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Dr. Charles Blackstock teaches how we can seek God's blessings on our country.
On this episode, I speak with Michelle Ana about how she went from being a 26 year old widow to God bringing her a new husband. We're discussing what restoration has looked like for her and how God has brought her healing during her waiting season. Follow Michelle Ana: YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@UCceX1-0Kbh7bVNIUx-MddgQ Website - https://www.lovemichelleana.com/ Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/lovemichelleana/ GRAB A DIGITAL COPY OF THE WEALTHY WOMAN JOURNAL: http://shopwealthywoman.com MORE WEALTHY WOMAN: Learn more about the podcast: http://wealthywomanpodcast.com Follow the show on Instagram: http://instagram.com/wealthywomanpodcast Follow Doni on IG: http://instagram.com/thedonibrown Follow Doni on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thedonibrown?lang=en --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/wealthywoman/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/wealthywoman/support
Sermon Outline I. The God Offended (22-25) A. The virgin B. The offended II. The God Sovereign (26-29) A. Over Assyria's victims B. Over Assyria herself III. The God Blessing (30-32) A. The fruit of the land B. The fruit of the city
When the Holy Spirit leads you, your work will be blessed. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/godfoundation/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/godfoundation/support
FIRST EVER CHRISTIAN FEMALE RAP ARTIST TO SIGN WITH A HIP HOP LABEL
How can we find blessing in this world? We will see how one man's encounter with God helped him discover the blessing he craved.
Get prophetic inspiration for victorious living. Jennifer LeClaire and others share now-messages, equipping you to overcome and walk in God's purpose for your life.
In this episdoe, Joe investigates a God Blessing bum looking for a new TV, and Rob watched a Tom Cruise video...Enjoy!FOR MORE CONTENT:#OlderPodDiscord: htts://discord.gg/hpqABJfUhttps://linktr.ee/olderpodhttps://www.facebook.com/OlderpodEmail: gettingolderpod@gmail.comTwitter: @older_podHuge SHOUT OUT to Matt Tatroe and Casey Mintkin for recording and putting together an amazingintro song for us. You guys rock!!!Getting older with Rob and Joe is a comedy podcast between two besties. We complain about all the things and tell stories. It's just good...have a drink with us and check it out!
Episode 29 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Some call it Good Luck or Bad Luck, but the Bible calls it "Favour and Love with God and Man"... or "The Blessing". Whatever you call it, there is a force that can empower someone to walk through life without too much toil...that will cause things to happen in their favour and people to go the extra mile for them. Joseph had it - let's find out! In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 28 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Some call it Good Luck or Bad Luck, but the Bible calls it "Favour and Love with God and Man"... or "The Blessing". Whatever you call it, there is a force that can empower someone to walk through life without too much toil...that will cause things to happen in their favour and people to go the extra mile for them. Joseph had it - let's find out! In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 27 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Some call it Good Luck or Bad Luck, but the Bible calls it "Favour and Love with God and Man"... or "The Blessing". Whatever you call it, there is a force that can empower someone to walk through life without too much toil...that will cause things to happen in their favour and people to go the extra mile for them. Joseph had it - let's find out! In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 26 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Some call it Good Luck or Bad Luck, but the Bible calls it "Favour and Love with God and Man"... or "The Blessing". Whatever you call it, there is a force that can empower someone to walk through life without too much toil...that will cause things to happen in their favour and people to go the extra mile for them. Joseph had it - let's find out! In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 25 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Some call it Good Luck or Bad Luck, but the Bible calls it "Favour and Love with God and Man"... or "The Blessing". Whatever you call it, there is a force that can empower someone to walk through life without too much toil...that will cause things to happen in their favour and people to go the extra mile for them. Joseph had it - let's find out! In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 24 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Some call it Good Luck or Bad Luck, but the Bible calls it "Favour and Love with God and Man"... or "The Blessing". Whatever you call it, there is a force that can empower someone to walk through life without too much toil...that will cause things to happen in their favour and people to go the extra mile for them. Joseph had it - let's find out! In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Iet's talk about God blessing us in this Month beyond our imagination.
