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Sep/Oct 2025
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The Question Is
‘“Pilate saith unto them, What shall I do then with Jesus which is called Christ?”

Sooner or later all must answer this question, for it is pertinent, it is pointed, it is personal. All must reckon with Jesus. It doesn’t matter whether you are a down-and-outer or and “up-and-outer.” It doesn’t matter whether you are a believer or an unbeliever. It doesn’t matter whether you are a fundamentalist or a modernist. It doesn’t matter whether you are a saint or a sinner—YOU MUST DO SOMETHING WITH JESUS! The question comes to all with equal force “What shall I do . . . with Jesus which is called Christ?”

Your eternal destiny will not be determined by your social register; it will be determined by your spiritual register—whether your name is written in the Lamb’s book of life. Your eternal destiny will not be determined by how you stand in the sight of your friends; it will be determined by your standing in the sight of your God.”

“Life’s Inevitable Question”

by W.R. Robinson
Message October, 1975, p. 30

EDITORIAL

Editor
Carmela Monk Crawford
[email protected]

Graphic Design
Erica Keith
www.ericakeith.com

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Calvin Watkins

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Call 1-800-456-3991 Monday through Thursday 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Mountain Time for subscription information or address changes. MESSAGE (ISSN 0026-0231) is published bimonthly Jan/Feb, Mar/Apr, May/June, July/Aug, Sept/Oct, Nov/Dec.

© 2018 by the North American Division of Seventh-day Adventists, 9705 Patuxent Woods Drive, Columbia, Maryland, 21046, U.S.A. Address editorial correspondence to MESSAGE MAGAZINE, 9705 Patuxent Woods Drive, Columbia, MD 21046-1565 U.S.A. All subscriptions are prepaid. If you did not order MESSAGE, it is being sent as a gift from a friend. You will not be billed. To subscribe, mail payment to MESSAGE, 1350 North Kings Road Nampa, ID 83687, U.S.A. or call 1-800-456-3991. Subscription price: one year, $19.95 U.S. currency; single copy, $4.00; overseas, add $10.00 per year for postage. Prices subject to change without notice. Periodicals Postage paid at Nampa, Idaho and additional offices. Vol. 91 No. 5 SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER POSTMASTER: Send address changes to MESSAGE, 1350 North Kings Road Nampa, ID 83687, U.S.A. Printed in the U.S.A.

Unless otherwise noted, Bible texts in this issue are from the New King James Version. Copyright © 1979, 1980, 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Statements in this issue attributed by an author to other speakers/writers are included for the value of the individual statements only. No endorsement of those speakers’/writers’ other works or statements is intended or implied.

Elevation
by Phillip McGuire Wesley
Words make you think. Music makes you feel. A song makes you feel a thought.” – E.Y. Harburg
In this column, we celebrate the sacred space where music and literature meet—where thoughts become feeling, and feeling becomes movement. Let’s talk about apps that elevate and initiate a presence of mind to contemplate.
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HE’LL BE THERE, David Bratton featuring Maurette Brown Clark

David Bratton, the gifted songwriter behind the beloved anthem “Every Praise” is back with another powerful musical offering, “He’ll Be There,” featuring the incredible Maurette Brown Clark. Bratton has a passionate way of writing music that not only uplifts but deeply ministers. “He’ll Be There” is a soul-stirring gospel experience that reminds us of God’s constant presence, no matter what we face.

“This is a song I wrote around the time I had prostate surgery. God gave me hope that I would get through it. Three days later, I was playing basketball. God showed me how much He was there.” – David Bratton

He’ll Be There album cover
book icon
“18 MINUTES” Peter Bregman

“18 Minutes” really challenged the way I think about time, focus, and purpose. What stuck with me most is his 18-minute daily framework—it’s simple but powerful. This book helped me become more intentional with my time, more aware of distractions, and more focused on what truly matters.

One quote that really hit home for me was:

“We waste so much time trying to be someone else, or doing what we think we’re supposed to do, that we miss the opportunity to be ourselves.”

18 Minutes book cover
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THE RETURNING CITIZEN’S SURVIVAL GUIDE, Frank Patka

Helping returning citizens is a true passion of mine, and “The Returning Citizen’s Survival Guide” is a powerful resource in that mission. Frank Patka writes from experience, offering practical, no-nonsense guidance on housing, jobs, healthcare, and more. Whether you’re reentering society or supporting someone who is, this book is a lifeline, and a great tool to spark ideas for the future.

The Returning Citizen’s Survival Guide book cover
EDITORIAL
The Beast of Jerusalem
Uppercase letter N dropcap in blackathan the prophet would have had after-hours access to his king. In my imagination his determined gait echoed in the torchlit hallways of David’s palace. Then, shoving the monarch’s reposing body on the royal mattress, the prophet starts abruptly, relaying a message crafted by the Lord, Himself. A parable:
Rich man. Poor man.

Poor man has a sweet lamb that the family loves so much she sleeps in the bed at night and eats from their table. She’s part of the family. When the rich man entertains a traveling friend one evening, however, the rich man doesn’t select from his own vast herd to prepare a meal for his guest—no. He has spied the frolicking pet at the poor man’s house. Determined to have her, and because he could, he commandeered his way in past the strong arm of the father, the objections of the mother, and the tears of the babies. He seizes the lamb, kills it, and serves it to his guest for dinner.

End of story. Nathan waits.

David erupts at the thought of this miserable injustice and through his righteous clenched teeth declares:

“As the Lord liveth, this man shall die!”

That’s when Nathan turns to David, his king, and says to him, “Thou art the man.”

This moment stands alone in its dramatic and prophetic force. Expecting a child any day now from his stolen wife, the king thought he got over.

“Few individuals in David’s reign wielded the influence or had the guts to confront him on his sin” John Maxwell posits about Nathan the prophet. One of the most famous gut checks in the Bible, and David did not see it coming. It was a sho nuff “straight lick with a crooked stick.” The content was so strategically embedded as to protect the prophet, because, you know, messengers can lose their jobs these days, if not their heads. But if you read it as simply a response to David’s infidelity with Bathsheeba, you may have missed its broader application.

This evergreen parable inspired by the God of love and justice, illustrates that He stands witness. A parent, a spouse, organizational leader, corporate executive or head of state without godly restraint, fears to cross no line. David’s sexual impropriety was but one in a series of moral lapses. Always a power play, sexual “conquest” is but one symptom of an individual who craves, and is drunk with power.

