Daily Archives: September 21, 2025

A Life-Changing Prayer | Dr. David Jeremiah | Colossins1:9-14

FREE – God Meant it for Good bookmark: https://bit.ly/4p54ANc

Message Description:
To intercede simply means to pray for someone else. Jesus closed the gap between us and God when He died on the cross. And because of that, we can now stand in prayer for others—bringing their needs to God and asking Him to work according to His will.

Find 100 Prayers With Key Verses in “Everything to God in Prayer”, by Dr. Jeremiah: https://bit.ly/4oUYTBk

NEW from Dr. Jeremiah – “The Promise of Heaven: 31 Reasons to Get Excited About Your Eternal Home”: https://bit.ly/4piVSv0

Source: A Life-Changing Prayer | Dr. David Jeremiah | Colossins1:9-14

The Feast of Trumpets :: By Daymond Duck

God told Moses to tell Israel to celebrate seven “Feasts of the Lord” (see Lev. chapter 23 and Deut. chapter 16).

God called the seven feasts “holy convocations” (holy gatherings; gatherings that were set apart for a special purpose) and “My feasts” (Lev. 23:2).

The seven Feasts are: Passover, Unleavened Bread, First Fruits, Weeks (the Greeks called this one Pentecost), Trumpets, Atonement, and Tabernacles (Lev. 23).

The special purpose was to remember past events that are a shadow (or a picture) of things to come (see Heb. 10:1).

The Lord’s Supper is an example.

  • Paul said, “For as often as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup, ye do show the Lord’s death till he come” (I Cor. 11:26).
  • The Lord’s Supper is a holy convocation that looks back on the first coming of Jesus (His death) and looks forward to His return (His Second Coming when He will eat bread and drink with us; Matt. 26:27-29).

God told the male Jews to appear before the Lord three times a year to celebrate the Feasts in their seasons and to give offerings to God (Lev. 23:4; Deut. 16:16).

This required the male Jews to go on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem three times a year (to the Temple in the spring season, summer season, and fall season).

The Spring Pilgrimage (Spring Season)

The First Feast Day

  • Passover past event: The Jews sacrificed a lamb without blemish, sprinkled its blood on the lintels and door posts of their home, the death angel passed over their house, their first born was spared, but the first born of those that weren’t under the blood died, and Pharaoh let God’s people go (Ex. 12).
  • Passover future event: Jesus was the Lamb of God (Jn. 1:29, 36). He was crucified on Passover (the day that the death angel passed over Egypt (Ex. 12:6: Lev. 23:5; Matt. 26:2). The Apostle Paul said, Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us (I Cor. 5:7).

The Second Feast Day

  • Unleavened bread past event: The Jews left Egypt eating unleavened bread (bread with no leaven; bread that had not risen), and Pharaoh started chasing them.
  • Unleavened Bread future event: Jesus was born in Bethlehem (the house of bread) He was the unleavened (sinless) Bread of Life (Jn. 6:35; 47-51; 53-58), a lamb without blemish (I Pet. 1:15), He knew no sin (II Cor. 5:21), Pilate could find no fault in Him (Jn. 19:4). His unleavened (sinless), unrisen body was in the grave on the Feast of Unleavened Bread.

The Third Feast Day

  • First Fruits past event: The Jews left Egypt on Passover Day. They wandered in the wilderness for 40 years and ate Manna (Josh. 5:6-12). They entered the Promised Land exactly 40 years later on Passover Day. On their first two days in the Promised Land (Nisan 14-15) the Jews ate manna, old corn and unleavened bread. On their third day in the Promised Land (Nisan 16) the manna stopped falling and the Jews ate food that was grown in the Promised Land for the first time. The Feast of First Fruits remembers the first day the Jews ate food that was grown in the Promised Land.
  • First Fruits future events: Paul said, “But now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the firstfruits of them that slept. For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive. But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s (the Church) at his coming (I Cor. 15:20-23).
  • Final comments about the Spring Feasts: Jesus was crucified on Passover (Nisan 14). Jesus’ body was in the grave on Unleavened Bread (Nisan 15). Jesus was raised from the dead on First Fruits (Nisan 16). The first three Feast Days prophesy the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus. The death, burial and resurrection of Jesus is the Gospel (I Cor. 15:1-4). Jesus told His disciples to go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature (Mark 16:15). The first three feast days were a shadow of things to come.

The Summer Pilgrimage (Summer Season)

The Fourth Feast Day

  • Weeks (also called Pentecost) past events: God told the Jews to celebrate the feast of Pentecost seven weeks plus one day (50 days) after the Feast of First Fruits. Greeks called it the Feast of Pentecost because the word “Pentekoste” means fiftieth day. The fiftieth day after the Feast of First Fruits on the Jewish calendar is Sivan 6. Many Jews believe God gave the Ten Commandments to Israel orally (later on stone tablets that were broken and then a second set of stone tablets) in the wilderness on Sivan 6 (Ex. 19:18; 20:1-17). They believe that was the beginning of Judaism and the Mosaic Law.
  • Weeks (also called Pentecost) future events: Before His ascension into heaven, Jesus told His disciples to stay in Jerusalem until they received power from on high. 50 days after the Feast of First Fruits, 120 Jewish followers of Jesus were gathered in the Upper Room on the Day of Pentecost (Sivan 6); the Holy Spirit fell, and the Church began (Acts 2:1-4). So, Judaism was born, and the Jews came under the Law on Sivan 6, and the Church was born and came under grace on Sivan 6. We have the same birthday.

The Fall Pilgrimage (Fall Season)

The Fifth Feast Day

  • Trumpets past events: While the Jews were in the wilderness, God told Moses to make two trumpets of silver to blow on to signal the Jews to assemble at the tabernacle, march, go to war, and celebrate the feast days (Num. 10:1-10). The Jews heard the voice of the trumpet when God came down to give them the Ten Commandments at Mt. Sinai (Ex. 19:16). “And when the voice of the trumpet sounded long, and waxed louder and louder, Moses spake, and God answered him by a voice” (Ex. 19:18-19). The last blast of the trumpet was the longest, and it got louder and louder. Jews call that last, very loud blast of the trumpet the “last trump” or the “great blast.”
  • Trumpets future events: The trump of God will sound at the Rapture (I Thess. 4:16-17), Jesus will come down out of heaven, and the church will assemble in the air. Several scriptures associate a heavenly voice with a trumpet (Rev. 1:10; 4:1). Paul said, “Behold, I show you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed” (I Cor. 15:51-52). Some Christians (not all) believe the Rapture will occur at the last trump or Great Blast of the trumpet on the Feast of Trumpets (blast #100).

