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It has been some time since I've posted anything here. I've been in a funk for a long time! Depression and Covid has pla...
05/09/2021

It has been some time since I've posted anything here. I've been in a funk for a long time! Depression and Covid has played a big part but I will tell you truthfully my heart and soul has been just out of it! Out of fuel, out of fire, out of steam! I could blame it on Covid, depression, or any number of things but I've simply fallen away from my lifeline...

JESUS!

I need you now!

JESUS!

God bless you ALL!

I posted something a few weeks ago that THANKFULLY ended up blessing a BUNCH OF people! If you were part of that, my hea...
02/12/2020

I posted something a few weeks ago that THANKFULLY ended up blessing a BUNCH OF people! If you were part of that, my heartfelt thanks goes out to you and I already know God will bless you for it! You made a difference in many lives! ❤

SOO... here I go again! I have a few ministries that I really try to faithfully support but I always feel like I could do more this time of year.....one is a homeless ministry and a local food pantry and one is a Christmas ministry for local families in our district. Both are in need of OUR help ESPECIALLY THIS YEAR!! Times are tough for so many, but for many that doesn't even begin to describe it.....2020 has been tougher than ever. The needs are never ending and the recipients are constantly changing. Since this is the season of giving, I'M CALLING ON YOU! These 2 ministries are always on my heart and they truly give from their hearts day in and day out all year long.....but this time of year seems to always hit hardest. It's freezing on the streets and many homes have no food or money for bill's much less gifts for their children. Anything you could do to help would be AMAZING! Let me list some immediate needs and some great ideas
Food
Tents
Blankets (2.99 @ acadamy right now)
Jackets
Gloves
Coats
Sleeping bags ($10 @ Walmart)
Sweaters
Socks
Beanies
Scarfs
Hand warmers
Hygiene products
Small propane heaters
Snacks
Jerky
Crackers
Peanut butter
Tuna kits
Children's toys
Books
Bibles
Water
Monitery donations!

Anything you could do would bless someone greatly. They may never know you or be able to repay you but I bet you are repayed 10 fold regardless! Let me know if you want to help! 🥰❤ And much love to you always!

And if you're reading this and think to you yourself, I really need help for my family....well msg me!

If you remain in Me (Jesus ) you will bear much fruit.John 15:3So what does this look like practically? We abide or rema...
16/08/2020

If you remain in Me (Jesus ) you will bear much fruit.
John 15:3
So what does this look like practically? We abide or remain in Christ when we expectantly dive into His Word each day, anticipating a "word" from Him, and when we joyfully come before Him in prayer, not only praying but also listening for His still, small voice. Our inward abiding leads to outward change and bountiful fruit. We willingly walk in obedience to His Word, even when it's hard and we don't understand. We gladly serve the least and the lost, sharing the love He so graciously extended to us. We boldly share the hope that we have found in Him with the least and the lost who so desperately need the hope of a Savior. ~ Wendy Blight

10/08/2020

Lord, straight up, it feels like the world’s gone mad.
Genocide & wars & the middle of the world about gutting out the middle of our hearts.
The world needs peacemakers who let the broken bits of their heart fill in all the cracked pieces & places in the world.
The world needs prayer warriors who don’t see prayer as the least we can do but the *most* we can do — and then literally get down on their knees & pray us through this mess.
The world needs to hear a lot more good news — and maybe that starts with each of us beggars who've found bread sharing more of the sustenance of Good News. The news that there is a Wounded Healer who touches our scars with His scars and says, 'I know & I see & no matter how it seems, there’s more happening than you see, and *this isn’t over yet.*'
The news that these days that are dry & brittle, ready to snap — these days are perfect kindling for a burning bush. Watch for burning bushes on days like this. The secret of joy is to keep seeking You precisely where we don't expect to find You.
The news that now more than ever is when we all need to be kind to one another. No one ever killed anyone with kindness —- only demons are killed by kindness. The rest of us are resurrected by kindness.
Kindle us with kindness, keep us with kindness, kiss us with kindness. Please, resurrect us all with kindness…
In the name of Jesus, the only One who loved all of us to death & back to real & forever life again,
Amen.

Love one another!!!
08/08/2020

Love one another!!!

