Sunday, July 19, 2026

Our one Missions-minded God has never changed

The Father, Jesus, and the Spirit are still missions-minded. 

The Bible consistently presents one God with one redemptive purpose from Genesis to Revelation. 

Remember the Call of Abram?

Yes, God's missionary heart did not begin in the New Testament. It is woven throughout the entire Bible. He said in the Book of Genesis. Jesus did not invent God's deep concern for the nations; He fulfilled what God had been revealing all along throughout history.

Remember when God intervened in the world with the choosing of Abraham who was sent. Now these words, in His choosing of Abram, might appear kind of different, but check it out. This passage is one chapter after humanity said, “Let us make a name for ourselves.” God chose one family back in the day to start a missionary outreach. Genesis 12:1–3 says:

Now the Lord said to Abram, “Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you. And I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing”.

The Lord is a missionary God.

In his last letter to Timothy, Paul writes: ‘You.. have followed my teaching, my conduct, my aim in life, my faith, my patience, my love, my steadfastness’ (2 Timothy 3:10). The apostle Paul clearly knew what he was trying to achieve – hence he can write ‘my aim in life’.

As Paul neared the end of his life he wrote to Timothy, now a pastor in Ephesus, to encourage him to follow the policy – the blueprint for ministry and church life – that flows out of the gospel. Paul was passing on the battle plan to Timothy so that his ministry would have a clear purpose and direction.

What is the church here for? Making an impact in this world so people come to faith in Jesus. 

Twenty centuries on, the need remains to have direction and purpose in gospel work. It is good and right to ask: ‘What is the purpose of the church?’ Ultimately, the aim of the church is to bring glory to God, but what must the church and its ministers do to fulfil this objective?

It is clear from the New Testament that if the church is to glorify God, it will gather for worship, for prayer, and to study God’s Word. In addition, church life will be characterised by mutual love, a working together and a determination to make the gospel known.

Furthermore, this last work will not be restricted to the local area but will involve a desire to see the good news preached throughout the world in accordance with the Lord’s commission (Luke 24:47; Acts 1:8). Local churches should therefore be missionary-minded churches.

If we are not careful, our missionary involvement can be characterised by vagueness and half-heartedness, rather than the devotion and enthusiasm that this vital work requires. The aim of this series of articles is to help ministers and churches become mission-focused – to consider how they view mission, how they pray for mission, and how they support mission financially.

God with His Missions Heart in the Old Testament

The true author of all missionary activity is the Triune God (Father, Son and Holy Spirit). The Lord has always been more concerned and activce with this work than we could ever be. Therefore, mission work (domestic or overseas) should be seen, first and foremost, as God work and not ours.. though He calls us to be in volved with Him. We Christians have a part to play as witnesses for Christ. 

From the opening chapters in Genisis we hear (‘The Lord God called to Adam.. 'Where are you?'’) to its closing paragraphs (‘The Spirit and the bride say, “Come!” And let him who is thirsty come. And … take of the water of life freely’). For example:

In Genesis, the Lord made the world because he is a missionary God! Although he was sufficient in himself, he chose to create a world inhabited by people so that he might relate to intelligent and sentient beings outside of himself (Genesis 1:1; 1:26).

When man rebelled, God promised a Redeemer (Genesis 3:15) and set out the purpose of his mission, namely, to redeem a fallen race in Christ. In Genesis 12 God calls Abram through whom he intends to bless all the nations of the world – and reveals in Abraham a work of grace through faith encompassing every age and dispensation in history.

In  Exodus we see the continuing purpose of God to have his own people who, despite their rebellion and disobedience, embodied the principle of free redemption and pictured the true church, ‘the Israel of God’ (Galatians 6:16).

In the Prophets (e.g., Isaiah 2:2-3) we see the Lord’s concern for the whole world. Isaiah 9:1-2 speaks of ‘a light shining amongst Gentiles to dispel sin and rebellion’. Joel 2:32 asserts that ‘everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved’ – witness Jonah’s commission to preach salvation to Gentile Nineveh, and the Lord’s declaration in Malachi 1:11: ‘my name shall be great among the Gentiles … [and] among the nations’.

The Psalms also contain many references to the international scope of the gospel (e.g. Psalm 2:7-8; 65:2; 67:2; 102:21-22).

The Old Testament thus teaches that all mankind belongs to God and that he is concerned for their evangelisation. This is more explicit in the New Testament, perhaps, but the foundation is solidly laid in the Old. Long before the Messiah appeared on the stage of human history, God had plans and intentions for mission to all nations.

In my Sunday School (life group classes we keep reading about Elijah nor Elisha). We can see that every-thing depends on the initiative of God.

Elijah and Elisha going Beyond the Area of Israel 

Neither made frequent missionary journeys like Paul. Their ministries were primarily directed to Israel, calling God's covenant people to repentance. However, God deliberately sent them to Gentiles at key moments to show that His grace extended beyond Israel.