Episode 23 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Some call it Good Luck or Bad Luck, but the Bible calls it "Favour and Love with God and Man"... or "The Blessing". Whatever you call it, there is a force that can empower someone to walk through life without too much toil...that will cause things to happen in their favour and people to go the extra mile for them. Joseph had it - let's find out! In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 22 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future..." - Jer 29:11 (NIV) Joseph had dreams of God's plan for his life and that was his anchor moving forward...Do you know why you are here? In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 21 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future..." - Jer 29:11 (NIV) Joseph had dreams of God's plan for his life and that was his anchor moving forward...Do you know why you are here? In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 20 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future..." - Jer 29:11 (NIV) Joseph had dreams of God's plan for his life and that was his anchor moving forward...Do you know why you are here? In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 19 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future..." - Jer 29:11 (NIV) Joseph had dreams of God's plan for his life and that was his anchor moving forward...Do you know why you are here? In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 18 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future..." - Jer 29:11 (NIV) Joseph had dreams of God's plan for his life and that was his anchor moving forward...Do you know why you are here? In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 17 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future..." - Jer 29:11 (NIV) Joseph had dreams of God's plan for his life and that was his anchor moving forward...Do you know why you are here? In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
As my good friend used to say with a glint in his eye: ‘God blesses all the wrong people!' We might like to think that only the churches that we agree with receive the blessing of God – after all, we have come to our treasured view with so much thought and prayer that God is bound to bless us and churches like us!
Truth Seekers! Welcome to the New Freedom Christian Ministries & More Than Conquerors Warriors For Christ Ministry Wednesday Night Hour Power of Prayer. This platform is our way of saying thanks to our Father in heaven for allowing us to become Intercessory Prayers Warriors, Gatekeepers and Overcomers in the name of Jesus Christ! https://pastorsericandphoebe.wixsite.com/my-site or call into our FREE conference line at 667-770-1557 access code 123218# God Blessing! Pastors Lester&Sharon Hayes of NFCM Pastors Eric&Phoebe Davis of MTCWFCM --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/pastor-lester-hayes/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/pastor-lester-hayes/support
God Blessing in the Unexpected Seasons The Christmas story is a timeless tale of hope, love, and redemption. From It's a Wonderful Life to A Christmas Story, from Miracle on 34th Street to Home Alone, the timeless truths of the Christmas story have been told time and again on the silver screen. And now, in Christmas at the Movies, you'll see what we can learn about the Christmas story from some of your favorite Christmas films. Luke 1:1-56 December 11, 2022 Looking for community? Try our Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/midwayonline Need more info? Check out our website: https://www.midwaychurch.com/ Did you make a decision to follow Christ, get baptized, or join Midway Church? Click here: https://midway.ccbchurch.com/goto/forms/578/responses/new
Sometimes we cry out to God, but he doesn't provide an answer or a blessing. This could be the reason. A daily devotional through the book of Malachi with speaker and author Vince Miller.
Episode 16 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future..." - Jer 29:11 (NIV) Joseph had dreams of God's plan for his life and that was his anchor moving forward...Do you know why you are here? In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 15 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future..." - Jer 29:11 (NIV) Joseph had dreams of God's plan for his life and that was his anchor moving forward...Do you know why you are here? In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 13 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: We explore the principle of 'Knowing Your Purpose'. The strength to endure the storms of life ultimately comes from knowing; What is Your Purpose? , Why are you here? What has God called you to do? We see this with Joseph! He endured because he knew what God had called him to be. He remembered the dreams... In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 14 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles: How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future..." - Jer 29:11 (NIV) Joseph had dreams of God's plan for his life and that was his anchor moving forward...Do you know why you are here? In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 10 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles on How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Mind your Own Business and be your SuperHero. We spend so much time keeping up with celebrities and friends. We know more about other people's lives and what they are good at but spend very little time discovering the gifts God gave us. Prov 25:2 says; it's the Glory of God to conceal a thing, but the honour of Kings is to search out a thing! In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 11 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles on How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Mind your Own Business and be your SuperHero. We spend so much time keeping up with celebrities and friends. We know more about other