F4S

Friday, February 13, 2026

Regarding Prodigals, Keep On Praying For Em ..Like When You Don't Even Feel Like It Any More. Q: What Else Are You Able To Do For Em? Hey, Pray For Their Parents Too.

On the prodigal son, God shows us a picture of His great love for sinners, the terrible, destructive nature of sin in people, and the pure JOY of repentance and biblical faith. 

What does Jesus emphasize? The father's open arms of love for sinners. That father in His story represents God the Father's tender heart, and kind readiness to forgive and restore, rather than to condemn, those who come to Him on His terms. Yes, that's what we clearly see in the Prodigal Son story.

"Then He (Jesus) said, 'A certain man had two sons. 12 The younger of them [inappropriately] said to his father, ‘Father, give me the share of the property that falls to me.’ So he divided the estate between them. 13 A few days later, the younger son gathered together everything [that he had] and traveled to a distant country, and there he wasted his fortune in reckless and immoral living. 14 Now when he had spent everything, a severe famine occurred in that country, and he began to do without and be in need. 15 So he went and forced himself on one of the citizens of that country, who sent him into his fields to [a]feed pigs. 16 He would have gladly eaten the [carob] pods that the pigs were eating [but they could not satisfy his hunger], and no one was giving anything to him. 17 But when he [finally] came to his senses, he said, ‘How many of my father’s hired men have more than enough food, while I am dying here of hunger! 18 I will get up and go to my father, and I will say to him, “Father, I have sinned against heaven and in your sight. 19 I am no longer worthy to be called your son; [just] treat me like one of your hired men.”’ 20 So he got up and came to his father. But while he was still a long way off, his father saw him and was moved with compassion for him, and ran and embraced him and kissed him. 21 And the son said to him, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven and in your sight; I am no longer worthy to be called your son.’ 22 But the father said to his servants, ‘Quickly bring out the best robe [for the guest of honor] and put it on him; and give him a [b]ring for his hand, and sandals for his feet. 23 And bring the fattened calf and slaughter it, and let us [invite everyone and] feast and celebrate; 24 for this son of mine was [as good as] dead and is alive again; he was lost and has been found.’ So they began to celebrate. 25 “Now his older son was in the field; and when he returned and approached the house, he heard music and dancing. 26 So he summoned one of the servants and began asking what this [celebration] meant. 27 And he said to him, ‘Your brother has come, and your father has killed the fattened calf because he has received him back safe and sound.’ 28 But the elder brother became angry and deeply resentful and was not willing to go in; and his father came out and began pleading with him. 29 But he said to his father, ‘Look! These many years I have served you, and I have never neglected or disobeyed your command. Yet you have never given me [so much as] a young goat, so that I might celebrate with my friends; 30 but when this [other] son of yours arrived, who has devoured your estate with immoral women, you slaughtered that fattened calf for him!’ 31 The father said to him, ‘Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours. 32 But it was fitting to celebrate and rejoice, for this brother of yours was [as good as] dead and has begun to live. He was lost and has been found.’” Luke 15:11-32 amp (I love what Wiersbe said on this)

* Waiting and Welcoming (15:11–24)
It is significant that the father did not go searching for his son, but waited at home for the boy to come back. When the boy did come back, the father ran to meet him. Like sheep gone astray, some sinners are lost through their own stupidity; and, like coins, some are lost by the carelessness of others. But the son was lost because of his own willfulness, and the father had to wait until that will was broken and submissive.
For the younger son to ask for an early inheritance was like asking his father to die! It must have broken the father’s heart, but he gave the boy his share of the wealth! God likewise has shared p 184 His wealth with a world of lost sinners, and they have wasted it (Acts 14:15–17; 17:24–28). It was not the badness of his life that brought the boy to his senses but the goodness of his father (v. 17; Rom. 2:4).
In the East, it is unusual for older men to run; but the Father had to run because of his compassion for the boy. Also, the son had disgraced his family and his village and could have been stoned to death (Deut. 21:18–21). If they threw any stones, they would have to hit the father! The best robe would be the father’s expensive festal robe; the shoes indicated that the son was not a servant (in spite of his request); and the ring was the proof of sonship. Again, there is joy, for the lost has been found!

* Pleading (15:25–32)

The elder brother is the forgotten person in this parable, and yet he is the key to the story. If the prodigal son symbolizes the “publicans and sinners,” then the elder brother represents the scribes and Pharisees. There are sins of the spirit as well as sins of the flesh (2 Cor. 7:1). The religious leaders may not have been guilty of the gross things that the younger son did, but they were still sinners, guilty of a critical and unloving spirit, pride, and an unwillingness to forgive.
Because the younger son had received his inheritance, the estate belonged to the elder brother; but it was run by the father, who benefited from the profits. If the younger brother came back home, it would confuse the inheritance even more, so the elder brother did not want him back, nor was he looking for him.
Now we discover that the elder brother had a “hidden agenda” of his own, a longing to have a big party for his friends. He was angry with his brother for coming home and with his father for welcoming him and forgiving him. Like the scribes and Pharisees, he stayed outside the joy and fellowship of those who had been forgiven.
By staying outside the house, the elder brother humiliated his father and his brother. The father could have commanded him to come in, but he preferred to go out and plead with him. That is what Jesus did with the Jewish religious leaders, but they would not be persuaded. They thought they were saved because of their exemplary conduct, but they were out of fellowship with the Father and needed to repent and seek forgiveness.