A lot more could be said about these first five feast days, and there are two more (Atonement and Tabernacles) – whole books have been written on them – but I need to move on to current events.

Just know that Jesus was crucified on Passover, the body of Jesus was in the grave on Unleavened Bread, Jesus was raised on First Fruits, Jesus started the Church on Pentecost, and many believe the Church will be Raptured on the Feast of Trumpets.

(FYI: Readers have sent me two reports that say the Israeli government will livestream rabbis blowing the trumpets at the Temple Mount on YouTube this year, and the last blast – the last trump – will be at 6:38 pm Jerusalem time: 11:38 am EST on Sept. 24 in the U.S., 10:38 am CST; 9:38 am MST, and 8:38 am PST. I do not know how to tell readers how to access it. Another reader has sent me a report that says the government has nothing to do with the blowing of trumpets on the Feast of Trumpets. Some synagogues choose to blow them, and some don’t. Some that choose to blow them livestream their services. Readers may be able to go online and find a synagogue that does it.)

(Update: On Sept. 16, 2025, it was reported that the PA has complained about Jewish groups efforts to blow the shofar on the Temple Mount. I don’t know whether the trumps will be blown on the Temple Mount or not, but I find it interesting that history has reached this point.)

Here are some current events that seem to indicate that the end of the age is near:

One, concerning wars and rumors of wars and the Israel-Hamas war: on Sept. 11, it was reported that Israel is using leaflets, recorded messages, and phone calls to warn the Palestinians to leave Gaza City.

Israel’s military Chief of Staff said, “We are going to bring down this regime, and nothing will stop us from accomplishing this mission.”

(More: On Sept. 18, 2025, it was reported that about 400,000 residents have left Gaza City in the last few weeks. Hamas is losing their human shield, and Israel believes this is increasing the pressure on Hamas.)

(Update: Israel’s invasion of Gaza City started late in the night on Sept. 15, 2025. Tanks are now moving into the heart of the city, and the fighting is intense. Israeli residents living close to the border with Gaza can hear loud explosions in Gaza City, the ground is shaking their houses, and some of their windows have cracked. Even though this is going on, Israel said 2-3,000 Hamas terrorists are holed up in Gaza City and Israel will need 2-3 months to root them out and completely take over the city.)

Two, concerning wars and rumors of wars and Israel’s strike on Hamas leaders in Doha, Qatar, on Sept. 11, 2025: it was reported that several Arab nations are furious, Pres. Trump told Netanyahu not to strike Qatar again, and Prime Min. Netanyahu demanded that Doha expel Hamas officials or bring them to justice, and he warned that if they don’t, “Israel will.”

On Sept. 12, 2025, William Koenig wrote:

  • Qatar’s duplicity is well-documented. They fund the Muslim Brotherhood, bankroll Al Jazeera—a media arm that consistently amplifies radical Islamic narratives—and pour billions into Islamist networks around the globe.
  • Over the past month, new revelations have underscored just how deep their reach extends into American universities, think tanks, and political circles, spreading radical Islamic teaching under the guise of education and diplomacy.

(More: On Sept. 9, 2012, US Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) sent a letter to the Dept. of Education that the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a nonprofit advocacy group long accused of having ties to terrorist organizations including Hamas, is seeking to infiltrate the city of Philadelphia’s public education system.)

(My opinion: The Trump administration needs to face the fact that Qatar and other Muslim nations are trying to establish a global Islamic caliphate and religion. Cotton believes CAIR is trying to poison the minds of U.S. children. In my opinion, it could be time to forbid our colleges, universities, professors, etc. from taking money from foreign nations. This seems harsh, but it may already be too late for the UK, France, and others to save their nations.)

(Update: On Sept. 13, 2025, U.S. Sec. of State Marco Rubio said, Pres. Trump was not happy with Israel’s attack on Qatar, but it will not change America’s relationship with Israel.)

(Update: On Sept. 15, 2025, U.S. Sec. of State Marco Rubio was in Jerusalem where he said, “Hamas needs to cease to exist as an armed element that can threaten the peace and security – peace and safety – and of the region. Rubio will go to Qatar next to discuss this.)

Three, concerning U.S. Sec. of State Marco Rubio’s trip to Jerusalem and who Jerusalem belongs to: while there on Sept. 15, 2025,

  • Rubio and Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu reopened the Pilgrimage Road in Jerusalem, an ancient stone road about 2,000 feet long that connected Jerusalem to the Temple Mount.
  • It passed the Pool of Siloam where pilgrims purified themselves in ritual baths on their way to the Temple Mount.
  • Jesus anointed the eyes of the blind man near the Pool of Siloam and told him to wash in the pool, and he would be healed (John chapter 9).
  • In the presence of Rubio, Netanyahu said, Jerusalem is forever our city, it will never be divided again, and there will be no Palestinian state.
  • Concerning the threat of some nations (UK, France, Canada, Australia, and many more) to recognize a Palestinian state with its capital in East Jerusalem later this month: Netanyahu said any unilateral action can be met with unilateral action. (He is threatening to respond by declaring Israeli sovereignty over part of Judea and Samaria.)

(My opinion: People can easily see how current events tie in with Bible prophecy, if they want to.)

Here is a link to an 11 min. video about the Pilgrimage Road that readers may want to watch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rr3x7SYo1uY

Four, concerning the Days of Noah, violence, lawlessness, and the persecution of Christians at the end of the age: on Sept. 12, 2025, William Koenig wrote,

  • The assassination of Charlie Kirk is not an isolated act of madness—it is part of a growing climate of hatred toward those who dare speak truth publicly. Christians who boldly stand for biblical truth will increasingly come under threat, whether through censorship, intimidation, or outright violence.
  • The chilling reality is this: we are only at the beginning.
  • As biblical truth continues to be equated with hate speech, more Christians will be targeted, both culturally and physically.
  • Jesus Himself warned us that this would be the case: “If the world hates you, know that it has hated me before it hated you” (John 15:18).
  • It is a spiritual battle.
  • The Bible tells us that we do not wrestle against flesh and blood but against principalities and powers (Ephesians 6:12).
  • What we are seeing in the streets of America, on our campuses, and in the rhetoric of the radical left is demonic reactionary warfare—a visceral opposition to the principles of God, family, order, and truth.

