The Gathering: Daughters of the Living King

Judy Killebrew

Welcome to The Gathering: Daughters of the Living King, where women seek to know and experience the love of Christ.  Here, in the messiness of our daily struggles we are a gathering of women who strive to live daily with Jesus. If you are an imperfect woman seeking to maximize your spiritual growth and desire to experience a transformed life with the beauty of God's love, then The Gathering is the podcast for you.

  1. 21H AGO

    In 2026, Joy is my Compass!

    Send a text My word for 2026 is Joy, and the verse I have been reflecting on is Romans 15:13, which states: "May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit."  In a world that often equates well-being with external success, the biblical definition of joy (or chara in Greek) is revolutionary. And let’s not confuse happiness with joy.  Happiness is a reaction to favorable "happenings," BUT biblical joy is a settled state of contentment rooted in the character of God. As I enter into 2026, I choose to define joy not as the absence of struggle, but as the presence of God. It is the "calm delight" that comes from knowing that, regardless of the global or personal climate, the Sovereign King is still on His throne.  Joy is a fruit of the Spirit, not a feeling.  Galatians 5:22 lists joy as the second fruit of the Spirit. This implies two things for me this year: It is cultivated: Fruit takes time to grow. It requires the soil of Scripture and the water of prayer.And it is supernatural: You cannot manufacture holy joy through willpower. It is the natural byproduct of "abiding in the vine" (John 15:5).To live out this word in 2026, I am focusing less on "trying to be joyful" and more on "staying connected to the Source of Joy." When the connection is strong, the fruit of joy appears automatically. Nehemiah 8:10 declares, "The joy of the Lord is your strength." In the original context, the people were weeping over their past failures. Nehemiah corrected them, essentially saying that their strength for the future was found in celebrating God’s goodness. So in 2026, I choose to use joy as a defensive tool: I use joy against Anxiety: Joy reminds us that the battle is already won.I use joy Against Bitterness: Joy shifts focus from what we lack to what we have been given.And I use joy against Exhaustion: Joy provides a "second wind" that physical rest cannot provide.And friends, a "Word of the Year" only changes your life if it changes your days. Three practices I have put in place for this year are: Gratitude Audits: At the end of each day, I name three "God-glimmers"—moments where His joy was visible.Sacrifice of Praise: On the days when joy feels furthest away, I offer a "sacrifice of praise" (Hebrews 13:15). Worship is often the doorway to the joy you can't yet feel.Joyful Service: Joy is one of the few things that increases as it is given away. I will intentionally look for opportunities to be the "overflow" mentioned in Romans 15:13.As I navigate 2026, I choose to let "Joy" be my compass. It isn't a naive optimism; it is a profound theological statement that God is good, He is here, and He is enough. May my life reflect the "indescribable and glorious joy" (1 Peter 1:8) that comes from a life hidden in Christ. Friends, I have attached episode 25, “A New Year, A New Word”.  There is something special about starting a New Year with God-centered prayer and having a dedicated word that intentionally stirs the heart for God’s purpose and plans.  In 2024, my Word was “Gather, in 2025, the word was Harvest and this year, in 2026, my word is Joy. I encourage you to choose a spiritual word for 2026 focused on intimacy with God.  Be intentional about integrating this word into your daily life through prayer, meditation, and journaling.

    14 min
  2. 5D AGO

    Boldly to the Throne: A Prayer for Salvation for Family and Friends

    Send a text Heavenly Father, Almighty God, Creator of all things seen and unseen, I come before Your throne of grace today with a heart burdened not for myself, but for those I cherish deeply. You know each of my loved ones by name. You know their paths, their struggles, and the condition of their hearts. I lift them up to You now, with all the love and longing within me, desperately praying for the salvation of their souls. Lord, Your Word declares that You are not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance and everlasting life. I cling to that promise now. I pray that the scales would fall from their eyes and the veil would be lifted from their understanding. Break through the deception, the pride, the apathy, and the distractions of this world that keep them from recognizing their need for a Savior. I ask that You send Your Holy Spirit to move mightily in their lives. Create a holy dissatisfaction within them with their current circumstances and worldly pursuits. Stir a hunger and a thirst for righteousness that only You can satisfy. Soften their hearts, Lord, which may be hardened by hurt, skepticism, or sin.  Soften the heart for a receptive soil for the seed of Your Gospel. Dispatch Your angels to surround them and orchestrate divine appointments. Bring faithful, loving witnesses into their lives who can clearly share the good news of Jesus Christ in a way that resonates with them. Remove any false beliefs, misconceptions about who You are, or any past hurt with the church that are acting as stumbling blocks to their faith. I pray specifically for a moment of profound revelation for my loved ones and friends—may there be a personal encounter with Your undeniable love and truth. Whether through a crisis that reveals their need, a gentle whisper in the quietness of their heart, or the undeniable evidence of Your creation, draw them relentlessly toward Yourself. Lord Jesus, You are the Way, the Truth, and the Life. I pray that they would see You not just as a historical figure, but as the living God who died for their sins and rose again. Instill in them the faith to confess with their mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in their heart that You raised Him from the dead, so that they might be saved. Grant me patience and wisdom as I interact with those who are not saved. Help me to live a life that reflects Your light, being a testimony of Your saving grace without judgment or condemnation. Give me the right words to speak and, more importantly, the wisdom to know when to simply pray and trust You to work. I trust my loved ones into Your capable hands, knowing that Your love for them is even greater than my own. I believe that You hear this prayer and that You are working behind the scenes for their eternal destiny. I thank You in advance for their salvation and for the day when we will all stand together before You in glory. In the mighty, saving name of Jesus Christ, I pray, Amen.

