Rivers of Living Water 🌿💧
- emkalinemkn
- 6 days ago
- 2 min read
“Whoever believes in Me, as Scripture has said, rivers of living water will flow from within them.” — John 7:38
A Fountain of Peace 💧🤍
While standing in front of a beautiful fountain, watching the water overflow, I felt such peace. There is something calming and refreshing about the sound of flowing water.

In Scripture, fountains carry deep symbolic meaning — they represent the life-giving, sustaining power of God. Just as physical fountains provided essential water in the arid landscapes of biblical times, spiritual fountains remind us of God’s cleansing, renewing work in our lives.
Fountains in Scripture: God’s Provision and Care 🌸
The first mention of a fountain appears in Genesis, when the angel of the Lord finds Hagar by a spring of water in the wilderness.
This moment is a picture of divine intervention and care — God meets Hagar in her distress and provides exactly what she needs.
And in Revelation, God makes a beautiful promise:
“To the thirsty I will give freely from the spring of the water of life.”
He is the ultimate Fountain of Life — the One who sustains, nourishes, and restores.

Overflowing From the True Source 🌿
A fountain doesn’t produce water on its own.It receives from a deep and constant source.
In the same way, as believers, we don’t pour out our own strength. We overflow with what Christ pours into us.
When our hearts stay connected to Jesus — the only true source of living water — encouragement, peace, and grace naturally flow from us to those around us.
A Daily Choice: Fountain or Drain? 💛
Every day, we make a choice:
Will we be a fountain that refreshes others?
Or a drain that empties and discourages?
When we allow God’s river of living water to flow through us, we experience His love, His peace, and His hope — and others do too. His fountain flows consistently, quietly, and beautifully.
God often works through small streams of kindness that turn into rivers of blessing.
Who in your life needs a refreshing word, prayer, or act of grace from you this week?
Instead of asking, “What can I get?”
Let’s ask, “What can I give?”





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