(My comment: I wish William Koenig was wrong, but I don’t think he is. The Apostle Paul wrote about the man of lawlessness, and he said the mystery of lawlessness is already at work (2 Thess. 2:37).

Five, concerning the ashes of a red heifer: on Sept. 12, 2025, Monte Judah said a credible source has told him that the red heifer that was sacrificed in July was a qualified red heifer, it was sacrificed by a qualified priest, they have the ashes, and the ashes have been divided up and are being kept at several different locations.

Judah added that he has been trying to verify this but hasn’t yet been able to.

(My comment: I have heard this before. And also, that unless some disagreements are worked out, the ashes cannot be used. Time will tell.)

Six, concerning the dividing of Israel and Jerusalem at the end of the age: on Sept. 12, 2025, the UN General Assembly overwhelmingly endorsed a French and Saudi-led declaration (called the New York Declaration) urging Palestinian statehood and advancing the two-state solution.

They want to replace the terrorist group Hamas with another terrorist group called the Palestinian Authority (PA).

Mahmoud Abbas (head of the PA) is very old and would probably be replaced by a terrorist leader who is just as bad as those who lead Hamas.

Sponsors of the New York Declaration are calling it a step toward peace, but it appears to be a major step toward the Tribulation Period.

Seven, concerning the controversy over Jerusalem at the end of the age with possible implications for the Battle of Gog of Magog: on Sept. 17, 2025, Turkey’s Pres. Erdogan said, “We, as Muslims, will not take a single step back from our rights over East Jerusalem.”

(My opinion: The effort to divide Jerusalem, make it the capital of a Palestinian state, and give the Temple Mount to the Palestinians under the guise of establishing peace and safety is a slap in God’s face, and He has warned the nations that He will not accept it. Jesus’ name is on Jerusalem. God’s covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and His reputation are at stake over this issue.)

Eight, concerning wars and rumors of wars and Iran: on Sept. 15, 2025, Israel’s Defense Min. said there will be more rounds of war with Iran.

Prophecy teachers know it is not over because the Battle of Gog and Magog hasn’t happened yet.

Nine, concerning wars and rumors of wars and hatred for Israel: on Sept. 15, 2025, there was an Emergency Arab-Islamic Summit in Doha, Qatar.

All the Psa. 83 nations and all the Gog and Magog nations were there.

They discussed forming a NATO-like army to attack Israel if Israel attacks just one of them.

Ten, concerning Israel becoming a great army at the end of the age: on Sept. 18, 2025, it was reported that Israel has become the first nation on earth to develop and deploy a high-power laser system to shoot down missiles, drones, rockets, mortars, and planes at a minimal cost.

Israel’s Defense Min. called it a game-changer.

Eleven, concerning wars and rumors of wars with implications for a possible Psa. 83 war: on Sept. 16, 2025, Egyptian Pres. al-Sisi ignored Israel’s peace treaty with Israel, and he referred to Israel as an enemy for the first time since he took office.

Twelve, concerning signs in the sun at the end of the age: on Sept. 16, 2025, according to research by two NASA scientists:

  • The sun has become more and more active over the last 16 years.
  • An uptick in solar activity could influence space weather, potentially leading to more solar storms, solar flares, and coronal mass ejections.

Thirteen, concerning Islam and wickedness: on Sept. 17, 2025, one of the Hamas officials that Israel targeted (but failed to get) in Qatar appeared in public and said:

  • We are not afraid of Trump’s threats to unleash hell upon us.
  • We do not take orders from him on how to treat enemy prisoners.
  • We treat them according to our own methods and according to our religion.

Hamas raped, beat, starved, tortured, and killed some of the hostages, and that was “according to our religion.”

Fourteen, concerning the decline of America at the end of the age: on Sept. 17, 2025, it was reported that the mayor of Dearborn, Michigan, is a Muslim, and the county has erected signs there that honor an Islamic terrorist sympathizer.

A longtime Christian resident of Dearborn attended the city council meeting last week to object to the signs.

The angry mayor told the Christian man, “Although you live here, you are not welcome here.”

The idea that Islam is a religion of peace is greatly misunderstood.

(More: On Sept. 16, 2025, RAIR Foundation USA posted an article titled, “They Say They’ve Come to Conquer – Are You Listening?”)

FYI: God does not send anyone to Hell (all of us are born with a sin nature and destined to go to Hell because we sin), but God has provided a way (Jesus) for everyone to go to Heaven (and He is the only way to get there; John 14:6).

Finally, are you Rapture Ready?

If you want to be rapture ready and go to heaven, you must be born again (John 3:3). God loves you, and if you have not done so, sincerely admit that you are a sinner; believe that Jesus is the virgin-born, sinless Son of God, who died for the sins of the world, was buried, and raised from the dead; ask Him to forgive your sins, cleanse you, come into your heart and be your Saviour; then tell someone that you have done this.

duck_daymond@yahoo.com

The post The Feast of Trumpets :: By Daymond Duck appeared first on Rapture Ready.

Source: The Feast of Trumpets :: By Daymond Duck

Wicked Hearts :: By Nathele Graham

For, lo, the wicked bend their bow, they make ready their arrow upon the string, that they may privily shoot at the upright in heart” (Psalm 11:2).

He was a good man, a man who loved God and served Him to the best of his abilities. His name was Stephen. He lived in Jerusalem when Christianity was beginning to grow. There always seems to be some sort of division within the Christian community, and so it was in the early days of Christianity.

And in those days, when the number of the disciples was multiplied, there arose a murmuring of the Grecians against the Hebrews because their widows were neglected in the daily ministration” (Acts 6:1).

At that time, there were people in need, and the members of the church were trying to care for those needs, in particular, widows. In order to better tend to all the needs of the people within the congregation, it was decided that men would be appointed to oversee the care of those in need. The Apostles knew it was important that they stay in prayer and seek God’s guidance, and others should tend to the needs of the congregation. Seven men were chosen who were honest, full of the Holy Ghost, and had wisdom. Stephen was one of them.