Consider: David’s woeful accession and appropriation to himself of another man’s wife. How David manipulated and strung along Uriah, playing him for a fool as part of his cover up. Witness the sexual exploitation of Bathsheeba’s body, and the resulting pregnancy. Then came a veritable hit put on one of the nation’s elite and valiant soldiers. The collusion among trusted advisors, implicating all in the heinous plot. Finally, watch David simply move Bathsheeba into the palace—under the appearance of normalcy.

Up until Nathan’s visit, David could both live with himself, and sleep at night just fine, apparently. That the parable’s imagery includes the details of a closely held relationship between the family and its one lamb, can also be expanded. Though he had and could have anyone he wanted, power drives the rich man to seize the lamb, and David to seize Uriah’s wife. Gaming the system, and exploiting the advantage, scorching the earth and her people — rather than a kingdom tactic, repulses the sensibilities of a compassionate God.

“The poor are the oppressed and the afflicted, those who cannot defend themselves against the powerful,” wrote James Cone in the seminal “God of the Oppressed.” “They are the least and the last, the hungry and the thirsty, the unclothed and the strangers, the sick and the captives. It is for these little ones that the gospel is preached and for whom liberation has come in the words and deed of Jesus.”

Recently, when the richest Americans received tax breaks in the hundreds of thousands of dollars per household, their windfall was funded by cuts to programs and supports we tend to value and hold close like: food for low income individuals and their children, healthcare for elderly and disabled, housing, and educational access. Yet, we feel powerless to protect these.

I can’t help but notice that thousands of years before John the Baptist heralded Jesus as “the lamb who takes away the sins of the world,” and Jesus told the story of the lost sheep, or the sheep and the goats, and John the Revelator saw the victorious “Lamb” open the mysterious seals that preceded the terrible wrath of God, Nathan employed the same motif, a seemingly defenseless lamb. Yet, it rings true, somehow, that Jesus the lamb of God centers Himself in stories in and around vulnerable people. (See Exodus 22:21-23, Matthew 25:31-40). You may have mixed feelings to know that He really was right there when they “did it unto you.” I find that it gives me comfort and hope, knowing that no injury or imposition will have gone unregistered in heaven, and that He will repay.

In the meantime, we work, in the prophetic tradition of a Nathan. We work smart to drive home an awareness of the representative responsibilities of those in power, in contrast to an abuse of power. Use your 5 Calls app to reach elected officials, or sign a Change.org petition. Visit, call, and talk to those in power to persuasively gain what would seem like an impossible conviction for change.

A portrait photograph of Carmela Monk Crawford smiling while standing in front of a building to pose

CARMELA MONK CRAWFORD, Esq., is Editor of Message Magazine

EYE ON THE TIMES
A Tale of Two Crises
Food Insecurity in Gaza and the United States
by Edward Woods III
I
n today’s world of technological advancement and global interconnection, food insecurity remains a persistent and heartbreaking issue, though it manifests in dramatically diverse ways across regions. Nowhere is this contrast more visible than between Gaza, reeling under the weight of war, and the United States, a wealthy nation still grappling with hunger in its own communities.
GAZA:
HUNGER AS A WEAPON OF WAR
Gaza is facing a humanitarian catastrophe. Since the war between Israel and Hamas reignited, blockades, bombardments, and the destruction of infrastructure have devastated the region’s food system. Farms have been flattened, supply routes cut off, and humanitarian aid restricted or delayed.

According to a March 2025 report by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), more than 1.1 million people in Gaza —half the population — are experiencing “catastrophic” levels of food insecurity, meaning they are facing famine-like conditions. Entire families are subsisting on flour and water, with no access to fruits, vegetables, or protein.

Unlike chronic food insecurity caused by economic inequality or systemic poverty, Gaza’s crisis is acute and largely human-caused. Here, hunger is weaponized as a tool of war, disrupting food supply chains and deliberately weakening civilian morale. The World Food Program has described the situation as “unprecedented in modern history.”

THE UNITED STATES:
HUNGER IN A LAND OF PLENTY
Meanwhile, in the United States ­— home to one of the world’s most robust food systems — food insecurity remains a stubborn and often invisible crisis. According to the USDA, 47.4 million Americans were food insecure in 2023, a sharp rise from previous years. Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Texas are above the U.S. average for food insecurity.
A simple, stylized illustration on a solid yellow background. A flag of Palestine is on the left and a flag of the United States is on the right. In the center, two black silhouetted hands are serving a covered dish on a tray. A top hand is lifting the cloche cover off the tray, revealing a few small scattered crumbs on the plate underneath.
The causes here are different: poverty, unemployment, racial inequality, and the rising cost of living. Many Americans rely on food banks, community centers, and government aid like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) to make ends meet. Yet gaps remain. According to Feeding America, one in four blacks and one in four Latinos experience food insecurity at disproportionately higher rates than whites, which includes children.
A SHARED MORAL CHALLENGE
The contrast between Gaza and the United States highlights how food insecurity can be driven by both violent conflict and structural inequality. But the outcome is the same: human suffering, stunted childhood development, and generational cycles of poverty.

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere,” said Martin Luther King Jr. Likewise, hunger is an affront to justice everywhere. In a world capable of feeding everyone, it is not a question of supply, it is a question of compassion and resolve.

  • Support humanitarian organizations like World Central Kitchen, United Nations Relief and Works Agency, or Doctors Without Borders working in Gaza.
  • Donate to local food banks or volunteer at a shelter or pantry in your own community.
  • Advocate for policy change, including stronger social safety nets, a permanent expansion of the Child Tax Credit, and international pressure to end hunger as a weapon of war.
EDWARD WOODS III is the Public Affairs and Religious Liberty director for Lake Region Conference and the Conscience & Justice Council chairperson.
The Last Days
For children born among bombast and bomb blasts;
For those gleaning from refuse, refused refuge;
For eyes full of fear,
begging for bellies full of hunger,
because the have – lots
tied knots
in their lifelines;
For the underserved, underpaid, and overworked,
whose daily bread
has been overdue
for weeks,
While the overstuffed
mistake greed for need,
and overplay
their power
over life and death;
For those fleeing the carnage in the Congo
that fills our cell phones
with bloodstones. . .
The last days are yesterday,
and every day,
until that Day.
By Carl McRoy
BLACK FROM THE PAST
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN MCADOO:
ARCHITECT AND ADVOCATE
by Carl McRoy
Benjamin Franklin McAdoo Jr. headshot
BACKDROP
Benjamin Franklin McAdoo Jr. was the first black architect to be licensed in the state of Washington. Although it never had Black Exclusion Laws like next-door Oregon, Washington did have a history of sundown towns, racially restrictive community covenants, and discriminatory practices among realtors, lenders, and appraisers that made it difficult for minorities to move there. At least 40,000 homes were restricted in these ways in King County, where Seattle is located.

