Revenge

📌Revenge

2 Timothy 4:14 (NKJV):

“Alexander the coppersmith did me much harm. May the Lord repay him according to his works.”

Paul is writing his final letter to Timothy, knowing his earthly life and ministry are nearly over (2 Tim 4:6–8). In this last chapter, he warns Timothy about people who opposed him and reminds him of those who supported him. One of the opponents he names directly is Alexander the coppersmith.

This is significant because Paul didn’t always name names—but when he did, it was usually to protect the church. Just as he mentioned Hymenaeus and Philetus earlier (2 Tim 2:17), here he calls out Alexander so Timothy and others could be cautious.

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Keep Your Thoughts Positive

I once knew a doctor who claimed to be an atheist. I suffered much because of him; for a long time he was a great enemy to my ministry, challenging my faith, attacking my words and beliefs.

Then one day that doctor suffered a stroke and became paralyzed. As a result of his paralysis, he was slowly dying. The doctor then came to my church, asking that I pray for his healing.

Many people brag about their atheistic views; yet when these same people experience a pitch-dark night, and encounter the storm tossed waves, their atheism becomes very weak.

So this doctor came to church, and I prayed for him. He received the prayer of faith, and he stood up and walked from his wheelchair, his steps strong. All the people clapped their hands and shouted, praising God.

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Unpleasant Coworkers

📌Hell’s Counsel vs. Heaven’s Whisper

🔹Situation:

A Christian struggles at work. A co-worker makes them cringe inside, yet they still smile and treat the person kindly. They wonder if that makes them a hypocrite.

▪️Hell’s Counsel:

Confidential memorandum from the Pit:

Convince her that her smile is false, that her kindness is a mask. Whisper, “You’re a hypocrite. You don’t really love them.”

If she believes this, she will either stop showing kindness altogether, or drown in self-condemnation. Both suit our purposes.

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What to do With Condenscending People

📌What to do with Condenscending People

1. Guard Your Spirit

Don’t let their tone or attitude get inside you. Proverbs 4:23 says, “Keep your heart with all diligence, for out of it spring the issues of life.” Their words may sting, but you don’t have to agree with them or let them define you.

2. Choose Humility, Not Inferiority

Sometimes condescending people want a reaction. Jesus said, “Learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart” (Matt. 11:29). Humility isn’t weakness—it’s strength under control. You can choose to respond from a higher place without letting them put you down.

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The Power of Asking Questions

📌The Power of Asking Questions

You know, I’ve been thinking about why it is that when someone asks a question, people sometimes treat them like they’re dumb. I’ve come to realize it’s not really about the one asking. It’s about the insecurities and pride in the ones answering.

This isn’t new. It’s been happening for centuries. Job’s friends mocked him. The Pharisees scoffed at the disciples. Paul was ridiculed in Athens. People have always confused asking questions with being weak. And honestly, it will keep happening until Jesus comes back.

Since we can’t save the whole world from this mindset, the best thing we can do is walk in wisdom. The Bible gives us anchors for that:
• Proverbs says not to waste words on a fool because they’ll only despise it. So sometimes wisdom is knowing when not to ask.
• Jesus said we must be childlike in spirit. Asking questions keeps us humble and childlike … and God loves that posture.
• Proverbs also reminds us that wise people love correction. If someone mocks your question, it probably shows they’re not the audience for your wisdom.
• And Proverbs 26 says sometimes you answer a fool plainly, sometimes you don’t … it takes discernment.

🔹So the key is wisdom. Asking the right question at the right time to the right person is really a form of spiritual warfare. It protects your dignity and keeps your growth moving forward even in a mocking world.

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God Never Forgets the Faithful

🔹God Never Forgets the Faithful (Part One)
Shared by Kenneth E Hagin

I didn’t know Sister Marlene personally, but in that vision the Lord opened a window into her life. She wasn’t some spiritual novice or occasional churchgoer. No, this was a woman who had walked with God for decades. She was the kind who arrived early and left late. She taught Sunday school for thirty-one years, helping little ones memorize scripture. She cooked meals for funerals, cleaned up after potlucks, prayed through storms, and sat beside hospital beds comforting others.

But now, she was the one in the bed.

And here’s what the Spirit of God made so clear to me: faithfulness doesn’t exempt you from battles. In fact, sometimes the most faithful people face the fiercest fires. But here’s the truth I want you to hold on to—God never forgets the faithful. Say that with me: God never forgets the faithful.