Elijah

1. Sent to the widow at Zarephath (Sidon)

  • 1 Kings 17:8-24
  • Zarephath belonged to Sidon, a Gentile region (modern Lebanon).
  • God bypassed many widows in Israel and sent Elijah to a Gentile widow.
  • Jesus later highlighted this event in Luke 4:25-26.

This is Elijah's only clearly recorded ministry outside Israel.

Elisha

1. Naaman the Syrian

  • 2 Kings 5:1-19
  • Naaman was commander of the Syrian army.
  • He came from Damascus and was healed of leprosy.
  • He confessed,

    "Behold, I know that there is no God in all the earth but in Israel." (2 Kings 5:15)

Jesus referred to this account in Luke 4:27.

Whether Elisha himself traveled into Syria is not recorded. Rather, Naaman came to Elisha.

2. Ministry connected with Syria

  • 2 Kings 6:8-23
  • Elisha dealt repeatedly with the Syrian army.
  • After God blinded the Syrians, Elisha led them into Samaria where they were fed and released rather than killed.
  • This displayed God's mercy even toward Israel's enemies.

Again, Elisha himself is not recorded as traveling into Syria.

Other Old Testament examples of God's heart for the nations

There are many more examples than Elijah and Elisha.

Abraham

  • Genesis 12:1-3
  • "In you all the families of the earth shall be blessed."

From the very beginning, God's covenant had every nation in view.

Melchizedek

  • Genesis 14:18-20
  • A Gentile priest who worshiped the true God.

Hagar

  • Genesis 16
  • God sought an Egyptian servant woman.

Joseph

  • Genesis 39-50
  • Used by God to preserve Egyptians and many surrounding peoples.

Rahab

  • Joshua 2
  • A Canaanite woman saved by faith.

Ruth

  • Entire book of Ruth
  • A Moabite who became part of the Messiah's family line.

Jonah

  • Entire book
  • Sent to Nineveh, the Assyrian capital.
  • Perhaps the clearest missionary book in the Old Testament.

Daniel

  • Throughout Daniel
  • Witnessed before Babylonian and Persian kings.

Esther

  • God preserved His people among the nations.

Psalms

Many psalms call all nations to worship God.

Examples:

  • Psalm 22:27-28
  • Psalm 47:1-9
  • Psalm 67
  • Psalm 96:1-10
  • Psalm 98
  • Psalm 117

Isaiah

Isaiah repeatedly speaks of God's salvation reaching every nation.

Examples:

  • Isaiah 2:2-4
  • Isaiah 11:10
  • Isaiah 19:23-25
  • Isaiah 42:6
  • Isaiah 49:6
  • Isaiah 52:10
  • Isaiah 56:6-8
  • Isaiah 66:18-21

Zechariah

  • Zechariah 2:11
  • Zechariah 8:20-23
  • Zechariah 14:16

Many nations will come to worship the Lord.

Jesus revealed the same missionary heart as the Father

Jesus ministered mostly among Israel but intentionally crossed ethnic and cultural boundaries.

Examples:

  • John 4 – Samaritan woman
  • Matthew 8:5-13 – Roman centurion
  • Mark 7:24-30 – Syrophoenician woman
  • Mark 5:1-20 – Gerasene demoniac in Gentile territory
  • Luke 17:11-19 – Samaritan leper
  • Luke 19:10 – "The Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost."

Jesus also declared:

"For God so loved the world..." (John 3:16)

The Great Commission Is Also My Mission Today

After His resurrection, Jesus expanded the mission publicly.

  • Matthew 28:18-20
  • Mark 16:15
  • Luke 24:46-47
  • John 20:21
  • Acts 1:8

The gospel was to go:

  • Jerusalem
  • Judea
  • Samaria
  • The ends of the earth

The early church

Acts demonstrates God's heart moving steadily outward.

  • Acts 8 – Samaritans
  • Acts 8 – Ethiopian official
  • Acts 10 – Cornelius
  • Acts 11 – Gentile church at Antioch
  • Acts 13-28 – Paul's missionary journeys across Asia Minor and Europe

Revelation

The Bible ends exactly where God's promise to Abraham pointed.

  • Revelation 5:9
  • Revelation 7:9-10

People redeemed

"from every tribe and language and people and nation."

The unchanging promises, word and missionary heart of God has won me over

To Jesus who was sent to save us. Taken together, Scripture reveals one consistent story:

  • God blessed Abraham so all nations would be blessed (Genesis 12:3).
  • Israel was called to be a light to the nations (Isaiah 49:6).
  • Elijah ministered to a widow in Sidon (1 Kings 17:8-24).
  • Elisha extended God's grace to Naaman the Syrian (2 Kings 5:1-19).
  • Jonah was sent to Nineveh.
  • The Psalms repeatedly summon all peoples to praise the Lord.
  • The prophets foresaw the nations streaming to worship the true God.
  • Jesus came to seek and save the lost and commissioned His followers to make disciples of all nations (Matthew 28:19).
  • Acts records the gospel spreading from Jerusalem to the Gentile world.
  • Revelation culminates with a redeemed multitude from every tribe, language, people, and nation worshiping the Lamb forever.