This environment led to disparities in homeownership that affect Blacks, Asians, and Hispanics to this day. Fortunately, the Covenant Homeownership Act was enacted in 2023 to help people who have been impacted by racist practices of the past.

MCADOO SHINES, AND SHINES A LIGHT
McAdoo’s architectural style combined modernism and regionalism. Part of what that means is he designed businesses, churches, and homes with open floor plans and large windows to bring in natural light that would further expand the spacious feeling inside.

McAdoo minimized ornamentation. This revealed the geometric shapes and clean lines formed by the structural materials, like steel, concrete, and stones. These looks were integrated with the natural landscapes of their surroundings to make them scenic from inside and out. Likewise, in his role as an activist, McAdoo stripped away facades from racist structures, opened up more space, and shone the light of truth to attract more people inside.

Homes designed by McAdoo were featured in the “Home of the Month” section of The Seattle Times in 1955-56. His excellence in small scale projects brought larger commercial and government projects to him throughout his career. On more than one occasion, he used his access and leverage to purchase property for black people who were excluded from doing so themselves.

A man with glasses, wearing a white shirt and a patterned tie, sitting at a desk and leaning over a large architectural drawing. A small, separate image of a four-story building with a facade of vertical columns is superimposed in the lower left corner.
SHINING FOR ALL CLASSES – AT HOME AND ABROAD
McAdoo’s innovations weren’t just for the wealthy. In the early 1950s, he designed affordable homes for the Houses of Merit program in central Seattle. As Japanese Americans struggled to recover from the dispossession and internment camps during World War II, McAdoo helped them resettle in Seattle and rebuild wealth through home equity.

His passion for affordable housing led to him moving his family to Jamaica in 1961-62, where he worked with USAID to design modular housing that could be sourced from materials within Jamaica, and largely assembled by unskilled laborers. Then McAdoo moved to Washington, DC, to help establish the Latin American Division of USAID, and work on the design team for the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.

In 1964, McAdoo resumed his private practice in the Seattle area, and also became president for the Seattle chapter of the NAACP until 1969. During that time, he also had a weekly radio show that addressed societal issues, including housing affordability and discrimination. Although Benjamin McAdoo died in 1981, architects and activists alike are keeping his legacy alive through the University of Washington’s Benjamin McAdoo Research Collective that started in 2021.

CARL MCROY is the Director of Literature Ministries for the Adventist Church in North America.
OPTIMAL LIVING HEALTH
Big Bad Bill typography
Members of Congress Who are Physicians: What Happened to the Hippocratic Oath?
An eye-level, medium shot shows an adult male in a dark suit, white shirt, and red tie holding a black stethoscope with both hands in front of his chest. He wears an American flag pin on his lapel, and a large American flag serves as the backdrop. The man's head is not visible.
by Ezinne Akamiro
Your vote, or lack thereof, can change the course of your life and has changed the country.
W
hen my little sister’s medical school graduating class was to recite the Hippocratic Oath, they asked for all physicians present to stand and recite it with them—a renewing of vows. Being tired and all the way in the back of the stadium, I stayed in my seat. My father gave me the look that every first-generation, American born child fears and instructed me to “Stand Up!” I quickly complied and renewed my commitment to those under my care.

On July 4, 2025, only one Republican physician in the United States Congress was willing to stand as H.R.1 was signed into law. It passed in both the United States House of Representatives (218-214) and Senate (50-51) with only Republican support.

The bill may be “beautiful” for the wealthiest Americans. However, it will be disastrous for many as the “not-so-beautiful bill,” as coined by Dr. Rand Paul of Kentucky, is set to add trillions to our national debt while decreasing funding to numerous social safety net programs, notably healthcare.

Of the 21 physicians currently in Congress, 17 in the House of Representatives and four in the Senate, 14 voted “Yes,” all of whom are Republicans. In voting for the bill, these physicians, government servants, and representatives forsook their Hippocratic Oath to “First Do No Harm” and “Respect Human Life.” Instead, they pledged their allegiance, not to a party or their constituents, but to a ruling class of billionaires governed by the love of money. As a result, they will pierce themselves (and millions of others) with many sorrows (1 Timothy 6:10).

We have been called to not only care for ourselves, but to be our sibling’s keepers.

Astronomical Individual Impacts
These physicians voted for a bill that is estimated to have 11.8 million Americans lose their largely federal government funded health insurance, Medicaid, over the next decade.

Medicaid currently covers 71 million individuals who must meet certain qualifications. Included are low-income families, qualified pregnant women and children, children in foster care, people with disabilities, seniors with low income, parents/caregivers with low income, and individuals receiving Supplemental Security Income (SSI). It also covers those with certain diagnoses such as end-stage renal disease on dialysis, HIV/AIDS, and cancer. There will also be cuts to the Health Insurance Marketplace program (under the Affordable Care Act best known as “Obamacare”) that serves 24 million Americans who work; many are pre-retires, part-time workers, independent contractors, and small business owners. Notably, both programs cover a large portion of rural America.

Many individuals on Medicaid work but are not provided with commercial health insurance by their employer and cannot afford it on their own.

Unlike the federal government (which will add $3.4 trillion to the federal debt due to this bill), state governments must balance their budgets. When less federal funding is provided for state-run Medicaid programs, the states must fill in the gap. If they cannot, covered services will decrease and people will be removed from the program to make ends meet.

An eye-level, close-up shot of a person's hand wearing a dark suit sleeve as they hold a black pen, poised to sign a document.
Lives Lost
Projections from the University of Pennsylvania, Harvard and Yale estimate that less funding for Medicaid could result in 51,000 lost lives per year. This can be due to several factors, including losing access to low-cost medications (like insulin), decreased quality standards for healthcare facilities, less funding for medical education, and delays in care.

Furthermore, we know that those without insurance are far less likely to seek timely medical care. Twenty percent of adults without insurance, in comparison to 5-7% with insurance, went without needed care because of the cost. The cost of healthcare can be financially debilitating as medical debt accounts for 66.5% of bankruptcies in America, with more than a half million people filing every year for this reason alone.