In the Pits with a KingResource by John Piper Scripture: Psalm 40:1-3One of the great benefits of reading the psalms is ...
05/08/2020

In the Pits with a King

Resource by

John Piper

Scripture: Psalm 40:1-3

One of the great benefits of reading the psalms is that they present us with patterns of life that the godly go through in every age. And in doing that they encourage us that we are made of the same stuff as the saints of old, and they give us guidance how to follow the pattern of godliness through to the end.

One of the patterns of life recurring in the psalms is getting in the pits and getting out again. And my favorite statement of this pattern comes from David's experience found in Psalm 40. We are going to focus only on verses 1–3 but we will read the whole psalm so as not to miss any insight the context might give.

I waited patiently for the Lord;
and he inclined to me, and heard my cry.
He brought me up out of the pit of destruction,
out of the miry clay;
And he set my feet upon a rock,
making my footsteps firm.
And he put a new song in my mouth,
a song of praise to our God;
Many will see and fear,
And will trust in the Lord.

How blessed is the man who has made
the Lord his trust,
And has not turned to the proud,
nor to those who lapse into falsehood.
Many, O Lord my God,
are the wonders which thou hast done,
And thy thoughts toward us;
There is none to compare with thee;
If I would declare and speak of them,
They would be too numerous to count.

Sacrifice and meal offering thou hast not desired;
My ears thou has opened;
Burnt offering and sin offering
thou hast not required.
Then I said, "Behold, I come;
In the scroll of the book it is written of me;
I delight to do thy will, O my God;
Thy law is within my heart."

I have proclaimed glad tidings of righteousness
in the great congregation;
Behold, I will not restrain my lips,
O, Lord thou knowest.
I have not hidden thy righteousness
within my heart;
I have spoken of thy faithfulness
and thy salvation;
I have not concealed thy lovingkindness
and thy truth from the great congregation.

Thou, O Lord, wilt not withhold
thy compassion from me;
Thy lovingkindness and thy truth
will continually preserve me.
For evils beyond number have surrounded me;
My iniquities have overtaken me,
so that I am not able to see;
They are more numerous
than the hairs of my head;
And my heart has failed me.

Be pleased, O Lord, to deliver me;
Make haste, O Lord, to help me!
Let those be ashamed and humiliated together
Who seek my life to destroy it;
Let those be turned back and dishonored
Who delight in my hurt.
Let those be appalled because of their shame
Who say to me, "Aha, aha!"
Let all who seek thee rejoice
and be glad in thee;
Let those who love thy salvation say continually,
"The Lord be magnified!"
Since I am afflicted and needy,
Let the Lord be mindful of me;
Thou art my help and my deliverer;
Do not delay, O my God.

Verses 1–3 present a pattern of life at least part of which every Christian knows about first hand. My goal tonight, though, is that we all be enabled to follow the whole pattern all the way through to its exciting conclusion. David leads us through six stages of his experience, and I want us to follow him closely. First, David is in a muddy pit; second, he cries to God for help; third, he waits for the Lord; fourth, God draws him out of the pit to safety; fifth, God gives David a new song to sing (probably the one we are reading); sixth, many others come to trust God when they see this pattern of life. The king's pit, the king's cry, the king's patience, the king's rescue, the king's song, and the king's influence. Here is King David, a man after God's own heart. Let us see if we can make his pattern part of our life.

David Is in the Pits

First, the king is in the pits (v. 2). What is this experience? What are we supposed to feel with the king when we read that it is like being caught in a desolate pit and in miry clay? I looked up this word translated "destruction" in the NASB and "horrible" in the KJV and "desolate" in the RSV. What I found was that it refers elsewhere to roaring or tumult, like stormy waves. When you consider that the usual meaning of "pit" is a well or a cistern, the image you get is striking. It is as if David had fallen into a deep, dark well and plunged not into a clean placid pool but a roaring storm like Hurricane Allen, only all dark and underground.

Then alongside that picture is the image of mire and mud. The two don't seem to go together. But don't forget these are images that are supposed to make us feel what David was feeling. They are not photographs. It helped me to get a picture of this mud to read what King Zedekiah did to Jeremiah when he wanted to get rid of him. It says in Jeremiah 38:6, "So they took Jeremiah and cast him into the cistern of Malchiah, the king's son, which was in the court of the guard, letting Jeremiah down by ropes. And there was no water in the cistern, but only mire, and Jeremiah sank in the mire." There is one other time David wrote about an experience similar to the one here in Psalm 40, and there, too, he combined the images of mud and flood. Psalm 69:1–2 says, "Save me, O God, for the waters have come up to my soul. I have sunk in deep mire and there is no foothold; I have come into deep waters and a flood overflows me."

