Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦

1.6K posts

Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦 banner
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦

Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦

@livingpurpose2

Christian Life Coach - Author of Rooted In Purpose 🚫 DMs

Ontario, Canada Katılım Eylül 2025
235 Takip Edilen256 Takipçiler
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦@livingpurpose2·
I had the opportunity to sit down with Pastor Mike Knoll at Frontline Church and share the heart behind Rooted In Purpose. Thank you, Pastor Mike, for creating space for this meaningful conversation. Grateful for the opportunity to share what God has placed on my heart. "Rooted in Purpose" with Life Coach, Cathy Kipfer youtu.be/2KjQqBScWlk?si… via @YouTube
YouTube video
YouTube
English
2
1
6
68
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦@livingpurpose2·
@LeahAravah @ILeadershi44610 Thank you dear Leah and thank you for being a part of Rooted In Purpose and sharing a part of your testimony. It's such a beautiful added touch! The readers will be blessed and encouraged by it Bless you my friend
English
1
0
1
23
Leah
Leah@LeahAravah·
@livingpurpose2 Well done Pastor Mike Knoll and Cathy Kipfer! It was such a beautiful and inspiring interview! May the LORD continue to bless both of you, your families, and ministries. 🙏🏼🤍🕊 @ILeadershi44610
English
1
0
1
25
Lynette
Lynette@LynetteF17527·
Today has been a day...my cousin is very ill and has been in the hospital since April 3, I found out today my step nieces' biological father died Friday and the elderly man I take care of has some serious heart blockages that are going to require stents most likely. He is at very high risk for a heart attack. Please pray for everyone, and for me. Thanks.
English
1
0
1
67
Christine Brejcha-Beach
Christine Brejcha-Beach@ChristineBrejc1·
A Father’s Love I don’t know who needs to hear this today, but your Heavenly Father loves you. And you can bet your bottom dollar that the Father’s love is beautiful and comforting. His love satisfies the bones, and like an elixir, Christ’s love is medicine for our pain and sickness, our distress, temporary confusion and loss (Jeremiah 30:17). Christ’s love relaxes the body and slows the mind, pulling us back only to release us again. And like a slingshot, the power to propel comes through the stretching. It operates freely, needing no outside force — only God. Even in the pain of stretching, the Father’s love tells the story of time and sacrifice. The Gospel teaches us that through suffering, we learn perseverance and patience (Romans 5:3–5). Obedience is a choice, and waiting on God is an act of trust. We don’t always know how long the waiting will last, but the Father’s love makes the wrong things right and the crooked things straight (Isaiah 40:4). A Father’s love feeds us when we are hungry and soothes the sores our enemies pick at. And even when we are falsely accused, Jesus shows the world that we belong to Him and that we are His people (Psalm 23:5). The Father’s love is a windfall in the tightest place, a waterfall in drought. His love empowers us to forgive our enemies and bless one another through prayer (Matthew 5:44). The Father’s love is merciful, kind, unique, and tender‑hearted. True love is easy to recognize because it never competes, never abandons, and never allows anyone to suffer alone. It stays present. Indeed, the Father’s love knows no boundaries. It does not gossip, compare, or compete. It loves freely and fairly, wrapped tightly in bravery. His compassion is fierce, confident, and bold (Psalm 103:8). This kind of love is only possible for those who walk with God. The Father’s love brings wholeness and joy, often accompanied by tears. True love is blameless, even when the world convicts us of guilt. True love forgives. It captivates. Its beauty is genuine, full of the oil of joy and gladness (Isaiah 61:3). The Father’s love is charismatic and charming, yet without theatrics — pouring out without cost or measure. The Father’s love makes all things possible in Christ (Philippians 4:13). Today, I live in the Father’s love — once an unloved human who found the love of God strong enough to heal my life. The Father’s love came from Heaven through a spiritual embrace made possible by Christ’s charity. His love is real and teaches me all things. My Father’s love will never leave me (1 John 2:27). And to all of you fatherless children walking through life in your teens, 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, and even into your 80s — seek to know your Heavenly Father. He is more real than the nose on your face, and oh, how He loves you. “A Father to the fatherless, a defender of widows, is God in His holy habitation.” (Psalm 68:5) “For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life.” (John 3:16) In your beautiful brokenness, He will fix you. In your humility, He will restore you before the eyes of those who crushed you and called you worthless (1 Peter 5:6–7). If you are a gentle giant — like that wounded horse — run to the Father and stand quietly with Him. He will heal you and set you free to run the course He chose for your life. We are not alone. God bless us all, Sister Christine Beach ❤️ We all matter to God.