Man, I really feel for some parents I meet who have suffered a lot due to arrogant, selfish, greedy, disrespectful children, even if they raised them much differently than that.

The waiting period for them to come to their senses and get right with God through Christ can last some years. That period of time is basically Mercy for the sinner who keeps straying and putting off his decision to return, to repent and to believe in Jesus Christ of the Bible.

I say we also pray for the parents of prodigals -- I say we gently encourage them with two ears and truth.

- Loving Father: Let's focus together on the Father and His great love for those who've taken a stride from their master's side, and not just the 2 lost sons with the bad words and deeds. Focus on Christ too. Yes, let's brag on sinless Jesus too, while highlighting His kindness, and the kindness of the Father, and of the Holy Spirit's strong grace and eagerness to warmly welcome home humble believers, each with a contrite change of heart.
  • Hope for Parents: I do want to encourage parents of wayward (adult or younger) children to do what?  To never stop praying, or advising (when they're open, if they ever get that way). What do I say" This: "Your child can run away to escape your delegated authority and presence like for all of their life if they want to, but they can never escape your prayers". Sometimes it's only due to the fact that you were the delegated authority placed over them. It's often that parents see their growing kids hastily ditch the little hammer of their parents' authority, so to speak, only to run off to a bigger hammer in the military. Not that any parent wants to hammer them. One day we all will face direct Authority -- God at His Judgement Seat. 
  • The "Two" Prodigals: Allow me point out that the older brother is also a full prodigal, representing dead legalism, while the younger brother represents open rebellion.
  • Rebellion from a Good Home: Please note that the prodigal sons were raised in a good and decent home, demonstrating that a rebellious child does not automatically mean there's a failure as a parent. God the Father is perfect and He's had a whole lot of prodigals.
  • A "Prodigal" Season: Some have a long lapse in judgment. It's like a "prodigal phase" until they learn some more through trial and ERROR. And that might not mean a total loss of faith, but rather a temporary, disobedient season that leads to a deeper commitment to God. 
  • I too was a real Prodigal in my own life, wandering far from my own father, Kim. Yes, that was my story too, so I want to extend a personal invitation, an opportunity for you to hang a 180, and "come home" to God, or come back to God. My dad and I became best of friends after I came to Christ. He is a real Christian, too. 
My wife, Liney, knows pigs. She had some pig-pets on her grandparents' farm in Iowa when young.  

"It would be better if they had never known the way to righteousness than to know it and then reject the command they were given to live a holy life." 2 Peter 2:21

My granddaughters have a pet pig, and they named him Sunday. He sounds like a pig, he looks like a pig, and if he were given the choice, he would like to be back in the mud like a pig. That’s because a pig is a pig.

Jesus told a story in the gospel of Luke about a son who ran away from his father, went to a far country, and made a mess out of his life. But then he came to his senses and returned home, and his father welcomed him and forgave him. We call him the prodigal son. And a prodigal always will come back home to the Father.

So, are you a prodigal son or daughter, or are you a pig? I don’t mean that as an insult. You decide which one you will be.

The Bible teachrs us, It would be better if they had never known the way to righteousness than to know it and then reject the command they were given to live a holy life. They prove the truth of this proverb: ‘A dog returns to its vomit.’ And another says, ‘A washed pig returns to the mud’” (2 Peter 2:21–22 nlt).

When people make professions of faith and then fall away, the question is not whether they lost their salvation. The question is this: Were they Christians to begin with?

You know whether you’re a believer by where you end up. If you end up returning to your commitment to Christ, it shows that you’re merely a prodigal. If you’re a prodigal, then you will want to come back to God.

But if you’re a pig, then you will go back to the way you were living before because you never believed.

You see, not everyone wants to change. God offers us forgiveness, but we have to be willing to do our part.

Come home to the Father—not on your terms, but on His: through true repentance, living faith, and humble obedience to His Word (Luke 15:17–24; Acts 3:19; James 4:8).

The gospel does not flatter our wandering; it calls us back from it. Like Prodigal Son, many have tasted the far country—empty promises, fleeting pleasures, and the slow famine of the soul—only to discover that the Father’s house still stands open, arms wide, mercy ready, truth unchanged (Luke 15:20).

Yet the road home is not paved with excuses but with repentance. “Let the wicked forsake his way… and let him return unto the LORD, and He will have mercy” (Isaiah 55:7). Returning means turning—away from sin, self-rule, and selective obedience—and toward Christ with saving faith that submits to His Lordship (Luke 6:46; John 14:15).

Consider the prodigals God restored: David wept over his sin and found cleansing (Psalm 51); Manasseh humbled himself after years of rebellion and was graciously received (2 Chronicles 33:12–13); Peter denied the Lord yet was restored by grace and recommissioned to feed Christ’s sheep (John 21:15–19). Their stories shout that no distance is too far when repentance is real and faith is sincere.

