EJOM DAILY DEVOTIONAL
June 13, 2026
Topic; Don’t Take God’s Glory
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Opening Scriptures
Isaiah 42:8
“I am the LORD: that is my name: and my glory will I not give to another, neither my praise to graven images.”
Memory Verse
James 1:17
“Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights…”
Praise and Worship
Sing songs that exalt God’s greatness, sovereignty, power, and majesty.
EJOM DAILY DEVOTIONAL: June 13, 2026 – Don’t Take God’s Glory
One of the greatest dangers in the life of a believer is taking credit for what God has done. Many people begin well in humility but later become proud when God starts blessing them. They forget that every achievement, breakthrough, success, promotion, open door, miracle, and victory came from God.
God is a jealous God when it comes to His glory. He blesses, promotes, heals, delivers, protects, and prospers His children, but He expects all glory to return to Him. The truth is that without God, we can do nothing in this life. Our strength comes from Him alone. Our wisdom comes from Him. Our opportunities come from Him.
The breath in our nostrils comes from Him alone. Every good thing we enjoy today is a product of His mercy and grace. God delights in blessing His children, but He does not share His glory with anyone. Whenever a person begins to act as though he is the source of his own success, the person puts his success at a greater risk.
Throughout the Bible, we see clear examples of people who recognized God’s hand upon their lives and gave Him all the glory. Joseph became the governor of Egypt, yet he never claimed that his wisdom was responsible for his success. When Pharaoh asked him to interpret a dream, Joseph replied, “It is not in me: God shall give Pharaoh an answer of peace” (Genesis 41:16).
Daniel also understood this principle. Although he possessed extraordinary wisdom and revelation, he consistently pointed people back to God. When King Nebuchadnezzar sought the interpretation of his dream, Daniel declared that there is a God in heaven who reveals secrets. Daniel refused to use God’s gifts to promote himself.
In contrast, King Nebuchadnezzar once stood in his palace and said, “Is not this great Babylon, that I have built?” He forgot that God was the One who gave him power, authority, and influence. Because of his pride, God humbled him until he acknowledged that heaven rules.
Furthermore, King Herod also made the mistake of accepting glory that belonged to God. When people praised him and said, “It is the voice of a god, and not of a man,” he failed to correct them. The Bible says he was struck by the angel of God because he did not give God the glory.
We must learn from these examples. Every success in life should increase our gratitude, not our pride. Every promotion should increase our dependence upon God, not our confidence in self. This devotional is ealso important for ministers of God. When God heals people through you, He deserves the glory.
When God delivers people through you, He deserves the praise. When God blesses people through your ministry, He deserves the glory, not your praise. There are ministers who gradually shift people’s attention from God to themselves. Instead of encouraging people to seek God, they make themselves the center of attention.
Some believers begin to trust more in a man than in God. This is dangerous because God will not share His glory with anyone. Sadly, some people begin to share or take God’s glory. What God did through His power, they present as though they personally did it and accomplished it by their own glory. This is dangerous.
They make people believe that the miracles happened because of their own greatness rather than God’s mercy. God can use a person mightily, but the vessel must never forget that it is only a vessel. The moment a person starts drawing glory away from God, such a person begins to invite danger into his life.
A wise person always points people to God and not to himself. The danger of taking God’s glory is that it can disconnect a person from the source of his blessing. When your business is doing well, it is the mercy of God at work. Remember that many hardworking people are struggling despite their efforts.
Many people would say, “I ‘ve worked hard for this success.” Hard work is important, but who gave you the strength to work? Who gave you good health? Who protected you from danger or accident? Who opened the doors that no man could open? Who kept you alive when others with higher grace dies? The difference between you and many others is often the mercy of God.
The moment a person starts stealing God’s glory, the moment a person start advertizing himself more than God, he begins to sink. The moment a person starts using his position to intimidate others, the grace that sustains him in that position will start dwingling. God can share His blessings to many, but He will never share His glory with anyone.
The apostles understood this principle. In Acts 3, when Peter healed the lame man at the Beautiful Gate, the people were amazed and wanted to focus on him. Peter immediately redirected their attention to God. He refused to take credit for the miracle because he knew the power belonged to Jesus Christ. A truly humble person understands that he is nothing in this world without God’s grace.
The more God blesses you, the more thankful you should become. The more God lifts you, the more humble you should become. The more God uses you, the more you should point people back to Him. The more grace you enjoy the more reasons you should be careful. And the more successes you have achieved, the more you should be humble.