Christine Brejcha-Beach tweet media
English
3
5
28
561
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦@livingpurpose2·
Healing That Reaches Generations ❤️ Sometimes we think our healing is only about us our pain, our wounds, our recovery. But healing has a ripple effect. When God restores a heart, He often begins restoring generations. The patterns we break today can become the freedom our children walk in tomorrow. When you choose forgiveness instead of bitterness, truth instead of shame, surrender instead of control, and healing instead of hiding, something shifts not only in your life but within your bloodline. Generational cycles can end when one person says yes to God’s healing process. Jesus demonstrated the greatest love through sacrifice. He did not only die to save individuals He came to redeem families, restore identity, and bring freedom to generations. There is no greater love than laying down your pride, pain, and brokenness before God and allowing Him to transform you from the inside out. Sometimes healing is painful because God is pulling roots out that have been buried for years. But what God heals, He can also redeem. Your obedience today may become someone else’s breakthrough tomorrow. Scripture 📖 “There is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.” “But as for me and my family, we will serve the Lord.” “He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.” “Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” Reflection to ask 🤔 What healing is God inviting me into right now? What unhealthy patterns or cycles need to end with me? How could my healing impact future generations? Heavenly Father, 🙏 We come before You together with humble hearts, asking You to heal, restore, and renew us from the inside out. Search our hearts and reveal every place that needs Your touch. Heal the wounds we carry, the burdens we have hidden, and the pain that has been passed down through generations. Lord, let Your love break every cycle of fear, shame, anger, rejection, addiction, bitterness, and brokenness. Replace it with peace, wisdom, forgiveness, and truth. Teach us how to walk in freedom so our lives may reflect Your goodness to those around us. Your Word says in The Bible that there is no greater love than this to lay down one’s life for others. Help us live with that kind of love. Give us courage to surrender our pride, our hurt, and our past so You can transform us completely. Father, heal not only us, but our families and future generations. Let our obedience today become freedom for our children tomorrow. May our homes be rooted in prayer, grace, truth, and compassion. Strengthen us when the healing process feels difficult, and remind us that You are always near to the brokenhearted. We declare that what was once broken can be restored through Jesus Christ. We trust You with our hearts, our families, and our future. In the mighty name of Jesus, Amen.
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦 tweet media
English
3
4
12
375
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦@livingpurpose2·
If someone could please point me to the Scriptures where Jesus spent His time arguing, fighting, and creating division over doctrine, I would genuinely like to read them. Yes, Jesus spoke truth boldly and corrected religious hypocrisy, but His life was marked by love, compassion, humility, mercy, and relationship. He healed the broken, sat with sinners, washed feet, forgave people, and called hearts back to the Father. What stands out most about Jesus was not constant arguing it was the fruit of His Spirit and the way He loved people while still standing firmly in truth. I had a dream that I was in a room filled with hundreds, maybe even thousands, of people. In the middle of the room stood a man quietly observing and watching everything around him. He wasn’t distracted. He saw it all. As I reflected on the dream, I thought about Jesus standing in the midst of us. While people argue, debate, divide, perform, and speak loudly to be heard, He is watching. He sees every heart, every motive, every word spoken, and the way we treat one another. Nothing is hidden from Him. We can fool people with appearance, knowledge, titles, and opinions, but Jesus looks deeper. He looks at our character, our love for others, our humility, and whether the fruit of His Spirit is truly evident in our lives. So many are feeding into a culture that encourages arguing and division, yet Jesus calls us to reflect Him. He was relational. He walked in love, mercy, compassion, truth, and grace. Truth matters. Doctrine matters. But so does our character. So does the way we speak to people, respond to disagreement, and represent Christ publicly. Sometimes I wonder if we have become more committed to winning arguments than reflecting Jesus. Reflection Question to ask 🤔 If Jesus were visibly standing in the middle of our conversations and interactions today, would my words and actions reflect His heart? Prayer:🙏 Lord Jesus, help us to walk in both truth and love. Teach us to reflect Your character in our conversations, attitudes, and responses to others. Guard us from pride, harshness, and division. Let the fruit of Your Spirit be evident in us so that people experience Your love through our lives. Give us wisdom to speak truth with humility and grace, always remembering that You see every heart and every motive. In Jesus’ name, amen.
