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Steve F
@stev30479
Christian, husband, father, grandfather, homesteader. MAGA & MAHA! No DM or solicitation. I will block for any reason because you don’t look at this anyway.
Oklahoma, USA Katılım Kasım 2024
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Here’s a word you don’t hear much these days…
“REPENT.”
It sounds harsh to modern ears. It makes people uncomfortable. But it is one of the most important words in the entire Bible — and honestly, one of the most loving things God ever said to us.
The word literally means to “Turn Around.” Not just feel bad. Not just say sorry. But to make a complete U-turn — to change the direction of your life.
Here’s where a lot of us get tripped up. We confuse remorse with repentance. And they are not the same thing.
Remorse says “I feel bad about what I did.” Repentance says “I am changing what I do.”
Judas felt remorse. Peter repented. One led to despair — the other led to restoration.
The Bible tells us in 2 Corinthians 7:10 — “Godly sorrow leads to repentance that brings salvation and leaves no regret — but worldly sorrow brings death.”
In other words — it’s not enough to feel guilty. God wants to do something far deeper than make you feel bad. He wants to transform you from the inside out.
What’s the difference between remorse and true repentance? Watch this short video — I think it will change the way you look at this powerful word. 👇
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🔥🚨BREAKING: A new Bible analysis has uncovered thousands of clues that suggest scripture was written by God. A vast network of more than 63,000 connections woven throughout the Bible is drawing renewed attention from believers, with some arguing the intricate links point to divine authorship.
The connections, identified by a computer scientist at Carnegie Mellon University and a Lutheran pastor in Germany, stretch across all 66 books of scripture, linking people, events and themes scattered throughout the Old and New Testaments.
Thousands of curved lines stretch between books to link related passages, with darker lines highlighting verses that share the greatest number of connections. The arcs form a rainbow-like pattern that visually reveals how extensively the Bible is woven together from beginning to end.
One example ties Genesis 2:9, which describes the Tree of Life in Eden, to Revelation 22:2, where the symbol reappears in the Bible's final vision of paradise.
Another connects Exodus 12, describing the Passover lamb, to John 1:29, where Jesus is referred to as the 'Lamb of God.'
Prophetic passages in Isaiah 7:14 are also linked to Matthew 1:23, which connects the verse to the birth of Jesus centuries later.
The network spans books believed to have been written by more than 40 authors over roughly 1,500 years. It also bridges three continents, Asia, Africa and Europe, and three languages, Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek.
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