Meditations With James Arheghan

Season 5 Episode 191

16 min · I går
episode Season 5 Episode 191 cover

Description

In this episode of Meditations, we reflect on the powerful truth of 1 John 5:20: “We know also that the Son of God has come and has given us understanding, so that we may know Him who is true…” In a world filled with confusion, misinformation, shifting opinions, and changing philosophies, Scripture reminds us that truth is not uncertain. Truth has been revealed in Jesus Christ. The Son of God has come. This means Christianity is not built on mere ideas or religious theories, but on the reality that God stepped into human history. Jesus came so that we would no longer have to guess what God is like. He revealed the Father, opened our understanding, and brought us into a real relationship with the true God. This meditation reminds us that spiritual understanding is a gift. We do not know God merely by intelligence, education, or human effort. Jesus gives us understanding so that we may know Him who is true. We also discover that our identity is secured in Christ. John says we are in Him who is true by being in His Son, Jesus Christ. In a world where people search for identity in success, relationships, money, fame, and ideology, the believer’s true identity is found in Christ. Jesus is not merely a teacher, prophet, or moral example. He is the true God and eternal life. If we have Him, we have life. Key Thought: Truth has a name: Jesus. Reflection Question: Am I building my identity and confidence on the truth of Christ, or on the shifting opinions of the world? Scripture Focus: 1 John 5:20 Closing Encouragement: If you are in Christ, you do not have to live in confusion. Your faith is grounded in reality, your relationship with God is personal, your identity is secured, and your future is guaranteed.

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300 episodes

episode Season 5 Episode 192 artwork

Season 5 Episode 192

Scripture: 1 John 1:7 “But if we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us from all sin.” Summary In this episode of Meditations, we reflect on the call to walk in the light as God is in the light. 1 John 1:7 reminds us that God’s light does not expose us to condemn us, but to cleanse, heal, and restore us through the blood of Jesus Christ. This meditation invites you to stop hiding, release shame, and come honestly before God. As you listen, be reminded that walking in the light is not about being perfect. It is about being honest, surrendered, and continually dependent on the grace of Jesus. Theme: Honesty, cleansing, fellowship, forgiveness, and freedom in Christ You are loved. You are forgiven. And you are never alone.

11. juli 202615 min
episode Season 5 Episode 191 artwork

Season 5 Episode 191

In this episode of Meditations, we reflect on the powerful truth of 1 John 5:20: “We know also that the Son of God has come and has given us understanding, so that we may know Him who is true…” In a world filled with confusion, misinformation, shifting opinions, and changing philosophies, Scripture reminds us that truth is not uncertain. Truth has been revealed in Jesus Christ. The Son of God has come. This means Christianity is not built on mere ideas or religious theories, but on the reality that God stepped into human history. Jesus came so that we would no longer have to guess what God is like. He revealed the Father, opened our understanding, and brought us into a real relationship with the true God. This meditation reminds us that spiritual understanding is a gift. We do not know God merely by intelligence, education, or human effort. Jesus gives us understanding so that we may know Him who is true. We also discover that our identity is secured in Christ. John says we are in Him who is true by being in His Son, Jesus Christ. In a world where people search for identity in success, relationships, money, fame, and ideology, the believer’s true identity is found in Christ. Jesus is not merely a teacher, prophet, or moral example. He is the true God and eternal life. If we have Him, we have life. Key Thought: Truth has a name: Jesus. Reflection Question: Am I building my identity and confidence on the truth of Christ, or on the shifting opinions of the world? Scripture Focus: 1 John 5:20 Closing Encouragement: If you are in Christ, you do not have to live in confusion. Your faith is grounded in reality, your relationship with God is personal, your identity is secured, and your future is guaranteed.