And the word of God increased; and the number of the disciples multiplied in Jerusalem greatly; and a great company of the priests were obedient to the faith” (Acts 6:7).

The simple act of doing God’s work within the congregation brought people to faith, and the congregation grew.

And Stephen, full of faith and power, did great wonders and miracles among the people” (Acts 6:8). 

I think I would have liked Stephen.

As happens too often, people will ruin a good thing. “Then there arose certain of the synagogue, which is called the synagogue of the Libertines, and Cyrenians, and Alexandrians, and of them of Cilicia and of Asia, disputing with Stephen” (Acts 6:9).

Some people just can’t deal with a man like Stephen who served the Lord and was very knowledgeable about his faith. These troublemakers were unable to silence Stephen because he spoke with the power of the Holy Spirit. These wicked people talked others into saying lies against Stephen.

Then they suborned men, which said, We have heard him speak blasphemous words against Moses, and against God” (Acts 6:11).

They resorted to lies in order to silence him. They stirred up community leaders who arrested Stephen and brought him before the council. False witnesses said that he spoke blasphemous words against the Jewish ways.

For we have heard him say, that this Jesus of Nazareth shall destroy this place, and shall change the customs which Moses delivered us” (Acts 6:14).

Stephen didn’t let these false accusations change the way he represented Christ. Jesus fulfilled the Law and the Prophets (which fulfilled prophecy) but didn’t destroy it.

Whenever we take a stand for Christ, we run the risk of being hated for exposing sin in the hearts of people. Jesus said this would happen. “If the world hate you, ye know that it hated me before it hated you. If ye were of the world, the world would love his own: but because ye are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you” (John 15:18-19). 

The world hates because the world doesn’t know Jesus. Christians need to step away from worldly ways and love others in the way Jesus loved. It isn’t love if we ignore the sin that’s sending the unsaved person to eternity in Hell. We must share the Gospel and help the lost to come to a saving faith in Jesus. That’s exactly what Stephen did. He explained Jewish history to the Jewish leaders who questioned him. Stephen spoke truth, but the wicked hearts of those listening couldn’t accept the truth.

Ever since the call of Abraham, the Jewish people have had troubles and persecution because of their rebellion against God. It was only when they trusted God that they found blessings. They had seen God’s miracles when He took them from slavery in Egypt and led them to the Promised Land, but they allowed their hearts to turn away from God, who was leading them to His promises; they turned to worshipping demonic idols.

Stephen pointed out that the Jewish people had a history of first rejecting God’s promise and having troubles, then later accepting it and finding blessings. Stephen’s words touched a sore spot in the hearts of the wicked.

When they heard these things, they were cut to the heart and they gnashed on him with their teeth” (Acts 7:54).

These Jewish leaders weren’t any different than sinners today. When their sin was pointed out to them, they became angry and set their hearts to kill the messenger in order to stop the message.

Then they cried out with a loud voice, and stopped their ears, and ran upon him with one accord, And cast him out of the city, and stoned him: and the witnesses laid down their clothes at a young man’s feet, whose name was Saul” (Acts 7:57-58).

The wicked can plug their ears and not listen to God’s truth, but their ignorance will never stop the truth from being the truth. Sin is sin even when you plug your ears and call evil good. Wicked hearts will always reject God’s truth.

God’s truth will never be stopped. Wicked people with evil in their hearts and souls have tried for centuries to stop the Gospel from being preached. Stephen was the first person to be martyred for his faith in Jesus. He spoke God’s truth in love; boldly, with no fear. Even unto death, the Holy Spirit was with him, and as the rocks were hurled at him, taking his life, Stephen stepped into eternal life and found peace with the Lord whom he served.

A young man who was there and heard Stephen’s words was Saul. When you share the Gospel and it’s rejected, don’t think that seeds haven’t been planted. Saul had much hate in his heart and became a vicious persecutor of Christians. It was Saul who was headed to Damascus to arrest Christians when he met Jesus, and his life was changed. Saul surrendered his life to Christ, became known as Paul, and spread the Gospel and wrote many of the letters that are contained in our Bible. Because of him, many people are still coming to salvation.

Paul had witnessed the murder of Stephen, but even his hatred didn’t stop God from changing his wicked heart. In one of those letters he wrote, “If it be possible, as much as lieth in you, live peaceable with all men. Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves, but rather give place unto wrath: for it is written, Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord….Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good” (Romans 12:18-19, & 21).

That’s not always easy to do, but should always be our goal. We cannot show God’s love while we harbor hate in our hearts.

Sugar is sweet, water is wet, God is love. It’s what He is. He is also just, and justice requires punishment for wrongdoings. God has told us what His standard of perfection is, and He has told us what the punishment for falling short of His perfection is.

For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord” (Romans 6:23).

People have a sin nature and find it impossible not to sin, but uncontrolled sin is on a rampage. There is much evil in this world; from Muslim terrorists attacking citizens of Israel to the murdering of babies in the womb, evil is everywhere. Satan is behind every murder since the beginning of time. He feeds on human hatred and fear. It’s Satan and his demons who inspire weak-minded people to kill and destroy.

Once again, we have seen a person pull the trigger of a gun and kill another human being. It wasn’t the gun that killed but a demon-possessed human who made the decision to pull the trigger. Charlie Kirk was a man to be admired. He stood strong and true for Jesus. He used words to debate with people, but wicked hearts prefer violence and bloodshed. Mr. Kirk is being called a martyr, and I agree. He was murdered while serving Jesus.

Too often, we see this type of craziness happen in lands far away, but when it happens close to home, it’s shocking. Brothers and sisters, this was an evil act, but how can it happen in America? Because all manner of sin and wickedness are tolerated, but the God of love and salvation is rejected. Another question I have is, how can we tolerate any cold-blooded murder? A baby murdered in the womb is of equal horror to a man shot while speaking God’s truth, but where is the outrage?

Wicked hearts must be changed. Charlie Kirk’s murder is making news headlines around the world, and I pray that what was meant for evil will be used for good, but the demonic cry of joy from liberals turns my stomach. Brothers and sisters, let me encourage you to mourn the loss of Charlie Kirk and feel the shock of what happened, but remember who he served. He served Jesus Christ who is the one we all need to praise and worship.

