When the Crowd Is Wrong, and Love Tells the Truth
Day 8: Micaiah, Amos, Deborah, and Priscilla with Aquila. Four who spoke truth when the room wanted agreement. Love tells what the crowd will not say.
114 articles on faith, spiritual practices, and encouragement.
Day 8: Micaiah, Amos, Deborah, and Priscilla with Aquila. Four who spoke truth when the room wanted agreement. Love tells what the crowd will not say.
Day 7: Habakkuk, Abraham, Job, Jonah, and James of Jerusalem. Five who gave up control of the outcome and found deeper trust in God's faithful timing.
Day 6: Mary, Elizabeth, Anna, the shepherds, Eldad, and Medad. Five who stepped from quiet hiddenness into a God-given public assignment. Part of The Trade.
Day 5: Nathan, Samuel, Gideon, Hosea, and Caleb. Five who told the truth where it cost the most. Explore the repentance and restoration that followed.
Day 4: Amos, Barnabas, Phoebe, Rahab, and Noah. Five who opened their hands and watched God multiply. Part of The Trade 7-day series on prophetic courage.
Day 3: Esther, Peter, Daniel, and the three in the furnace. Five who walked into danger and found God already there. Part of The Trade series on courage.
Day 2: Nehemiah, Joseph, Huldah, Obadiah, and Ebed-Melech. Five people who held power and risked it for others, and the favour God gave them in return.
Day 1: Mary Magdalene, the man born blind, the Samaritan woman, and Mary. Four who traded reputation for truth and found their voice. The Trade series begins.
Scripture is full of people who gave up something real and received something greater. Comfort for calling, safety for significance. Every believer is invited.
Just reading 'pink elephant' put an image in your mind. That reveals how thin the line is between seen and unseen, and how God uses it to speak to you.
God feeds His people through Scripture, through Jesus, and through promises from the Spirit. Are you eating early and often, or starving on a full plate?
Hidden in the New Testament are prophecies that were deeply personal, not given to crowds but spoken into individual lives. These words kept faith alive.