As John Stott said, "The Bible is not primarily the story of the church's mission, but of God's mission." While the wording is often paraphrased in different ways, it accurately reflects a major biblical theme: from Genesis to Revelation, God is going, is sending, gathering a people for Himself from every nation under heaven.

God's missionary heart did not begin in the New Testament. It is woven throughout the entire Bible. Jesus did not invent God's concern for the nations; He fulfilled what God had been revealing all along.

Elijah and Elisha going beyond Israel

Neither Elijah nor Elisha made frequent missionary journeys like Paul. Their ministries were primarily directed to Israel, calling God's covenant people to repentance. However, God deliberately sent them to Gentiles at key moments to show that His grace extended beyond Israel.

Elijah

1. Sent to the widow at Zarephath (Sidon)

  • 1 Kings 17:8-24
  • Zarephath belonged to Sidon, a Gentile region (modern Lebanon).
  • God bypassed many widows in Israel and sent Elijah to a Gentile widow.
  • Jesus later highlighted this event in Luke 4:25-26.

This is Elijah's only clearly recorded ministry outside Israel.

Elisha

1. Naaman the Syrian

  • 2 Kings 5:1-19
  • Naaman was commander of the Syrian army.
  • He came from Damascus and was healed of leprosy.
  • He confessed,

    "Behold, I know that there is no God in all the earth but in Israel." (2 Kings 5:15)

Jesus referred to this account in Luke 4:27.

Whether Elisha himself traveled into Syria is not recorded. Rather, Naaman came to Elisha.

2. Ministry connected with Syria

  • 2 Kings 6:8-23
  • Elisha dealt repeatedly with the Syrian army.
  • After God blinded the Syrians, Elisha led them into Samaria where they were fed and released rather than killed.
  • This displayed God's mercy even toward Israel's enemies.

Again, Elisha himself is not recorded as traveling into Syria.

Wanna See Other Old Testament Examples of God's heart for the Nations Needing His Mercy and Grace

There are many more examples than Elijah and Elisha.

Abraham

  • Genesis 12:1-3
  • "In you all the families of the earth shall be blessed."

From the very beginning, God's covenant had every nation in view.

Melchizedek

  • Genesis 14:18-20
  • A Gentile priest who worshiped the true God.

Hagar

  • Genesis 16
  • God sought an Egyptian servant woman.

Joseph

  • Genesis 39-50
  • Used by God to preserve Egyptians and many surrounding peoples.

Rahab

  • Joshua 2
  • A Canaanite woman saved by faith.

Ruth

  • Entire book of Ruth
  • A Moabite who became part of the Messiah's family line.

Jonah

  • Entire book
  • Sent to Nineveh, the Assyrian capital.
  • Perhaps the clearest missionary book in the Old Testament.

Daniel

  • Throughout Daniel
  • Witnessed before Babylonian and Persian kings.

Esther

  • God preserved His people among the nations.

Psalms

Many psalms call all nations to worship God.

Examples:

  • Psalm 22:27-28
  • Psalm 47:1-9
  • Psalm 67
  • Psalm 96:1-10
  • Psalm 98
  • Psalm 117

Isaiah

Isaiah repeatedly speaks of God's salvation reaching every nation.

Examples:

  • Isaiah 2:2-4
  • Isaiah 11:10
  • Isaiah 19:23-25
  • Isaiah 42:6
  • Isaiah 49:6
  • Isaiah 52:10
  • Isaiah 56:6-8
  • Isaiah 66:18-21

Zechariah

  • Zechariah 2:11
  • Zechariah 8:20-23
  • Zechariah 14:16

Many nations will come to worship the Lord.

Jesus revealed the same missionary heart

Jesus ministered mostly among Israel but intentionally crossed ethnic and cultural boundaries.

Examples:

  • John 4 – Samaritan woman
  • Matthew 8:5-13 – Roman centurion
  • Mark 7:24-30 – Syrophoenician woman
  • Mark 5:1-20 – Gerasene demoniac in Gentile territory
  • Luke 17:11-19 – Samaritan leper
  • Luke 19:10 – "The Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost."

Jesus also declared:

"For God so loved the world..." (John 3:16)

The Great Commission Is Our Mission

After His resurrection, Jesus expanded the mission publicly.

  • Matthew 28:18-20
  • Mark 16:15
  • Luke 24:46-47
  • John 20:21
  • Acts 1:8

The gospel was to go:

  • Jerusalem
  • Judea
  • Samaria
  • The ends of the earth

The early church

Acts demonstrates God's heart moving steadily outward.