When Mr. Kirk was murdered, he stepped into eternal life with Jesus. He can truly rest in peace. Don’t forget that there is a young man who is about to stand trial, something Mr. Kirk wasn’t given, and he is facing the death penalty. For him, and all who plotted with him, are facing eternity in the Lake of Fire. Their sin will send them there. Find it in your heart to pray for the salvation of those wicked people who were, and are, very lost.

The Apostle Paul was of the same wickedness, but God’s grace and mercy touched him and changed him. This same grace and mercy is offered to all who accept it.

Has God turned away from blessing the United States of America? If He has, I can understand why. Instead of respecting God’s truth, this nation has gone the way of Sodom and Gomorrah. God made a man and a woman, and that is where marriage began. Any sexual activity other than within a God-ordained marriage is sin.

But the men of Sodom were wicked and sinners before the LORD exceedingly” (Genesis 13:13).

These men lusted after each other rather than desiring marriage that pleased God. Their sin had become so wicked that God had to send His judgment on them. We know about AIDS, and I’m sure Sodom was full of disease. Abraham’s nephew, Lot, had chosen to live in Sodom. It seems as if he was able to keep from being a part of the wickedness there, and before the judgment that God was about to send could happen, Lot and his family had to be removed from that wicked place.

It will be the same for Christians. God’s judgment is coming. The same spirit of wickedness that brought destruction to Sodom and Gomorrah is destroying America. God will remove Christians prior to His judgment. If you, like Lot, have been living amongst the wickedness, it’s time to get away from it. Turn to Jesus and surrender to Him.

How do you help to change wicked hearts? Start with your own. Draw nearer to Jesus and follow Him closer. Then go to your local school and be sure your child isn’t being brainwashed or taught ungodly things. Better yet, homeschool your children if at all possible. Study the first chapter of Paul’s letter to the Romans and see what happens when evolution is credited with creation rather than God. We are in the end times, and the Rapture is drawing very near.

Now the Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils; Speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared with a hot iron” (1 Timothy 4:1-2).

Also, look to the person in the pulpit. Is he speaking God’s truth, or is he telling you to be tolerant of the wickedness in the world. Remember, the people in this world who embrace the wickedness are not the enemy. The enemy is the demonic spirits that are possessing people. These evil spirits are able to possess or oppress us when we give them power. How do we do that? Mind-altering drugs are a huge problem. This became quite a big problem during the hippy days of LSD and other illegal drugs.

Today, I know many people who are given prescriptions for drugs to calm their nerves. Many children who need discipline are given drugs instead.

Another problem is that we “tolerate” people who choose a sinful lifestyle. We would rather allow neighbors and family to go to Hell rather than share the Gospel.

But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts: and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear (1 Peter 3:15).

Charlie Kirk was murdered because he chose to share God’s love and God’s truth. He had Biblical answers for people with wicked hearts. He stepped into a glorious eternity, and we can be comforted by that fact. We must take Scripture seriously. Study Ephesians chapter 6, know who or what the enemy is, put on the full armor of God, and fight the good fight for God’s truth.

The Rapture is coming soon. Some people say it will happen in September, others say October. The truth is that only God knows when it will happen. Signs are in place, and the anticipation is high. Until we are taken Home, do your part to change wicked hearts.

God bless you all

Nathele Graham

twotug@embarqmail.com

Recommended prophecy sites:

www.raptureready.com
www.prophecyupdate.com
www.raptureforums.com

All original scripture is “theopneustos,” God-breathed.

If you would like to be on my mailing list to receive the commentaries, just drop me an email and let me know.

“Pray for the peace of Jerusalem: they shall prosper that love thee” (Psalm 122:6).

 

The post Wicked Hearts :: By Nathele Graham appeared first on Rapture Ready.

Source: Wicked Hearts :: By Nathele Graham

Following Visions and Dreams, Trusting God’s Word | Servants of Grace

By Dave Jenkins

Many Christians today are surrounded by stories of visions, dreams, and supernatural experiences. Some claim God spoke to them in the night, others build entire ministries on “prophetic dreams.” In a culture fascinated with the extraordinary, the real issue is discernment, how should believers respond to extra biblical claims of revelation while honoring the sufficiency of Scripture.

What Scripture Teaches About Dreams and Visions

In the Old Testament and New Testament, God at times communicated through dreams and visions. Joseph received dreams that foretold God’s plan (Genesis 37), Daniel was given visions of future events (Daniel 7), Joseph the husband of Mary was warned in a dream (Matthew 1–2), and Peter received a vision that clarified God’s plan for the nations (Acts 10). These moments were rare, purposeful, and tied to God’s redemptive work in history.

“Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets, but in these last days He has spoken to us by His Son.” (Hebrews 1:1–2)

God has now spoken finally and sufficiently in His Son, and that revelation is preserved for us in the written Word. The Bible is not one voice among many, it is the standard by which all claims must be tested.

The Danger of Following Extra Biblical Revelation

When dreams and visions are elevated alongside or above Scripture, the sufficiency and authority of God’s Word are undermined. Sincere people can be misled, churches can be divided, and the gospel can be confused. Paul warned that even if an angel preached a different gospel, it must be rejected (Galatians 1:8). The final court of appeal is the written Word of God, not feelings, impressions, or private revelations.

The Sufficiency of God’s Word for Life and Godliness

God has given everything necessary for life and godliness through the knowledge of Him as revealed in Scripture (2 Peter 1:3). The Word of God is breathed out by God, it instructs, reproves, corrects, and trains, so that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work (2 Timothy 3:16–17). Christians can rest in the clarity and completeness of the Bible. God may providentially guide, yet He will not contradict what He has revealed in Scripture.

Practicing Biblical Discernment

  • Test everything by Scripture, receive what aligns, reject what contradicts (1 Thessalonians 5:21).
  • Prioritize the ordinary means of grace, the Word, prayer, and the local church, where God has promised to work.
  • Pursue maturity, grow in doctrine and discernment so you are not carried about by every wind of teaching (Ephesians 4:14–15).

