Adam and Connie Wedge
58 posts


@BlueBelle672 @BGatesIsaPyscho Dude I've been seeing it since at least the early 2000s in maine
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@BGatesIsaPyscho I was laughed at and unfriended by SO MANY PEOPLE over this. I saw it back in the very late 90s early 2000s. Oh well, I knew I was right. 🤷🏼♀️
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@BGatesIsaPyscho I remember them spraying when I was a kid. I'm 36 now
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@TimSmit63424704 @DavidFischer Read the book of acts
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People that are tired of my faith posts, you might as well unfollow me now.
There will be more in the morning.
There will be more in the evening.
I’m going to be testifying about the greatness of Jesus.
I’m going to be even bolder about His Truth.
You think I’m annoying now? You haven’t seen nothing yet.
His Grace continues to amaze me and I'm not ever shutting up about it.
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@RealShahriqKhan You said it at the end.. its all about truth
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When I was Muslim, I never asked who built the golden calf. I just knew it was a sin in the desert.
Then I read both accounts and one detail stopped me cold.
In the Bible, the man who builds the golden calf is AARON. Moses’ own brother. The first high priest. Exodus 32:4.
He gathers the gold, melts it, shapes the idol. And when Moses confronts him, he gives the weakest excuse in scripture: “I threw the gold in the fire and out came this calf.” As if it made itself.
Bro. The Bible just put the worst sin in the camp in the hands of the holiest man in the camp.
You would NEVER write that if you were protecting your prophets.
Now read the Quran. Surah 20. Aaron is cleared. Innocent. He tried to stop it. The blame goes to a mystery man called “al-Samiri.” The Samaritan. Surah 20:85.
You know what shook me? The Bible incriminates its own high priest.
The Quran writes him an alibi and invents a villain.
One reads like an honest record. The other like damage control.
And there’s a second problem with that villain. “The Samaritan.” But Samaritans didn’t exist in Moses’ time.
The city of Samaria wasn’t founded until about 500 years later, under King Omri. 1 Kings 16:24.
It’s like putting a Texan at the Last Supper.
Now, some Muslim scholars push back — they say “Samiri” means something else. I’ll be fair, that argument exists. But their own classical commentators read it as “the Samaritan” for centuries.
The defense only works by re-translating away from how the tradition always understood it.
I used to say the Bible was corrupted. But the Bible is honest enough to say the high priest built the idol.
Only a book honest about how bad we are could point me to a Savior real enough to fix it.
The Bible never flattered Aaron. It didn’t flatter me either. It just told me the truth, and handed me Jesus.
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Adam and Connie Wedge retweetledi

WHY DID PETER SINK AFTER WALKING ON WATER?
People say Peter failed because he was afraid.
They say he should have had stronger faith.
They say sinking means he never really believed.
But Scripture shows something deeper.
Peter did not sink before he stepped out. He sank after he had already obeyed. That matters because fear does not always show up before obedience. Sometimes fear attacks after you have already started walking by faith.
Here are the truths that change everything:
1️⃣ Peter Stepped Out Because Jesus Called Him
→ Matthew 14:28 to 29
Peter did not jump out of the boat because he wanted attention. He said, “Lord, if it is you, tell me to come to you on the water.” Jesus answered, “Come.” That means Peter’s first step was obedience. He was not being reckless. He was responding to the voice of Christ. Faith is not stepping anywhere you want and expecting God to bless it. Faith is moving when Jesus speaks.
2️⃣ Peter Actually Walked On Water
→ Matthew 14:29
Before Peter sank, he walked. That part is easy to skip because people focus on his failure. But Scripture says Peter got down out of the boat, walked on the water, and came toward Jesus. That means his faith was real. His obedience was real. His miracle was real. One moment of fear does not erase the fact that he had already stepped into something impossible with Christ.
3️⃣ Fear Came When His Focus Shifted
→ Matthew 14:30
“But when he saw the wind, he was afraid.”
Peter did not sink because Jesus disappeared. He sank because his focus moved from Christ to the storm. The wind was real. The waves were real. The danger was real. But Jesus was still there. That is what makes this so personal. Many believers do not lose faith because God left. They struggle because what they see becomes louder than what Jesus said.
4️⃣ Jesus Corrected Peter But Still Saved Him
→ Matthew 14:31
“Immediately Jesus reached out his hand and caught him.”