    6 min
  3. 5D AGO

    The Altar of Surrender

    Send a text Welcome back, my friends, we are talking about the one thing we all struggle with but desperately need: The Altar of Surrender. Romans 12:1 states, “And so, dear brothers and sisters, I plead with you to give your bodies to God because of all he has done for you. Let them be a living and holy sacrifice–the kind he will find acceptable.  This is truly the way to worship him.” So we are called to be "living sacrifices." But the problem with being a living sacrifice is that we may want to crawl off the altar of surrender the moment things get uncomfortable. Yet surrender is a daily choice to climb back onto that altar and say, "Not my will, but yours, be done." Luke 22:42 Surrendering means acknowledging that our emotions are indicators, not dictators. It takes immense courage to tell yourself, "I hear you, self, but I am going to move in the direction of God's word anyway." This is where faith becomes tangible because surrendering is the courage to obey despite our emotions or fears. It’s about trading our stress and control for God’s peace.  Our true freedom is found only when we stop fighting for control and start surrendering to God's better plan.  But why is it so hard to let go and surrender our all to God?  Sometimes, I think in the quietness of faith, we often live under a profound misunderstanding of power. We are taught from the world at a young age that to survive and to succeed is to maintain control. We carry the weights of our anxieties, our past mistakes, and our fears like armor, believing that if we set them down, we will be left vulnerable. However, a deeper spiritual truth reveals that surrender is a gift, not a weakness. It is the courageous act of trusting that God’s hands are far stronger than our own. My friends, so much of our spiritual and physical exhaustion stems from trying to manage what was never meant to rest in our hands. These "heavy things" may include: The Weight of Performance: which could be the exhausting need to prove our worth through religious legalism or the illusion of "perfect" living. We may carry The Burden of Control, which is the anxiety that comes from trying to orchestrate outcomes we cannot influence. And then there is The Sack of Regret: Carrying past sins, disappointments or failures that God has already offered to redeem. When we hold onto these heavy burdens, our hands are too full to receive the "new things" God wants to provide. In Matthew 11:28-30, Jesus offers each one of us a radical exchange and invitation. He says, "Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest". This is not a call to passivity but a call to partnership. A surrender of ourselves to His yoke. By taking on His "yoke," we aren't abandoning all responsibility; rather, we are aligning ourselves with a Master who pulls the weight with us. To take the yoke of Jesus means to become His disciple, aligning our life with His teachings and presence. My friend, Surrender, is "giving over" rather than "giving up". It is the realization that our weakness is actually the doorway through which divine grace flows most freely—for as the Apostle Paul recorded, God's power is "made perfect in weakness" (2 Corinthians 12:9). To lay down the heavy things of “performance, control, and regret” is to finally accept that we are not autonomous. When we stop striving, we allow God to start moving in ways we could never orchestrate on our own.

    11 min
  4. 12/11/2025

    A Prayer for Healing

    Send a text In a world filled with pain, sickness, and brokenness, many of us are crying out for a touch from God. Maybe you are listening today with a heavy heart, a weary body, or a crushed spirit. You need to know that God is near to the brokenhearted, and His Word is alive and active, bringing life and health to all your flesh. Today, we are going to anchor our faith in God's promises of healing found throughout the Bible and pray. Over the next few minutes, we will pray together, trusting in the God who heals us – Jehovah Rapha. The desire for healing is universal. And the good news is that God's compassion for our suffering is a cornerstone of our faith. From the Old Testament to the New, we see a God who is not distant from our pain, but actively involved in our restoration. One of the most foundational scriptures in the Bible is found in Exodus 15:26, where God declares, "'I am the Lord, who heals you.'" The passage reads “He said, 'If you will listen carefully to the voice of the Lord your God and do what is right in his sight, obeying his commands and keeping all his decrees, then I will not make you suffer any of the diseases I sent on the Egyptians; for I am the Lord who heals you.” This isn't just a statement; it's a covenant. God reveals Himself as our personal physician. We see this beautifully echoed in the Psalms. In Psalm 103:2-3, the Psalmist writes, "Let all that I am praise the Lord; may I never forget the good things he does for me.  He forgives all my sins and heals all my diseases.” Notice the connection there: God forgives our sins and heals our diseases. While sin isn't always the direct cause of sickness, there's a profound, holistic link between our spiritual and physical well-being. And sometimes what appears as an unanswered prayer for physical healing is actually God working in unseen ways, and our prayer is answered through spiritual healing and emotional support.

