and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God, not by works, so that no one can boast."

Pastor, this may be the most important reminder in the entire New Testament.

The foundation of Christianity is not effort.

The foundation of Christianity is grace.

People are not saved because they prayed enough, served enough, gave enough, volunteered enough, or performed enough.

They are saved because God extended grace through Jesus Christ.

Every sermon should ultimately point back to this reality.

When believers leave church feeling as though they must somehow earn God's approval, the Gospel has been unintentionally obscured.

Growth is important.

Discipleship is important.

Obedience is important.

But these are responses to grace, not requirements for receiving grace.

Your congregation needs frequent reminders that salvation is a gift.

People who understand grace serve out of gratitude.

People who forget grace serve out of obligation.

One creates joy.

The other creates exhaustion.

Never allow your congregation to forget that Christianity begins and ends with grace.

2. Romans 8:1

No Condemnation in Christ

"Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus."

Pastor, many believers live under a cloud of condemnation.

Not because God placed it there.

Because they placed it there themselves.

Some carry guilt from decades ago.

Some carry shame from failures they cannot forget.

Some constantly compare themselves to others and feel spiritually inadequate.

Then they arrive at church hoping to hear good news.

The Apostle Paul could not have been clearer.

There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.

Notice he did not say less condemnation.

He did not say reduced condemnation.

He said no condemnation.

When people leave church feeling condemned week after week, they may be hearing something very different from what Paul intended.

Your responsibility is not merely to identify sin.

It is also to proclaim freedom.

Remind people that God's grace is larger than their failures.

Remind people that forgiveness is real.

Remind people that Christ has already paid the debt.

That message changes lives.

3. Matthew 11:28–30

Come to Me and Rest

"Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest."

Jesus knew people were tired.

Physically tired.

Emotionally tired.

Spiritually tired.

Today, many church members arrive carrying enormous burdens.

Financial burdens.

Family burdens.

Health burdens.

Relationship burdens.

Emotional burdens.

The question pastors should ask themselves is simple.

Does my sermon add another burden?

Or does it point people toward rest?

Jesus did not say:

"Come to me, and I will give you another list."

He said:

"I will give you rest."

Certainly, Christians should grow.

Certainly, Christians should mature.

But every sermon should contain a pathway toward peace.

A pathway toward hope.

A pathway toward rest.

People should leave knowing that Christ is not standing over them with a clipboard measuring their shortcomings.

He is extending His hand.

Inviting them to walk beside Him.

That image matters.

4. Psalm 23

The Shepherd Leads to Green Pastures

"The Lord is my shepherd, I lack nothing."

The imagery of Psalm 23 is powerful.

A shepherd leads.

A shepherd protects.

A shepherd restores.

A shepherd comforts.

A shepherd guides sheep toward nourishment.

Notice what David did not write.

"The Lord is my shepherd, therefore I should feel inadequate."

Instead, he wrote:

"I lack nothing."

Pastor, that statement should influence how shepherds lead today.

God's people need to be reminded what they possess.

They possess forgiveness.

They possess grace.

They possess hope.

They possess purpose.

They possess God's presence.

They possess eternal life.

Too many sermons focus exclusively on deficiencies.

Psalm 23 focuses on provision.

The flock should leave church reminded not only of where they need growth but also of the abundance God has already provided.

5. John 10:10

Life to the Full

"I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full."

Jesus did not come merely to prepare people for heaven.

He came to transform life today.

The Gospel should create joy.

Hope.

Peace.

Confidence.

Purpose.

A healthy church should be one of the most encouraging environments on earth.

People should leave inspired to live.

Inspired to love.

Inspired to serve.

Inspired to forgive.

Inspired to dream.

Inspired to trust God.

When church becomes synonymous with guilt, pressure, obligation, and inadequacy, something has gone wrong.

The Christian life was never intended to be joyless.

The abundant life described by Jesus should be reflected in the tone of our preaching.

People should leave believing life with God is better, richer, fuller, and more meaningful.

That is the Gospel.

6. Hebrews 10:22

Full Assurance of Faith

"Let us draw near to God with a sincere heart and with the full assurance that faith brings."

Notice the phrase "full assurance."

Not uncertainty.

Not anxiety.

Not insecurity.

Assurance.

Many believers spend years wondering whether they are doing enough.

Faith was never intended to be lived in constant fear of inadequacy.

Pastors should help people develop confidence in God's promises.

Confidence in God's character.

Confidence in God's faithfulness.

Confidence in God's love.

People need assurance because life is already filled with uncertainty.

The church should be a place where certainty about God's love is reinforced repeatedly.

7. 1 Thessalonians 5:11

Encourage One Another

"Therefore, encourage one another and build each other up."

Paul could have chosen many commands.

Yet he specifically chose encouragement.

The early church understood something many modern churches have forgotten.

Encouragement is not optional.

It is essential.

People grow when they are encouraged.

Children grow when they are encouraged.

Employees grow when they are encouraged.

Athletes grow when they are encouraged.

Believers grow when they are encouraged.

Every sermon should contain genuine encouragement.

Not flattery.

Not avoidance of truth.

Encouragement.

The Apostle Paul believed building people up was a fundamental responsibility of Christian leadership.

Pastors should, too.

8. Galatians 5:1

Freedom in Christ

"It is for freedom that Christ has set us free."

Many believers live as though Christianity is bondage.

More rules.

More obligations.

More requirements.

More pressure.

Paul says exactly the opposite.

Christ came to bring freedom.

Freedom from condemnation.

Freedom from guilt.

Freedom from legalism.

Freedom from trying to earn God's approval.

Pastor, if people leave church feeling trapped under impossible expectations, they are not experiencing the freedom Paul described.

Your sermons should help people walk in freedom.

Not fear.