people's lives and what they are good at but spend very little time discovering the gifts God gave us. Prov 25:2 says; it's the Glory of God to conceal a thing, but the honour of Kings is to search out a thing! In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 12 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles on How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: To become the person God created you to be, your transformation starts with renewing the mind. Romans 12:2 (MSG) says; Don't become so well-adjusted to your culture that you fit into it without even thinking. Instead, fix your attention on God. You'll be changed from the inside out. Readily recognize what he wants from you, and quickly respond to it... In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 9 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles on How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: We dive into the power of putting on your new identity in Christ! In Luke 5:34-36 Jesus said that you can't put new wine in old wineskins but new wine must be put in new wineskins! To reap the benefits of new-possibilities-opportunities-ideas etc., we must first put on a New Mindset that doesn't carry around past failures, trauma and disappointments. In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 8 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles on How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: The apostle Paul perfectly illustrates the idea of letting go of our past, in Phi 3:12-16 he says; ...Brethren, I do not count myself to have apprehended; but one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forward to those things which are ahead... In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Episode 7 of Decoding Joseph. Everyday Life Biblical Principles on How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: We explore how we can perform at God's level: God's ideas and God's strategies. When we live our lives through Prov 3:5 (trust in the Lord, lean not on our own understanding but acknowledge God in all our ways) then we have access to His Playbook. God's plays have guaranteed success! Like He did for Joseph, He can for you as well. In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Everyday Life Biblical Principles on How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Our guest Tolu helps us decode what it takes to go from slave to second-in-command or from employee to employer as we see in the life and story of Joseph in Genesis chapter 39. In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Everyday Life Biblical Principles on How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Our guest Tolu continues to help us decode the character traits that propelled Joseph from slave to second-in-command (as we see in the life and story of Joseph in Genesis chapter 39). You can also apply these principles at your workplace to go from employee to employer. In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Everyday Life Biblical Principles on How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Our guest Tolu continues to help us decode the character traits that propelled Joseph from slave to second-in-command (as we see in the life and story of Joseph in Genesis chapter 39). You can also apply these principles at your workplace to go from employee to employer. In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Everyday Life Biblical Principles on How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: Letting go of our past experiences especially if they are negative is another key principle to conquering the future. You see we can't change our past but we keep carrying it around in a backpack, sort of as a badge of honour ready to tell it even, and yet this is what corrupts any new beginnings God has for us. We explore the power of letting go and embracing the newness of life. In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
Everyday Life Biblical Principles on How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: God's primary criteria for entering into a partnership with anyone to do great things through them is the kind of heart posture, character and heart attitude they have. We explore this further through Joseph as our example. In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
So many people in our generation don't understand the message of divine abundance and blessing. They act like it's some kind of “perverted gospel”, but in reality, there are many Christians that are struggling financially because they've either never been taught the principles of financial increase or they've simply rejected them. Today I want to touch on seven areas that are enemies of your personal increase. If you're not in the right position on every one of these areas, you cannot expect the Lord to continue to bless you. Jump into today's podcast! Sow a seed and help us change this generation before it's too late: http://bit.ly/2B81pjY Give by PayPal: https://www.paypal.me/miracleword Give by CashApp or Venmo: $MWgive Subscribe to The Last Gen Podcast for students: https://miracleword.com/lastgen Get exclusive emails and our free magazine here: http://bit.ly/2WlgS6N Get text messages from me: http://bit.ly/2XoOapG I want to highly recommend our online training courses found at https://www.miraclewordu.com/ Each course is designed to equip you with biblical knowledge that will give you the fuel to overcome in every area of life. Our brand new course "Divine Prosperity" is now available in Miracle Word University! For more great content, follow me on Instagram: @tedshuttlesworth and Facebook: @MiracleWordMinistries
