Fig Tree

November 15th – Mark 11:13-14

Mark 11:13-14

Did you know fig trees in the time of Jesus couldn’t produce figs on their own? They might have looked full and leafy on the outside, but unless a tiny wasp slid inside and pollinated them from within, nothing would grow. As followers of Jesus, we’re like a fig tree. We can look put-together on the outside, showing leaves of busyness, good intentions, and surface-level faith. But unless God is working on the inside shaping our motives, softening our hearts, and transforming us from within, we won’t bear real fruit either. True growth doesn’t come from trying harder or looking spiritual. It comes from letting the Holy Spirit do His quiet, unseen work deep in our souls. When we invite Him into the places we’d rather hide, He brings life, conviction, healing, and genuine change. And before long, the fruit that once felt impossible begins to grow naturally. The fruit of patience, kindness, forgiveness, self-control, peace. The kind that can only come from God. Just like the fig tree, what happens inside determines what appears outside, and when God is at the center, our lives begin to overflow with the fruit He always intended.

Prayer Prompt:
Lord, work in the hidden places of my heart. Shape me from the inside out, and help me bear fruit that reflects Your goodness and Your presence in my life.

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March 25th – Mark 11:12-14

Mark 11:12-14

As we approach the celebration of Resurrection Day, many are the lessons we can learn from Jesus during this most Holy Week. The accounts of Jesus cursing the fig tree and overturning the money-changing tables at the temple, both share a common theme of confronting hypocrisy and spiritual emptiness. In both instances, Jesus reacts strongly against outward displays of religiosity that lack genuine substance. The fig tree, though appearing healthy from afar, bore no fruit, symbolizing the barrenness of a faith lacking true righteousness. Similarly, the money-changing tables in the temple represented a corruption of worship, where greed and deception took precedence over genuine reverence for God. Jesus’ actions in both cases serve as a powerful rebuke against a superficial faith, and a call to authentic devotion and spiritual integrity. They remind us that God what values most of all, is a sincere heart and genuine worship above mere outward appearances.

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