Here are some of the projects I’ve had the opportunity to work on as an Editor🤗
And this is me saying I look forward to editing your films, documentaries, podcasts, vlogs… Anything video editing, I’m your girl😎
Happy New Month🥂
Throwback to October 12, 2024 —a moment captured some minutes after receiving some tough news. Despite it all, I’m incredibly grateful for the gift of family. Coincidentally, it was also Thanksgiving Day.
To claim that people are tired of teachings and only desire power and demonstrations—or vice versa—is a profound misrepresentation of truth. We are not called to choose between teaching and power; rather, we are called to embrace the whole counsel of God.
Miracles and teachings are not competing realities but complementary expressions of Christ's ministry. His teachings carried the same anointing as His miracles, and together, they revealed the fullness of the Kingdom of God. Jesus is both the power of God and the wisdom of God—these dimensions are inseparable and indispensable.
This is a clarion call to the Body of Christ: let us reject the false dichotomy that divides the anointing upon (demonstrations of power) from the anointing within (wisdom and teaching). We are heirs of a complete Gospel that reflects the entirety of Christ’s mission. To diminish one is to diminish the other. Let us embrace the fullness of His purpose and proclaim both His power and His wisdom to a world in need.
It reminded me of the call to be salt and light, to embrace discipleship despite its cost, and the vital role of the body of Christ in encouraging one another.
This film was inspiring. The concept of being a fountain and not a drain spoke volumes, highlighting the essence of salvation—not just translation(Col 1:13) but transformation(Romans 12:2).
This film was inspiring. The concept of being a fountain and not a drain spoke volumes, highlighting the essence of salvation—not just translation(Col 1:13) but transformation(Romans 12:2).
On this anniversary of my personal genesis, I find myself in a contemplative state, musing over the past annum—a span of time so rich in events and insights that it rivals the narratives of ancient epics, albeit with less fire and brimstone and more paper and presentations.
In this remarkable year, I've been a pilgrim in two worlds: the realm of divine scriptures, where each verse seemed to echo with the profound wisdom of the Lord Jesus Christ, imparting grace and deepening my sense of apostleship; and the domain of academia, where I've jousted with theories and research to secure a PhD in management. Imagine, if you will, a scholar with one foot in the hallowed halls of theological study and the other in the bustling agora of modern academia—this has been my balancing act.
As I stand at the gateway of another year, I am draped not only in the figurative mantle of biblical scholarship but also in the somewhat more literal cap and gown of academic achievement. This blend of spiritual and scholarly attire suits me as I prepare to step into a future where the sacred and the cerebral continue to intertwine.
The journey ahead promises a blend of celestial inspiration and earthly endeavor, spiced with a dash of humor to leaven the profoundest of discussions. It is a path I anticipate with eagerness, envisaging a year where grace flows with the abundance of academic coffee—transforming challenges into opportunities for growth, contemplation, and, dare I say, a few well-placed quips.
In it all,it is grace spreading through the many and causing Thanksgiving to always abound to the glory of God...
So here's to marking another milestone on my life's timeline, a birthday celebrated with both solemnity and a smile, recognizing that life's richest lessons often come dressed in the dual garb of piety and punditry.
Happy birthday to myself—may the coming year be filled with enlightening discourse, divine insights, and, ideally, a significantly lower caffeine intake and filled with Thanksgiving...
Personal encounters are valid and vital for individuals within the context of their private walk with God
But personal encounters are not doctrinal in nature...
Making a doctrine out of them is cancerous as it creates conceptual tensions and anomalies.
That you prayed 10 hrs every day for 4 weeks to 'hear' God can never be a doctrine of prayer or hearing God.
Anything that is doctrine grade is rooted in the written word supported by 2 or 3 witnesses.
Scripture is profitable for doctrine...
Personal experiences are not...
Someone took me up last Sunday after service "PD are you saying there is no price to pay for spiritual things"
I responded 'the price you cannot pay is to create grace,status,power and positioning in christ,its been paid fully at calvary...these things are freely given...but we make sacrifices especially in obedience in order to align with what is already given...there is no true believer who will not give up something for the kingdom...
But, For instance, when a believer says he is paying a price to defeat Satan,then that would be double payment as christ already did that...
So the 'price' we pay are in terms sacrifices to obey,yield and adjust...but not to achieve what Christ already achieved...."
So when we say price,let us be clear about what we mean...else we undermine the finished work of Christ by elevating the efforts of man above it...
We freely receive,we freely give"
End of discussion...
We are beginning to loose the essence of personal devotion and study...Quiet time...it is now routed through a medium in early morning prayer altars...and is about sorting what is chasing you,or chasing your next miracle...
There must be a revival of quiet time and personal devotion...