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@cat-blob
“In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” Genesis 1:1.
“The grace of the Lord Jesus be with all. Amen.” Revelation 22:21.
The Bible starts with God creating everything and ends with grace.
I think sometimes we read those verses separately so often that we miss how incredible it is to place them side by side. The very first words of Scripture introduce us to a God powerful enough to simply speak and create reality itself. No struggle. No effort. No panic. He speaks light into existence before the sun even exists. He hangs stars in space that we are still discovering thousands of years later. He creates oceans deep enough that humanity still has not fully explored them and galaxies so massive our brains can barely comprehend them. Genesis opens with a God so powerful that creation itself responds to His voice.
And Revelation closes with grace.
Not with humanity finally becoming good enough. Not with people successfully fixing themselves. Not with, “Congratulations everyone, you figured it out.” The final words of the Bible are about grace because that was the point all along.
Honestly, the entire Bible is the story of God dealing with people who repeatedly make absolute disasters of things while He continues reaching toward them anyway. Adam and Eve eat the one thing they were told not to eat. Noah gets off the ark after surviving a worldwide flood and almost immediately makes questionable choices. Israel sees miracles with their own eyes and still turns around and complains every six minutes. Jonah gets asked to preach and responds by trying to relocate himself via ocean. Peter boldly declares loyalty to Jesus and then denies Him three times in one night. Thomas doubts. David falls hard. Paul literally hunted Christians before becoming one himself.
The Bible is not a collection of spotless heroes. It is a collection of broken people being pursued by a holy God.
And somehow people still think Christianity is about pretending to have it all together.
If anything, Scripture repeatedly proves the opposite. The closer people get to God, the more aware they become of how much they need Him. Isaiah sees the holiness of God and immediately says, “Woe is me.” Peter sees the power of Jesus and says, “Depart from me, for I am a sinful man.” Paul openly admits his own struggles. The Bible is strangely terrible at being propaganda for human greatness because it keeps telling the truth about humanity.
But it also keeps telling the truth about God.
Because from Genesis to Revelation, God keeps making a way back.
The God who created the world in Genesis stepped into it Himself in the Gospels. The Creator entered creation. Jesus walked among the people He formed from dust. He touched lepers nobody else would touch. He forgave people society had written off. He stood beside the grieving. He wept. He suffered. He allowed Himself to be mocked, beaten, and crucified by the very people He came to save.
And then He rose again.
That is why Revelation can end with hope instead of despair. Yes, Revelation contains judgment and warnings and imagery that has caused approximately every Bible reader at some point to stare at the page and go, “I would like several explanations immediately.” But after all of it, the story ends with grace because grace is greater.
The Bible starts with paradise lost and ends with paradise restored. In Genesis, sin enters the world. In Revelation, sin is defeated. In Genesis, death begins. In Revelation, death dies. In Genesis, humanity is separated from God. In Revelation, God dwells with His people again.
The entire Bible is one long story pointing to Jesus.
And honestly, I love that the final verse of Scripture includes grace because if it were based on human performance, we would all be in trouble. Every single one of us has moments we regret, things we wish we could undo, words we wish we could take back, seasons where we wandered farther than we ever intended to go. Yet somehow the story still ends with grace.
The God powerful enough to create the universe in Genesis is also merciful enough to offer grace in Revelation.
And that is the kind of ending that changes everything.”
From: “Farmer Girl” (FB)
Amen. 🙏
Surrender Everything to God
Surrender isn’t giving up; it’s trusting God enough to let Him lead. When you release control, worries lose their grip and peace begins to grow. God can do more with your surrender than you can with your striving.
Giving everything to God means placing your plans, fears, and future in His hands, knowing He is faithful and good. You don’t have to carry the weight alone; God is strong enough to hold it all. Let go today and trust Him completely.
“Commit your way to the Lord; trust in Him and He will act.” Psalm 37:5
Amen! 🙏🕊️🙌
If you don't believe in the bible because it's man made, you shouldn't believe Ceaser was real because so was the history books showing his existance.
If you don't believe in God because you can't touch, see, smell, taste, or feel him, then you shouldn't believe in Gravity because you can't touch, see, smell, taste, or feel that either.
If you don't believe in Jesus because you think having faith in a God you haven't "met" is blind idiocy, then you shouldn't believe the astroid belt exists because that'd be having faith in something you've only seen in diagrams, pictures, and books, all of which were given to you by man.
As my teacher had once taught me, hard evidence is great, but soft evidence is just as valid.
There are testimonies, miracles, healed and saved people roaming the world. All of them have a reason for following God, and if you find a true christian, you'll be in awe everytime you hear their discoveries. They don't believe because they saw it in a book or because mama told them so, but because they've met Christ in a way He wanted to reveal Himself to them. One day, if you honestly ask him to show Himself to you and you listen, you could have a testimony of your own.
There are more primary sources of Jesus' life than Caesar's, fun fact
“God isn’t asking you to chase Him. He chooses to walk with you. He knows your limits, your struggles, and your moments of weakness — and He doesn’t rush past them. Instead, He stays close.