Yesterday16 min
episode Season 5 Episode 190 artwork

Season 5 Episode 190

In today’s episode, we meditate on Proverbs 16:32, which teaches that true strength is not merely the ability to conquer people, places, or opportunities, but the ability to rule oneself. God’s Word tells us that the person who is slow to anger is better than the mighty, and the one who rules his spirit is greater than the one who takes a city. This meditation reminds us that self-control is one of the greatest forms of strength. Anger may arise, but we do not have to be ruled by it. Offense may come, but we do not have to react in foolishness. Real victory begins within — in our words, emotions, thoughts, reactions, and desires. We also reflect on the example of Jesus, who showed divine strength under control. He was insulted, falsely accused, and mistreated, yet He did not retaliate. His life teaches us that meekness is not weakness; it is power submitted to God. May this episode encourage you to pause before speaking, pray before reacting, and allow the Holy Spirit to help you rule your spirit. Key Reflection: The strongest person in the room is not always the one who can overpower others, but the one who can control himself. Prayer Focus: Ask God for grace to be slow to anger, wisdom to manage your emotions, and strength through the Holy Spirit to walk in self-control.

9. juli 202615 min
episode Season 5 Episode 189 artwork

Season 5 Episode 189

Anchor Scripture:Proverbs 25:28 — “He that hath no rule over his own spirit is like a city that is broken down, and without walls.” Episode Summary:In today’s episode of Meditations, we reflect on the importance of self-control. Proverbs 25:28 compares a person without control over his spirit to a city with broken walls. In ancient times, city walls represented protection, strength, and defense. Without walls, a city was exposed to danger. In the same way, a life without self-control becomes vulnerable to anger, pride, lust, offense, careless words, and destructive decisions. Self-control is not weakness; it is spiritual strength. It is the ability to pause before speaking, resist wrong desires, manage emotions, and allow the Holy Spirit to govern our responses. A ruled spirit protects our destiny, relationships, testimony, and future. Key Thought:Self-control is a spiritual wall that protects your life from unnecessary destruction. Main Lessons:A person without self-control is vulnerable to spiritual, emotional, and relational damage. True strength is not reacting quickly but ruling your spirit wisely. Not every emotion must become an action, and not every thought must become a word. Self-control is part of the fruit of the Spirit and grows as we yield to the Holy Spirit. Broken walls can be rebuilt through prayer, discipline, wisdom, accountability, and obedience. Reflection Questions:Where are the walls broken in my life? Do I struggle most with anger, words, appetite, thoughts, emotions, or reactions? Am I allowing the Holy Spirit to govern my spirit? What practical step can I take today to rebuild the wall of self-control?

8. juli 202617 min
episode Season 5 Episode 188 artwork

Season 5 Episode 188

In today’s episode of Meditations, we reflect on Proverbs 26:16: “The sluggard is wiser in his own conceit than seven men that can render a reason.” This verse reveals a dangerous connection between laziness and pride. The sluggard is not only unwilling to act; he is also convinced that his excuses are wise. Even when sound counsel is given, he rejects it because he believes he knows better. Laziness often hides behind explanations. It can sound like caution, patience, waiting for the right time, or being careful. But when those explanations produce no obedience, no movement, and no fruit, they may simply be excuses dressed up as wisdom. True wisdom is teachable. It listens. It receives correction. It acts responsibly. It does not use knowledge to defend delay; it uses knowledge to produce obedience and progress. This episode reminds us to examine our hearts. Are we postponing what God has asked us to do? Are we resisting counsel because of pride? Are we calling fear wisdom or calling procrastination discernment? God’s grace empowers us to rise, obey, work diligently, and produce fruit. Wisdom is not proven by how much we can explain; wisdom is proven by the fruit our lives produce. Key Thought: Laziness becomes more dangerous when it is joined with pride, because it makes a person defend the very thing that is keeping him stuck. Reflection Questions: 1. What instruction have I been delaying? 2. Am I using excuses to justify inactivity? 3. Do I receive correction with humility or resist it with pride? 4. What one step of obedience can I take today?

7. juli 202615 min