Forwarded from ThinMint (ThinMint)
Charlie Kirk was not killed; he was murdered -he was assassinated.
We don't make peace with Evil; with God's help, we destroy it.
I pray for the backbone of every Believer throughout the world to straighten, look Evil in the face, and declare it defeated in the name of Christ. Authority has been given to us and we can call down Christ's army in the name of Jesus.
All of us are sick of the carnage, tired of the complicity, outraged over the injustice.
We may not have Big Social Media Platforms; we may not preach from a pulpit; we may not travel on missions to foreign places; we may not have books and podcasts published; we do not have the ear of those in authority.
What we have is a relationship with King of Kings and LORD of Lords. And that is EVERYTHING!
In your living room, while driving, or sitting with your cup of warm, pray.
Pray like you've never prayed before.
Prayer is our weapon, God is our Leader, Christ is our Savior.
Stay tuned. More to come...
We don't make peace with Evil; with God's help, we destroy it.
I pray for the backbone of every Believer throughout the world to straighten, look Evil in the face, and declare it defeated in the name of Christ. Authority has been given to us and we can call down Christ's army in the name of Jesus.
All of us are sick of the carnage, tired of the complicity, outraged over the injustice.
We may not have Big Social Media Platforms; we may not preach from a pulpit; we may not travel on missions to foreign places; we may not have books and podcasts published; we do not have the ear of those in authority.
What we have is a relationship with King of Kings and LORD of Lords. And that is EVERYTHING!
In your living room, while driving, or sitting with your cup of warm, pray.
Pray like you've never prayed before.
Prayer is our weapon, God is our Leader, Christ is our Savior.
Stay tuned. More to come...
🔥26
Forwarded from BrittRepublican
Resiliency. Hope.
In the wake of yesterday’s absolute tragedy, our hearts are heavy once again. As we remember the sorrow of 9/11/2001.
On this Patriots Day, we are reminded that evil has tried time and again to break us, yet by God’s grace, it has never prevailed.
Yesterday’s loss, like the horror of that September morning, shakes us to the core. As a people, and as children of the living God, we must rise, not in hatred, but in faith, unity, and courage.
We honor those we have lost by choosing hope over despair, light over darkness, and love over violence.
While tragedy wounds, it also awakens us to the truth: Christ has conquered the grave, and in Him, our future is never without hope.
@BrittRepublican
In the wake of yesterday’s absolute tragedy, our hearts are heavy once again. As we remember the sorrow of 9/11/2001.
On this Patriots Day, we are reminded that evil has tried time and again to break us, yet by God’s grace, it has never prevailed.
Yesterday’s loss, like the horror of that September morning, shakes us to the core. As a people, and as children of the living God, we must rise, not in hatred, but in faith, unity, and courage.
We honor those we have lost by choosing hope over despair, light over darkness, and love over violence.
While tragedy wounds, it also awakens us to the truth: Christ has conquered the grave, and in Him, our future is never without hope.
@BrittRepublican
🙏13
Forwarded from Ashley USMC
I wrestled with God last night…
I thought I was radically sold out to Him.
I thought He had my unconditional “yes.”
I thought I had laid it all down and surrendered fully.
I thought that if the moment ever came where my faith would cost me my life, I would be ready to stand tall and say, “I will not deny my Jesus.”
But then… when I heard that Charlie Kirk was assassinated—no, martyred—something shifted inside of me.
Suddenly the “yes” that I thought was unconditional felt shaky.
Suddenly the fire that I thought was unshakable flickered.
Because my mind went to my children.
It went to my husband.
It went to the future I want to have, the things I want to do, the places I want to see, the milestones I haven’t reached yet.
And I broke before the Lord.
Paul says in Romans 12:1, “I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that you present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.”
And as I wept last night I heard the Holy Spirit asking me if I was truly willing to be a living sacrifice?
A living sacrifice means the altar will test the depth of your “yes.”
It means the fire will expose whether our surrender is conditional or complete.
Peter called himself a bondservant of Christ (2 Peter 1:1).
Paul said the same again and again—Romans 1:1, Philippians 1:1, Titus 1:1.