But Scripture also warns: many wander and never truly return (Hebrews 3:12–13). The difference is not how loudly they feel remorse but whether they bow to Christ as Savior and Lord (Romans 10:9–10). God does not negotiate holiness; He gives grace to the humble (James 4:6).

Here's a sobering statistic: It's Research from George Barna has repeatedly found that a significant percentage of those raised in church drift away in young adulthood, yet a notable portion later re-engage with faith—often after crisis, conviction, or rediscovery of Scripture. The lesson is clear: wandering is common, but coming home requires a decisive, grace-enabled turn back to God.

God Makes a Loving Appeal to All Prodigals

You may have church memories but a distant heart. You may speak of God yet resist His commands. Hear this: the Father welcomes repentant sons and daughters, not self-directing ones. He receives those who come empty-handed, trusting wholly in Christ’s finished work (John 6:37; Ephesians 2:8–9).

Come as you are—but do not stay as you are. Saving faith yields a changed life (2 Corinthians 5:17; Titus 2:11–12).

“The door of return swings on the hinges of repentance.” — Charles H. Spurgeon

“God never turns anyone away who wants to come home.” — Billy Graham

“The Father is always ready to receive the prodigal, but the prodigal must be willing to leave the pigpen.” — Greg Laurie

“Repentance is not merely feeling sorry; it is turning around and going in a new direction.” — A. W. Tozer

Return to the Lord now.. on His terms, not on yours: repent of sin, believe the gospel, and submit to His Word. Draw near to Him, and He will draw near to you (James 4:8). The robe is ready, the feast prepared, and the Father is watching the road—but the step home must be yours (Luke 15:20–24).

Tell me about the “prodigal-type” figures you've known—those who strayed from the Father (God) in heart, behavior, or calling.

 Let's group them by outcome: returned/restored vs. remained estranged (or Scripture gives no clear repentance). Counts reflect what the Bible explicitly records, not later tradition.

Hey Prodigal, Repent, Returned and Be Restored to God Your Father. Here and Now is good. Return as You Are.  

  • David – Fell grievously (2 Sam 11) yet repented deeply (Ps 51).
  • Manasseh – Idolatrous and violent, later humbled and restored (2 Chr 33:10–13).
  • Jonah – Fled from God’s call, then returned after discipline (Jonah 1–3).
  • Solomon – Drifted into idolatry (1 Kgs 11); Ecclesiastes reflects late-life repentance (Eccl 12:13–14).
  • Peter – Denied Christ yet restored by Jesus (Luke 22:61–62; John 21:15–19).
  • Prodigal Son in the story – Jesus’ paradigm of repentance and return (Luke 15:11–24).
  • Israel (corporate, collectively) – Repeated cycles of wandering and returning (Judg 2:16–19; Neh 9).
  • Hezekiah – Pride corrected; humbled himself before God (2 Chr 32:25–26).
  • Samson – Wayward life; final prayer shows returning faith (Judg 16:28–30).

Count clearly restored: 9

What other prodigals will you find and tell me about?  

Remained Estranged With No Clear Biblical Repentance Spoken Of 

  • Cain – Departed from God’s presence after sin (Gen 4:13–16).
  • Esau – Reconciled to Jacob (Gen 33), but Hebrews portrays spiritual loss without recorded repentance (Heb 12:16–17).
  • Saul – Rejected God’s word; no true repentance recorded (1 Sam 15:22–23; 28).
  • Absalom – Rebelled against his father and died estranged (2 Sam 15–18).
  • Jeroboam – Led Israel into lasting idolatry (1 Kgs 12–14).
  • Ahab – Momentary humility (1 Kgs 21:27–29) but no enduring repentance shown.
  • Judas Iscariot – Remorse but not saving repentance; died in despair (Matt 27:3–5).
  • Demas – Forsook Paul, loving this present world (2 Tim 4:10).
  • Rich Young Ruler – Walked away sorrowful; no later return recorded (Mark 10:17–22).
  • Pharaoh – Hardened heart despite repeated warnings (Exod 7–14).
  • Korah – Rebellion against God’s appointed leadership (Num 16).
  • Lot's Wife – Looked back in disobedience (Gen 19:26).

Count remaining estranged (or no clear repentance): 12

Ambiguous. Is The Scripture Silent On Their Final Spiritual State?

(They drifted or resisted God, yet the Bible does not explicitly state final repentance or continued estrangement.)

  • Ishmael – Outside covenant line; personal repentance not addressed (Gen 16–21).
  • Uzziah – Pride led to judgment; no clear repentance recorded (2 Chr 26).
  • Ananias and Sapphira – Judged for deceit; no chance to demonstrate repentance (Acts 5:1–11).

Summary Tally (based strictly on explicit biblical record)

Returned and then restored people?: 9

Remained estranged (no clear repentance): 12

Ambiguous / not explicitly stated: 3

Any Insights In There?