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦 tweet media
English
1
2
4
115
Leah
Leah@LeahAravah·
@livingpurpose2 Our Father is so good! Amen. It has been such a blessing to walk together as we serve the LORD. I love and appreciate you as well. 💕🙏🏼
English
1
0
1
47
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦@livingpurpose2·
Spiritual Postpartum When the Vision Has Been Birthed After writing Rooted In Purpose, I experienced something I did not fully expect. I thought after the vision was completed there would only be celebration, joy, and relief. While those things were present, I also experienced exhaustion, emotional heaviness, vulnerability, and spiritual fatigue. What I later realized was this: I was experiencing spiritual postpartum. For a long season, I carried the burden of what God placed inside me. There were prayers, tears, stretching, refining, obedience, spiritual warfare, doubt, and perseverance. Writing was not just writing it was laboring with God to bring forth something He entrusted to me. And when the vision was finally birthed, my spirit, mind, and emotions needed recovery. Many people do not talk about what happens after the breakthrough. We celebrate the birth of the vision, but we rarely prepare people for the recovery that may follow. Maybe you have experienced this too. Perhaps God gave you: a ministry a book a business a Bible study a testimony a calling a restored marriage a healing journey a dream fulfilled through obedience You finally arrived at the moment you prayed for, yet instead of feeling only strength, you feel tired. Empty. Uncertain. Maybe even spiritually drained. If that is you, hear this clearly: Your exhaustion does not mean you failed. Your weariness does not mean God abandoned you. Sometimes the heaviness comes because something real was birthed through you. Scripture Reflection 📖 After a mighty spiritual victory, Elijah experienced deep exhaustion and discouragement. “He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.” — Isaiah 40:29 God did not shame Elijah for his weakness. He allowed him to rest, replenished him, and gently restored him. Sometimes stewardship after the birth of a vision looks less like striving and more like allowing God to heal, replenish, and strengthen you again. Devotional Thought There is a difference between: carrying a vision, birthing a vision, and stewarding what was born. Many of us prepare for the birth, but not for the recovery afterward. Spiritual postpartum is not weakness. It is often evidence that you poured out deeply in obedience. Do not rush yourself into the next assignment before allowing God to restore you from the last one. The same God who helped you carry the vision also wants to sustain you after it is born. Reflection Questions 🤔 What has God recently brought forth in my life? Have I allowed myself time to spiritually recover? Am I trying to immediately “produce” again out of pressure or fear? What would healthy stewardship look like in this season? Where is God inviting me to rest and trust Him? Prayer 🙏 Heavenly Father, Thank You for giving me the strength to carry and birth the vision You placed inside me. Thank You for sustaining me through every season of obedience, stretching, and growth. Lord, help me not to confuse exhaustion with failure. Teach me how to steward what You have birthed with wisdom, humility, grace, and rest. Restore the places in me that became weary during the laboring season. Renew my spirit, guard my heart, and remind me that I do not have to carry everything in my own strength. Help me encourage others who may also be walking through spiritual postpartum after obeying Your call. Let our stories become testimonies of Your faithfulness. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦 tweet media
English
2
0
6
104
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦
Cathy Kipfer 🇨🇦@livingpurpose2·
@LeahAhavah Thank you Leah 💕🤗 I have not heard of this until the Lord revealed to me what it was I was going through. Then it all made sense. 💡 God is so good! Thank you for your encouragement and prayers for my family and I. I love and appreciate you very much! 💕🙏
English
1
0
1
131
Leah
Leah@LeahAravah·
Sending heartfelt gratitude and prayers my friend. This is so accurate and needed. Cathy thank you for putting into words what is so hard to articulate. Thank you for being transparent and sharing what you endured and the wisdom and clarity that you gained by going through it. We need more encouragement in this area for sure. GOD bless you, your family and your ministry. Shalom. 🙏🏼🤍🕊
English
1
0
1
68