  • Acts 8 – Samaritans
  • Acts 8 – Ethiopian official
  • Acts 10 – Cornelius
  • Acts 11 – Gentile church at Antioch
  • Acts 13-28 – Paul's missionary journeys across Asia Minor and Europe

Revelation

The Bible ends exactly where God's promise to Abraham pointed.

  • Revelation 5:9
  • Revelation 7:9-10

People redeemed

"from every tribe and language and people and nation."

The unchanging missionary heart of God

Taken together, Scripture reveals one consistent story:

  • God blessed Abraham so all nations would be blessed (Genesis 12:3).
  • Israel was called to be a light to the nations (Isaiah 49:6).
  • Elijah ministered to a widow in Sidon (1 Kings 17:8-24).
  • Elisha extended God's grace to Naaman the Syrian (2 Kings 5:1-19).
  • Jonah was sent to Nineveh.
  • The Psalms repeatedly summon all peoples to praise the Lord.
  • The prophets foresaw the nations streaming to worship the true God.
  • Jesus came to seek and save the lost and commissioned His followers to make disciples of all nations (Matthew 28:19).
  • Acts records the gospel spreading from Jerusalem to the Gentile world.
  • Revelation culminates with a redeemed multitude from every tribe, language, people, and nation worshiping the Lamb forever.

As John Stott observed, "The Bible is not primarily the story of the church's mission, but of God's mission." While the wording is often paraphrased in different ways, it accurately reflects a major biblical theme: from Genesis to Revelation, God is gathering a people for Himself from every nation under heaven. KnowGod.org

Saturday, July 18, 2026

A Christian leader who is involved in ministering God's word to His people needs to be more involved with the Lord in private.

..cuz it's important to walk in love, have spiritual balance, discernment, and red-hot passion for Christ.  

The fruit of the Spirit is love. We all can speak the truth in love. That good balance comes from knowing the Bible and it's Author well -- yes, from cultivating a prayer life. 

Ever Ask.. Who Is Fit to Mentor a Born-Again Soul Winner? 

A passionate Bible-loyal spiritual leader who earnestly prays for people and seeks to win lost souls. 

I want to talk about lost passion, but how this in a close walk with Christ, can be recovered. Real spiritual revival, spawning an awakening, can indeed happen, and it will start with prayers of repentance.

First-love-righteous-passion can be somewhat compared to a romance between a man and lady, or a would-be groom and his potential bride.

Guys know that when they first take a girl out for a meal, coffee and/or for concert etc., they sure want to make a good first impression on her cuz they only get one opportunity to do that. That's so normal.

So, the smart guy showers her with polite kindness (not overly with gifts etc). They make sure their shirt, best jeans or slacks, and shoes are clean. They show her respect and get her door. Yes, maybe they open the car or restaurant door for her. They pull out all the stops, pull out her chair at the eatery—a nice Italian restaurant.

Then a few of them get married, and some things change.

Some of the guys still open the car door for her and other's just beep it open with that button on the keys. I say wait until she’s all the way in car or restaurant before closing the door.

Is their heart still fully there? Something has happened with some of the. The passion has somehow jsut slipped away. Some are no longer making the all-star effort.

One inwardly neglected and hurt woman who wanted to divorce her husband after the drab efforts told her attorney, “I want this divorce to hurt him badly. I want him to feel as much pain as possible.”

The attorney said, “Here’s how to do it. For the next three months, smother your husband with affection. Compliment him constantly. Tell him what a great guy he is and how much you care for him. Then, when he’s feeling on top of the world, drop the divorce papers on him. He won’t know what hit him. He’ll be devastated when you walk out.”

The woman agreed to the doc's plan. For the next three months she complimented her husband daily, she affirmed him, and she told him how much she loved and appreciated him. What happened next? When the three months ended, her attorney wanting to make some bucks called her on the phone and said, “All right, let’s get this divorce started.”

The woman said, “Divorce? We’re going on our second honeymoon.” By committing to the relationship as God intends, the woman unwittingly re-ignited the flames of passion in the relationship again.

Similarly, when believers commit to time with Jesus.. to the Christian life as God intends—by studying Scripture, immersing ourselves in prayer, getting involved in a church, and sharing our faith—we fuel the fire of revival in ourselves and others.

That’s why Paul wrote, “So never be ashamed to tell others about our Lord. And don’t be ashamed of me, either, even though I’m in prison for him. With the strength God gives you, be ready to suffer with me for the sake of the Good News. For God saved us and called us to live a holy life. He did this, not because we deserved it, but because that was his plan from before the beginning of time—to show us his grace through Christ Jesus” (2 Timothy 1:8–9 NLT).