Conclusion

Dreams and visions in Scripture were real, yet never intended to replace or rival God’s written Word. Today believers possess something more sure, the completed canon of Scripture. True discernment is found not in chasing experiences, but in holding fast to the Bible, trusting that God’s Word is clear, sufficient, and authoritative for all of life.

For more from Contending for the Word Q&A please visit us at Servants of Grace or at our YouTube.

Source: Following Visions and Dreams, Trusting God’s Word

Classical Apologetics and Contemporary Conversion Accounts | The Worldview Bulletin Newsletter

Classical apologetics is a two-step approach to apologetics that appeals to a variety of sources to establish the plausibility of God’s existence and then defends Christian doctrines based on historical and other evidences. It proceeds on the fundamental assumption that common grace is granted to all image-bearers by the Holy Spirit, enabling them to thoughtfully consider matters related to God and Christianity. The classical apologist believes human beings have shared understandings of some aspects of reality that allow us to find islands of common ground upon which to initiate such conversations. Otherwise, evangelistic apologetics would be impossible.

. . . Ideally, the classical apologetics strategy will be integrative and holistic, engaging the different aspects of the human person: the intellect, imagination, conscience, aesthetic sensibilities, and innate existential longings. Often, as Blaise Pascal understood, we need first to make Christianity desirable to nonbelievers by helping them see its unrivaled goodness and beauty before attempting to show that it is indeed true. In common parlance, we engage the heart to open the mind. Perhaps an appropriate term for this perspective is holistic classical apologetics . . .

Classical Apologetics and Contemporary Conversion Accounts

In an essay titled “Is Theism Important?,” C. S. Lewis remarks, “Nearly everyone I know who has embraced Christianity in adult life has been influenced by what seemed to him to be at least probable arguments for Theism.” Still today, testimonials indicate that conversions often proceed through an initial phase of theism and, like Lewis’s, involve a variety of experiential and intellectual stepping-stones. The enormous value of conversion stories is that they illustrate the holistic, cumulative, and gradual nature of many journeys to faith, which is instructive for the Christian apologist. The two stories summarized below are paradigmatic in this respect.

Sy Garte is a biochemist, formerly of the National Institutes of Health, with more than two hundred scientific publications to his credit. He was raised by stridently atheist parents who were devoted to the anti-theist political philosophy of Marxism. As Garte explains, “My parents . . . laughed at the idea of God. They were sure that there was no God; there could be nothing like God. . . . My parents’ atheism was indeed a deeply felt religious belief, and it was successfully transmitted to and accepted by me at a very young age.” As a young adult, Garte had the vague sense that there were logical inconsistencies between materialism and humanist ideals, but he remained content with social evolutionary explanations. While pursuing his scientific education and then during the early decades of his career, he began asking crucial questions about the world, such as whether all of reality is fully comprehensible through reason, how to ground human significance, and how the universe, the first life, and consciousness could have arisen through blind processes.

Deep down, Garte experienced the quintessential human longings for meaning and higher purpose, and he sought satisfaction in his professional endeavors. Yet, as his scientific knowledge advanced, his philosophical questions multiplied. The first phenomenon he encountered that he considered a positive reason to believe in God was cosmic fine-tuning—the mathematical constants that must fall within extraordinarily narrow ranges in order for life or even chemistry itself to exist. Ultimately, it was the scientific problems presented by the origin of the universe, of life, and of consciousness that opened his mind to the real possibility of God’s existence. Garte subsequently moved from atheism to agnosticism.

A church service Garte attended with a friend dispelled some key misconceptions he had always harbored about religion and the Christian message. The next lengthy phase of Garte’s journey included intense dreams with themes of surrender and trust as the gateway to true security and joy. After attending church a few more times over several years, he came to understand the gospel message, but he was not yet willing to receive it. Finally, in 2006, as Garte drove alone along a Pennsylvania turnpike listening to the radio, a rhetorically talented preacher inspired him to imagine how he himself would present his hypothetical conversion story to an audience. During this mental exercise, he was emotionally overwhelmed by the thought of God’s love for him. He recognizes now that this was the presence of the Holy Spirit and that many stepping-stones had prepared his mind and heart for that glorious moment. These stepping-stones included encounters with joy-inducing beauty, his recognition of the philosophical incoherence of materialist humanism and the theistic implications of scientific phenomena, the message of Christ’s love and forgiveness, spiritually significant dreams, and finally this direct encounter with the Holy Spirit. Garte’s experience was gradual, cumulative, and holistic.

Crime novelist and screenwriter Andrew Klavan was raised in a secular Jewish home that included some traditional ceremonial aspects of Judaism. Yet his home was entirely devoid of religious devotion. His father was essentially agnostic. “My mother,” he writes, “was, to the day she died, as certain an atheist as I have ever met.” By the age of thirteen, Klavan had developed both a repulsion toward religion and a lifelong love of story. He sought to develop his own philosophy of life by experimenting with those he read about in what he calls the “tough guy” novels—books that exhibited existentialism, nihilism, and detachment—but he was unsettled by their incoherence and insufficiencies. “Just as I wanted my daydreams to make sense as stories,” he says, “I wanted my personal philosophy to make sense too.”

The first turning point for Klavan was the realization that themes and symbols of certain high ideals pervaded the stories he loved most and that these ideals were rooted in Western Christianity. He recalls that by his mid-teens, he had already begun “to understand that at the heart of all Western mythology, all Western civilization, all Western writing, all Western thought, and every Western ideal, there stood a single book, the Bible, and a single man, Jesus of Nazareth.” He read the Bible, which, aside from the supernatural parts, he thought made sense as a metaphor. “As I struggled to educate myself and find my voice as a writer, the Bible story came to seem to me the story behind every story, especially the stories of the West. . . . It was, as the poet William Blake said, ‘The Great Code of Art.’”

. . . Near the end of a long and excruciating season of psychosis and suicidal depression during which he had an intensely spiritual experience at the birth of his first child, Klavan entered a period of existential exploration. He searched for enlightenment in various ways. He sat in contemplative silence and experimental prayer in empty churches, he immersed himself in the meditative practices of Zen Buddhism, he became attracted to Freudian philosophy (thanks to his therapist), and then attempted to shoehorn his human experiences into an atheist framework. The philosophical reasoning he found in the likes of Nietzsche, Kafka, and Freud could not, however, make sense of the human condition or of Klavan’s personal experiences of the world.