So perhaps what we are to imagine is falling into a well and sinking deep in the sludge at the bottom and going deeper every time we try to lift a foot and then all of a sudden there is roaring water coming from somewhere and it rushes around us in the dark. And then comes the sense of helplessness and desperation, and all of a sudden air, just air, is worth a million dollars, worth more than all the cars in Michigan and all the cabins in Minnesota. Helplessness, desperation, apparent hopelessness, the breaking point for the overworked businessman, the outer limits of exasperation for the mother of three constantly crying children, the impossible expectations of too many classes in school, the grinding stress of a lingering illness, the imminent attack of a powerful enemy. It is good that we don't know what the experience was. It makes it easier to see ourselves in the pits with the king. Anything that causes a sense of helplessness and desperation and threatens to ruin life or take it away—that is the king's pit.

David Cries Out to the Lord

Now the king's cry (v. 1): "I waited patiently for the Lord; he inclined to me and heard my cry.'' One of the reasons God loved David so much was because he cried so much. Psalm 6:6, "I am weary with my mourning; every night I flood my bed with tears; I drench my couch with my weeping." Psalm 56:8, "Put my tears in thy bottle; are they not in thy book?" Indeed they are, because, "blessed are they that mourn." It is a beautiful thing when a broken man genuinely cries out to God. Not like the jock who gets a cramp while swimming but struggles to get to shore unassisted lest he appear to be weak, but like the little child who wanders too far out in the turf and starts to get taken by the undertow and cries out immediately, "Daddy! Daddy!" God loves to answer childlike prayers.

But make sure the cry is to God and for God, not to man. Notice the inference David draws in verse 4: "Blessed is the man who has made the Lord his trust, and has not turned to the proud." Some are willing to say they need help but will seek it anywhere but from the Lord. But God is very displeased with such behavior. A good example is King Asa. God punished him for relying on Syria as an ally instead of relying on God. But Asa refused to learn his lesson and at the end of his life, it says in 2 Chronicles 16:12, "In the 39th year of his reign, Asa was diseased in his feet, and his disease became severe, yet even in his disease he did not seek the Lord, but sought help from physicians." The point here is not that doctors are bad, but that it is bad to make a doctor your God . . . to think that with him alone is healing. Whatever benefit comes through physicians comes from the Lord and therefore his help is to be sought. Psalm 118:8, 9: "It is better to take refuge in the Lord than to trust in man; it is better to take refuge in the Lord than to take trust in princes." Or as one of my favorite passages puts it: "Do not trust in princes, in mortal man, in whom there is no salvation. His spirit departs, he returns to the earth; in that very day his thoughts perish. How blessed is he whose help is the God of Jacob, whose hope is the Lord his God!" (Psalm 146:3–5). Therefore, when you are in the pit, you do not just cry out to anybody, you cry to God.

David Waits for the Lord

And then—and then is a very important part of the pattern—you wait. Verse 1: "I waited patiently for the Lord." Or more literally, I waited intently for the Lord. The reason this is so important for us to hear is that it guards us from unbelief when God's help seems long in coming. We can draw no deadlines for God. He hastens or he delays as he sees fit.

He knows the time for joy and truly
Will send it when He sees it meet,
When He has tried and purged thee duly
And found thee free from all deceit.

Waiting for the Lord is a great part of the Christian life. There are at least two essential elements in the way we should wait with the king: humility and hope. Look back at Psalm 37:9, "Evildoers will be cut off, but those who wait for the Lord, they will inherit the land." Then in verse 11 the same promise is repeated, but in the place of those who wait it is the meek or the humble: "But the humble will inherit the land, and will delight themselves in abundant prosperity." Those who wait are the humble.

Have you ever been in a large waiting room at a doctor's office when the doctor is late returning from a call and the patients are stacked up? Who are the ones who get feisty with the receptionist and grumble to everybody? Not the meek, not the humble. Humble people can wait. They are not so presumptuous about their rights. So it is in waiting for God. We simply show how badly we need the chastisement of his delay when we do not wait patiently.