They could have called themselves apostles, leaders, church planters, miracle workers.
But when it came down to identity, they said, “I am a servant. A slave of Jesus Christ. My life is not my own.”
And Paul didn’t just speak it; he lived it.
He said in Romans 1:14, “I am debtor both to the Greeks and to the Barbarians; both to the wise, and to the unwise.”
He carried in his spirit a debt, a duty, and an obligation.
He owed his life to the gospel.
He owed his breath to the One who met him on the Damascus road.
His “yes” was not cheap, it cost him beatings, prison cells, shipwrecks, betrayals, hunger, thirst, and eventually his life.
And yet Paul could say with confidence, “For me to live is Christ, and to die is gain” (Philippians 1:21).
Church, we talk about revival.
We talk about fire.
We talk about surrender.
But have we truly placed ourselves on the altar?
Have we truly said, “My life is not my own, I have been bought with a price?”
A living sacrifice doesn’t crawl off the altar when the fire gets hot.
A living sacrifice doesn’t negotiate the cost.
A living sacrifice says, “Lord, all that I am, all that I have, all that I will ever be, I place in Your hands.”
This is not an emotional moment of worship.
This is the covenant of the bondservant, who says, “I love my Master too much to leave His house. I love my Lord too much to claim my own freedom. Pierce my ear, mark me forever, I belong to Him.”
And that is what Jesus is asking of us in these last days.
He is raising up a church that doesn’t just worship with lips, but with lives.
He is calling for a generation that loves not their lives unto the death (Revelation 12:11).
I don’t know about you, but I don’t want to just talk about being a living sacrifice, I want to be one.
I want my children to see a faith that is costly, not comfortable.
I want my family to see a legacy of surrender, not compromise.
I want to stand before God and hear Him say, “Well done, My good and faithful servant.”
So last night, I placed myself back on the altar.
I laid down my fears.
I laid down my excuses.
I laid down my future.
For my life is not my own.
I have been bought with a price.
I am His bondservant.
I am His vessel.
I am His living sacrifice.
-Jessica Jecker via FB
I thought I was radically sold out to Him.
I thought He had my unconditional “yes.”
I thought I had laid it all down and surrendered fully.
I thought that if the moment ever came where my faith would cost me my life, I would be ready to stand tall and say, “I will not deny my Jesus.”
But then… when I heard that Charlie Kirk was assassinated—no, martyred—something shifted inside of me.
Suddenly the “yes” that I thought was unconditional felt shaky.
Suddenly the fire that I thought was unshakable flickered.
Because my mind went to my children.
It went to my husband.
It went to the future I want to have, the things I want to do, the places I want to see, the milestones I haven’t reached yet.
And I broke before the Lord.
Paul says in Romans 12:1, “I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that you present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.”
And as I wept last night I heard the Holy Spirit asking me if I was truly willing to be a living sacrifice?
A living sacrifice means the altar will test the depth of your “yes.”
It means the fire will expose whether our surrender is conditional or complete.
Peter called himself a bondservant of Christ (2 Peter 1:1).
Paul said the same again and again—Romans 1:1, Philippians 1:1, Titus 1:1.
They could have called themselves apostles, leaders, church planters, miracle workers.
But when it came down to identity, they said, “I am a servant. A slave of Jesus Christ. My life is not my own.”
And Paul didn’t just speak it; he lived it.
He said in Romans 1:14, “I am debtor both to the Greeks and to the Barbarians; both to the wise, and to the unwise.”
He carried in his spirit a debt, a duty, and an obligation.
He owed his life to the gospel.
He owed his breath to the One who met him on the Damascus road.
His “yes” was not cheap, it cost him beatings, prison cells, shipwrecks, betrayals, hunger, thirst, and eventually his life.
And yet Paul could say with confidence, “For me to live is Christ, and to die is gain” (Philippians 1:21).
Church, we talk about revival.
We talk about fire.
We talk about surrender.
But have we truly placed ourselves on the altar?
Have we truly said, “My life is not my own, I have been bought with a price?”
A living sacrifice doesn’t crawl off the altar when the fire gets hot.