Scripture repeatedly shows that wandering hearts can truly return (e.g., David, Manasseh, Peter), yet it also soberly records those who persisted in their sin of unbelief and estrangement (e.g., Cain, Saul, Judas). What's the consistent biblical pattern?: true repentance leads to Jesus Christ and then restoration in Him; refusal to apply the word in obedience, or to appropriate grace.. hardens the heart unto distance.

Hurtful Words, Attitudes, and Actions Directed At The Father in This Parable (Luke 15:11–32)

From the account in the Gospel of Luke, both sons wound the father deeply—one through open rebellion, the other through cold self-righteousness. Here is a comprehensive list of the insults, aspersions, and dishonoring attitudes implied or expressed:

From That Selfish Know It All Younger (Prodigal) Son

  1. Demanding his inheritance early (Luke 15:12) – Essentially saying, “I wish you were dead so I could have what is mine.”

  2. Rejecting the father’s authority and household – A declaration of independence that rejects relationship for autonomy.

  3. Publicly shaming his father before the community – In that culture, such a request disgraced the patriarch.

  4. Valuing the father’s wealth more than the father himself – Loving gifts more than the giver.

  5. Leaving the father behind without regard for his grief (15:13).

  6. Squandering the inheritance in reckless living – Treating the father’s lifelong provision with contempt (15:13).

  7. Aligning himself with a foreign citizen and feeding pigs (15:15–16) – A humiliating descent that reflected disregard for his father’s heritage and values.

  8. Cutting off fellowship and communication – No concern for the father’s sorrow during his absence.

  9. Returning only because of hunger, not initially from love (15:17) – Self-interest precedes repentance.

  10. Preparing a reduced-relationship speech (15:18–19) – Willing to be a hired servant rather than restored son, minimizing the father-son bond.

  11. Confession that admits sin yet assumes loss of sonship – Implicitly doubting the father’s grace (15:21).

From the Self-righteous Elder Brother 

  1. Refusing to enter the celebration (15:28) – Publicly dishonoring his father’s joy and authority.

  2. Anger toward the father’s mercy – Resenting grace shown to the repentant sinner.

  3. Speaking to the father with accusation and entitlement (15:29).

  4. Viewing obedience as slavery – “These many years I have served you…” implying resentment, not love.

  5. Claiming the father never rewarded him – Charging the father with unfairness.

  6. Disowning his brother – “This son of yours…” (15:30), refusing familial unity the father cherished.

  7. Accusing the father of celebrating immorality – Suggesting the father approves of sin.

  8. Self-righteous comparison – Elevating himself while condemning the father’s compassion.

  9. Resisting reconciliation – Refusal to share the father’s heart for restoration.

Any Insights?

What have you had to endure with rebels? What did this father in the story have to endure?

  • Rebellion (from that know-it-all, selfish younger son)

  • Waste and disgrace (younger son)

  • Cold, puffied up disrespectful criticism (from the self-righteous elder son)

Both of the prodigal sons in that story, in different ways, wounded the father’s heart—one by reckless sin, the other by loveless religion. 

Sunday, February 8, 2026

I've gladly decided I am for Jesus more than for anything or anyone else. In the Bible, who were the people known more.. for what they were against than what they were for? Who were the people in the Book who were known more for what they were against..than what they were for.


Believer, are you more so ..known for what you are for, or for what you're against? 

We want our lifestyle in Jesus to be winsome in order to draw people to Him. we want the people we work with and witnesss to.. to see Christ and His holy kind character in us. Yes, we each want to think, talk and behave more like Christ would daily. We not only want to enjoy His free forgiveness, the warmth of His presence, the JOY and pure peace, we also want to do our part on our knees etc so that others will too! 

When preaching and teaching through the Book, yes zealously against sin and for righteousness in the Lord, we seek to make a beeline to Jesus.. We must remember to see Jesus Christ in all those Old and New Testament Books -- pointing as many as possible toward a relationship with Him. 

Out of the overflow of the Spirit, do you joyously brag on Jesus? God alone saves and changes people -- He delights to use us, flawed, reborn Christians in this work.

I want to challenge you to have Him as Lord walking real close, to have His truth with tenderness (a soft heart) inside, with strong conviction, and with graciousness. Always keep it biblical in the Spirit (relying upon Him), and honest, and balanced too as you exemplify the life “bragging on Jesus” wherever you go. 


I. People Known More for What They Were Against (Cautionary Examples)

These figures often became identified not by love for God’s redemptive work, but by resistance, control, fear, or condemnation—even when they claimed spiritual authority.

1. The Pharisees

Against: Jesus’ mercy, grace to sinners, Sabbath freedom
Key verses:

  • “You shut the kingdom of heaven in people’s faces.”Matthew 23:13

  • “They tie up heavy burdens… but they themselves are not willing to move them.”Matthew 23:4

They were orthodox in doctrine yet cold in compassion. They opposed sin, but also opposed the Savior who forgives sinners.

A.W. Tozer: “The Pharisees lived by negatives. Their religion was all ‘Thou shalt not,’ and very little ‘Thou shalt.’”


2. The Older Brother (Parable of the Prodigal Son)

Against: Grace for the repentant, celebration of mercy
Key verses:

  • “This son of yours… you killed the fattened calf for him!”Luke 15:30

He stood for “rightness” but missed the Father’s heart.

