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Showing posts from November, 2025

Radical Honor (Malachi 1-3)

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  Malachi 1:1-5   “Love” is a word we toss around to signal care and affection. But anyone who’s walked through covenant—especially in marriage—knows the truth: spoken love means nothing without demonstrated love—words without action ring hollow. If you say you love me, then show me. That’s precisely where the book of Malachi begins. The Lord speaks through His prophet, saying, “I have always loved you.” Israel snaps back, “How have you loved us?” And God answers not with sentimental language, but with evidence—His faithfulness, His protection, His covenant work across generations. He points to Jacob and Esau: Jacob, the one who responded with obedience; Esau, the one who brought an offering, but not the one God asked for. Jacob honored the Lord. Esau treated the Lord casually, bringing whatever pleased him instead of what God required. The Lord makes it plain: what He tears down won’t stand, no matter how hard Esau’s descendants try to rebuild. Dishonor cannot produce a ...

Radical Hope (Zechariah 9:9-17)

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 A Word for a World on Edge Hope doesn’t shine the brightest when life is peaceful.
Hope shines when judgment shakes the nations, when wickedness runs its course, and when people reap consequences they never expected. That’s the burning backdrop of Zechariah 9. But right in the middle of the chaos, God lifts a trumpet to His lips and announces Radical Hope—the kind that breaks in from another realm and stands defiant in the face of darkness. This prophetic word isn’t just ancient poetry. It’s a red thread woven straight into the Christmas story and tied securely to the return of Christ. It calls us to lift our eyes, straighten our shoulders, and remember who our King really is. The King Comes Low, Yet Carries Ultimate Victory “Behold, your King is coming to you… humble and riding on a donkey” (Zech. 9:9). Matthew draws on this very prophecy when he tells the story of Jesus riding into Jerusalem (Matt. 21:4–5). The same King whose birth shook Herod, drew shepherds, and summoned wise...

Radical Power (Zechariah 4)

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When the Assignment Feels Too Big There are seasons when the work in front of you feels far bigger than the strength within you. Zerubbabel knew that feeling well. He was called to rebuild the temple with weary people and scarce resources. The task looked overwhelming—and his strength looked small. We’ve all stood in that same space.
Where the calling is real, but the capacity feels thin.
Where the vision is clear, but the energy is gone. Heaven’s Reminder: You Are Not Alone Before God addressed the work, He addressed the source. In Zechariah 4, the prophet is shown a golden lampstand continually supplied with oil from two olive trees—a picture of the Holy Spirit’s unending empowerment. Then comes the verse that breaks through discouragement: “Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit,” says the Lord of Heaven’s Armies. This is God’s gentle rebuke and holy reassurance.
We were never meant to rely solely on human strength.
Every kingdom assignment requires kingdom power. Why We Run D...

Radical Cleansing (Zechariah 3)

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Introduction to Zechariah:     The Prophet of Renewal and Return  (Scripture Reference: Zechariah 1-2) Zechariah’s name means “The Lord remembers.” And indeed, his prophetic voice came at a time when Israel needed to remember who they were, whose they were, and what they were called to do. After seventy years of Babylonian exile, God’s people had returned to a land that looked more like a ruin than a promise. The temple lay unfinished, morale was low, and hope was flickering. Alongside Haggai, Zechariah arose as a prophetic voice calling the people not only to rebuild the house of God but to renew their hearts for God. Without the inward being right, everything will deteriorate inward and then outward.  The first few chapters of Zechariah are filled with night visions — divine messages wrapped in vivid imagery. Horses patrolling the earth, horns and craftsmen, a man measuring Jerusalem — all painting a picture of God’s protection, restoration, and expansion. Zec...

🌟 Radical Glory: When the Latter Outshines the Former (Haggai 1:1-9)

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“The glory of this latter temple shall be greater than the former,” says the LORD of hosts. “And in this place I will give peace,” says the LORD of hosts.
— Haggai 2:9 🔥 Introduction: From Ruins to Radiance Haggai’s message confronts three heart conditions—disinterest, discouragement, and dissatisfaction—all rooted in one cause: the absence of God’s dwelling place. The people of Judah had returned from Babylonian captivity and began rebuilding the Temple, but opposition and apathy caused them to stop. For sixteen years, the foundation of God’s house lay neglected while the people busied themselves with building their own homes. Into that complacency, God sent the prophet Haggai around 520 B.C. with a divine wake-up call: “Consider your ways!” (Haggai 1:5) This wasn’t about architecture—it was about alignment. The people’s worship had lost priority, and therefore, their work had lost blessing. God allowed frustration not to punish them but to redirect them back to His presence. When th...