Jason Thomas retweetledi
Jason Thomas
823 posts

Jason Thomas
@jteverything
Christ-follower, Life-long Learner, Husband to a beautiful wife and Community/Discipleship Pastor at FBC Duluth
Duluth, GA Katılım Mart 2009
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Jason Thomas retweetledi

Your past doesn’t get the final word — you do.
Shame wants to keep you in the same loop: overthinking, avoiding, and apologizing for who you used to be. But you’re not that version anymore. You’ve grown. You’ve changed. You’ve survived.
It’s time to stop letting guilt write your script. Look your past in the eye, take what you need to learn, and leave the rest behind.
Freedom starts when you stop dragging your old story into your new chapter. What's next is too important to spoil with what's old. Let it go — and step boldly into your next season.
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Jason Thomas retweetledi

Where to read what happened on each day of Holy Week.
Palm Sunday: Matt. 21:1–11
Monday: Matt. 21:12–22
Tuesday: Matt. 21:23–26:5
Wednesday: Matt. 26:6–16
Thursday: Matt. 26:17–75
Friday: Matt. 27:1–61
Saturday: Matt. 27:62–66
Easter Sunday: Matt. 28:1–20
thegospelcoalition.org/article/easter…
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Jason Thomas retweetledi

You cannot change your past, but you must change your internal connections to those who hurt you by forgiving them. You have to let go of the demand that they somehow make it up to you.
You have to let go of lost dreams and lost people.
You can take the hurts and wounds of the past to those who can heal them. You can address the patterns you’ve learned from parents and other adults, confess those destructive patterns, disagree with them, and repent from them.
If you have wronged people, address it, apologize to those who were hurt, and make amends.
You cannot change what happened in the past, but you can begin to redeem it.
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Jason Thomas retweetledi
Jason Thomas retweetledi
Jason Thomas retweetledi
Jason Thomas retweetledi
Jason Thomas retweetledi
Jason Thomas retweetledi
Jason Thomas retweetledi

While William Carey is called the father of the modern missionary movement, George Liele went to Jamaica a decade before Carey left England.
Although he was born a slave, he lived as a free man as he followed Christ and shared the gospel.
🔗 Learn more: imb.org/george-liele/.
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