Tim Keller: “You can be just as lost by keeping the rules as by breaking them.”


3. Jonah

Against: God’s mercy toward enemies
Key verses:

  • “That is why I fled… for I knew that you are a gracious God.”Jonah 4:2

Jonah preached truth but resented grace when it worked.

Charles Spurgeon: “We often forgive but do not rejoice in forgiveness.”


4. The Judaizers

Against: Freedom in Christ
Key verses:

  • “You are severed from Christ… you who would be justified by the law.”Galatians 5:4

They preached morality without new birth.

Martin Luther: “The law works fear and wrath; grace works hope and mercy.”


II. People Known for What They Were Against—Verbally (Prophetic but Risky)

These spoke strongly and publicly against sin, hypocrisy, or injustice. Their words were often right—but their tone, focus, or imbalance could obscure grace if not anchored in God’s heart.

1. John the Baptist

Against: Hypocrisy, immorality, false repentance
Key verses:

  • “You brood of vipers!”Matthew 3:7

Yet John’s purpose was to point to Jesus, not to himself.

“He must increase, but I must decrease.”John 3:30


2. Elijah

Against: Baal worship, spiritual compromise
Key verses:

  • “How long will you waver between two opinions?”1 Kings 18:21

Bold, necessary, but later burned out and discouraged—showing that constant confrontation without rest and reassurance can wound the servant.


3. Jeremiah

Against: National sin and false peace
Key verses:

  • “They have healed the wound of my people lightly, saying, ‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace.”Jeremiah 6:14

He wept more than he thundered.

Jeremiah 9:1“Oh that my head were waters, and my eyes a fountain of tears…”


III. People Known More for What They Were For (The Winsome Witness)

These men and women confronted sin—but were primarily recognized for reflecting the heart of God.

1. Jesus

For: The Father’s glory, sinners’ redemption, truth with grace
Key verses:

  • “Full of grace and truth.”John 1:14

  • “The Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.”Luke 19:10

Jesus never minimized sin—but He maximized mercy.

Hebrews 7:25: “He is able to save to the uttermost…”


2. The Apostle Paul

For: Christ crucified, grace that transforms
Key verses:

  • “We preach Christ crucified.”1 Corinthians 1:23

  • “I have been crucified with Christ.”Galatians 2:20

Paul opposed false teaching, but his life radiated joy, humility, and hope.

D.L. Moody: “The gospel is not good advice—it is good news.”


3. Barnabas

For: Encouragement, restoration, second chances
Key verses:

  • “He was a good man, full of the Holy Spirit and of faith.”Acts 11:24

Acts 4:36 — His name means “Son of Encouragement.”


4. Stephen

For: Christ’s glory—even in death
Key verses:

  • “He saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God.”Acts 7:55

Even while rebuking sin, his face shone like an angel.


IV. The Biblical Balance: Preach the Word, Brag on Jesus

Scripture does not call us to silence on sin—but it does call us to lead with Christ.

Key Scriptures

  • 2 Timothy 4:2“Preach the word… reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete patience and teaching.”

  • Romans 2:4“God’s kindness is meant to lead you to repentance.”

  • Colossians 4:6“Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt.”

  • Matthew 5:16“Let your light shine before others.”

Francis Schaeffer: “Truth without love is brutality; love without truth is hypocrisy.”

John Stott: “We must be able to say ‘no’ to the world, but we must first have said a joyful ‘yes’ to Christ.”


V. Closing Pastoral Thought

Christians are not called to be known primarily for what we oppose, but for Whom we belong to.

We do preach against sin—because sin kills.
We do stand for righteousness—because holiness heals.
But we boast in Jesus—because only He saves.

2 Corinthians 5:20“We are ambassadors for Christ, God making his appeal through us.”

God alone changes hearts.
God alone grants repentance.
God alone saves—sometimes using cracked, redeemed vessels like us.

And when people see Christ in us—His forgiveness, joy, peace, and truth—they won’t just hear what we’re against…
They’ll want the Savior we’re for.

Thursday, February 5, 2026

In RETURNING and rest you shall be saved; in quietness and in trust.. “Only in returning to me and resting in me will you be saved. In quietness and confidence is your strength." Isaiah 30:15 #emph.mine

I'm a realist who likes to be positive most of the time, so I say: America can return.

Americans can come back.. can return one (won) by One!

Many might feel like turning away from all the junk that's been happening In our world gone quickly sideways (that feeling would be normal), but it's okay to not ignore it like it's not happening, to be aware.. for prayer.

Franklin Graham recently said he is encouraged to see more young people beginning to search for God, especially as many feel left cold by modern education and Religious churches that no longer boldly preach the Gospel.
At the same time, Franklin Graham warned that Scripture does not specifically or necessarily predict a widespread end-times revival type of awakening on earth (If you think differently, then please give the passage and verse (I hope one would happen but the Bible doesn't say this would happen before the Rapture). The only one I can see is during the 7 years of the Great Tribulation here with the 144,000 Jews starting to evangelize.
Those 144,000 Jews are first mentioned in Revelation 7:4, “Then I heard the number of those who were sealed: 144,000 from all the tribes of Israel.” This passage comes in during an interlude between the judgment of the sixth seal of the tribulation (Revelation 6:12–17) and the opening of the seventh seal (Revelation 8:1).
Franklin is no lame PMA motivational speaker. He truthfully tells us: "the world will likely grow darker as Christ’s return approaches."