One person’s spiritual boldness paves the way for others to follow, just as John Hancock’s bold signature on the Declaration of Independence gave others courage to follow.

Passion and boldness are key ingredients of revival.

"So never be ashamed to tell others about our Lord. And don’t be ashamed of me, either, even though I’m in prison for him. With the strength God gives you, be ready to suffer with me for the sake of the Good News. For God saved us and called us to live a holy life. He did this, not because we deserved it, but because that was his plan from before the beginning of time—to show us his grace through Christ Jesus." 2 Timothy 1:8–9

"Honest prayer, sincere thanks, heartfelt praise, and the acceptable worship of God -- those are the highest activities of any real Christian. In fact, it's impossible to properly live red-hot passionately for Jesus without maintaining these top priorities." @KurtwVs

A man who has never pled with a stranger to God's Kindom.. to do what? To flee the wrath that is to come.. a person who has never wept over one soul who is getting closer and closer so to eternity.. one who has never been involved in planting one local church with his own sweat. Man, that would be a poor guide for soundly shepherding God's people, however brilliant his mind is. He teaches from a book that he hasn't lived.

Seminaries today are full of gifted theologian-types who can defend the faith with precision and yet have never once verbally witnessed to a lost person or led one soul to Christ and His cross. Their students inherit an academic faith and head-knowledge instead of earnestness with fighting faith, armed with categories (which isn't always bad) but short on travail. A theology that produces no zeal for time alone with the Lord or for the lost is not worth passing on. Paul trained Timothy on the road, in prison, and under threat: "endure hardness, as a good soldier of Jesus Christ" (2 Timothy 2:3).

The Modest Ambitions of a New Generation

A young pastor spoke out about his five-year goal. It was to grow his church from twenty to forty (trust God to use you to help them grow and mature spiritually and they bring their lost and saved friends with em). Not bad at all. Another said his only ambition was to teach and preach through every verse of Scripture on a schedule, nothing more. For decisions in wise applications? Exposition and steady growth are indeed good. But let there be a greater desire to get alone and bless the Lord. Otherwise, where did that burden for the lost of the city outside the doors go? Faithfulness in times of solitude and in public brings fruitfulness. Abide in the Vine. A plan to double twenty into forty is not really a vision though. It sounds like a spreadsheet with perhaps a verse taped to it.

Between 2015 and 2022, the share of pastors who believed that their church was effective at reaching the unchurched fell from 63 percent to 39 percent, a 24-point collapse in less than a decade. Only about three in ten Christians today strongly agree that they carry a personal responsibility to share their faith one on one or one on more than one with people. The Seminary pipeline seems to be producing managers of decline, not shepherds of authentic revival.

The Overcorrection Nobody Even Seems To Name

Know any high-D times? I like so many of those with natural leadership gifting. Now, fifty years ago the church endured some domineering types of men who pretty much bulldozed people in the name of their vision and mistook their volume for anointing. I did like the clarity of many. 

Correcting.. that was necessary. But man, the pendulum seems to have swung past center in this correction. In repenting of prayerlessness and self-driven loud or pushy leadership, many of us have somehow built a system that manufactures overly cautious, tentative men preaching very cautious but boring sermons hard to put into practice..yes, to comfortable congregations that are calibrated to stay in a comfortable-neutral. We have not cured the so-called disease so to speak. We have swapped one imbalance for a quieter imbalance that rightly/aka biblcially challenges nobody. We can get closer to and more like the Lord. 
Where Is the Fire of God For Building His Kingdom Today? 

I mean regarding the zeal for the Lord and His Kingdom. Not talking about His judgment right now.. that indeed is coming. 

There is a passion regarding getting folk to Christ for safety, and for keeping them from God's future judgment. 

"His word was in mine heart as a burning fire shut up in my bones, and I was weary with forbearing, and I could not stay" (Jeremiah 20:9). That is the preacher this hour demands, and the kind our current system rarely produces.



How can I get passion for Jesus (that's most important)? Pray, worship, spend lots of time alone with the Lord listening to His word speak to your heart. Let Him be Lord and change you. 








Does my Christian marriage need some pure passion? Sure, but what does the Bible teach us about overcoming passionate lust?  You don't feed lust; you starve it to death. It's about dying to self (your old fleshly nature) and being careful with what you allow to enter your mind -- yes, your ear and eye gates. We are called to be holy as He is Holy. 









What does the Bible say about having zeal? In the Lord have you ever been rightly zealous?

















Can you give me some Bible verses about zeal?









People can develop crushes on other people they don’t even really know, such as celebrities, public figures, or teachers. The internet has provided a new source of crushing as cyber-relationships ignite and our only contact with people is through a screen. The teen years are especially crush-prone (you've been there, right, and I've been there. Many have married cuz of a crush they felt). Hormones today are running wild, and bodies are in various stages of maturity with an urge to merge. We are not always aware of the differences between love and a passionate crush, especially when we’re young, so we are prone to leap headfirst into romances or even sinful sexual liaisons that leave lifelong wounds. Love wiser! 


