A question believers often ask:
Are we in the last days?
Scripture teaches that we live under Christ’s present reign in the era inaugurated by His resurrection. This page offers a calm, biblical answer grounded in hope rather than speculation.
Read here:
https://t.co/QyvUwZVmC8
@KatharinaLeAnn I don't know the nature of your request, but:
I think it depends on the posture of the heart. Are you looking to glorify God in your request? Or glorify yourself?
Paul makes it clear that God will say no to prevent the focus from shifting from him to anything else.
@realcopeaganda @jimmyfailla I wonder what was going on in 2020 that he would seem that necessary. Must be something big... Hmmmm. It'll come to me. 💉💉💉
@jcher78 When you read the Bible, ask "what does this tell me about God/Jesus? Just like if you are trying to get to know anyone else. Start looking for things that make him happy, things that make him sad... He already knows that about you. He reveals all of that to us. More below:
Every other religion asks you to climb high enough to reach God.
Easter says God came down.
That's not what philosophy delivers. That's not what self-improvement promises. That's the gospel.
The gospel begins with good news many people overlook.
God did not wait for humanity to repair what was broken.
He entered the story Himself through Jesus.
Restoration begins with His grace.
Sunday can feel different depending on the season you're in.
Sometimes hopeful.
Sometimes weary.
Sometimes uncertain.
But the same invitation remains:
Come to Christ.
Walk with Him again this week.
A helpful way to think about the Christian life:
You are not trying to earn a place in God’s Kingdom.
Through Christ, you’ve already been welcomed.
Now you’re learning what it means to live as someone who belongs there.
Have you ever looked back on your life and realized you understand something now that once confused you?
Spiritual growth often works that way.
God gives insight gradually.
Step by step.
Season by season.
If your faith feels slower than you expected, that may not be a problem.
Growth in Christ often looks like patience.
Trust learned gradually.
Wisdom gained through experience.
Over time, those quiet changes become deep roots.
Many people think the goal of Christianity is escaping a broken world.
But the Bible tells a story of restoration.
God is renewing what sin damaged.
And those who trust Christ live now as citizens of that coming Kingdom.
Have you ever noticed how much of life happens in ordinary moments?
Meals.
Conversations.
Daily responsibilities.
God often forms faith in those same places.
Not only in dramatic moments, but in the quiet rhythms of everyday life.
One of the quiet shifts that happens as faith matures:
You stop thinking of Christianity mainly as a set of expectations.
And you begin to see it as a relationship with a living King.
That shift changes everything.
A lot of Christians carry quiet pressure to “grow faster.”
But spiritual growth rarely happens on a schedule we design.
God forms people through years of walking with Him.
Through Scripture.
Through prayer.
Through life itself.
Have you ever noticed how often the Bible describes believers as travelers?
Pilgrims.
Sojourners.
Citizens of another Kingdom.
The Christian life isn’t about controlling every step of the journey.
It’s about trusting the King who leads it.
If you're new to following Jesus, one realization helps steady your faith.
You’re not expected to understand everything immediately.
Discipleship is learning to walk with Christ over time.
Clarity grows along the path.
Many Christians assume spiritual maturity means never feeling uncertain.
But in Scripture, growth often includes seasons of learning, questions, and renewed trust.
Faith isn’t pretending to have no questions.
It’s continuing to walk with Jesus while learning the answers.