It's time to buckle up, Buckaroo, and quickly get back to Christ and His Bible basics for wise application's sake.
Graham points to signs that God is still working in our nation — including the massive response following the death of Charlie Kirk. He noted that Kirk’s faith became stronger near the end of his life, and that his memorial drew huge crowds, with churches reporting packed pews and many young people turning to Christ afterward.
Totally Sovereign still.. “God’s at work… and God is still on that throne,” Graham said.
Graham gave a clear call for repentance and spiritual readiness, encouraging believers to pray for forgiveness and renewal in America.
“We just need to pray, ‘God, forgive us,’” he said. “Repent… and ask God to forgive our nation.”

When Society in this Western World (or Anywhere) Tilts Into Collapse Sideways, God Still Reigns

It’s not strange—nor faithless—to feel the urge to turn away from the noise, the moral confusion, and the spiritual junk piling up around us. Anyone paying attention can feel it: something is off. Our world didn’t drift; it swerved. And Scripture tells us that awareness is not panic—it’s prayer fuel.

Jesus never asked His people to deny reality. He told us to discern the times (Matthew 16:3), to watch and pray (Mark 13:33), and to keep our lamps lit while the night grows darker (Matthew 25:1–13). Awareness without despair is wisdom. Ignoring the moment is not faith—it’s avoidance.

As the old hymn reminds each of us,

“This world is not my home, I’m just a-passing through.”

Yet while we pass through, we are called to stand.

A Call Back, Not a Call Out

Scripture is clear: when a nation collapses morally, the first call to repentance is not aimed at pagans—it’s aimed at God’s people.

“If My people, who are called by My name, will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.” (2 Chronicles 7:14)

Revival has never begun in Washington, the university, or the media. It has always begun on its knees.

Billy Graham once said,

“The greatest need in America is not new laws, but new hearts.”

That truth has not aged.

Franklin Graham has recently noted something both hopeful and sobering: more young people are searching for God, disillusioned by hollow secularism, politicized classrooms, and churches that traded the cross for comfort. Barna research has consistently shown that while institutional trust has collapsed, spiritual hunger has not—especially among Gen Z, who are asking deeper questions than many expected.

Can we pray for a revival, spawning spiritual awakening? Sure, I will too.

You’ve probably heard the words “genuine revival” thrown around a lot on TV or in church circles. But what does that actually mean?

To revive something is to restore it, to bring it back to life from a dying situation.

Picture a classic car, maybe—a real beauty—that’s been fully restored to its original condition. It shines -- stunning! It’s as good as it was when new. That’s what spiritual revival is like—its a coming back to life, a waking up spiritually, and getting back to real life.. living sold out in Chrisst as the Christian life was meant to be lived.

Here’s the truth: the USA desperately needs a real revival. Our nation is in desperate need of a fifth Great Awakening. It could happen again!

Is it productive to merely point fingers at the culture gone sideways or at others? Do people know more about what we are against than what we are for? We are for Jesus having His way with people we love. We want them to become open to the truth of the gospel. Real revival starts with us and repentance. Lord, increase our faith for this. Yes, maybe you need a personal revival to happen inside—a fresh touch of love from God in your life.
I sincerely challenge you to cry out to the Lord, to earnestly pray that God sends a spiritual awakening to America. Today, now.. or at least this year, would be good.

Let’s pray that it starts with you and me. We choose life in the Lord over death. When we come alive spiritually inside, it will change everything. Better than merely talking about revival—let’s be a part of it and do revial like things, wisely applying God's word. "Go..tell" Mark 5:19.

Hope Without All The Hype: What Scripture Actually Says About This Stuff

The Bible actually does not promise us a global, pre-rapture revival that will sweep the whole globe (as many Carismania-preachers like to "prophecy" and preach about). We may earnestly pray for one, an nation shaking 5th Great Awakening—I would love that, and we should pray for people to return with those sincere weeping tears of repentance—but Scripture repeatedly warns that this corrupt world system will grow darker and darker as Christ’s return draws nearer.

“Evil men and impostors will go from bad to worse.” (2 Timothy 3:13)

“Because lawlessness will abound, the love of many will grow cold.” (Matthew 24:12)

Franklin Graham is no shallow motivational speaker. He speaks plainly: the darkness deepens before the dawn.

That doesn’t mean God stops working. It means He works through faithful witnesses, not favorable conditions.

The clearest picture of mass global evangelism in Scripture comes not before the Rapture, but during the Great Tribulation—through the sealing of the 144,000 Jewish evangelists:

“Then I heard the number of those who were sealed: 144,000 from all the tribes of the children of Israel.” (Revelation 7:4)

This occurs between the sixth and seventh seals (Revelation 6:12–17; 8:1), when judgment intensifies and mercy still calls.