One of the greatest tests of spiritual maturity is how a person behaves when God begins to bless him. Poverty does not reveal the true character of a man as much as prosperity does. When people have little, they often appear humble because they have no choice. But when God blesses them, their true heart or colour begins to show.
This is why God watches the heart before He releases certain blessings to us. The Bible says that God resisted the proud but gives grace to the humble. Imagine God Himself resisting a person. Imagine God saying the person does not deserve this blessing. I am not comfortable releasing this glory to him. He will misuse or abuse it.
No matter how gifted, connected, educated, or powerful a person may be, he cannot prosper when God is resisting the spirit of pride in him. Humility keeps the heavens open. While pride closes the doors that prayer may have opened. Sometimes God may deliberately use people who are less qualified than you. This is to remind everyone that the glory belongs to Him.
If God used or blessed only the strongest, smartest, richest, and most gifted people on earth, many would think their success comes only through human abilities. And hence the need to give God praise will not be there. But God often chooses unlikely people so that nobody can take His glory. As believers, we must be careful when people begin to praise us. We must be careful when we begin to monetize our gift.
We must be careful when we begin to look down on people. There is nothing wrong with appreciating people, but there is danger when appreciation turns into worship. The moment people begin to treat you as though you are the source of the blessing or help instead of a vessel, quickly redirect the glory to God.
Many people are willing to do good only when others are watching them. They want their names announced. They want people to know what they contributed. They want public acknowledgment for every act of kindness. But true humility serves God whether people notice or not.
God may use you to pay someone’s medical bills. God may also use you to pray for someone who is going through a difficult situation. You may intercede faithfully, and God may answer those prayers with a miracle. But be careful not to take ownership of what God has done.
The prayer may have come from your mouth, but the answer came from God. Never place yourself in the position of God by making people feel that they owe their breakthrough to you. Remember, it was God who gave you the grace in the first place. You were simply an instrument in His hands. God may use you to support the church financially.
He may bless you so that His work can move forward through your giving. But do not seek public praise for your contribution. Do not become angry because your name was not mentioned. Do not feel offended because people did not celebrate or appreciate your donation. The God who sees in secret is able to reward openly. If your greatest reward is human applause, then you have already received your reward.
Sadly, there are people who tell others, “If I had not prayed for you, this miracle would not have happened.” Some even pressure people to sow a seed before they can receive further prayers or blessings. Others brainwash their victims fearful revealtion, forcing to sow. This is not the spirit of Christ.
The moment we begin to act as though God cannot bless people without us, we have stepped into dangerous territory. God may use you, but He does not need you. We are privileged to be channels of His blessing, not owners of His power. A truly humble believer is happy when God is glorified, even if nobody remembers his name.
He finds joy in seeing lives transformed, not in receiving applause. He serves because he loves God, not because he wants recognition. Never forget this: if God uses you to bless someone, thank Him for the privilege. If God uses you to meet a person’s need, thank Him for the opportunity to do so.
If God uses you to pray for someone, thank Him for allowing you to participate in His work. The blessing is not that people know what you did. The blessing is that God found you worthy to be used. Let God take the glory.
Let God take the praise. Let God take the honor. And let your satisfaction come from knowing that heaven saw your obedience, even if earth never applauded it. Some people have lost their anointing because they became so addicted to human praise. Some people have lost their grace because they talk too much.
Some have manipulated the mind of people to believe them. These people began to crave applause from men more than God’s approval. They became more concerned about using ”I” in their statements like I gave him the money. I pray for him. I was the one that initiated the miracle. They said this to praise themself than honoring God. Never become too big to say God, I need your help.”
Never become too big to acknowledge the grace of God in your life.” Never become too influential to kneel before God. Never become too knowledgeable to learn from God. The truth is that every gift we have is borrowed from God. One day, we will stand before Him and give an account of how we used what He entrusted to us.
When that day comes, it will not matter how famous we are, how wealthy we became, or how many people praised us. What will really matter is whether we gave God the glory He deserved. Whether we praise God in everything He deserves. Therefore, live every day with gratitude to God.
Another reason God hates pride is because pride attempts to take the place that belongs to Him alone. Pride does not always announce itself openly. Sometimes it hides behind achievements, titles, wealth, influence, spiritual gifts, knowledge, or success.