What Klavan calls “the only truly nonlogical leap of faith I ever made” was his decisive assent to objective morality. This moved him back to agnosticism. After another decade, he became mentally healthy and gained success as a writer, all while being further shaped by both the reading and writing of stories. That’s when he spontaneously prayed a simple prayer of gratitude before falling asleep one night: “Thank you, God.” From that moment on, he cultivated a diligent prayer life: “I went on praying. I prayed every day. Every day, the joy of my joy grew more present to me. And God became more present to me as well.” This period of devoted theism went on for five years, culminating in an encounter with the Holy Spirit during a solitary scenic drive. Upon asking God what he should do next, the response was clear and startling: “Now, you should be baptized.” This led Klavan to consider the historicity of the Gospel accounts and then to assent to the truth of the resurrection while reading the Gospel According to Mark. Several months later, he was baptized in New York City.

In both Garte’s and Klavan’s conversion stories, we see a grand variety of factors that led them, over long spans of time, to the truth of theism and then to the truth of Christianity. We must consider how such observations should inform our philosophy of apologetics and encourage enrichment of the tool chest at our disposal. Of course, every nonbeliever we encounter is at a unique place in their journey, and thoughtful triage is necessary. Blessed is the one who is prepared and willing to meet a soul where they are and to participate in the Spirit’s work.

— Dr. Melissa Cain Travis is assistant professor of apologetics at Houston Christian University. She is also a Fellow at the Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture and serves on the Executive Committee of the Evangelical Philosophical Society. She is the co-founder and president of the Society for Women of Letters, a ministry that mentors Christian women pursuing intellectual formation. She is a regular contributor to Christian Research Journal and lectures internationally.

Excerpted from Understanding Christian Apologetics: Five Methods for Defending the Faith, edited by Timothy Paul Jones (Hendrickson, 2025). Used by permission.

God has called Christians to be prepared to defend their hope in Christ, but what’s the best method for making this defense? In this book, five expert apologists set out together to determine which approach to apologetics is the most faithful to Scripture and the most useful in a secular age.

Understanding Apologetics presents in counterpoint form five popular approaches to the defense of the Christian faith that have developed throughout history―from the early days of Christianity through to our practices today. Apologetics philosophies explored here include:

  • Cultural Apologetics
  • Presuppositional Apologetics
  • Evidential Apologetics
  • Classical Apologetics
  • Ecclesial Apologetics.

Understanding Christian Apologetics is an accessible yet challenging exploration of five key approaches to defending the faith. This survey of apologetic methods—including the often overlooked cultural and ecclesial approaches—stands out as a model of charitable dialogue. The authors exemplify the kind of respectful engagement so needed in the church today. A fantastic resource for Christians beginning their study of apologetics!”

— Mikel Del Rosario, professor of Bible and theology, Moody Bible Institute

Understanding Christian Apologetics offers a nuanced and insightful exploration of the varied approaches Christians employ to articulate and defend their faith. Instead of positioning apologetic methods as competing ideologies, the authors skillfully illuminate their unique strengths, fostering a thoughtful and integrative perspective. What particularly resonated with me was the book’s consistent emphasis on clarity and charitable engagement. It masterfully models an apologetic rooted in humility, love, and a deep sensitivity to the listener, a crucial element often overlooked.”

 Mary Jo Sharp, founder of Confident Christianity Apologetics Ministry and author of Why I Still Believe: A Former Atheist’s Reckoning with the Bad Reputation Christians Give a Good God

Find Understanding Christian Apologetics at HendricksonAmazonBarnes & NobleWalmartChristianbook.com, and Books-A-Million.

 

Source: Classical Apologetics and Contemporary Conversion Accounts

Misusing God’s Gifts

Don’t take this kindness of God, and use it for your own flattery.

The Lord Jesus ordained this remembrance supper for us, and then supplies us with a world in which bread and wine are in abundance. But if we come to this table in presumption, pride, or unbelief, how great is our condemnation?

 

Many a parent has been mortified to discover a mischievous toddler misusing some toy or or household tool. Dad’s golf clubs make a great axe to fell the oak tree. Mom’s make-up is wonderful finger paint for the bathroom tiles. Perhaps the worst example of this is when you get your child a gift, and then they use it as a weapon against their annoying little brother.

A gift of kindness is horrific when misused for evil. This is precisely the sort of misuse of God’s gifts that the prophets frequently rebuked. Ezekiel put it this way, “Thou hast set mine oil and mine incense before [your idols]. My meat also which I gave thee, fine flour, and oil, and honey, wherewith I fed thee, thou hast even set it before them for a sweet savour (Eze 16:18-19).” God kindly gave Israel the various sacrifices and ordinances.

Read More

3 Things We Do When We Take Communion

Obeying, remembering, and proclaiming.

Why do we eat this meal? Well, the most basic reason is because Jesus told us to do it.

 

It wasn’t just another dinner, and the disciples knew it. This was Passover week, the yearly celebration in which the Jewish people remembered how God delivered their ancestors from bondage to the Egyptians. And this meal, with its meticulous structure in which the story of the Exodus is retold and reflected on, was the climax. It’s no wonder, then, that Jesus’ followers asked Him:

“Where do you want us to make preparations for you to eat the Passover?” (Matt. 26:17).

They knew it would be special because it was always special. They didn’t know, however, that Jesus would change the way they – and we – understand this meal from that point forward. Since then, followers of Jesus have been regularly eating this meal. As Paul would later write in 1 Corinthians:

For I received from the Lord what I also passed on to you: On the night when he was betrayed, the Lord Jesus took bread, and when he had given thanks, broke it, and said, “This is my body, which is for you. Do this in remembrance of me.”

In the same way also he took the cup, after supper, and said, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me.” For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes (1 Cor. 11:23-26).