These cuts are proposed to decrease government spending by $1.1 trillion on Medicaid, Medicare and The Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) over the next decade. More than $1 trillion of the cuts are to come from Medicaid alone.

Access to Healthcare Withdrawn
The very news of losing funding has already had its first casualty. Community Hospital (a healthcare system in McCook, Nebraska) announced July 2, 2025 that it will close Curtis Medical Center in Curtis.

How is it that the federal government is cutting funding, yet our debt is increasing? Show me your budget and I’ll show you your values. Our checkbook shows our treasures to be big business, border control and billionaires. Forty-six and a half billion is set to construct the border wall that Mexico was “supposed” to build. Another $45 billion is allocated to detention centers for immigrants in custody with an additional $30 billion to fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents. Finally, the top 20% of income earners will receive a disproportionate amount of the extended and new tax savings.

The consolation prize is $50 million to support rural hospitals. This is a drop in the bucket as the cost to run even a small hospital is estimated to be in the 10s to 100s of millions of dollars a year. The closing of facilities will not only lead to increased death and morbidity for the people these centers serve, but also to economic disaster as the local hospital is often a major economic engine keeping these communities financially viable. The $50 million is too late to save Curtis Medical Center and will be too little to save others.

Left out completely is targeted funding to support urban healthcare centers, which carry the load of providing uncompensated care to a diverse population in our larger cities. These safety net facilities are also in jeopardy.

One recent example is the closing of two Atlanta, Georgia hospitals by WellStar Health System (Atlanta Medical Center and Atlanta Medical Center South) in 2022. Their closings have put increased financial and capacity pressure on Grady Memorial Hospital, the sole remaining Level 1 trauma center in the city. This means longer wait times and decreased access to care for all in the community. This is especially critical in what we deem as the “golden hour.” It is the time immediately after a medical emergency when timely intervention can significantly improve a patient’s survival and decrease long-term complications.

Groups Fear Disruption for Unprotected
The American Medical Association (AMA) has expressed concern as the bill will limit access to care as millions will lose insurance and a decrease in federal support of medical student loans will worsen physician shortages.

The American Hospital Association (AHA) noted the financial strain on hospitals.

The National Academy for State Health Policy (NASHP) cited apprehensions about operational challenges states will have in implementing the bill’s requirements, especially as it relates to eligibility verification and data systems.

The National Medical Association (NMA), the nation’s collective voice of African American physicians, is alarmed because the bill will expand healthcare disparities and “harm our communities for decades to come.”

Non-profits such as Planned Parenthood are worried that the “bill will restrict access to essential healthcare services for low-income individuals, particularly those who rely on Medicaid for services like birth control, cancer screens and mental health care.” This is especially true as the Supreme Court decided in a June 2025 ruling that states can block the organization from receiving Medicaid funds, even if patients are seeking care unrelated to an abortion. Imagine how this will impact states like West Virginia where half of all births are funded by Medicaid.

Epidemic of Delay
As a hospital medical physician, I can foresee an already too common scenario becoming even more frequent: a person comes into the hospital with symptoms that have been worsening for months such as pain, edema or shortness of breath. They delayed seeing their healthcare provider in clinic and/or filling/refilling prescriptions due to the availability of clinicians and cost; particularly if they lost their insurance. Due to the worsening severity of the disease, their care team recommends medical management (medications) and not more aggressive treatment (like a procedure or chemotherapy) because the disease has progressed to a point where options are now too risky and less likely to be effective. Increasingly, hospice and palliative care are recommended.

This scenario will have broad consequences outside of that for the patient and their family. Someone will have to pay for the $204 billion in increased uncompensated care: $63 billion for hospitals and $24 billion for physicians. That someone is most likely you. Again, as states must balance their budget, the additional expenses will be laid at the feet of state taxpayers via an increase in income, sales, and/or property taxes.

What Can Change
Now more than ever, preventative care must be the focus of our nation’s healthcare system. Programs such as NEWSTART can lay the foundation to prevent, treat and even cure chronic disease. It is a “physician monitored, scientifically researched lifestyle-change program based on eight fundamental principles proven to help you achieve optimum health: Nutrition, Exercise, Water, Sunlight, Temperance, Air, Rest and Trust.” It is a means in which we can start to take control of our health, increase wellness, and decrease our reliance on costly pharmaceutical and advanced medical care.

My support of lifestyle modifications comes from personal experience. When faced with my own health challenges, my physicians were amazed at my rapid recovery and attributed it to years of a plant-based diet and regular exercise.

One other note, H.R.1 passed without compromise or input from members of any other party, because Republicans control the House of Representatives, the Senate, the White House, and the Supreme Court. While I have called out my fellow physicians in Congress, 50 Senators (with a tie breaking vote from the Vice President) and 218 Representatives voted for this bill. Your vote, or lack thereof, can change the course of your life and has changed the country.

My duty is not only as a physician to my patients, but as a daughter whose Heavenly Father requires much for the much I was given. I am to look after the orphans and widows (James 1:27), give openly to the needy and poor (Deuteronomy 15:11), and to consider the needs of others (Philippians 2:4). The parable in Luke 16:19-31 is a cautionary tale.

EZINNE AKAMIRO, MD, MHA is the second of six children to parents who immigrated from Nigeria to the United States. Her profession, as a board-certified internal medicine physician, has taught her the fragility of life. Her walk with Jesus is teaching her the strength of her Savior.
At Last
I’ve Found You?
Nate Checked the Boxes, and Even God Said Yes.
white check box
By Kaye Mo’
A few days after Nate’s proposal, I heard a voice telling me clearly in my spirit “Nate is your husband.”

“What?!” I screamed from the recesses of my mind. I didn’t even really like Nate! Certainly not enough to want to marry him! I’d only decided to pray about his proposal to fulfill all righteousness. How could this be?

Well, I kept on praying that day and kept hearing the same thing in my spirit: “Nate is your husband.”

A digital illustration shows a Black man wearing a brown suit jacket over a white shirt. He has a beard and dark sunglasses. The style is minimalist, using solid blocks of color without detailed features.
Physically, Nate was perfect. We’re both of African descent, and he had a cute smile and a glorious set of dimples. While he wasn’t so tall, he was still three inches taller than my 5 ft 7’ – which meant I didn’t need to crane my neck so much to look into his eyes. And don’t even get me started on his sixpack…

I just so happened to catch him shirtless in the apartment he shared with his brother when I dropped by from an outing, so we could go grab dinner together. As soon as I got there, he quickly put on his shirt and we left. I do remember feeling disappointed about him covering up (hey, I’m a believer, not blind!).