Everyday Life Biblical Principles on How God thinks about Work, Money, Business, Investing and Leadership. Full list of the topics covered on our website: jaef.foundation/problem-guide-jaef In this episode: We look at Joseph's background and how despite the betrayal from his own brothers selling him as a slave to Egypt managed to rise through the ranks at his mater's house. There must have been a character and attitude of looking past his past and striving day by day towards the vision of his life that God had given him through two dreams. In this series: We decode God's thought processes and patterns - our case study is the life of Joseph. Like many of us, Joseph was born into a loving family - his father loved him but that resulted in envy and jealousy from his other siblings. From the outset, we see glimpses of Joseph's character because scripture tells us in Gen 37:2 - "When Joseph was seventeen years old, he often tended his father's flocks...But Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing." Based on the character trials we see Joseph overcome later on in his life, it's inevitable to think that this statement; “...Joseph reported to his father some of the bad things his brothers were doing…” is some insight into how well-rounded and of good character Joseph was from early on in his life. He must have been the kind of employee every company would want and we clearly see this alluded to by how Potiphar (Joseph's master - to whom Joseph was sold as a slave) can't stop raving about his service, productivity, loyalty, obedience and problem-solving skills. Scripture tells us: “...And his master saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made all he did to prosper in his hand…” Lucky for Joseph, the hand of God (Blessing, Protection, Love and Favour) was on him as he encountered other unfortunate events in his life. Joseph was wrongfully accused of rape by Potiphar's wife and he ends up in jail. Even in jail, somehow once again Joseph rises to the occasion of impeccable service in jail and as a result, the prison warden who can't help but notice his manner of service gives Joseph responsibility for his fellow inmates and their jail duties. While in prison, he exercises his gift of interpreting dreams for other inmates. Two of which happened to have been servants of the King - Pharoah. When Pharoah has terrible dreams he can't interpret, Joseph is called to the rescue and this is his get-out jail card. Joseph rises to the occasion again, interpreting the two dreams - one forecasting seven prosperous years for Egypt followed by seven disastrous years of famine. Joseph not only interprets the two dreams but also gives Pharoah a backup plan - a SAVING and INVESTMENT plan. Pharoah is blown away by Joseph's wisdom and he elects Joseph as the second in command over all of Egypt. Things exactly unfold the way Joseph had interpreted them - seven years of plenty and prosperity followed by seven disastrous years of famine - only Egypt has a plan to go through the famine. During the seven years of famine - while other economies are falling apart, Egypt is striving off Joseph's plan to store 20% of all the food and grain during the seven years of plenty. Joseph builds a powerful economy during years of recession. From one valuable commodity (grain), he scales up Pharoah's empire by acquiring all the livestock and land. He then establishes a credit system, wage system and tax system. This story has it all! The host for this episode is Calvin Kabanda.
In this meandering episode, the Pastords end up talking about Bruce's sinus issues, international travel, the sale of the Denver Broncos, underpaid employees, the source of wealth, being rich toward God, Bruce's farm purchase fiasco, saving vss giving, storing up treasure in heaven, the best retirement plan, the planet Pluto, eternal investments, hiking in the Holy Land and generosity to the poor.
The question of the permissibility for a Christian to utilize CBD oil for medical or therapeutic purposes prompts interesting discussion. Special GuestInesa CEO of Nesa' HempBLESSING OR BLASPHEMY?
God Blessing are assured for those who believe Him, refuge on Him and love him. He will rescue them, He will protect them, He will answer them, He will be with them in trouble, He will deliver them, honor them and give them salvation................listen to podcast by pastor Robin.You can call - 91 - 8826215678
Taylor and I wanted to wish everyone a Merry Christmas. God Blessing.
God Blessing are assured for those who believe Him, refuge on Him and love him. He will rescue them, He will protect them, He will answer them, He will be with them in trouble, He will deliver them, honor them and give them salvation......listen to podcast by pastor C T Robin.You can call - 91 - 8826215678
In all of world history, no nations have been blessed by God more than America and Britain. Today, those blessings are slipping away.
God's grace is illogical and scandalous. But believe this, He knows what you need. He knows your past, present and future. And when He blesses the people in front of you, it is always with a purpose. To enjoy life, don't forget that everything you have comes from pure grace. _____ Arun Gogna has authored many books and his books are available on Shopee and Lazada. Buy from Shopee: podlink.co/eos Buy from Lazada: podlink.co/tir ------ Follow me on social media. Facebook: fb@gognaarun Instagram: @arun.gogna Tiktok: @wackyspeaker --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
God's grace is illogical and scandalous. But believe this, He knows what you need. He knows your past, present and future. And when He blesses the people in front of you, it is always with a purpose. To enjoy life, don't forget that everything you have comes from pure grace. _____ Arun Gogna has authored many books and his books are available on Shopee and Lazada. Buy from Shopee: podlink.co/eos Buy from Lazada: podlink.co/tir ------ Follow me on social media. Facebook: fb@gognaarun Instagram: @arun.gogna Tiktok: @wackyspeaker --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
God Blessing are assured for those who believe Him, refuge on Him and love him. He will rescue them, He will protect them, He will answer them, He will be with them in trouble, He will deliver them, honor them and give them salvation.