Secondly, those who wait patiently hope in God. Psalm 39:7, "And now, Lord, for what do I wait? My hope is in thee." Psalm 130:5, "I wait for the Lord, my soul does wait, and in his word do I hope." The soul of one who waits for God is not listless. It is not like a weather vane pointing this way, then that. But it is like a hungry animal straining toward his food, longing for his food. "As a deer pants for the water brooks, so my soul pants for thee, O God. My soul thirsts for God, for the living God" (Psalm 42:1, 2). Those who wait like David strain toward the moment when God will come, and they hope in him. When will he come? At the right time. That is all we can know. And that is enough.

The Lord Delivers David

When he comes he will lift us out of the pit. Verse 2: "He brought me up out of the pit of tumult, out of the miry clay; and he set my feet upon a rock making my steps firm." There is a world of difference between quicksand and rock. God moves us, when he comes, from a sense of desperation to a sense of security. In the pit we had not forgotten God, but our sense of his presence and comfort was not as lively as when he rescues us. In fact, the essence of the rescue is the restoration of that strong feeling of God's nearness and help.

For David, the rescue may have been the healing of some disease as well. This was the case in Psalm 30:2, "O Lord, my God, I cried to thee for help, and thou didst heal me." Or it may have been deliverance from his enemies as in Psalm 69, "Save me, O God . . . those who hate me without a cause are more than the hairs of my head; those who would destroy me are powerful." Or it may have been deliverance from the oppressive guilt of sin he had committed as in Psalm 51, "Be gracious to me, O God, . . . wash me thoroughly from my iniquity and cleanse me from my sin."

The Lord Gives David a New Song to Sing

God can deliver from every sort of pit and mire and will deliver his servants from any plight that would destroy their faith. And when he does we will sing. Verse 3: "He put a new song in my mouth, a song of praise to our God." People who never sing, at least in their heart, are people who do not cherish anything very deeply, or feel intense gratitude for anything. They are the sort of people who take all life for granted. They never soar with a sense of joy in their heart.

All of us gravitate to that condition because of our fallen nature. And one of the ways God keeps us awake is by letting us hit the pits, leaving us there a while and then bringing us out into the fresh air of his grace again. Do you know of any other way to get someone to love air besides letting them almost be suffocated and breathe again?

I was swimming at the bottom of a pool one time, about nine feet down, and I got my finger caught in the drain cover. In a matter of seconds air was almost all I cared about. I was good for about thirty more seconds and I cried out to God and he loosed my finger and set me upon the concrete deck and put a new song in my mouth, a hymn to air, precious air, sweet air, priceless air, and to God.

That is the kind of love God wants from us for himself. And if he must, he will get it by hiding himself for a season, until we crave him like a drowning boy craves air. And when he shows himself again and we come up gasping into his presence, we will sing like never before. All the old songs will be new. And if they are not adequate we will write our own.

The church ought not merely sing the songs of yesterday's saints. There ought to be new songs and they ought to come from you, because God has put them in your mouth. Let all the poets of Bethlehem Baptist Church come forth. Let us make a book. We will call it Patterns of Praise. Somebody start the collection!

Others See and Are Saved

Who knows how many people might see and fear and put their trust in the Lord. That is the end of verse 3, and the final step in the pattern of life described in these three verses. Isn't it tremendous that whenever God gives us deliverance from the pit and puts a new song in our mouth, his aim is not only our benefit but also the benefit of others through us? Let us never view our own song as the stopping place of God's mercies. God aims for us to sing others into the kingdom. How does this happen?

They see, fear, and put their trust in God. What do they see? They see a person who, contrary to human nature, was humble in distress and who never lost hope and banked on God and who when he was delivered gave God the glory. They see something real, genuine, authentic, something that rings true in the human heart. And as the conviction starts to build in the unbeliever that there is truth and reality in the life of the godly, he begins to fear, fear the implications of his own unbelief. If God is that real and can be depended on to help those who hope in him, then probably those who disregard him and pin their hopes on all sorts of other things are in trouble (cf. Philippians 1:28). And by the grace of God many will make the final move and put their trust in the Lord. The music of the rescued saints is a tremendous means of evangelism.

What a surprise! The whole story turns out to be a lesson in personal evangelism. How shall we win others to Christ? When you are in the pits with the king, cry out to the Lord like a helpless child; then humbly and hopefully wait patiently for the Lord; and when he comes in his own time and makes you secure, then sing a new song to his grace so people can see and fear and put their trust in the Lord

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Because we live in a fallen world and the power of darkness is real, we will be tempted. Do not be fooled into thinking ...
01/08/2020

Because we live in a fallen world and the power of darkness is real, we will be tempted. Do not be fooled into thinking that because you were saved that you will not be tempted. This is false! Even Jesus suffered temptation while he was here on earth. Yet, he overcame Satan’s temptations. Since Jesus was tempted himself, he is able to help us when we are tempted. Call on the name of Jesus when you are tempted!