My deeper concern today is not so much who sits in the White House (and that's a really good concern to pray and vote about minus any cheating), but it's about who fills the pulpits and pews in God's house. 

May I say it again? Christ alone is the ultimate solution for this generation, and every Christian's first citizenship is in heaven, not in any political party (See Philippians 3:20). That said, plain speech is still owed: abortion, the sexualizing and gender confusion of children, and open hostility toward Christ and His church are not neutral policy disagreements. Scripture calls calling evil good a sin in itself (Isaiah 5:20), regardless of which platform promotes it. Naming a sin is not hatred. Silence in the face of it is cowardice dressed as tolerance.

We have traded the fire of God for caution, unction for competence, travail in prayer for polished technique. A man can be doctrinally sound and functionally lifeless, able to parse the Greek and never once weep over his own city. The question is not whether a minister can rightly handle a text. The question is whether God's glory has ever broken him, and whether he still burns to see the lost won to Christ.

Christ told Laodicea, "because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth" (Revelation 3:16). Lukewarm is not a safe middle. It is the one condition Christ calls intolerable.

Examine yourself. Red hot, lukewarm, or cold? Zeal without wisdom burns out. Wisdom without zeal lights nothing. Repent where you have gone cold, believe Him fully, and ask again for the fire Jeremiah could not shut up in his bones. KnowGod.org








Thursday, July 9, 2026

WE DO HAVE SOME GOOD EXAMPLES... YES, OF PEOPLE WHO WERE WILLING TO STAND AGAINST THE WHOLE WORLD TO REMAIN LOYAL AND FAITHFUL TO CHRIST.

I dare ya, no I double-dog dare you by God's powerful anointing if I may, to be like them. Be filled and controlled by the Holy Spirit. 

Choose early, draw upon the Spirit's grace...

Be Faithful Until Death -- How Beautiful, That Unshakable Loyalty Of Those Who Belong To Christ

"Be faithful unto death, and I will give you the crown of life." Revelation 2:10

The Christian life has never been a call to comfort. It is a call to Christ and then boldly spreading His gospel Message. Let's earnestly pray. God the Father can use you to win people to His Son.

From the very beginning, Jesus never promised His followers an easy road. He promised Himself. He promised His presence. He promised His peace. He promised His power. And He promised that those who belong to Him will never be abandoned.

When Jesus spoke to the suffering believers in Smyrna, He did not tell them that persecution would disappear. Instead, He prepared them to endure it. Some would be imprisoned. Some would suffer greatly. Some would even die for His name. Yet His command remained wonderfully simple:

"Do not fear.. Be faithful until death." (Revelation 2:10)

That command rests upon an even greater reality:

God is always faithful first.

Our perseverance is never the cause of our salvation. It is the evidence that God's saving grace is at work within us. We endure because Christ holds us securely. We remain faithful because He remains faithful.

Paul rejoiced in this certainty:

"He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus." (Philippians 1:6)

Jesus declared the same glorious security:

"My sheep hear My voice.. I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one will snatch them out of My hand." (John 10:27–30)

Being faithful unto death means following the Lord with all fears getting conquered. 

  • Believers should be.. they each can be fully ready to stand strong in the Lord when adversity arrives.. with their faith in Chirst, even facing extreme fierce persecution or even martyrdom like Stephen did. 
  • Believers should be.. they each can be fully ready for the Rapture to happen, if it happens during their life time here. 
  • Believers should be.. they each can be fully ready to give verbal witness of what God has done in their lives. True witnesses live the life (not a double life, not inconsistantly if they allow the Spirit is in control). Yes, they can be and give verbal expression speaking God's Message boldly by the power of the Holy Spirit rather than relying upon human strength. We're called to Him and to this lifestyle. 
  • I would like to point to some biblical figures like Stephen who sacrificed everything for Christ. Death is not the end for believers because Jesus conquered the grave, offering eternal life.

    The believer's confidence is not found in the strength of his grip upon Christ, but in Christ's unbreakable grip upon him.

    The Holy Spirit seals every true believer until the day of redemption (Ephesians 1:13–14; 4:30; 2 Corinthians 1:22). The God who saves also keeps His own.

    Therefore, faithfulness is not self-produced determination. It is the fruit of God's preserving grace.

    The World May Reject Christ, But Heaven And All Those There Never Will

    Jesus warned His disciples that increasing hostility would mark this present age. Here's a Bible promise we don't really feel fond of...

    "You will be hated by all nations because of My name." (Matthew 24:9)

    False teaching would multiply.

    Lawlessness would increase.

    Love would grow cold.

    Many would abandon the faith they once professed.