Still, over time, Sister Marlene had grown weary. She still believed in her heart, but somewhere along the way she had stopped declaring it with her mouth. And that’s where the problem lay.

You see, you can believe something so long that it fades into the background of your soul. It becomes quiet, assumed, unspoken. But silent faith doesn’t move mountains. Silent faith doesn’t stir the heavens. Silent faith doesn’t commission angels.

I saw her lying in that bed—frail hands, dry lips—murmuring, “Jesus, I trust You. Jesus, I trust You.” That’s tender, that’s sincere, but it’s only half the equation. Trusting is good, but trusting without declaring leaves heaven waiting.

Then the Spirit said to me, She knows the Word. She has taught the Word. But now she must speak the Word.

Suddenly, the Lord opened her memories before me. I saw her years earlier in a little Sunday school room. A big Bible nearly larger than her hand. Flannelgraph on the wall. Five or six children sat cross-legged in front of her as she taught them Psalm 91:

“He shall give His angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways.”

“Say it with me, children,” she said. And they repeated it over and over. Then she told them, “When you’re scared, when you’re hurt, when you feel alone—say this verse. Because when you speak God’s Word, angels move.”

I saw the joy on her face, the authority in her voice, the power in her teaching. She knew the truth. She lived the truth. But in her moment of weakness, that same truth needed to rise again—not just as memory, but as confession.

And the Lord spoke to my heart that night: You never outgrow the Word. You never graduate from confession. You never age out of the authority of scripture.

Sister Marlene wasn’t being punished. She wasn’t under some cruel test. She was simply being reminded that life and death are still in the power of the tongue.

The breakthrough wasn’t waiting on another doctor’s report. It wasn’t in a new medicine. It wasn’t in another visitor. The breakthrough was already at her bedside—waiting for her to do what she had once taught those children to do. Waiting for her to speak just one verse.

And my spirit stirred with urgency. I wanted to shake her, to shout, “Say it! Speak it! You know it!” But I couldn’t. I was in the spirit. I couldn’t touch her or force her.

Then I heard the Lord whisper, Speak to her spirit. Remind her. And so I did.

All the while, the angel still stood by—unmoved. His presence was fierce yet patient. Wings folded, gaze fixed, strength like a pillar of heaven. With one movement, I knew he could have driven that sickness out of the room. But he didn’t. He wouldn’t.

And I asked the Lord, “Why won’t he act?”

The Lord said, He has the power to act, but not the permission.

Because heaven isn’t moved by need alone. Heaven is moved by faith-filled words.

🔹God Never Forgets the Faithful (Part Two)

Oh, listen to me now—what I saw that night changed my theology. It reshaped my understanding of spiritual law. The angel by Sister Marlene’s bed wasn’t powerless; he was bound by divine protocol. Heaven had already spoken the Word, but until that Word was echoed on earth by a believer, the angel could not act.

That’s why Jesus said in Matthew 18:18: “Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.”

Child of God, the authority isn’t in the angel. The authority is in the covenant. And that covenant is activated through your confession.

The angel wasn’t ignoring Marlene. He wasn’t indifferent. He wasn’t incapable. He was simply waiting—for alignment. For a covenant word to be spoken from earth that matched heaven’s decree. Angels are not free agents. They don’t freelance. They don’t respond to tears or intentions. They respond to the Word of God when it’s given voice by faith.

I looked again—his sword still sheathed, his eyes fixed, his presence fierce yet patient. Then the Lord pierced my heart with these words: “There are angels like this one standing beside every child of mine, waiting for just one verse. One verse. Not a sermon, not a song, not a parade of prophets—just one verse.”

One whispered scripture, and heaven’s army moves.

Psalm 103:20 declares, “Bless the Lord, ye his angels, that excel in strength, that do his commandments, hearkening unto the voice of his word.”

The angels wait for His Word to be voiced.

I bowed my head and asked, “Lord, what would happen if she spoke even a whisper of Your Word?” And He said, “Then the assignment would activate. The miracle would begin.”

So again the Lord said, “Speak to her spirit. Stir what’s already inside her.”

I leaned in, and with quiet authority, I said, “Marlene, speak the Word.” Not “try harder.” Not “feel something.” Simply: “Speak.”

Because believing in the heart is the beginning, but it’s not complete faith until it comes out of your mouth.

Romans 10 says: “The word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth, and in thy heart… if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart, thou shalt be saved. For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness, and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.”

Did you see it? Believing is unto—but confession is into. Believing brings you to the door, but speaking opens it.

That angel was stationed by her bed because of her heart-belief, but he would not move until her lips gave voice to it. Angels are motionless until your mouth moves.