A person may still praise God with his mouth while secretly believing in his heart that he is the reason for his accomplishments. Sadly, pride has crept into the hearts of many people, including some who claim to serve God. Some ministers speak as though they are the source of people’s blessings.
They make statements such as, “Without me, you cannot succeed,” or “If I do not pray for you, nothing good can happen in your life.” Some even place themselves in a position where people fear them more than they fear God. No genuine servant of God should place himself above God.
We are only vessels. The power belongs to God. The healing belongs to God. The deliverance belongs to God. The miracle belongs to God. The danger is that when a person begins to take God’s place in the hearts of people, he is stepping into a territory reserved only for God. And that alone can attract the wrath of God. God may use a man, God may give a man grace to demonstrate His signs, wonders and miracles but the glory belongs to God.
The danger of pride is that it blinds a person to reality. When God begins to bless some people, they gradually forget the role that grace played in their success. They begin to see themselves as self-made. They begin see themselves as more important than others. They start looking down on others who are struggling.
They become less compassionate about people because they have forgotten where God brought them from. Consider the story of King Uzziah. The Bible says that as long as he sought the Lord, God made him to prosper. He became powerful, successful, and influential. But the Scripture also says, “when he was strong, his heart was lifted up to his destruction” (2 Chronicles 26:16).
The very success that should have made him grateful became the reason for his downfall. Instead of remaining humble before God, he became proud and overstepped his boundaries. His story reminds us that success is not dangerous; but pride can scatter what a person had gathered for many years.
When water flows from a tap, people appreciate the water. But the tap is not the real source. The water comes from a reservoir. The moment the reservoir stops supplying water to the people, the tap becomes useless. Many people have forgotten the source of their blessings.
They have forgotten that we are merely taps connected to God’s reservoir of grace. The day we begin to claim ownership of the water, is the day we are already heading toward trouble. One of the signs that a person is taking God’s glory is when he begins to think he is indispensable. Such a person believes that nothing can happen without him.
He feels that his family, business, ministry, or organization cannot function without his presence. But the truth is that God existed before us and will continue His work after us. We are privileged to be used by Him, but we are not indispensable to Him.
Moses understood this principle. Despite the mighty miracles God performed through him, Moses remained humble. The Bible describes him as one of the meekest men on earth. He understood that he was only an instrument in the hands of God. The Red Sea did not part because of Moses’ greatness; it parted because of God’s power.
The manna did not fall because of Moses’ ability; it fell because of God’s provision. Believers must also be careful not to take God’s glory in subtle ways. Sometimes people say, “Look at what I have achieved,” but they never talk about God’s mercy. They celebrate their intelligence but ignore the God who gave them wisdom.
They boast about their connections but forget the God who connected them to the right people. They admire their own strength while forgetting that God preserved their health. If God removes His mercy fom our life for one day, human strength will fail. If God withdraws His favour from our life, or the testimony that we are enjoying today disappear without trace.
If God removes His protection from our life, all human security can prove insufficient. This is why every believer must live with a constant awareness of dependence upon God. Even Jesus, while on earth, demonstrated humility. Though He was the Son of God, He constantly pointed people to the Father. He said, “The Son can do nothing of himself” (John 5:19). If Jesus walked in such humility, how much more should we?
A humble person understands that every testimony is a gift of grace. Every promotion is an act of favour. Every achievement is a result of God’s help. Such a person is quick to thank God, quick to worship, and quick to acknowledge divine assistance.
The beautiful thing about humility is that it attracts more grace. The Bible says, “God resisteth the proud, but giveth grace unto the humble” (James 4:6). When you continually give God the glory, you position yourself for greater blessings because God knows that whatever He places in your hands will ultimately return praise to His name.
The more humble a person becomes, the more God entrusts him with. This is why truly great men and women of God remain broken before the Lord. The higher God lifts them, the more they bow before Him. Some people crave public praise more than private approval from God. They enjoy hearing people applaud them in the public. They want people to recognise and praise their glory.
The truth is that heaven is not always moved by human applause. But heaven responds to a heart of humility. There are people whose ministries once carried great power, but today the grace is no longer there. The anointing has gone dried. The gifts may still be visible, the crowds may still gather, but the true presence of God has departed. Why? Because somewhere along the journey, they started taking credit for what God was doing.
