Day 1: Born of Water and Spirit

Day 1: Born of Water and Spirit

Jesus stood under night skies explaining rebirth to Nicodemus. A respected teacher struggled to grasp heavenly things. Christ insisted: “You must be born again.” Wind blew where it wished—so it is with Spirit-birthed lives. Nicodemus touched his own skin, wondering how to reenter the womb. But Jesus spoke of water-washed repentance and Spirit-breath remaking DNA.

This new birth transplants God’s nature into believers. Just as infants carry parental traits, Christ’s life in us reshapes speech, desires, and destiny. Earthly credentials fade; kingdom lineage defines us.

You’ve been reborn with resurrection power. Yet where do old habits still mirror the “first birth” more than your Father’s image? List one action today that needs rewriting by your divine DNA.

“Jesus replied, ‘Very truly I tell you, no one can see the kingdom of God unless they are born again.’”
(John 3:3, NIV)

Prayer: Confess one area where you’ve relied on natural abilities over Spirit-led dependence.
Challenge: Write “Born of God” on three sticky notes—place them where you’ll see them hourly.

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“I am Built to Last”

We declare that we are built to last because new birth in Christ roots us in an unshakable reality. The opening text from 1 John 5 assures that what is born of God overcomes the world, and that victory centers on faith in Jesus as the Son of God. We must be born of God in the fullest sense, not merely informed about him but possessed by his life so the divine DNA shapes our speech, choices, and desires. That belonging shows itself in the preposition of, which signals family and inheritance rather than mere protection or proximity.

We recognize that being born of God means we stand apart from the world’s values and fashions. This world tempts with pleasure, power, and comfort, but our citizenship is heavenly, so temporal trials cannot define our destiny. Scripture calls us to renew our minds, resist conformity, and endure hardship with the assurance that tribulation cannot separate us from Christ’s love. We embrace pilgrim identity so earthly storms refine rather than wreck us.

We affirm that victory comes through faith that abides in Jesus, not through status, works, or spiritless knowledge. Faith that knows who Jesus is perseveres when miracles feel distant; even faith the size of a mustard seed shifts the landscape because it trusts the risen Lord who has already overcome death. The blood of Christ, the spoken testimony of transformed lives, and a willingness to surrender earthly comforts secure triumph over accusation, deception, and violence. Overcomers inherit promises of authority and presence with Christ because overcoming traces back to what Christ accomplished on the cross and in the resurrection.

We submit to the shaping work of God, inviting him to mold and make us durable and dependable. Yielding cultivates resilience so we do not faint in the day of adversity but prove the good, acceptable, and perfect will of God. As we live out that yielded life, we walk confident that the best is not behind us but ahead, for the victory given through Jesus assures that we truly are built to last.


Key Takeaways
  • 1. We must be born of God. Our identity in Christ is not a label but a transfer of life that changes desires, speech, and choices. True new birth creates likeness to the Father so moral effort flows from union rather than mere self-discipline. This rebirth grounds endurance because trials meet a life that shares divine DNA and destiny.
  • 2. We belong to another world. Heavenly citizenship reframes suffering as temporary training rather than final defeat. When we live from our true citizenship, cultural pressures lose their authority to shape our hope and behavior. Endurance grows from seeing ourselves as pilgrims whose loyalty overrules immediate comfort.
  • 3. Victory comes through abiding faith. Faith functions as persistent, relational trust in Jesus, not a sporadic feeling or intellectual assent. Abiding faith aligns perception with the risen Christ so obstacles become opportunities for dependence, not despair. Small, sustained trust unlocks the power already won by his death and resurrection.
  • 4. Yield to God and be molded. Deliberate surrender invites God’s formative work so resilience becomes a formed character trait. Yielding replaces brittle independence with dependable endurance, enabling spiritual growth through trials rather than collapse. The clay posture produces durability that reflects Christ to a watching world.
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