    9 min
  5. 10/29/2025

    The Broken Mirror: Seeing Ourselves Through God’s Eyes

    Send a text Today, we’re diving into the core of the gospel. If you’ve ever felt unworthy, ashamed, or stuck in guilt—this message is for you. Let’s begin with Romans 3:23-24, which states, “For everyone has sinned; we all fall short of God’s glorious standard. Yet God, in his grace, freely makes us right in his sight. He did this through Christ Jesus when he freed us from the penalty for our sins.” The reality is that “everyone” has sinned (that includes you, myself, our friends, and yes, even our pastors have sinned)…this is not a condemnation, but a universal truth. We ALL fall short in some area of our lives. We may experience pride, selfishness, bitterness, fear, addiction, or the temptation of comparison. But sin isn’t just a list of wrong behaviors—it’s a condition of the heart. It’s the fracture in our relationship with God, the distortion of His image in us.  “Sin isn’t just what we do—it’s what separates us from the One who made us.” Let’s look at the metaphor of a broken, shattered mirror to help us grasp this truth in a deeply visual and personal way. Just as a mirror is designed to reflect light, we were created to reflect the glory of God—His love, His holiness, and His truth. Genesis 1:27 states, “So God created human beings in his own image. In the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.”   My friend, we were made in His image, God’s image. That means we were meant to shine with His character, to be living reflections of His goodness in the world. But sin—whether pride, envy, lust, bitterness, or unbelief—cracks the mirror and distorts the reflection. We may try to piece the mirror (which is ourselves) back together with effort, religion, or self-help, but the shards of brokenness may cut deeper, and the cracks remain. The light of God still shines, but the reflection is distorted. Instead of clarity, there’s confusion. Instead of beauty, there’s brokenness. And no matter how hard we try to fix ourselves, we can’t restore the cracked mirror on our own.  And guess what, a broken mirror doesn’t just fail to reflect fully—it can even block the light. And that’s what sin does. It separates us from God’s presence, leaving us in a spiritual shadow. In our sin, we feel the ache of that separation in guilt, shame, restlessness, and the longing for something more. But praise God, who is our master restorer, for His generous Grace. God doesn’t discard broken mirrors. He redeems them. The key scripture that declares we are made new in Christ is 2 Corinthians 5:17, “This means that anyone who belongs to Christ has become a new person. The old life is gone; a new life has begun!” This verse beautifully captures the transformative power of salvation. When we place our faith in Jesus, we don’t just get a fresh start—we become a new creation. Our identity shifts from broken to redeemed, from guilty to forgiven, from lost to found.

    16 min
  6. 10/26/2025

    Anchored in Hope: The Promises of God

    Send a text Welcome, friends. I’m so glad you are here. Today, we are diving into one of the most powerful truths in Scripture: the promises of God—and how they anchor us in hope. If you’ve ever felt like you’re drifting in uncertainty, this episode is for you. Let’s begin with a verse that’s carried me through many storms: Jeremiah 29:11—“For I know the plans I have for you,” says the Lord, “They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope.” So What Is Hope?  Hope isn’t just wishful thinking. It’s a confident expectation rooted in God’s character. It’s the belief that no matter what we face, God is always with us. Think about this: God never promised a life without trials—but He did promise His presence, His peace, and His purpose. “This hope is a strong and trustworthy anchor for our souls.  It leads us through the curtain into God’s inner sanctuary.” — Hebrews 6:19 My goodness, that’s not just words on paper. That is a spiritual reality. Let’s take a few minutes and walk through a few of God’s promises that will breathe hope into our lives: The Promise of Presence: “Don’t love money; be satisfied with what you have.  For God has said, I will never fail you. I will never abandon you.” — Hebrews 13:5 Even in silence, God is near. The promise of presence serves as an unshakable foundation of faith, emphasizing God's unwavering support and intimate nearness……even during challenging times or periods of perceived divine silence.  The notion that "even in silence, God is near" addresses the human experience of feeling alone or unheard when prayers seem unanswered or in times of profound suffering. Theological understanding suggests that God's silence is not absence, indifference, or rejection, but rather a purposeful part of our spiritual journey. A Test of Faith: Periods of silence are often an invitation to a deeper, more mature faith that relies on God's character rather than fleeting feelings or immediate answers. It challenges believers to trust God's unseen hand at work behind the scenes.Space for Growth: Just as a seed grows in the darkness of the soil, the soul can grow in trust, patience, and humility during seasons of divine quiet. This time allows for introspection and a re-evaluation of priorities, shifting focus from worldly concerns to a deeper reliance on God's Word.In essence, the promise of Hebrews 13:5 assures believers that, no matter how distant God may seem, His presence is an unchanging spiritual reality that provides security, comfort, and strength for every circumstance of life.

    18 min
5
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

Welcome to The Gathering: Daughters of the Living King, where women seek to know and experience the love of Christ.  Here, in the messiness of our daily struggles we are a gathering of women who strive to live daily with Jesus. If you are an imperfect woman seeking to maximize your spiritual growth and desire to experience a transformed life with the beauty of God's love, then The Gathering is the podcast for you.