Never allow success to make you forget the God who gave it to you in a platter of gold. Never let promotion remove your dependence on prayer. Never let the praise of men become sweeter in your ears than approval from God. The blessings may increase, the influence may expand, and the testimonies may multiply, but your attitude should remain the same: grateful, humble, and fully dependent upon God.
For every miracle, give God the glory. For every open door, give God the glory. For every achievement, give God the glory. For every victory, give God the glory. When you do, God will continue to trust you with greater things because He knows His glory is safe in your hands.
There is something remarkable about people who genuinely give God the glory. They understand that life can change in a moment. They know that today’s success is not merely the result of yesterday’s effort, but also the result of God’s mercy. Because of this understanding, they refuse to boast.
Many of us have seen people who once occupied great positions in life but later lost everything. We have seen wealthy people become poor, healthy people become sick, and famous people become forgotten like a smoke. These things should remind us that no human being can sustain himself for too long without God. The same God who lifts people up is the same One who keeps them standing.
This is why David never stopped praising God. Even when he became king over Israel, he still recognized God’s hand in his life. David understood that he was once a shepherd boy whom nobody considered important. He remembered the fields where he watched sheep. He remembered the lion and the bear.
He remembered how God protected him when nobody else knew his name. Therefore, when God elevated him to the throne, he did not forget the source of his promotion. The problem is that many people enjoy the benefits of grace but fail to honour the Giver of grace.
That is why God sometimes allows some situations that remind us of our dependence on Him. Sometimes He allows a challenge, a delay, or a difficult season not to destroy a person, but to humble them. God knows that pride can destroy a man faster than poverty, sickness, and car. Poverty can drive a person to prayer.
Sickness can drive a person to prayer. Challenges can drive a person to prayer. But pride often drives a person away from prayer (God) because pride creates the illusion of self-sufficiency. One of the greatest protections against pride is remembrance. When you remember where God brought you from, it becomes difficult to boast about God’s blessing.
When you remember the prayers you prayed in secret, the tears you shed, the battles God fought for you, and the doors He opened, gratitude naturally fills your heart. Many people become proud because they suffer from spiritual amnesia. They forget their beginnings so quickly. They forget the people God used to help them.
They forget the opportunities God provided for them. They forget the favour they received. Eventually, they begin to believe that their success is solely the result of their own efforts. That was the mistake of the rich fool in the Bible. After experiencing increase, he spoke only about himself. “My fruits.” “My barns.” “My goods.”
There was no place God;s acknowledgment in his mouth. There was no gratitude. There was no humility. He saw himself as the source of his prosperity. Yet that very night, his life was required of him. God wants His children to enjoy blessings, but He never wants people to impersonate His works.
The danger is not the blessing; the danger is when you fail to acknowledge God as the source. The danger is not in having influence; the danger is when influence makes a person forget God. The danger is not in being used by God; the danger is when a person begins to think God cannot work without him.
Even spiritual gifts can become a trap if we are not careful. A preacher may preach powerfully and begin to think the anointing belongs to him. A singer may minister effectively and begin to think the glory belongs to her. A dream interpreter may accurately interpret dreams and begin to think that no any other person can interpret dreams accurately than him.
But the moment when the Owner of grace takes back the gifts, what a person is proud of will be no more. What you don’t appreciate, you may lose the benefits. Pride takes no man no where. The devil understands this mystery very well because pride was the very sin that brought about his downfall. Lucifer was not originally a demon. He was created with beauty, glory, and honour.
He occupied a privileged position in heaven. But instead of giving glory to God, he became fascinated with his own greatness. He began to admire himself. He began to focus on his beauty rather than the God who created him. Eventually, he desired the glory that belonged to God.
One thing that has always amazed me in Scripture is that God can tolerate many weaknesses in a person’s life while He is working on them, but that doesn’t happen with proudful people.. A person may be struggle with something and God will help him. A person may fall and God will lift him.
A person may make mistakes over and over again and God will correct him. But when pride enters the heart, that person begins to oppose the very grace that was helping him. The reason is simple: pride makes a person believe he no longer needs God.
When a man is humble, he depends on God for direction. When a man becomes proud, he begins to depend on his own understanding. He starts making decisions without prayer. He stops seeking God’s counsel because he believes he already knows enough. This is often how spiritual decline begins.
Look at Samson. The power of God upon his life was extraordinary. No ordinary man could do what he did. He defeated enemies, broke hard chains, and performed mighty exploits. Yet there came a point in his life where he became so familiar with the grace upon his life that he stopped valuing the God who gave him that grace.