Jesus said in Mark 11:23: “Whosoever shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; and shall not doubt in his heart, but shall believe that those things which he saith shall come to pass; he shall have whatsoever he saith.”

Not what he feels. Not what he hopes. What he says.

Say it out loud: “I will have what I say, not just what I believe.”

That’s why the angel waited. And that’s why your miracle waits still—not on God, not on your emotions, but on your voice.

How many angels, even now, stand motionless beside hospital beds, homes, and children’s rooms—waiting for just one verse?

And then it happened. In that vision, I saw it.

From deep within her spirit, not from her weary mind, Sister Marlene whispered, “He shall give His angels charge over me.”

Glory to God! She said it. Weak but audible. Not just in her heart, not just in memory, but with her mouth. And the moment those words crossed her lips, the atmosphere shifted.

Because the Word of God never loses its power—even decades later. The same verse you once sowed into a child can rise in your own spirit to bring healing today. That’s why you must keep sowing the Word. Sow it into children, into your home, into your own soul—because one day you may need the very Word you once taught.

And as she spoke, I saw it—the angel moved.

His wings unfolded, his face shone like lightning, and he drew his sword—not to slash wildly, but with precision, like a surgeon of heaven. He reached toward her chest, and fire flowed from his hand into her body. Machines beeped. Lines trembled. Color returned to her face. In the spirit I heard what the doctors would later say in the natural: “She’s stabilizing. Her vitals are returning.”

But it wasn’t medicine. It wasn’t luck. It wasn’t the nurses. It was the Word spoken and the angel activated.

Listen to me, friends: angels don’t respond to pity. Angels don’t respond to panic. Angels respond to the Word.

And when Marlene spoke, heaven moved.

══ღೋƸ̵̡ Pressing Toward the High Call Ʒღೋ══

Leadership and Small Funerals

📌Leadership:

Small Funerals

Funerals are where people gather to honor a life that has ended. Sometimes it’s for a loved one, sometimes a friend, sometimes a figure deeply important to a community. We gather, tell stories, shed tears, share meals, and then cry some more. We lean on each other to get through the painful moments.

But I’ve been thinking—there’s another side of funerals we might need to grasp.

If I’m honest, I suspect very few people would come to mine. What? Only a few? That thought might make someone ask, What have you been doing with your life?

The truth is, most of my life happens behind the scenes. I’m a quiet person, and much of my interaction is online. There are many people like me—people whose influence stretches far beyond their local setting. But would our funerals reflect the things we actually poured our lives into?

My everyday job reminds me of the tax collectors and soldiers who asked John the Baptist what they should do (Luke 3:13–14). John told them to act with honesty, integrity, and contentment. My work as a rental property manager is similar. I collect rent, maintain property, and enforce rules. I’m not usually the person people want to see. At best, I’m “okay” in their eyes, but let’s be honest—most tenants just want to pay and move on. If their yard is messy, I’m the one knocking on the door. That kind of authority doesn’t exactly create a line of friends ready to throw me a sweet farewell party. More likely, some might feel like singing “Ding Dong, the Witch Is Dead.” (Wizard of Oz, anyone?)

Sometimes, I’ve wished I could be the one baking cookies for neighbors, making children laugh, and winning easy affection. But I had to make a choice: do the job the Lord placed me in, or chase a life that would make me popular?

Some roles require holding the line, even when it’s not appreciated. These jobs are often called thankless, and on this side of heaven, they usually are. But I believe they are not thankless on the other side.

When one of God’s children finishes their earthly assignment, heaven doesn’t echo with the sound of a small funeral. It rings with the joy of a homecoming. Family and loved ones in Christ line up to welcome them. The joy of entering heaven can’t be captured by human words. All I know is this: while earth holds funerals, heaven celebrates arrivals.

Sj

ღೋƸ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒღೋ
✿⊰ B e l i e v e ⊰✿
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Can one Believer in a family really make a difference?

1. Noah (Genesis 6–9)

Noah was described as “a righteous man, blameless among the people of his time” (Gen. 6:9).

Surrounded by wickedness and corruption, he was the only one God found righteous.

Because of Noah’s obedience, God saved his entire household in the ark (Gen. 7:1).

– One man’s obedience preserved his whole family from destruction.

2. Rahab (Joshua 2; 6:22–25)

Rahab was a Canaanite prostitute, not part of Israel. Yet she believed in the God of Israel when no one else around her did. Continue reading “Can one Believer in a family really make a difference?”