Freedom creates joyful obedience.

Fear creates reluctant obedience.

The difference matters.

9. 1 Peter 5:2–3

Shepherd the Flock

"Be shepherds of God's flock that is under your care."

Peter's words are directed specifically toward leaders.

A shepherd's responsibility is care.

Not control.

Care.

People should feel cared for.

Known.

Valued.

Protected.

Loved.

The congregation is not an audience.

They are a flock entrusted to your care.

A shepherd who constantly criticizes sheep eventually wounds them.

A shepherd who encourages sheep helps them flourish.

Pastors should ask themselves regularly:

Am I feeding the flock?

Or am I frustrating the flock?

The answer may determine the spiritual health of the entire congregation.

10. John 3:16–17

Saved, Not Condemned

"For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him."

Pastor, perhaps no passage captures the heart of the Gospel more clearly.

Jesus came to save.

Jesus came to redeem.

Jesus came to restore.

Jesus came to reconcile.

Jesus did not come to condemn.

Certainly, He addressed sin.

Certainly, He called people to repentance.

But His mission was salvation.

When people consistently leave church feeling condemned rather than saved, something is missing.

The Gospel should always point people toward hope.

Toward redemption.

Toward grace.

Toward the incredible love of God.

Never forget why Jesus came.

And never allow your congregation to forget it either.

Pastor, Leave Them With Hope

As we bring this letter to a close, I want to return to a simple but important question.

What do your people feel when they leave church?

Not what did they learned.

Not what notes did they take.

Not what verses did they underline.

What do they feel?

Do they feel loved?

Do they feel encouraged?

Do they feel strengthened?

Do they feel hopeful?

Do they feel closer to God?

Do they feel grateful for His grace?

Or do they leave feeling that once again they have fallen short?

Pastor, your words matter more than you may ever know.

For thirty minutes, forty minutes, or an hour each week, you have a unique opportunity to shape how people see God, how people see themselves, and how people experience the Gospel.

That is a tremendous responsibility.

For some in your congregation, your sermon may be the only spiritual input they receive all week.

For some, it may be the one hour they have been looking forward to because life has been difficult.

For some, it may be the final thread of hope they are desperately trying to hold onto.

Never underestimate the power of your words.

The world already tells people they are not enough.

Social media tells them they are not successful enough.

Advertising tells them they are not attractive enough.

Employers tell them they are not productive enough.

Neighbors tell them they are not wealthy enough.

The culture tells them they are not important enough.

People hear messages of inadequacy every day.

The church should be different.

The church should be the place where people hear the truth about God's love.

The church should be the place where weary souls find rest.

The church should be the place where broken hearts find healing.

The church should be the place where sinners find grace.

The church should be the place where ordinary people discover that they matter deeply to God.

This does not mean abandoning truth.

This does not mean ignoring sin.

This does not mean eliminating repentance.

This does not mean avoiding difficult conversations.

Jesus never ignored sin.

Paul never ignored sin.

Peter never ignored sin.

But neither did they make condemnation the center of their message.

The center of their message was redemption.

The center of their message was grace.

The center of their message was hope.

The center of their message was Christ.

Somewhere along the way, many churches have unintentionally created a culture of perpetual striving.

People are always trying harder.

Always doing more.

Always chasing another spiritual benchmark.

Always wondering if they measure up.

Always wondering if God is disappointed.

Always wondering if they are enough.

Pastor, perhaps one of the greatest gifts you can give your congregation is the freedom to stop striving long enough to remember what Christ has already accomplished.

Remind them they are loved.

Remind them they are forgiven.

Remind them they are accepted.

Remind them they are seen.

Remind them they are valued.

Remind them they are not forgotten.

Remind them they are not walking alone.

Remind them that God's grace is bigger than their failures.

Remind them that God's mercy is new every morning.

Remind them that Christ's sacrifice was sufficient.

Remind them that salvation is a gift.

Remind them that God's love is not based upon performance.

Most importantly, remind them that while they will continue to grow throughout their lives, their worth was settled long ago at the cross.

When people understand that truth, something remarkable happens.

Growth no longer comes from fear.

Growth comes from gratitude.

Obedience no longer comes from guilt.

Obedience comes from love.

Service no longer comes from obligation.

Service comes from joy.

Faith no longer feels like a burden.

Faith becomes a privilege.

That is the Gospel.

That is the message people are longing to hear.

That is the message many pastors themselves need to hear.

The next time you stand before your congregation, challenge them.

Teach them.

Guide them.

Correct them when necessary.

Call them higher.

But before they leave, make sure they hear something else.

Make sure they hear what heaven has been declaring all along.

That they are loved.

That they are forgiven.

That they are redeemed.

That they are children of God.

That grace is sufficient.

That Christ is enough.

And because Christ is enough, they can walk out of those church doors with confidence, hope, peace, and joy.

Pastor, leave them with hope.

The world will give them plenty of reasons to be discouraged.

You have been called to remind them of the Good News.

And the Good News has always been better than they imagined.

Scriptural Foundation Summary

1.     Ephesians 2:8–9 — Grace, not works.

2.     Romans 8:1 — No condemnation.

3.     Matthew 11:28–30 — Rest for the weary.

4.     Psalm 23 — The shepherd restores.

5.     John 10:10 — Life to the full.

6.     Hebrews 10:22 — Full assurance of faith.

7.     1 Thessalonians 5:11 — Encourage and build up.

8.     Galatians 5:1 — Freedom in Christ.

9.     1 Peter 5:2–3 — Shepherd the flock with care.

10.                        John 3:16–17 — Saved, not condemned.

Together, these passages present a consistent biblical picture: shepherds are called to teach truth, encourage growth, proclaim grace, strengthen faith, and leave God's people with hope.