But here’s the thing: my relationship with Nate was so rocky that, within the first couple of months, I found myself crying over some of the issues I was having with him. Nate had a jealous streak a mile wide – maybe because of his rather sexually-liberal lifestyle as a teenager and young adult. He hated meeting my male friends, despite the fact that I openly introduced him to them as my boyfriend. He would say again and again that he didn’t believe in platonic relationships between men and women.

Something else Nate used to do that I found rather worrisome was his insistence on my submission. He would quote Ephesians 5:22 to me saying “Kaye, I am your husband; you have to submit to me.”

“Dude, you’re not my husband yet,” I thought as I rolled my eyes, internally.

Beyond these though, was his anger. Within the first three months of our relationship, it was clear to me that he had serious anger management issues. Hey, I’m a quick-tempered person myself, but I was a whole lot better at not allowing the anger to get the better of me than he was.

One day, after having just returned home for a brief visit after three months working out of town, I excused myself from him and my friend who had come to see me with her fiancé. I wanted to go say hi to my dad who had just come home from work. Certainly, it wasn’t going to be a one-minute “Hello, Dad.” I honored my father by spending a couple of minutes with him, enquiring about his health and whether my mom had been treating him right!

I returned only to find that Nate had left. In fact, my friend explained that he had muttered angrily that I’d been out of town for three months, yet apparently hadn’t missed him enough to spare any time for him. He had stormed off to his car without another word, said my friend. Her fiancé confirmed that he had driven off with a screech of his tires.

I was due to travel back to my duty station two days later. I went to his place hoping we could talk about what had happened, but he wasn’t in. I didn’t see him again until I was about to set out to return to work out of town.

To be fair, he did come with an offering of chocolate (my favorite). By then though, it was too little, too late.

“Lord, if I said I still wanted to marry Nate, You would know it for the bald-faced lie it is, because You know my heart. Lord, I believe I heard You clearly telling me Nate was my husband, but please Lord, just allow me to make this one request. Please give me a man with a gentle temper — one who doesn’t anger easily.”

I broke things off with Nate and even though he tried for us to get back together, I was resolute. A few months after that breakup, a senior colleague of mine — Boone, who had always been interested in me, openly expressed his desire for a relationship and ultimately marriage. Remembering my experience with Nate, I didn’t just ask to hear from the Lord — I sought a sign also, just to be double sure.

Boone and I have been married for twenty-two years, with four children —two of whom are adults now. I can count on one hand the number of times he has raised his voice to me. I asked the Lord for a mild-tempered man, and that’s exactly what I got.

Was it really the voice of the Lord I heard telling me “Nate is your husband”? I believe so, with all my heart. However, dare I say that Nate, like King Saul, lost his kingdom because of his refusal to own up to his mistakes and make amends?

The Bible asks us to prove all things (1 Thessalonians 5:21), to test every spirit (1 John 4:1).

Even when God has chosen someone for you, if that person refuses to walk worthy of that call, the Lord always has a back-up plan. After all, He is the Master Strategist.

Look to Him in all things, all of the time.

KAY MO’ is a Biblical Sexuality Education Advocate, Inspirational Speaker, Radio Presenter, Faith-Based Romance Writer, Wife and Mother. She writes from Nigeria.
OPTIMAL FAMILY LIVING
I Survived.
God’s omnipotent covering over the lives of my two daughters and me.
By Lilith Whyte
That morning changed everything. I stood there blindsided, breathless, fighting desperately for my life while trying to digest what was unfolding right before my eyes. The hands of my husband that had once held and protected me were now callously and mercilessly strangling me.

The pernicious effects of alcohol from the night before had taken its toll on him as it permeated the atmosphere and manipulated him to nearly end my life that morning. Just when I thought I would take my last breath in my helplessness and apparent defeat, the Lord placed my oldest daughter in my view. She appeared to be praying and internally fighting as she witnessed my struggle. She inspired me and instantly activated my maternal prowess to live for my baby girls. I needed to be there for them and be a testimony of God’s omnipotence and saving grace.

This explosive domestic event caused a shift in the trajectory of my life and the lives of my two daughters. Bonds were severed, hearts were torn, and lives were broken, while we were abruptly uprooted from our comfort zone and placed at an unwelcome crossroad that morning. I would have never imagined waking up to this appalling and menacing entanglement with the love of my life — the person I considered to be my safe space. I felt like I had been sleeping with the enemy.

That day marked the beginning of the girls’ and my journey of adversity, opposition, loss, and isolation. Unbeknownst to me, the internal upheaval that transpired that morning stripped the lid off of Pandora’s box and exposed secrets that took my breath away and almost tempted me to feel hopeless. From that day forward, I was relentlessly bombarded with unforeseen and unimaginable discoveries that surfaced and spoke volumes that I was dealing with more than just a domestic incident in my current crisis. Spiritual warfare was staring me right in the face leaving me terribly flummoxed as it attacked me from multiple angles.

At this time, my situation was looking pretty dismal, but God! This catchphrase, “But God,” has been my mantra in every seemingly insurmountable situation because I’m aware that no one “but God” can deliver me in these situations.

I survived. Not just that morning, but the days that followed as I adjusted to my new reality as an instant single mom. I survived the silence and shame from friends and family who felt uncomfortable with my new family profile.

I survived the stigma from being both a professional and a victim — the weight of “Professional Stigma” and “Helper Syndrome.” These are the unspoken beliefs that personal struggles, particularly those involving domestic violence and mental health, are incompatible with being a competent professional. That professionals should be emotionally resilient, even immune to such societal concerns.

I survived the manipulation and gaslighting from my then husband about that horrific morning, because there had been no prior history of physical abuse in our marriage. Or, was I simply unaware of the intangible and subtle ways abuse can manifest? In this struggle, I learned that abuse has many faces: emotional, verbal, mental, physical, spiritual, sexual, and financial.

It is far more prevalent than most of us realize. That’s why our counseling — my counseling — and education focused on healthy relationships among families, friends, co-workers, and significant others, and was nothing short of revolutionary.

I also survived the misunderstanding and ridicule from both the church community and the system, neither of which fully grasped the precarious nature of our situation. Both could benefit from education, awareness, and compassion in these areas. Navigating the social system in search of resources to meet our basic needs gave me a whole new perspective. As a healthcare provider, I had no idea how unsettling and often insensitive the process is. I never imagined how scarce and difficult it is to find real help for individuals broken by relational, social, or financial crises.