"The Lord thy God in the midst of thee is mighty; He will save, He will rejoice over thee with joy; He will rest in His love, He will joy over thee with singing." (Zephaniah 3:17)
There will be days when you feel like you’ve fallen behind — when your faith feels weak, your steps feel heavy, and your progress seems slow. But God doesn’t measure your walk by speed. He measures it by your willingness to stay with Him. When you stumble, He doesn’t walk away. He pauses, reaches out, and helps you back up.
"The steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord: and He delighteth in His way. Though he fall, he shall not be utterly cast down: for the Lord upholdeth him with His hand." (Psalm 37:23-24)
God’s heart is not to leave you behind, but to lead you forward — patiently, faithfully, lovingly. He is not frustrated by your pace. He is committed to your journey.”
"For I the Lord thy God will hold thy right hand, saying unto thee, 'Fear not; I will help thee.'" (Isaiah 41:13)
From: “Christian Spiritual Warfare from a Biblical Perspective” (FB)
Amen! 🙏🕊️🙌
"By his stripes we are healed" wasn't just about physical healing. It was something greater.
Many believers have held onto those words with all their hearts. They prayed, confessed, and still watched their bodies grow weak. Some were not healed physically. That pain is real.
In grief, they wonder if the promise was untrue or if their faith was lacking.
That verse did not let them down. Most of us were never taught what it really promised.
People rarely talk about it because speaking up can feel like doubting, and doubt can feel like a betrayal of faith. But it deserves a real answer.
We mostly quote the verse from 1 Peter 2:24: "by whose stripes ye were healed." But read the full verse, not just the last line: "Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree, that we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness, by whose stripes ye were healed."
That verse is not mainly speaking about physical recovery. It speaks about Christ bearing our sins so that we might die to sin and live in righteousness. The healing at the centre of the verse is deeper than the body. It is the healing of our separation from God.
He uses the past tense “were healed”, not "will be healed" or "might be healed if faith is strong," but "we were healed", already finished, nothing left to earn. This points to spiritual healing, not just physical recovery.
Look back at Isaiah 53, where this promise began. The chapter mentions sin, iniquity, and transgression twelve times. It uses images of wounds and stripes, but the real issue is spiritual separation from God. The wounds were the means of bringing healing, and that healing was reconciliation with God. The deep wound was not in the body, but in the soul, a broken spiritual connection that needed restoring.
This does not mean God does not heal physically. He does, and mostly through our bodies, doctors, miracles, and moments we cannot explain. That is real and important. But even the people Jesus healed on earth still died later.
The healing Jesus gave us at the cross cannot be undone by death. It secured something greater than temporary relief; the healing of the soul.
So when a believer dies, it does not mean the promise failed. It means the deepest part of the promise was already fulfilled.
What does it change for you to know that this promise reaches deeper than the body?”
From: “Ellis Enobun” (FB)
Today's Prayer 🙏
Dear Lord, Today, I come to You humbly, asking for forgiveness. I am not perfect; I am a sinner. Sometimes, I forget to pray. At times, I forget to thank You. Sometimes, I lose my temper. I know You see every little thing I do. But thank You for always giving me another day to start anew. God, as this week ends, please make me better. Change my attitude, my approach, my mind, and my reactions. If I'm chasing the wrong things, redirect me. In Jesus' name, Amen.
Today's Prayer 🙏
Dear Father God, we thank You for allowing us to walk through this day. We acknowledge we are Your chosen people. Allow us to continue to be a light in the midst of darkness. Thank You for protecting us and our loved ones from the attempts of the enemy. Help us rest in Your love and Your protection this day. Wake us up rejoicing in the wonders of who You are. In Jesus' name, Amen.
Allow Jesus in your heart, so He can show you the way.
There are many posts by “Beneath The Shadow of Thy Wings Group” (FB) that I would like to share, but this is the one that seems to be appearing everywhere this week, so I know that it must be important. 🙏
I've been a follower of Jesus for a very long time, and I still get times when God seems silent and far away. After so many years, I know from experience that He isn't far away at all. He's just busy quietly working all things for good. He'll make His presence felt when the time is right.
James 4:8 shows us that God wants a relationship with us, His children. You'll probably have heard it said that God didn't need us. He is sufficient in Himself (He is the Triune, Three-in-one God, so He is never alone). God didn't need us, but He wanted us, which is why He created us. God still wants us, which is why He sent Jesus to save us and bring us back to Himself.
To me, this verse is saying that God isn't deliberately being distant. He is a Gentleman. If we don't want to know Him, He won't force us. He'll keep trying quietly to bring us back, but He won't interfere, unless we ask Him to.
My point is that if God seems distant, set aside time to draw closer to Him, because He is waiting for you to do that. He will respond and draw closer to you. Talk with Him, share your concerns. He knows them anyway, but He loves to hear your voice. Ask Him for help. He's waiting for you to ask.
You can never be too near to your Heavenly Father, and the nearer you draw to Him, the nearer He'll draw to you.
Friends, I pray you draw so near to God, that you can feel the warmth of His love and His arms around you. Blessings! In Jesus' name, Amen! 🙏🕊️🙌
Source: walkswithmyfather