God is always saving—but never on our timetable.

God Is Still on the Throne

Despite the chaos in our world, God has not fallen off His throne or abdicated.

The Gospel must go out -- it still cuts through all the noise and weirdness.

“God’s at work… and God is still on that throne.”

That sentence alone steadies the soul.

Charles Spurgeon once said,

“God is too good to be unkind and too wise to be mistaken. And when we cannot trace His hand, we must trust His heart.”

Buckle Up, Sport—and Get Back to Christ and His Bible Basics

This is no time for adding to, or watering down.. diluting the Message of the Word in Christianity! Let's live pure and get the Gospel out like Jesus commanded us to.

D. L. Moody warned,

“The Bible will keep you from sin, or sin will keep you from the Bible.”

A couple of my So Cal pastors also caution and exhorted us to return to Jesus and then live all out for Him. We can rely upon His power to live the life! Chuck Smith Sr. has echoed this in our generation:

“When the church becomes like the world, it no longer has anything to say to the world.”

The answer is not escapism. The answer is repentance, readiness, and returning—to Christ, to Scripture, to the Gospel that saves.

As Greg Laurie puts it,

“God is only one prayer away—but it must be a prayer of repentance.”

A Call to the Altar—Wherever You Are

Franklin Graham said it plainly, and Scripture backs him fully:

“We just need to pray, ‘God, forgive us.’ Repent… and ask God to forgive our nation.”

That prayer begins personally.

“God commands all people everywhere to repent.” (Acts 17:30)

“If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us.” (1 John 1:9). If we get real with God in confession with true repentance, then He will forgive and He will work in us to change us for His glory! As we get in touch, He delights to use us in helping others get in touch with His Son.

Righteous Vertical Connection > Unrighteous Connections In Any Direction

Billy Sunday thundered,

“Going to church doesn’t make you a Christian any more than going to a garage makes you an automobile.”

And Billy Graham lovingly reminded millions,

“The cross shows us the seriousness of our sin—but it also shows us the immeasurable love of God.”

God The Father Is Waiting For You To Return.. With His Arms Open Wide -- Come Home. Not Tomorrow, Right Now.

You remember how Naomi was the wife of a man named Elimelech, and they lived in Bethlehem with their two sons, Mahlon and Kilion. Naomi’s life illustrates the power of God to bring something good out of bitter circumstances.

Naomi and Ruth had returned ..humble and to the humblest of circumstances, yet God used this situation to work in a remarkable way. Ruth would not only join Naomi’s people; she would later marry one of Naomi’s relatives and give birth to a son named Obed—who became the grandfather of King David.

Ruth’s response of faith is a powerful example of how we each are to give full allegiance to God even when we do not know what the future holds. When we surrender to Him, God sometimes will work in unexpected ways to show His power and reveal His love.

Naomi’s fierce bitterness inside is turned to pure JOY! In the end, she gains a son-in-law who would provide for both her and Ruth. She also becomes a grandmother to Ruth’s son, Obed. Then the women of Bethlehem say to Naomi, “Praise be to the Lord, who this day has not left you without a guardian-redeemer. May he become famous throughout Israel! He will renew your life and sustain you in your old age. For your daughter-in-law, who loves you and who is better to you than seven sons, has given him birth” (Ruth 4:14–15). Naomi was no longer Mara. Her life again became sweet and pleasant, blessed by God.

If your heart is weary, cold, compromised, or simply tired of pretending—come back to Christ.

If you’ve never trusted Him—come to Him now. If you have already and have drifted away, then return to Him now!

Jesus still saves. The blood still cleanses. The Gospel still works.

“Now is the day of salvation.” (2 Corinthians 6:2)

Or as one old hymn sings it best:

“Just as I am, without one plea,

But that Thy blood was shed for me…”

The world may be shaking—but the Rock has not moved.

Jesus is calling you now (not to a mere flawed human preacher or to some dead religion, or to a certain denomination per se though some are more biblical than others.. but) to Himself.

Returning to God After Drifting Away--It Can Happen

First comes true repentance, then humble, honest confession, the real restoration, and then the renewed fellowship of forever friendship


Right Now, It Can Begin Inside Of You!

It Starts By Turn Away From What The Bible Calls Sin.. By Turning To God.

Now What Would Prevent You From Inviting Jesus In To Be Lord Of All? You Can Invite Him In.. Or Back.. To Rule Without Rival.. As Lord.

Redemption With Restoration Can Arrive After That Lame Cold Distance

God Invites Us to Return To Him Today

  • James 4:8 – “Draw near to God, and He will draw near to you…”

  • Zechariah 1:3 – “Return to Me, says the LORD of hosts, and I will return to you…”

  • Isaiah 55:6–7 – “Seek the LORD while He may be found… let him return to the LORD, and He will have mercy…”

  • Jeremiah 24:7 – “I will give them a heart to know Me… for they shall return to Me with their whole heart.”