    Yet Christ also declared:

    "The one who endures to the end will be saved." (Matthew 24:13)

    Endurance does not purchase salvation. It reveals the reality of saving faith.

    Real faith perseveres because the Savior preserves.

    The same grace that forgives also transforms.

    The same grace that justifies also sanctifies.

    The same Savior who rescues sinners also sustains saints.

    Fear Has Lost Its Mastery, So Why Should You Who Know The Lord? Ask Him To Make You Fearless Today

    Jesus gave one of the most liberating commands ever spoken to His followers:

    "Do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul." (Matthew 10:28)

    The greatest enemy can only touch the body.

    He cannot steal eternal life.

    He cannot separate believers from the love of Christ (Romans 8:35–39).

    He cannot remove them from the Father's hand.

    Death itself has become merely the doorway into everlasting joy.

    The Christian never walks toward defeat.

    He walks toward resurrection.

    God Keeps His People Through All Kinds Of Trials

    Scripture never promises believers an escape from every hardship.

    Instead, it promises God's presence in every hardship.

    He walks through the fire with His people.

    He enters the lions' den.

    He stands beside imprisoned apostles.

    He strengthens weary missionaries.

    He comforts suffering saints.

    He never abandons His own.

    As Hebrews reminds us:

    "I will never leave you nor forsake you." (Hebrews 13:5)

    Because God never leaves us, believers can say with confidence:

    "The Lord is my helper; I will not fear. What can man do to me?" (Hebrews 13:6)

    Faithful People Change History

    From cover to cover, from Table of Contents to the maps in the back. Throughout all of Scripture and church history, God has always preserved boys and girls, men and women who loved Christ more than comfort. Do you? You can also live like this. Pray like you mean it...without ceasing... cuz you really do. 

    Faithful Examples in Scripture

    Old Testament

    • Abel
    • Enoch
    • Noah
    • Abraham
    • Sarah
    • Isaac
    • Jacob
    • Joseph
    • Moses
    • Joshua
    • Caleb
    • Rahab
    • Deborah
    • Hannah
    • Samuel
    • David
    • Elijah
    • Elisha
    • Jehoshaphat
    • Hezekiah
    • Josiah
    • Nehemiah
    • Ezra
    • Esther
    • Mordecai
    • Daniel
    • Shadrach
    • Meshach
    • Abednego
    • Jeremiah
    • Ezekiel
    • Hosea
    • Habakkuk

    New Testament

    • Mary, the mother of Jesus
    • Joseph
    • John the Baptist
    • Peter
    • James
    • John
    • Andrew
    • Philip
    • Bartholomew
    • Thomas
    • Matthew
    • James the Less
    • Simon the Zealot
    • Jude
    • Matthias
    • Stephen
    • Barnabas
    • Paul
    • Silas
    • Timothy
    • Titus
    • Luke
    • Aquila
    • Priscilla
    • Epaphroditus
    • Onesiphorus
    • Lydia
    • Phoebe

    Most of these believers faced severe opposition and suffering. Many were misunderstood. Several were imprisoned. Many were martyred for the wonderful name of Jesus.

    None regretted following Christ.

    Faithful Witnesses Throughout Church History

    Know Him well, and then make Him well known wherever He leads you. Be like the Lord; live like that. Care for real, and then share what's real cuz we are realists. Talk to God about men and then to men about God.. in that order. The Lord has continued raising up courageous witnesses (with a right human spirit cuz of the Holy Spirit, by good words, good motives, good attitudes, and by good deeds) throughout every century.

    • Ignatius of Antioch
    • Polycarp of Smyrna
    • Justin Martyr
    • Athanasius
    • Patrick of Ireland
    • John Wycliffe
    • Jan Hus
    • William Tyndale
    • Martin Luther
    • John Calvin
    • John Knox
    • Richard Baxter
    • John Bunyan
    • David Brainerd
    • William Carey
    • Adoniram Judson
    • George Müller
    • Hudson Taylor
    • Charles H. Spurgeon
    • J. C. Ryle
    • Amy Carmichael
    • Jim Elliot
    • Elisabeth Elliot
    • Richard Wurmbrand
    • Corrie ten Boom
    • Dietrich Bonhoeffer
    • John and Betty Stam
    • Nate Saint
    • Ed McCully
    • Roger Youderian
    • Pete Fleming
    • Billy Graham

    Go study these lives prayerfully and don't do the wrong things these have done. We each are flawed sinners and imperfect (are you a sinner who was saved or a sinner yet to be saved?), but do that they each did right in the Lord if it's fitting for your time and situation ..please. Wisly apply the Word of God.. don't apply it foolishly in His name. That would be a bad witness that would repell people. Each one LOVED JESUS MOST MORE THAN LIFE ITSELF. Each one of these believers served the Lord faithfully in different generations, but they shared one primary conviction along with believing in the Essentials:

    Jesus Christ is worth everything.