01/08/2020

Hey y'all! I've been on vacation for the last week with no internet or signal on my phone! It was actually nice to be disconnected! How has everyone been this week!?!?

Taking this week to reflect on the goodness of God! We are out in the country with close family and we want for nothing!...
27/07/2020

Taking this week to reflect on the goodness of God! We are out in the country with close family and we want for nothing! It is so serene and beautiful! Everyone is at peace and loving it! No one is worried about a thing! We are all just getting along and fellowshippng! I love this life I've been given! It's a beautiful ride!!!

24/07/2020
Let us Remember the Joy of Our YouthThroughout my years in ministry, I worked with many men and women who had chosen to ...
23/07/2020

Let us Remember the Joy of Our Youth

Throughout my years in ministry, I worked with many men and women who had chosen to become Christians. I watched their faces shining with joy as they came up out of the pool. I saw their fervor as they became active in the church community, and brought their children to classes. Some of these men and women remain active in the church community and have the same or greater love of Jesus as they had in the first flush of their joy in becoming a Christian. Others either found it too difficult to maintain the lifestyle changes Christianity calls for, or lost their fervor and became “sometime” followers of Christ. As I read this passage about Israel, I remembered these people. God is reminding them of the fidelity and love they once felt for the God who brought them out of Egypt and who saved them over and over again form those who would destroy them. Now, they had lost their fervor for doing the will of God. They had turned to a life that was less demanding, becoming more selfish and less just. They took for granted that God was there – if they thought about God at all! Jeremiah is reminding them of their former kindness toward one another and their hearts that were turned to him and not to idols. For those whom I worked with who decided to become Christians, there will not be any invasion that will take away everything they have, and I am sure that the Lord will rekindle in them the love they once had like the marriage that cools after the honeymoon, but blossoms again as time goes by. For the Israelites, not listening and turning back to God will have much graver consequences. The message for us is also clear: if we have lost the fervor of our first coming to Christ, we need to do something about it.
-Frances Taylor

21/07/2020

I started this page 3 days ago and I now have 191 followers! That's so encouraging to me! I'm going to do a giveaway once I reach 500 followers! To be eligible for the giveaway all you need to do is LIKE The GOOD News Initiative, Share this page, and comment below! I'll be giving away $50 gift card.....your choice of places!

This GOOD News Story is delicious!!Michelle Brenner: ‘Lasagna Lady’ makes hundreds of homemade lasagnas free of charge.A...
20/07/2020

This GOOD News Story is delicious!!

Michelle Brenner: ‘Lasagna Lady’ makes hundreds of homemade lasagnas free of charge.

After Michelle Brenner was furloughed from her job at a menswear store in Gig Harbor, Wash., because of the novel coronavirus pandemic, she turned to comfort-food therapy.

Brenner, 45, made herself a huge pan of lasagna using her grandmother’s recipe. Then, in a moment of pride after shopping for groceries (including frozen lasagna) for some of her neighbors, she got on her community page and wrote that frozen, store-bought lasagna could not compare to the real Italian homemade deal.

“Hello favorite friends – I delivered a ton of frozen family-size lasagnas today,” Brenner wrote. “Now, this is not a problem by any means, lol. But you have a die-hard, full Italian lasagna lover living in your town.”

She followed up with an offer:

“If any of you want some fresh homemade, no calorie counting lasagna, please let me know and I will gladly prepare it,” she wrote.

Brenner set aside her $1,200 stimulus check to buy ingredients, and the requests soon began to trickle in.

First a retired neighbor showed up at her house, then an out-of-work friend came for a pan. After that, so many people started showing up, including strangers, that Brenner lost track.

Nearly three months and 1,200 pans later, Brenner is still at it, boiling noodles, cooking ground beef, mixing up tomato sauce and layering mozzarella, ricotta and Parmesan.

About eight hours a day, seven days a week, she helps feed people in her community – from hospital workers and first responders to single parents struggling without paychecks.

Brenner said nothing brings her more contentment while she is out of work than passing along goodness from her kitchen.

“The world as we know it is falling apart, but my two little hands are capable of making a difference,” she said. “I can’t change the world, but I can make lasagna.”

