Remember God's Promises: Why Active Memory Matters
God's promises do not expire. But they do fade from memory. Here is the biblical case for active remembering and a practical way to hold onto what God said.
Subtopic of Remember
Coming back to what God has said and done.
5 articles in this subtopic
Other subtopics in Remember
God's promises do not expire. But they do fade from memory. Here is the biblical case for active remembering and a practical way to hold onto what God said.
Your faith is only as strong as your memory. The biblical practice of remembering what God has done, with 5 modern tools to never forget his faithfulness.
When God acts, it leaves a mark: healing that defies logic, peace in a storm, a door no hand could open. The question is whether we remember or move on.
Paul told Timothy to wage the good warfare using his prophecies. Not theology. Not strategy. The personal words God had spoken over his life. Here is why.
Israel stacked twelve stones at the Jordan as a memorial of what God did. Remembered promises become courage. This spiritual discipline builds tomorrow's faith.
More from this pillar
To remember is to refuse to forget. The God of the Bible is constantly telling His people to remember. Stones at the Jordan. Bread on the table. Names in a journal. Memory is how faith survives the in-between.
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The words spoken over you, weighed against Jesus, kept for the whole journey.
Scripture as the Standard. Your own record of what God has said to you. Available now on iOS and Android.
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