@TelecelGhana@Medikalbyk@TelecelGhana
My broadband with account number P0732986 has not been working, the LOS shows red color blinking.
I have made several reports but no response
@TelecelGhana@TelecelGhana
My broadband with account number P0732986 has not been working, the LOS shows red color blinking.
I have made several reports but no response
There are some Bible verses you read once and move on from. And then there are others that follow you through life. For me, Romans 8:28, which happens to be Verse 2 in my book (Anchored in the Word), has always been one of those verses.
“And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to His purpose.”
What has always struck me is how the verse begins — “And we know.” Not we hope. Not we think. But we know. A quiet, steady certainty anchored in who God is.
And then there are the words “all things.” Not just the good days. Not just answered prayers and joyful moments. But the disappointments. The heartbreaks. The closed doors. The seasons that didn’t make sense at the time.
Looking back now, I can see that even in the painful moments, God was weaving something redemptive. Nothing was wasted.
That reflection — and many others like it — is what led me to write Anchored in the Word: Forty Bible Verses That Shaped My Life. Each chapter is a personal meditation on a verse that stayed with me, strengthened me, and carried me through different seasons of life.
If you are walking through uncertainty, loss, or waiting right now, I want you to know this: God is not finished yet. You may not see the full picture today, but one day you will look back and realise that all things truly did work together for your good.
I wrote this book as an encouragement — a reminder to rest in God’s Word and trust His purpose, even when the path is unclear.
Anchored in the Word is now available on Amazon: https://t.co/Ou9BxIibHf
I pray it blesses you, strengthens your faith, and anchors your heart — just as these verses have anchored mine.
🙏🏽
@77kobby 5:
•Explains the women coming to the tomb on Sunday morning after the Sabbath(s) passed (Mark 16:1 says they bought spices after the Sabbath, while Luke 23:56 says they prepared them before the Sabbath — suggesting two Sabbaths: one on Thursday, one on Saturday).
@77kobby 4:
•Therefore, the next day after crucifixion (Thursday) was a high Sabbath, not necessarily the weekly Saturday Sabbath.
Support:
•Fits with Jesus’ own prophecy more literally — three full days and nights.
@77kobby 3:
•The “Sabbath” mentioned in John 19:31 (“for that Sabbath was a high day”) wasn’t the weekly Sabbath (Saturday), but a special feast Sabbath, the First Day of Unleavened Bread, which would have been Thursday that year.
@77kobby 2:
The Wednesday Crucifixion Theory
•Wednesday – Jesus is crucified and buried before sunset.
•Thursday – 1st full day and night in the tomb.
•Friday – 2nd full day and night.
•Saturday – 3rd full day and night.
•Sunday early morning – Resurrection
@77kobby 1:
Matthew 12:40:
“For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the huge fish, so the Son of Man will be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.”