Scripture: Matthew 28:18-20, John 16:12
Christians do something really interesting with God’s promises. We claim them without actually fulfilling the conditions attached to them. Let me show you what I mean.
If someone tells you “believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and you’ll be saved,” nobody thinks they can just say “I’m not going to believe, but save me anyway.” That’s crazy. But listen to how we treat other promises. God says “if you confess your sins, I will forgive you.” Not “confess your sins and maybe I’ll forgive you”—I *will* forgive you. That’s a promise. But it has a condition: confession.
Here’s what amazes most people—Jesus gave a promise at the end of the Great Commission: “Lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” But where’s the condition? It’s right there in the verse before it. “Go and make disciples. Baptize them. Teach them to do all that I have commanded you. *Then* I will be with you always.”
Think about what this means. The promise isn’t “I’ll be with all Christians always.” It’s “I’ll be with those who go forth teaching others to do what I have commanded.” It’s a promise to people actively engaged in discipleship work. If you’re not doing that—if you’re not teaching people to actually obey Jesus—you can’t claim that promise.
That’s why people who do this work experience Christ’s presence so tangibly. It’s not magic. It’s obedience. They fulfilled the condition. They’re doing the work. So they receive the promise. It’s that simple.
Think about it: Are you trying to claim God’s promises without living the conditions He attached to them?
Prayer: Jesus, I want to experience Your presence like it’s promised. Help me stop claiming promises I haven’t earned through obedience. Give me grace to do the work, so I can receive the promise.



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