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In the Spirit or in the Flesh? | From the MLJ Archive on Oneplace.com

Romans 7:6 — What does it mean to be in the Spirit? In this sermon on Romans 7:6 titled “In the Spirit or in the Flesh?” Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones shares that it means the Christian lives in a totally new way than before. He says that to be in the Spirit is to live in Christ and renewed daily in His power. He contrasts the new life with the old life of sin and bondage under the law. The law was good, but because of human sin and depravity, it brought only condemnation. Jesus is better than the law. Jesus died for His people and makes them new creatures in Christ if they believe in His gospel. Jesus brings commandments that are not burdensome, but rather they are freeing. The glory of this new life is in living in the Holy Spirit as children of God. Christians are no longer slaves to sin and immorality. The most important question then is how does one live this life? The answer is by believing in the gospel of Christ, and in His death, burial, and resurrection as the only means of salvation and peace with God. This message is the only way of true peace and joy with God.

Source: In the Spirit or in the Flesh?

September 21 – Preaching peace | Reformed Perspective

“And he came and preached peace to you who were far off and peace to those who were near.” – Ephesians 2:17 

Scripture reading: Romans 10: 1-21

We have a 30 acre lake behind our house. This past winter my family watched as a bald eagle killed a Canadian goose on the ice. All the other geese watched from a distance. It was quite a bloody spectacle to behold. As I write this now, I am watching a bald eagle on that same small lake. As he flies, the geese start to honk. The eagle is not bringing any peace to the goose population. But it is peace that you should be looking forward to hearing today, the Lord’s Day. After all, what gospel does a minister have to bring but the gospel of peace. It was the message from the angels to the shepherds on Christmas evening, and it is the message that is to be preached to those who are far and near.

The Ephesians were in the category of “far off.” But through the preaching of the gospel of peace, they had been brought near. Maybe today you feel far off. Maybe you wonder where you stand before the Lord, and what message He might have for you. Use this day to draw near, not only to worship, but to hear and believe in faith, all that Christ has done for you. We are granted peace.

Suggestions for prayer

Ask God to use the preaching of the Word to strengthen your faith today. Pray for your pastor that he might faithfully preach the gospel of peace.

Rev. Steve Swets graduated from Mid-America Reformed Seminary in 2007. He is presently serving at Redeemer United Reformed Church in St. John, IN. He previously served United Reformed Churches in Abbotsford, B.C. and Hamilton, ON. In this third charge, Rev. Swets returned to his hometown of St. John, IN. Get this devotional delivered directly to your phone each day via our RP App. This devotional is made available by the Nearer To God Devotional team, who also make available in print, for purchase, at NTGDevotional.com.

Source: September 21 – Preaching peace

Video: Bill & Gloria Gaither – What a Day That Will Be / How Beautiful Heaven Must Be [Live] ft. David Ring

Who was St Matthew and what do we know about him?

21 September is St Matthew’s Day. But who was St Matthew and what do we know about him? This is the story …

Source: Who was St Matthew and what do we know about him?

Inspiring Quotes from John Stott – Part IV | Bible Apologetics – A DAILY DEVOTIONAL

“Christian giving is to be marked by self-sacrifice and self-forgetfulness, not by self-congratulation.”1

“The authority by which the Christian leader leads is not power but love, not force but example, not coercion but reasoned persuasion. Leaders have power, but power is safe only in the hands of those who humble themselves to serve.”

“We should not ask, ‘What is wrong with the world?’ for that diagnosis has already been given. Rather, we should ask, ‘What has happened to the salt and light?’”

“We must allow the Word of God to confront us, to disturb our security, to undermine our complacency and to overthrow our patterns of thought and behavior.”

“Knowledge is indispensable to Christian life and service. If we do not use the mind that God has given us, we condemn ourselves to spiritual superficiality and cut ourselves off from many of the riches of God’s grace.”

“A person’s life is his most precious possession. Consequently, to rob him of it is the greatest sin we can commit against him, while to give one’s own life on his behalf is the greatest possible expression of love for him. This, then, is the ultimate contrast: Cain’s hatred issued in murder, Christ’s love (issued) in self-sacrifice.”

“Faith is a reasoning trust, a trust which reckons thoughtfully and confidently upon the trustworthiness of God.”

“The chief occupational hazard of leadership is pride.”

“To encounter Christ is to touch reality and experience transcendence. He gives us a sense of self-worth or personal significance, because He assures us of God’s love for us. He sets us free from guilt because He died for us and from paralyzing fear because He reigns. He gives meaning to marriage and home, work and leisure, personhood and citizenship.”

“To evangelize is to spread the good news that Jesus Christ died for our sins and was raised from the dead according to the Scriptures, and that as the reigning Lord he now offers the forgiveness of sins and the liberating gift of the Spirit to all who repent and believe.”

“The Gospel is good news of mercy to the undeserving. The symbol of the religion of Jesus is the cross, not the scales.”

“We must be global Christians with a global vision because our God is a global God.”

“God intends us to penetrate the world. Christian salt has no business to remain snugly in elegant little ecclesiastical salt cellars; our place is to be rubbed into the secular community, as salt is rubbed into meat, to stop it going bad. And when society does go bad, we Christians tend to throw up our hands in pious horror and reproach the non-Christian world; but should we not rather reproach ourselves? One can hardly blame unsalted meat for going bad. It cannot do anything else. The real question to ask is: Where is the salt?”

“We are not, therefore, to regard the cross as defeat and the resurrection as victory. Rather, the cross was the victory won, and the resurrection the victory endorsed, proclaimed and demonstrated.”

“The radical biblical perspective is to see death not as the termination of life but as the gateway to life.”

“Christian liberty is freedom not to indulge the flesh but to control the flesh, freedom not to exploit our neighbor but to serve our neighbor, freedom not to disregard the law but to fulfill the law.”

“The power to save lies in the one who is gazed upon, not the one who does the looking.”

“Grace is God loving, God stooping, God coming to the rescue, God giving himself generously in and through Jesus Christ.”

“When the Christian loses himself, he finds himself, he discovers his true identity.”

“The Spirit of God leads the people of God to submit to the Word of God.”

“Christianity is in its very essence a resurrection religion. The concept of resurrection lies at its heart. If you remove it, Christianity is destroyed.”


1 All of these quotes are from the websites below:

53 John Stott Quotes | ChristianQuotes.info

John R.W. Stott Quotes (Author of The Cross of Christ)

https://libquotes.com/john-stott

The post Inspiring Quotes from John Stott – Part IV appeared first on Bible Apologetics – A DAILY DEVOTIONAL.

Source: Inspiring Quotes from John Stott – Part IV