Initially, Brenner set up a pantry in her front yard where people could pick up an assembled lasagna and bake it at home.

But when the requests began multiplying faster than she could restock her refrigerator with ground beef and cheese, the president of the Gig Harbor Sportsman’s Club offered the clubhouse kitchen for her project.

“We saw what a great thing she was doing, and we have this nice commercial kitchen that wasn’t being used because of covid,” said Le Rodenberg, 73, the club’s president.

“She decided to do what she could for the community instead of sit at home,” he said. “I can tell you that she takes extra care with every one of those lasagnas.”

After Brenner used her stimulus check to buy lasagna ingredients for her first 60 giveaways, she decided to start a Facebook fundraiser that quickly netted more than $10,000 – enough for more than 500 pans. Then people began donating what they could – from $1 to $100 – when they picked up their orders.

“When word got out on social media, people from all over the world started donating to my cause,” said Brenner, who is single and moved to Gig Harbor from Port Orchard, Wash., six years ago.

People have contributed more than $22,000 so far, and she said she hopes “to be making lasagna for many months to come.”

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Tonight I would like to share with you out of the book of Ephesians chapter 2.MADE ALIVE IN CHRIST1 And you hath he quic...
18/07/2020

Tonight I would like to share with you out of the book of Ephesians chapter 2.

MADE ALIVE IN CHRIST

1 And you hath he quickened, who were dead in trespasses and sins;

2 Wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience:

3 Among whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind; and were by nature the children of wrath, even as others.

4 But God, who is rich in mercy, for his great love wherewith he loved us,

5 Even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened us together with Christ, (by grace ye are saved;)

6 And hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus:

7 That in the ages to come he might shew the exceeding riches of his grace in his kindness toward us through Christ Jesus.

8 For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:

9 Not of works, lest any man should boast.

10 For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them.

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The kind act that helped shape a lifeMevan Babakar had a difficult start in life. Her Kurdish parents fled Iraq during t...
18/07/2020

The kind act that helped shape a life

Mevan Babakar had a difficult start in life. Her Kurdish parents fled Iraq during the Gulf War in the 1990s, travelling through Turkey, Azerbaijan and Russia until the family reached the West and spent a year in a refugee camp near Zwolle in the Netherlands.

Mevan now works for a fact-checking charity and lives happily in London. But she never forgot the refugee camp worker all those years ago who, out of the kindness of his own heart, bought her a red, shiny bike. “My five-year-old heart exploded with joy,” she remembers.

Mevan, today aged 29, decided to track down the man and posted an old photo of the two of them in the camp on Twitter. To her surprise, the tweet was shared more than 7,000 times and within 36 hours the charity worker, Egbert, was located in Germany.

The pair were reunited and Mevan posted another photograph: “This is Egbert. He’s been helping refugees since the 90s. He thought the bike was too small a gesture to make such a big fuss about.”

For Mevan, the lesson is that small actions can have big consequences: “The kindness Egbert showed me continues to shape me. That’s the magical thing about kindness: it doesn’t cost anything and it changes the world one person at a time.”

18/07/2020

Thank you all for jumping on here and supporting The GOOD News Initiative!

This project has been on my heart for a few months now and I'm excited to get it started!!

I figured my first post should be something really special and close to my heart....right?

Soooo...I decided to share my life verse with y'all!
I will always lean on this verse and draw comfort from it! I found it in the KJV New Testament in the midst of the very darkest place I've ever been in. I hope it touches your heart the way it did mine!!

Phillippians 1:6
Being confident of this very thing, that he which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ.

This verse tells me that, no matter what, He is not finished with me!!!! No matter how bad I mess up, No matter how far I wonder.....he is gonna complete the work he has started in me! He didn't start a work in me to just abandon it and be like.....nope, she isn't getting it, she a mess....I'm done with her! He plans on seeing it through to the day Christ returns!!!

Chills y'all!!! Chills!!!

He isn't gonna EVER GIVE UP ON ME!!

EVER!! EVER!!! EVER!!!!

If you feel like you've wandered to far off, or you feel like God could never ever love you or forgive you....reach out to me! I'm a sinner, we all are! None of us are worthy of his saving Grace! That's the beauty of it! He gives it freely! You don't have to earn it! HE GIVES IT FREELY!!

🥰💚Love y'all!

Stay tuned for MORE GOOD NEWS!!

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