As for the church, abuse is a topic too often swept under the rug, as if silence will make it disappear. There is a deep and troubling denial, an unwillingness to acknowledge the reality and prevalence of abuse, even within its own walls. This left me feeling broken, isolated, and misjudged. Ironically, we were treated like villains, when, in truth, we were the victims.

In the meantime, I had no earthly idea of the magnitude of anguish and heartache the girls and I would suffer along this journey, but I knew the omnipresence of our Heavenly Father would suffice in these difficult times. Residing in the “secret place” of the Most High God was our refuge and respite from the storm. Here we could spiritually refuel while God nurtured, healed, and revived us so that we didn’t look like what we were going through. Hallelujah!

Here, devoid of distractions, we could clearly hear Him speak to us words of wisdom and instruction to help us navigate through this storm. When all hope seemed gone because the typical earthly strongholds we relied on daily by default disappointed us, my God proved Himself to be more than enough. I was quickly reminded that God trumps every earthly stronghold — one’s village, the legal system, and the church. He is the Stronghold par excellence, the true “Rider” or “Ride or Die.”

God has given the biblical charge that we are to bear each other’s burdens in Galatians 6:2 and help each other on our heaven-bound journey. And by divine orchestration, my wound of affliction morphed into a womb of life birthing my nonprofit organization in 2019 – Three Women And A Vision, Inc. (TWAAV), which focuses on the ministry of reconciliation and social service advocacy. The three women are my two daughters and myself, of course, and by God’s grace, we aspire to make a permanent footprint in this world that fosters a culture of healing, reconciliation, unconditional love, and forgiveness.

LILITH R. WHYTE, M.D. is the CEO of The Image of Eve Restored, Inc.
Life Design
Wide view of silhouetted couple sitting separately in high-rise apartment setting. The man wears a crown and sits to the furthest left in the foreground, the woman sits to the farthest right in the midground and the background is filled with the view of a sunset over a city skyline.

Morality Versus Immorality

by Delbert Baker

Consequences of One Wrong Turn: Why Morality Matters

“He who covers his sins will not prosper, but whoever confesses and forsakes them will have mercy” (Proverbs 28:13, NKJV).

David had it all: anointing, authority, acclaim! Chosen by God, celebrated by the people, a leader armed with a heart for worship and poised for a stellar reign and a life of greatness. But one night, when kings were at war, David stayed home! He made a choice that tragically altered the course of his life and his family.

The story of David and Bathsheba (2 Samuel 11) isn’t just about temptation — it’s about trajectory. One decision to ignore God’s law led to a descending path of adultery, deceit, murder, and cover-up. The consequences were devastating: a child lost, a home in turmoil, and generational pain.

See the consequences of morality or the lack of it:

A close-up of a black male warrior holding a spear and a shield in the middle of a battlefield at sunset.
A close-up of a black male warrior holding a spear and a shield in the middle of a battlefield at sunset.

The story of David and Bathsheba (2 Samuel 11) isn’t just about temptation — it’s about trajectory. One decision to ignore God’s law led to a descending path of adultery, deceit, murder, and cover-up. The consequences were devastating: a child lost, a home in turmoil, and generational pain.

See the consequences of morality or the lack of it:

Immorality Has a Ripple Effect

Sin doesn’t stay contained. David’s secret act with Bathsheba became a public and domestic disaster. His son Amnon would later mimic his father’s sins with tragic results. What we excuse in private often erupts in public, and those around us suffer the collateral damage.

Morality Protects More Than Just You

David’s story reminds us that moral decisions are never just personal. Each choice builds or breaks trust, safeguards or sabotages legacies. The price of immorality is often higher than anyone ever expects.

God Forgives, But Consequences Remain
David repented (Psalm 51), and God forgave him. But even forgiven sin can carry lasting results. In her book “Patriarchs and Prophets,” Ellen White observed, “The work of sin may be stopped, and the sinner forgiven; but the results of sin, though forgiven, may be reaped by others” (p. 722).

Thank God for grace. We can remember David, not for the ignominy of his fall but for the example of his restoration. He owned his failure, he turned to God, and he accepted the consequences. True morality is not sinlessness but choosing virtue and sincerely and humbly returning to God when we fall.

Conclusion:

The lesson is clear: immorality always takes more than it gives. It promises pleasure but delivers pain. It whispers freedom but chains the soul. Like David, we each stand at a crossroads where one step can shape destiny. Choose the narrow path. Morality matters — because your future and your family depend on it.

Self Check | Are You Guarding the Moral Path? graphic with a three question self survey

Morality Protects More Than Just You

David’s story reminds us that moral decisions are never just personal. Each choice builds or breaks trust, safeguards or sabotages legacies. The price of immorality is often higher than anyone ever expects.

God Forgives, But Consequences Remain

David repented (Psalm 51), and God forgave him. But even forgiven sin can carry lasting results. In her book “Patriarchs and Prophets,” Ellen White observed, “The work of sin may be stopped, and the sinner forgiven; but the results of sin, though forgiven, may be reaped by others” (p. 722).
Self Check | Are You Guarding the Moral Path? graphic with a three question self survey
Thank God for grace. We can remember David, not for the ignominy of his fall but for the example of his restoration. He owned his failure, he turned to God, and he accepted the consequences. True morality is not sinlessness but choosing virtue and sincerely and humbly returning to God when we fall.
Conclusion:

The lesson is clear: immorality always takes more than it gives. It promises pleasure but delivers pain. It whispers freedom but chains the soul. Like David, we each stand at a crossroads where one step can shape destiny. Choose the narrow path. Morality matters — because your future and your family depend on it.

Delbert Baker, PH.D., is an international educator with a broad worldview and an astute observer of human nature. He has degrees in theology, history, counseling and administration with a Master Divinity, Ph.D. in Organizational Communication, and is a certified Executive Leadership Coach.

A Black female therapist or counselor sits across from a sad, teenage boy in a professional office setting. She is holding a clipboard and has her hand on his arm in a comforting gesture. The teenager, with his head down, appears to be listening intently.
YOU ARE NOT ALONE:
Restoring Hope in the Black Community
by Raynard Allen
Sarah Velasquez, co-founder of the Suicide Prevention Support Group Purposeful Life in the Light, experienced a devastating loss when her 22-year-old daughter died by suicide on February 13, 2017.

Her daughter was vibrant, free-spirited, full of life, a nature lover with a deep affection for dogs. No one saw it coming.

