Happy New Years Eve sisters in Christ! 🙏🏼✨
Opening Scripture (MSG) Mark 4:26–29 (The Message) “God’s kingdom is like seed thrown on a field by a farmer. He goes to bed and gets up day after day, and the seed sprouts and grows—he has no idea how… When the grain is fully formed, he reaps—harvest time!” --- New Year’s Eve Devotional: Growth, Gratitude, and Letting Go As this year closes, God invites us to pause—not to rush into the next chapter, but to recognize what He has been growing in us. Some seeds grew quietly beneath the surface: patience you didn’t know you had, strength formed through loss, wisdom shaped by hard choices. Other things were meant to fall away. Not every season is meant to be carried forward. Letting go isn’t failure—it’s faith. It’s trusting that God knows what must stay in the soil and what must be released. Gratitude helps us see clearly. When we thank God for what went right, what went wrong, and what stretched us, we honor His hand in it all. As we step into a new year, we don’t move forward empty—we move forward planted. God is still working, still growing, still faithful to bring a harvest in His time. --- Reflection Question What is one thing God is asking you to release from this past year, and one thing He wants you to carry forward with gratitude? --- Prayer Lord, thank You for this year—every lesson, every blessing, every moment You were with me. Help me let go of what no longer serves Your purpose in my life. Teach me to walk into this new year with trust, gratitude, and courage. Grow in me what You have planted, and lead me into what’s next. In Jesus’ name, Amen. Deeper Context of the Opening Scripture Mark 4:26–29 (MSG) This passage sits in a section where Jesus is teaching about the Kingdom of God through parables of growth. Unlike stories that focus on effort or strategy, this parable emphasizes God’s hidden work over time. Jesus describes a farmer who scatters seed and then simply lives his life—sleeping, waking, day after day. The farmer does not control the growth. He cannot force it, rush it, or fully explain it. The seed grows “all by itself.” This was radical for Jesus’ audience, many of whom believed spiritual growth came mainly through strict rule-keeping or religious performance.