Does God have a job for me? How would God want to use my life to make a difference in the lives around me? --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/dl-700/support
Sunday AM Worship - 02/14/21
Being faithful in God's will allows me to be a blessing to others around me
In this episode, you’ll discover… Why morning routines may be the hidden key for crushing it in your business and life (3:27) Jesus WASN’T nice: A seldom-discussed aspect of his relationship style that you can use to improve the quality of all your interactions (6:10) The counterintuitive reason setting the bar high is the most loving thing you can do for another person (9:26) The shocking way you can be there for your family but still destroy your relationship (12:00) How “offramps” ease the transition between work and home so you can be fully present for your loved ones (12:35) Why hobbies are essential to a well-rounded life (16:15) The massive mental benefits of writing as much as possible even if you never plan to publish anything (21:56) Why paying attention to your desires honors God and your family (33:35) Are you crushing it at work but struggling at home? If you want to learn how to win at home, then go to https://CoryMCarlson.com and download your free copy of “10 Ways To Win At Home.”
What do you need to do bring all spiritual blessing you have been bless with through Christ Jesus into a reality? This message will guide you on the path to activate Gods blessing into reality in your life. Be bless! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/podcast-eaca2d4/message
Bible scripture. Prayer. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mike-williams7/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mike-williams7/support
Continuing with our 'Selfless' series here Ps. John talks with us about how God uses us & our circumstance, to impact those around us.Connect with us at:https://facebook.com/inspirechurchhttps://instagram.com/inspirechurchPreached: 17/11/19Support the show (https://pushpay.com/g/inspirechurch)
Why isn't God blessing you? Does God exist? Why isn't God answering your prayers? This is a life lesson to people with a hateful spirit. God won't bless you if you're a hater. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/expenzive-facts/support
David Perez teaches on September 1, 2019.
The Jesus Saves Ministry 1007 w. Arlington Blvd Greenville, N.C. 27834 www.tjsm.org E-Mail: gojesusnow@aol.com Church: 252-689-6172 Belvoir: 252.916.0104 252.214.0799 Apostle Lonnie Stocks, pastor Proverbs 10:21-23 (GW) 21 The lips of a righteous person feed many, but stubborn fools die because they have no sense. 22 It is the LORD'S blessing that makes a person rich, and hard work adds nothing to it. 23 Like the laughter of a fool when he carries out an evil plan, so is wisdom to a person who has understanding.
God has called us blessed. The now question is, is it limited to health and wealth!!!
We often say to someone: “May God bless you.” What is the blessing of God? Blessing is the empowerment of God for divine favor and success in life. Blessing is the covenant of God to override any curse. How do we activate the blessing of God in our lives?In this sermon podcast, delve deeper into the origin and the powerful significance of God’s blessing from His Word; and find out how you can release it into your situation and your life.
Life makes us fear, and worry lack, and then protect, hold back and conserved. Yet Jesus shows us that we open the door to God blessing us, by doing the opposite.
Ahavah Ministry's i-Love Moment It's Positive It's Inspirational It's Uplifting The i is Intentional
2019 Prayer Intimacy With God & Blessing Our Day~Episode 46 Ahavah’s iLM~ It's Positive! It's Inspirational! It's Uplifting! "The i is Intentional!" Please contact me, I would love to hear from you: ahavahministrywa@gmail.com We would love your feedback; Please click the link below to take an ANONYMOUS 3 question survey: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/Q5R896D
EPISODE 31 with the homie Keyz! Check it Out! #DebateMePodcast
Sermon by George Kenworthy (Series: Living Without Fear)
The Fifth Sermon in the "Why?" series by Shawn Hennessy Support this podcast
Razzy is in a particularly good mood and wishes you God Blessing’s.