This heartbreaking experience transformed Sarah’s understanding of suicide. She now gently reminds others: “Just because someone is smiling doesn’t mean they aren’t in pain.”

Holding on to hope, Sarah believes that her daughter’s life — and death — carry meaning. Today, she supports other parents through their own journeys of grief, shame, and guilt, offering comfort through shared experience and empathy. Every holiday, she sets a plate at the table for her daughter and softly says: “You are never forgotten. . . and we will forever love you.”

The Word of God declares:
“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit” (Psalm 34:18, NIV). This promise breathes life into weary souls. Even if you don’t consider yourself a Christian, know this: there is Someone who cares deeply for you. You are not alone. The Bible reminds us, “Cast all your anxiety on him (Christ) because he cares for you” (1 Peter 5:7, NIV).
Understanding the Crisis
Within the black community, systemic and historical injustices have contributed to deep and ongoing struggles that often lead to mental health challenges, including increased risk of suicide. These are not isolated incidents; they are symptoms of broader, deeply rooted issues such as racism, economic inequality, and intergenerational trauma.

Public health data show that suicide is the third leading cause of death among black youth ages 15 to 24 in the United States. Between 2008 and 2019, suicide attempts rose significantly among young adults ages 18 to 25. Alarmingly, suicide rates among black young adults ages 18 to 24 increased by 37% from 2018 to 2021.

A 2020 report from the Congressional Black Caucus Emergency Taskforce on Black Youth Suicide and Mental Health titled, “Ring the Alarm: The Crisis of Black Youth Suicide in America,” highlights the gravity of the situation. According to the report:

“Among youth aged 10 to 19, suicide is the second leading cause of death. In 2017 alone, over 3,000 youth in this age group died by suicide. Over the past decade, the suicide death rate for black youth rose from 2.55 per 100,000 in 2007 to 4.82 per 100,000 in 2017. Alarmingly, black children under 13 are twice as likely to die by suicide as their peers, and black boys age 5 to 11 are more likely to die by suicide compared to their white counterparts. The suicide death rate among black youth is increasing more rapidly than any other racial or ethnic group.”

While research on suicidal thoughts and behaviors in black youth has shown mixed results, recent data underscores growing concern. A study using the CDC’s Youth Risk Behavior Survey — a national assessment of adolescent health —found that suicide attempts among black adolescents increased by 73% between 1991 and 2017. During the same period, suicide attempts resulting in injury rose by 122% for black adolescent boys, suggesting an increase in the use of more lethal means.

Historically, black youth have not been seen as a high-risk group for suicide, but emerging trends tell a different, more urgent story.

Several factors contribute to the frequency of attempts, and their lethality.

1. Racism and Discrimination
  • Racial Trauma: Ongoing exposure to racism causes chronic stress, fear, and emotional pain. This trauma can lead to anxiety, depression, social isolation, PTSD, and an increased risk of suicide.
  • Mental Health Stigma: Deep-rooted distrust in the healthcare system, shaped by historical abuses such as the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, continues to delay diagnosis and treatment in black communities.
  • Discrimination and Suicidality: Research published in BMC Public Health shows that young black adults who experience frequent discrimination are more likely to report suicidal thoughts or attempts. In contrast, those who hold positive attitudes toward seeking mental health support are 34% less likely to attempt suicide and 35% less likely to experience suicidal ideation.
2. Economic Injustice
  • Poverty and Psychological Distress: Due to systemic inequities, black Americans are disproportionately affected by poverty, which increases vulnerability to mental health challenges.
  • Residential Segregation: Historically rooted segregation continues to limit access to quality education, employment opportunities, and healthcare, exacerbating both economic hardship and emotional strain.
  • Barriers to Care: High costs and limited access to affordable mental health services often prevent individuals from receiving the care they need.
3. Intersectionality of Risk
  • Compounded Effects: The intersection of racism, poverty, and mental health stigma can intensify feelings of hopelessness, disconnection, and worthlessness.
  • Intergenerational Trauma: Trauma isn’t always individual — it’s often inherited. The effects of past and present injustices can pass through generations, influencing identity, resilience, and emotional well-being.
  • Youth Suicide Disparities: Young black men are particularly at risk, facing unique cultural and societal pressures that compound their mental health challenges.

While racism and injustice are undeniable risk factors, suicide is a complex and multifaceted issue. It cannot be attributed to one cause alone.

As Kathy Hurt wrote in the National Alliance on Mental Illness Journal (November 17, 2017), “Suicide is not a desire for death, but a cry for life — more life, better life.”

Moving Forward with Faith and Courage
To build a healthier, more hopeful future, we must:

  • Address systemic racism and economic barriers.
  • Increase access to culturally competent mental health care.
  • Promote mental health education and reduce stigma in both faith and black communities.
  • Let’s also be clear: mental health struggles do not equal weak faith. Seeking help, whether through therapy, medication, or pastoral care, is not spiritual failure. It is wisdom. It is stewardship.

While prayer is powerful, it is OK to also ask for help. And it is necessary to move beyond harmful cultural norms like “what happens in the family stays in the family.” Healing often begins in the light.

As the Apostle Paul instructs us:

“Bear one another’s burdens…” (Galatians 6:2).

The Role of the Church and Community
Faith communities hold a unique and powerful position in supporting mental health and healing. Churches, in particular, can play a vital role by:

  • Providing faith-based counseling and support groups.
  • Creating safe, stigma-free spaces for open and honest conversations.
  • Encouraging the integration of spiritual support with professional mental health care.
  • Actively checking in on members, especially those who may be struggling silently.

One example of this important work is The Balm in Gilead, an organization that partners with African American faith communities to address health disparities, including mental health and suicide prevention. Learn more at balmingilead.org.

RAYNARD ALLEN is the Spiritual Care Supervisor at Adventist Health Hospital in Hanford, California. He is a retired Commander of the United States Navy and a retired pastor of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. He holds a Doctorate in Suicidology. His daughter, Ashante Allen, assisted with this research and writing.
A group of people, including a mother and child, walking across a desert under the large text "MIGRATION".

How current immigration policies clash with the biblical record, and our duty to respond.

by William Davis

S

cripture is clear; we are to obey God rather than man (Acts 5:29). Paul encourages us to pray for government leaders and respect their authority (Romans 12 and 13). But Paul demanded his rights as a Roman citizen (Acts 25:11) Therefore, Christians, while respecting those in authority, do not owe blind obedience to any human law if it is contrary to the Law (Torah) of God. What does the Bible say?