Jesus did ask, “You of little faith, why did you doubt?” But He asked that after He caught him. That shows the heart of Christ. Jesus did not let Peter drown to teach him a lesson. He corrected him while saving him. God’s correction is not abandonment. Sometimes His hand catches you before His words confront you.
5️⃣ The Boat Learned From Peter’s Step
→ Matthew 14:33
When Jesus and Peter got into the boat, the disciples worshiped and said, “Truly you are the Son of God.” Peter’s step did not only teach Peter. It revealed Jesus to everyone watching. Even Peter’s sinking became part of a testimony that pointed back to Christ.
This is not just about Peter sinking.
It is about what happens when faith meets fear.
Peter was brave enough to leave the boat, but human enough to notice the storm.
That sounds like many of us.
You can obey God and still feel fear.
You can step out in faith and still need Jesus to catch you.
You can have real faith and still need deeper trust.
The lesson is not that Peter was a failure.
The lesson is that Jesus was faithful.
Peter’s faith got him out of the boat.
Jesus’ hand kept him from drowning.
So if you stepped out and started sinking, do not run from Christ.
Cry out like Peter did.
“Lord, save me.”
And remember this.
The same Jesus who called you onto the water is still close enough to catch you.
#JesusChrist
#ChristianFaith
#FaithOverFear
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@TevinMacharia Ohhh that hit me right in the feels! Thankyou for this post! Praise Jesus!!
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What Are Generational Curses?
A generational curse is a pattern of sin, bondage, destruction, or suffering that repeats itself through generations of a family because of disobedience to God, ungodly foundations, sinful lifestyles, or demonic influences.
These patterns can appear as:
addiction,
anger,
immorality,
divorce,
violence,
idolatry,
occult practices,
poverty caused by destructive choices,
rejection of God,
depression and hopelessness,
or repeated cycles of failure.
When people notice the same struggles repeating in a bloodline, many say: “Something is wrong in this family.”
The Bible shows us that sin can affect generations.
In Exodus 20:5, God spoke about “visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation.”
This means the consequences and patterns of rebellion can continue from one generation to another if nobody rises to stop them.
For example: A father lives in alcoholism.
The children grow up in trauma and later become alcoholics too.
A family practices witchcraft and idolatry.
The next generation grows up under fear, confusion, and spiritual oppression.
A generation rejects God completely.
The next generation grows spiritually weak and empty.
This is how destructive patterns travel through generations.
But hear this clearly:
Jesus Christ did not come so people would remain prisoners of their family background.
The Gospel is the GOOD NEWS that no matter where you came from, you can become a new creation in Christ Jesus.
The Bible says:
> “If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away…” — 2 Corinthians 5:17
This means your history does not have to become your destiny.
Many people today are suffering because they normalize evil patterns instead of confronting them spiritually.
Some families normalize:
adultery,
abuse,
corruption,
anger,
prayerlessness,
fornication,
drunkenness,
ancestral worship,
and rebellion against God.
People say: “That is just how our family is.”
No.
Some patterns must be broken.
There are people who grew up seeing:
every marriage fail,
every man become violent,
every woman become rejected,
every child leave God,
every generation trapped in darkness.
And after years, they begin to think it is normal.
But when Jesus enters a life, He changes the story.
The Bible says:
> “Christ has redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us.” — Galatians 3:13
Jesus became the curse so that you can walk in freedom.
This is why believers pray, fast, repent, and surrender fully to God — not because we fear demons more than God, but because we want every ungodly pattern destroyed by the power of Christ.
Breaking generational patterns is not just shouting: “I break every curse!”
It is also:
changing your lifestyle,
renewing your mind with Scripture,
walking in holiness,
forgiving others,
rejecting sin,
and building a new foundation in Christ.
You cannot claim freedom while still living in the same darkness that created the bondage.
If your family was full of immorality, you must choose purity.
If your family rejected God, you must become the one who seeks God.
If your bloodline was filled with anger and violence, you must become a person of peace.
If nobody prayed in your family, become the first altar carrier.
Somebody must rise and say:
“This pattern stops with me.”
Not by human strength.
Not by fear.
But by the power of Jesus Christ.
Your family background may explain your battles, but it does not have to determine your future.
In Christ:
curses are broken,
identities are restored,
destinies are healed,
and lives are transformed.
You are not doomed because of where you came from.
Jesus is still able to save, heal, restore, and rewrite stories.
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