God’s Readiness To Fully Restore And Bless

  • 1 John 1:7–9 – “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive…”

  • Psalm 103:12–13 – “As far as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our transgressions…”

  • Lamentations 3:22–23 – “His mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning…”

  • Micah 7:18–19 – “He delights in mercy… You will cast all our sins into the depths of the sea.”

God Compassionately Pursues the Wanderer

  • Luke 19:10 – “For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.”

  • Ezekiel 34:16 – “I will seek the lost, bring back the strayed…”

  • John 6:37 – “Whoever comes to Me I will never cast out.”


Jesus Spoke About Sinners Really Returning

  • The Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11–32) – The clearest picture of restoration after rebellion

  • The Lost Sheep (Luke 15:3–7) – God actively seeks the wanderer

  • The Lost Coin (Luke 15:8–10) – God rejoices over repentance

Luke 15:20 – “While he was still a long way off, his father saw him and felt compassion…”


Who In The NT Drifted—And Then Returned With Repentance To Christ?

1. Peter – Blew It Badly, and Then God Restored After Denial

  • Matthew 26:69–75 – Peter denies Jesus three times

  • Luke 22:61–62 – “And Peter remembered… and wept bitterly”

  • John 21:15–19 – Jesus restores Peter publicly: “Do you love Me?”

Failure does not have to be the final word.. when repentance is real.


2. Thomas – Returned, Got The Doubt Out

  • John 20:24–29 – Thomas doubts the resurrection

  • John 20:28 – “My Lord and my God!”

Honest doubt met with honest prayerful humility leads to deeper faith.


3. John Mark – Got Restored Spiritually After Bailing Out.. Quitting

  • Acts 13:13 – Mark deserts Paul and Barnabas, but returns later

  • Acts 15:37–39 – Paul refuses to take him again, but later became good friends

  • 2 Timothy 4:11“Get Mark… he is useful to me for ministry.”

God can restore usefulness after seasons of real weakness and floundering.


4. The Disciples – Were Scattered, And Then Reunited

  • Matthew 26:56 – “Then all the disciples left Him and fled..” But they returned to Jesus

  • Matthew 28:16–20 – Jesus commissions them anyway.. after, not before they returned

Jesus grants true repentance and faith. Free gifts. He redeems and restores in calling us to return to Hmi -- it's not just some ordinary type of relationship.


5. Saul of Tarsus (later Paul the Apostle) – Got Away From The Truth Regarding God In Scripture, Then Became An Enemy, But Came To The Living Word (Jesus)

  • Acts 9:1–6 – Saul encounters Christ

  • Galatians 1:15–16 – “God… was pleased to reveal His Son in me”

God not only can restore wanderers returning as they fully repent—He can use saintss to help other people get redeemed in His Son..changing (forgiving) complete enemies of the Cross of Christ.


Don’t Be Drifting Away With Despair, Appropriate A Living Hope!

  • Hebrews 2:1“We must pay much closer attention.. lest we drift away.”

  • Revelation 2:4–5“You have left your first love.. Remember.. Repent.. and do the works you did at first.”

  • Hebrews 12:1–2“Let us lay aside every weight… looking to Jesus the Author and Perfector…”


Need More On This Returning To God? Start To

Charles Spurgeon

“The Lord does not reject the returning sinner on account of his past sins. He delights in mercy.”

A.W. Tozer

“God waits on the other side of our obedience. When we return, we find He never left.”

Augustine of Hippo

“You have made us for Yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in You.”

Billy Graham

“The moment you turn to God in repentance, He runs toward you with forgiveness.”

John Newton

“I am not what I ought to be… but by the grace of God I am what I am.”

C.S. Lewis

“Repentance is not something God demands of you before He will take you back; it is simply a description of what going back is like.”


Sup With Kurt's Summary?

  • Drifting is often very gradual, not so sudden (Hebrews 2:1)

  • Restoration is vertically relational, not merely emotional like we see on TV (See John 21)

  • Repentance is a choice to return as you are, not self-punishment, self-flagellation or penance (None can ever earn God's forgivness. Luke 15)

  • Grace restores the calling, the tender intimacy, and faithful ministry usefulness.. fruitfulness

Joel 2:25 “I will restore to you the years that the locust has eaten…”


Do You Need To First Better Understand The Gospel? (Even Now You Can Repent and Become Rooted in The Redeemer for Restoration)

If you’ve drifted—quietly, slowly, or painfully—the door is still open. Return to God through Christ!

Romans 5:8 “While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” From enemies to forgiven friends.
John 10:28“No one will snatch them out of My hand.” He's so able to keep and use you.

Returning doesn’t begin with you trying to clean up your own life unto perfection first. Too many try to clean up their life before they come to God. Nope. Come just as you are. Jesus catches His fish, and then he cleans them so to speak. Sanctification comes after redemption.. and then come His perfection.
It begins with that change of mind and heart inside.. one by one, in that turning to Jesus. Lord, we look for your return.

We'd like that. Use us today while we can witness. Lord, I come back soon - let the Rapture happen—not because I deserve that, but because You are good.

And heaven still rejoices when one person repents and comes Home. The angels throw a righteous party over that happening!

Jesus says, " I tell you, in the same way there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous people who have no need of repentance." Luke 15:7 amp