    They Loved Not Their Lives

    Heaven gives this remarkable description of faithful believers:

    "They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony, for they loved not their lives even unto death." (Revelation 12:11)

    That is biblical courage.

    Not reckless bravery.

    Not human stubbornness.

    Not self-confidence.

    But wholehearted devotion to the Savior who first loved them.

    Faithfulness Is Ordinary Obedience Over a Lifetime

    Most Christians will never stand before a firing squad.

    Most will never be imprisoned.

    Yet every believer is called to daily faithfulness.

    Faithfulness at home.

    Faithfulness at work.

    Faithfulness in purity.

    Faithfulness in prayer.

    Faithfulness in truth.

    Faithfulness in forgiveness.

    Faithfulness in evangelism.

    Faithfulness when no one notices.

    The greatest victories are often quiet acts of obedience known only to God.

    The Crown of Life

    Jesus ends His promise with hope:

    "I will give you the crown of life." (Revelation 2:10)

    This is not a reward earned by human effort.

    It is the joyful inheritance of those whose faith proved genuine because Christ faithfully preserved them.

    The race will end.

    The battle will cease.

    The tears will dry.

    Faith will become sight.

    Every sacrifice made for Christ will seem small compared to seeing Him face to face.

    As the old hymn declares:

    "It will be worth it all, when we see Jesus."

    The Fruit of the Holy Spirit – What is self-control?

    What is the realm of the Spirit (Romans 8:9)?

    Isn't it unloving to tell someone he/she is sinning?

    How do I find comfort and peace when I have lost a loved one?

    Why is there no greater love than to lay down your life (John 15:13)?

    Is a believer supposed to be able to feel the Holy Spirit?

    In what way is self-control a fruit of the Holy Spirit?

    Did God sacrifice Himself to Himself to save us from Himself?

    What does it mean to walk in the Spirit?

    What does it mean that Jesus loved His own to the end (John 13:1)?

    How can I overcome the fear of death?

    What does the Bible say about suicide? Don't do that selfish act.. you are not your own; you've been bought at a price.

    What did Jesus mean when He said that he who loves his life will lose it? 

    What is the sin unto death?

    What does it mean that the believers will overcome by the blood of the Lamb?

    How can I ..for real.. be filled and controlled (not by spirits all buzzed or drunk) with/by the Holy Spirit?

    What does it look like to be spiritually minded (Romans 8:6)?

    “If you have not discovered something you are willing to die for, then you are not fit to live.” ― Martin Luther King Jr.

    Live in God's will. You haven't even begun to live right until you find that one thing.. I mean that One Person worth living and dying for. #Jesus


    Need some courage from Him?

    Jesus put it this way: “For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it; but whoever loses his life for My sake will find it” (Matthew 16:25).

    Everyone’s physical life here is terminal.

    We are all going to physically die at some point; we just don’t know when or how.

    Some say we each start dying right after we were physically born. The real question is, will we ever really live?

    Am NOT talking about taking up space and sucking up air; I mean really living, making an impact, a real difference, pushing past our fears and taking hold of our God-ordained destiny.

    Until we deal with death in our minds, we will miss out on life.

    "Therefore, since the children share in flesh and blood, He Himself likewise also partook of the same, that through death He might render powerless him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and might free those who through fear of death were subject to slavery all their lives." Hebrews 2:14–15

    It is only when we deal with the inevitable in our hearts that we can actually go serve the Lord, I mean for Him to do the impossible.

    When a person loses their fear of death and the fear of man, having Jesus as Lord, he or she begins to move into new realms of Christian impact! God totally delights to use us, ordinary people to pull of extraordinary things for His glory.

    "A coward dies a thousand deaths, but a brave man dies only once!" Anon. from Rome

    Why be robbed of real zoe life every day? I propose that the life we were called to live lies on the other side of our personal fears and all deception. The Fake News and others love to lie to us, but we can walk with discernment and boldness. Remember, God how did not childproof that Garden of Eden. He is very interested in keeping each of us from a life of vanity and meaninglessness. Courage is a catalyst to great leadership in the Lord and for a life full of real purpose!

    Turn your eyes upon Jesus, look full in His wonderful face; and the things of earth will grow strangely dim, in the light of His glory and grace.

    I don't mind the part about being physically dead (cuz I know my spirit will be alive with the Lord and then later my body will be resurrected), but it's "getting dead" that kinda concerns me a bit. Sickness and disease, heart attacks and strokes and other physical problems wouldn't be here if it wasn't for Adam's sin in the garden. If it wasn't for sin. God can forgive each of us if we will be straightforward and repent, if we will simply receive saving faith in His Son Jesus. None of us want to "get dead" really (that isn't a normal longing of anyone), but we all want to live forever. God is love. Let's live in and with Him! Only Christ can give us sufficient grace and strength to get through the getting that way.