The saddest statement in Samson’s story is not that his enemies captured him. The saddest statement is that “he wist not that the LORD was departed from him.” He still thought he was carrying the same power. He still believed he could shake himself free as before. What he did not realize was that the grace had lifted.
This is one of the dangers of pride. Pride can make a person continue operating outwardly while heaven has quietly withdrawn its approval from the person. Many people mistake activity for anointing. They mistake popularity for God’s presence. They mistake applause for divine approval. But these things are not the same.
A church can be full and yet God is not there. A minister can be famous and yet grace has diminished. A businessman can be wealthy and yet be operating outside God’s favour. A singer can be celebrated and yet be far from God’s heart. The real question is not whether people are applauding you. The real question is whether God is pleased with you.
There are people who spend more time maintaining their image than maintaining their relationship with God. They carefully protect their reputation before men while neglecting their walk with God. They want to appear powerful before people, but they no longer spend time in God’s presence.
One of the greatest signs of humility is gratitude. Proud people believe they deserve everything they have. Humble people see everything as a gift from God. A proud man receives a blessing and says, “Of course I got it. I worked for it.” A humble man receives the same blessing and says, “Lord, thank You for showing me mercy.” A proud minister sees growth and says, “My preaching did it.” A humble minister sees growth and says, “The Lord has been faithful.”
A proud businessman says, “My intelligence made it possible.” A humble businessman says, “God gave me wisdom and favour.” Notice the difference. The achievement may be the same, but the attitude is different. And God always looks at the attitude.
This is why some people continue increasing while others suddenly stop growing. It is not always because of talent. It is not always because of opportunity. Sometimes God continues to pour into one vessel because that vessel never forgets the Source.
God is attracted to humility because humility gives Him room to work more. Humility says, “Lord, without You I can do nothing.” Humility acknowledges that every victory is a gift, every breakthrough is a divine priviledge, and every testimony is an act of grace. Beloved, never become so familiar with God’s blessings that you stop praising His goodness.
Never become so accustomed to miracles that you stop thanking Him. Never become so successful that you stop depending on Him. The moment you stop seeing God’s hand in your life, pride is already knocking at the door.
Stay low before God. Stay grateful before God. Stay dependent upon God. Because the people whom God uses the most are often the people who are most aware that they are nothing without Him. The higher God lifts them, the deeper they bow. The more He blesses them, the more they worship.
The more He promotes them, the more they give Him the glory. And that is why the grace upon their lives continues to increase instead of decrease. That is the nature of pride. Pride always seeks a throne. Pride always wants recognition. Pride always wants to be seen. Pride always wants to be celebrated.
This is why believers must constantly guard their hearts. The more God blesses you, the more you must examine yourself. The more people praise you, the more you should return the praise to God. The more successful you become, the more you should remember your dependence upon Him.
Beloved, if God has blessed you, remain humble. If He has promoted you, remain humble. If He has given you influence, remain humble. If He has used you mightily, remain humble. The people who last longest in God’s kingdom are not always the most talented; they are often the most humble. Talent may open a door, but humility keeps the door open. Gifts may attract attention, but humility preserves the anointing.
The grace that lifted you can remain upon you if you continue to give God all the glory. But the moment a person begins to touch God’s glory, he begins to touch the very thing God has reserved for Himself. And history has repeatedly shown that whenever men try to sit on God’s throne, they eventually fall from their own.
May we never become so blessed that we no longer pray or see the need to pray. May we never become so successful that we no longer worship. May we never become so influential that we no longer kneel before God. And may we never become so celebrated by men that we forget to give all the glory to the One who deserves it.
Beloved, if you want to operate optimally in grace, remain humble. Let God take the glory. Let God take the praise. Let God take the honor. Humility may not attract the applause of men, but it attracts the favor of God. And one moment of God’s favor is worth more than a lifetime of human praise.
At the end of the day, every blessing, every achievement, every promotion, every miracle, every open door, and every testimony belongs to God. Remember, God can bless a humble person repeatedly because He knows the glory will always return to Him.
Prophetic Declaration
Father, I decree that pride shall not destroy your blessings in my life. Every spirit of self-glorification is broken over your life. May God keep you humble, grateful, and dependent upon Him. As He lifts you higher, you shall remain higher, faithful and give Him all the glory. Your testimony shall point people to God and not to yourself, in Jesus’ mighty name. Amen
Key Lessons for Today
- God alone deserves all the glory and honor.