A living sacrifice doesn’t negotiate the cost.
A living sacrifice says, “Lord, all that I am, all that I have, all that I will ever be, I place in Your hands.”
This is not an emotional moment of worship.
This is the covenant of the bondservant, who says, “I love my Master too much to leave His house. I love my Lord too much to claim my own freedom. Pierce my ear, mark me forever, I belong to Him.”
And that is what Jesus is asking of us in these last days.
He is raising up a church that doesn’t just worship with lips, but with lives.
He is calling for a generation that loves not their lives unto the death (Revelation 12:11).
I don’t know about you, but I don’t want to just talk about being a living sacrifice, I want to be one.
I want my children to see a faith that is costly, not comfortable.
I want my family to see a legacy of surrender, not compromise.
I want to stand before God and hear Him say, “Well done, My good and faithful servant.”
So last night, I placed myself back on the altar.
I laid down my fears.
I laid down my excuses.
I laid down my future.
For my life is not my own.
I have been bought with a price.
I am His bondservant.
I am His vessel.
I am His living sacrifice.
-Jessica Jecker via FB
❤22🔥6
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I am already seeing evidence of this happening! Charlie’s death was not in vain. God is turning this tragedy around for good. Thank you Lord! Let your Spirit move across this land like never before, amen!
🔥15❤6
Forwarded from PATRIOT 17 ⚜️ (Arizona AtHeart)
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🔥13
At first it didn’t make sense. When we try to reason in our own hearts we are focusing on the tragedy, or the storm. His ways are not our ways. His ways are Higher. Not our will but His will.
🙏16🔥1
Forwarded from Daily Bible Devotionals
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👍10❤1😍1
Testimony Tuesday
It hasn’t even been a week since Charlie Kirk’s death, and we are a seeing tidal wave of conversions, people turning to the Lord, hearts are being stirred. Something is happening.
The Spirit of God is definitely moving, not just here in the USA, but all over the world.
In less than a week we are seeing this wave of people making decisions to change and turn to Christ. Even lukewarm Christians are realizing the death of Charlie put a check in their spirit to do to better, make sacrifices, make a difference for the kingdom of God and speak boldly for Christ.
Here are three examples of the impact one man’s death is having over mankind.
This first video revisits the story of Stephen who was martyred in Acts 7. The story is similar to what we are witnessing today.
Watch how this man explains what exactly happened after Stephen’s death compared to Charlie Kirk’s death.
👇🏼
It hasn’t even been a week since Charlie Kirk’s death, and we are a seeing tidal wave of conversions, people turning to the Lord, hearts are being stirred. Something is happening.
The Spirit of God is definitely moving, not just here in the USA, but all over the world.
In less than a week we are seeing this wave of people making decisions to change and turn to Christ. Even lukewarm Christians are realizing the death of Charlie put a check in their spirit to do to better, make sacrifices, make a difference for the kingdom of God and speak boldly for Christ.
Here are three examples of the impact one man’s death is having over mankind.
This first video revisits the story of Stephen who was martyred in Acts 7. The story is similar to what we are witnessing today.
Watch how this man explains what exactly happened after Stephen’s death compared to Charlie Kirk’s death.
👇🏼
🔥6
This second video is about carrying the mantle of Charlie’s and multiplying his mission.
When I asked God to give me a noscripture about multiplying He gave me the following…
“He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will supply and multiply your seed for sowing and increase the harvest of your righteousness.”
2 Corinthians 9:10 ESV
It’s no coincidence that this verse is also the date of Charlie’s death.🤯
👇🏼
When I asked God to give me a noscripture about multiplying He gave me the following…
“He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will supply and multiply your seed for sowing and increase the harvest of your righteousness.”
2 Corinthians 9:10 ESV
It’s no coincidence that this verse is also the date of Charlie’s death.🤯
👇🏼
❤8🙏1
You can see the peace in this man’s heart, his tenderness, his surrender, the hope he now has. This is what it’s all about.
“May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope.”
Romans 15:13 ESV
👇🏼
“May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope.”
Romans 15:13 ESV
👇🏼
❤9