Lee and Chris have one more week off. But we are bringing you another lecture by Meredith Kline. This one is from March 25th 1999. It seemed appropriate for that time of the year that we especially tend to think about the future. Of course Meredith Kline is talking about that ultimate future in which we will dwell with God thanks to everything he accomplished for us in the person and work of his Son Jesus Christ. Show Notes: Priesthood Culture is subservient to cult Image of God Blessing sanction came to expression in the Sabbath Tree of Life Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil Tree of Life reserved for beyond probation Tree of Life is sacramental Blessing sanctions symbolized (Tree of Life, Sabbath) Curse sanctions verbalized (in the day you eat of it, you will surely die) Only options are heaven and hell Resurrection of the righteous and the wicked The final state is an embodied experience Common curse Physical death is a temporary experience How blessing sanctions would have worked their way out Probation phase and conferral phase Conferral phase: confirmation stage and consummation stage Probation phase has a cultic focus After the probation would have been cultural fullness Armageddon or Har-magedon Judgment would have been the starting point of human history “Slay the dragon” was the probation phase City of God – Megapolis would have been man's cultural endeavor The Holy Spirit would have glorified man and the city to be Metapolis upon a successful probation. Only God can produce the beyond-city or Meta-city Mountain of God – focus of Eden was a thrust outward to achieve the fullness of what the Lord had in mind. Upper register has existed the entire time – heaven is God's achievement – not the result of human achievement. Change of man's perceptive capability. Glorification takes us beyond our technology Being like Christ will be the ultimate culture Covenant of works The knowledge of good and evil is a judicial function Two Adams 2 Samuel 14:17, 20 1 Kings 3:9, 28 Genesis 3:15
20170101-Sun-AM - Rev 1:9 - Bible Baptist Church - www.www.bbcbyesville.com
20170101-Sun-AM - Rev 1:9 - Bible Baptist Church - www.www.bbcbyesville.com
20170101-Sun-AM - Rev 1:9 - Bible Baptist Church - www.bbc-kjv.com
The Jesus Saves Ministry 509 Evergreen Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11221 www.tjsm.org E-Mail: gojesusnow@aol.com TEL. 718-574-2244 on air: 1-347-884-8850 Audio now: 1-213-992-4339 Pastor, Apostle Lonnie Stocks Proverbs 10:20-24 (MSG) 20 The speech of a good person is worth waiting for; the blabber of the wicked is worthless. 21 The talk of a good person is rich fare for many, but chatterboxes die of an empty heart. 22 GOD's blessing makes life rich; nothing we do can improve on God. 23 An empty-head thinks mischief is fun, but a mindful person relishes wisdom. 24 The nightmares of the wicked come true; what the good people desire, they get.
Today on My Gospel Soul Radio. Join in On the Conversation about Healthy Relationships. I will be sharing different pointers that will help you grow strong together! Join Me Pastor J. for an Hour of Encouragement, Music, and more. God Blessing! www.mygospelsoulcc.weebly.com
June 20-26, 1992 This week Ken welcomes writer/podcaster/blogger and occasional actress Tess Lynch. Ken and Tess discuss the beauty of borrowed temporary housing on the dark side of the Hollywood sign, clam dunks from Boston, a 9-year-olds hate fueled rage towards their parents' bedtime rules, the Glory of 90210, The Flash, TV's Man of the Year Ross Perot, "Popcorn Chicken", making up parenting as you go along, Sinbad's reading classes, Rancid ruining your children's programming, Soaps, Passions, cloning TGIF, Who's the Boss, who cares?, horny old ladies, being serious when it comes to law enforcement, the anxiety of flipping, picture-in-picture, taking advantage of teenagers inherent love of eavesdropping to teach foreign languages, House of Style, Todd Oldham date night, On the Air, hateful In Living Color, Hi Honey! I'm Home, the seasonal inappropriateness of Edward Scissorhands, John Waters, Hairspray covered Pink Flamingos, John Stamos' Dreams, the inherent hilarity of mediocre actors re-enacting 9-1-1 calls, coming to Full House by following the leads pre-Full House careers, being fine with JTT but hating Home Improvement, Green Acres, maturing into Nick at Nite, The Adventures of Pete and Pete, New Englander's affinity for Stephen King, Wonder Years, not buying Doogie Howser, shows where everyone is a bad person, the terror of people just walking into your house, God Blessing your Neighbor's Underwear, Howie Mandel's long career, That's My Dog, Demi Moore's music career, Cheers, Michael Jordan and Michael Jackson's "The Michaels" years, America's Most Wanted, the end of Dinosaurs, Ken's hatred of post-Henson Muppets, seeing people who look like Gelflings, and loving Swamp Thing.
A holy dialogue increases the life and goodness in the world. The Zohar teaches us that God's only desire is to give goodness to His created beings. Therefore all that He wants to give us is ready for us. However, we cannot always receive the goodness He wants to give, because we become separated from Him by receiving for ourselves alone. Blessing God for everything we enjoy is a simple and wonderful way that Judaism teaches us to change the one-way flow into a productive dialogue.
Pastor Darrel preaches from Joel 2:23-32