- Pride is dangerous and can destroy great destinies.
- Every success in life is ultimately a result of God’s grace.
- Humility attracts God’s favour and promotion.
- Never allow people’s praise to replace God’s glory in your life.
- The higher God lifts you, the more humble you should become.
Daily Reflection
Ask yourself:
- Am I giving God credit for my successes?
- Have I become proud because of my achievements?
- Do I acknowledge God’s hand in my daily life?
- When people praise me, do I redirect the glory to God?
- Is there any area where I have forgotten God’s role in my success?
Personal Challenge
Today, take time to thank God specifically for every achievement, breakthrough, victory, and blessing in your life. Refuse to see your success as merely the result of your effort. Acknowledge God’s hand in every area of your life and make a conscious decision to give Him all the glory.
Evangelism Challenge
Share with someone how God has helped you in a difficult situation. Let your testimony point people to God’s goodness rather than your own ability.
Wisdom for Today
The quickest way to lose God’s favor is to take the glory that belongs to Him.
Bible in One Year
1 Kings 14–15
Acts 9:23–43
Prayer Assignment (Morning)
1. Father, I thank You for every blessing, achievement, and victory You have given me, in Jesus’ name.
2. O Lord, deliver me from every spirit of pride and self-glorification, in Jesus’ name.
3. Father, let humility become my lifestyle and my character, in Jesus’ name.
4. Every evil voice telling me that I am the source of my success, be silenced by the blood of Jesus.
5. O Lord, help me to always remember that every good thing in my life comes from You, in Jesus’ name.
6. Father, whenever You bless me, let my heart remain grateful and humble, in Jesus’ name.
7. Every power assigned to make me take God’s glory, scatter by fire, in Jesus’ name.
8. Lord, let me never become too successful to pray, worship, or depend on You, in Jesus’ name.
9. Father, use me for Your glory and never allow me to become a competitor with Your glory, in Jesus’ name.
10. Every blessing that may become a source of pride in my life, let it instead draw me closer to You, in Jesus’ name.
11. O God, give me the grace to acknowledge You publicly and privately for all You have done, in Jesus’ name.
12. Father, let my life continually point people to Christ and not to myself, in Jesus’ name.
13. Father, let me never forget the days when I cried to You for help, in Jesus’ name.
14. O God, whenever I am tempted to boast, remind me of Your grace and mercy, in Jesus’ name.
15. Every power waiting for me to become proud before attacking me, be disappointed by fire, in Jesus’ name.
16. O Lord, keep me at the foot of the cross regardless of my achievements, in Jesus’ name.
Prayer Assignment (Night)
1. Father, forgive me for every time I took credit for what You did in my life, in Jesus’ name.
2. Every spirit of pride inherited from my family line, die by fire, in Jesus’ name.
3. O Lord, break every root of self-exaltation operating in my life, in Jesus’ name.
4. Father, do not allow pride to destroy my blessings, ministry, marriage, health, or destiny, in Jesus’ name.
5. Every power using success to separate me from God, be destroyed by fire, in Jesus’ name.
6. O Lord, help me to decrease so that You may increase in every area of my life, in Jesus’ name.
7. Father, let every testimony in my life bring glory to Your holy name, in Jesus’ name.
8. Every spirit that wants me to seek the praise of men more than the praise of God, come out and die, in Jesus’ name.
9. O God, let Your grace never depart from my life because of pride, in Jesus’ name.
10. Father, make me a humble vessel that You can trust with greater blessings and responsibilities, in Jesus’ name.
11. Every satanic trap of pride set against my destiny, catch fire and be destroyed, in Jesus’ name.
12. Every blessing that has become an idol in my life, lose your hold over me, in Jesus’ name.
13. Father, let Your fear remain in my heart all the days of my life, in Jesus’ name.
14. O God, keep me small in my own eyes and great in Your sight, in Jesus’ name.
15. Father, let my heart remain full of thanksgiving regardless of my position in life, in Jesus’ name
16. O Lord, keep me faithful, humble, grateful, and dependent upon You until the end of my life, in Jesus’ mighty name.
African Proverb
“The tree that bears fruit bends low.”
Closing Reflection
This devotional is brought to you by Evangelist Joshua Orekhie Ministries (EJOM)
— Dream it. Pray it. Win it.