The Migrant in Scripture
Abram was a migrant. He left his home in Ur and went to the land God promised to him and his children. Couldn’t God bless him where he was? Why was it necessary for him to migrate? The society and laws of Ur were antagonistic toward God’s ways and Abram could not thrive in that place. God told him to move.

Isaac and Jacob were also migrants moving continually throughout the land of Canaan. Jacob fled his brother and violence to have a better future. Late in life, through the efforts of his son Joseph, who was now the prime minister of Egypt, Jacob and his entire family moved to Egypt to flee hunger caused by famine in Canaan, a natural disaster.

In Leviticus 19:33, 34 God commands us to love the stranger, not persecute or abuse them.

Centuries later the Hebrews were seen as a threat by the Egyptians who feared their growing numbers. A law was made enslaving them and finally a death decree was made to curb their population. The Hebrew midwives resisted this order. They made excuses for their “illegal actions” to save the baby boys.

Moses’ mother resisted this immoral law by hiding him. She hid him in a basket in the bulrushes of the river where he was found and saved by the daughter of the Pharaoh who wanted to kill him. This Egyptian princess knew he was a Hebrew but adopted him anyway. He was raised by his birth mother for the first years of his life and then went to live in the palace as the adopted grandson of Pharaoh. This same Moses led the Hebrews out of Egypt to return to the land of Canaan.

Another Bible story of migration is that of Ruth. She was a Moabite, a people who were the enemies of Israel. She had married an Israelite while he was a migrant in her country. When he died his mother wanted to return to Israel. Ruth went with her declaring, “your people will be my people and your God, my God.” To eat, Ruth labored in the fields picking up the leftovers after the harvest according to the law of God that demanded the corners of the field be left unharvested for the poor. This included widows and orphans. She married Boaz, the owner of the field she was working in, and became an ancestor of King David and Jesus.

Jesus was a migrant soon after his birth. Joseph and Mary were warned by an angel that their child was in imminent danger of death by Herod’s soldiers who were going to Bethlehem to kill all of the baby boys up to two years of age. Imminent danger forced them to migrate to Egypt where they could be safe.

The first believers in Jesus were forced to migrate from Jerusalem and Judea because of religious persecution. These people fled for their lives. Fear of imprisonment or death was the cause of their migration. The Apostles remind us that we are pilgrims in this earth, wandering. We look for a new heaven and a new Earth where righteousness reigns (1 Peter 2:11; Hebrews 11:13).

As we can see, the Scriptures are full of stories of people who had to migrate because of their faith, natural disasters, violence, death threats, and more. These are many of our Bible heroes. Migration was a key element in the story of their lives.

We are called to be light in the darkness, teaching Jesus’ gospel of love for one another. This is a love that is universal, not restricted to those who are nearest to us, or the most like ourselves.
Migrants in the Commandments and the Gospels
In Leviticus 19:33, 34 God commands us to love the stranger, not persecuting them nor abusing them. Deuteronomy 10:18,19 reminds us that the foreigner is to be treated well because of the migrant history of God’s people. These are clear mandates for God to treat the foreigner as one of our own.

The division of human beings because of race, national origin, and gender is not God’s plan. In Jesus there is neither Jew nor Greek, male nor female, slave nor free (Galatians 3:28). Satan wants to divide us and cause enmity between people including believers (James 4:1). Jesus calls us to love one another, even those who hate us and persecute us (Matthew 5:44). And, He asks us to go into all the world and preach the gospel to everyone (Mark 16:15-16).

Jesus commands us to love (John 13:34-35, 1 John 4:7; Romans 12:10; 13:8; Ephesians 4:32). But whom should we love? Some have argued that there is an order of love (Ordos Amoris) beginning with those closest to us followed by those like ourselves. And finally, they argue, if there is any leftover love, care and concern, then it can go to others who are not of our family, community, or nation.

This is not the teaching of Jesus. He taught that our neighbor is not necessarily the one closest, nor most like us. In one of His most well-known parables, He seeks to answer the question: Who is my neighbor? In the story of “The Good Samaritan,” it was not those closest to the wounded man who turned out to be his neighbor. It was a man of the hated, demonized “others,” a Samaritan. Jesus taught that “God so loved the world” (John 3:16), not God so loved the Jews or the sons of Abraham.

Conclusion

Migration is an answer to human needs in the Scriptures just as it is in our times: religious persecution, famine hunger, family ties, injustice, and persecution based on race-ethnicity and other circumstances that make people migrate to another country where they hope to find freedom, justice, and safety for themselves and their families. It is sin that separates people into us and them. The fear and hatred of the other is sinful. Resistance to unjust, immoral laws is the duty of believers.

For many in our history, this was and remains a nation with hopes and intentions to fulfill the longing of the human heart for freedom and justice. It is a nation where religious freedom was the motivation for many of our ancestors’ migration. Christians are called to obey God’s commands rather than man’s. We are called to be light in the darkness, teaching Jesus’ gospel of love for one another. This is a love that is universal, not restricted to those who are nearest to us, or the most like ourselves. We follow Christ, not man. We are guided in our lives by the perfect law of liberty!

William Davis, D.MIN. PH.D., writes from Pleasant Grove, Utah, and currently works as an advocate for disability rights. He is bilingual (English and Spanish) and works in educational leadership, research, design and effective delivery.
Divine Nine
Divine
Nine
by Lenessa Jones-Boddie

From hazing to kneeling devotion, challenging the spiritual side of our Greek-letter organizations.

by Lenessa Jones-Boddie

A banner with nine fraternity and sorority crests.
W

hile attending Southern University and A&M College in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 20-year-old engineering student Caleb Wilson sought out to pledge with Omega Psi Phi. He died during the hazing process. Sadly, his death is one of the latest in a string of tragedies associated with hazing.

Since 2000, there have been more than 100 hazing deaths. Hazing rituals are prevalent in various groups on many campuses, whether HBCUs, PWIs, private Christian, and non-Christian campuses. Many are drawn to Greek organizations after seeing their community service, friendships, career connections, and step shows. Yet, there is more to them than what meets the eye.

Pulling Back the Veil

Hazing
“Hazing: any activity often within a group setting, regardless of an individual’s willingness to participate, that causes or risks mental, physical or emotional harm, or humiliates, degrades, or abuses someone as a condition of joining or belonging to a group.”

Anti-hazing laws exist all over this country, at many distinct levels. They include institutions of higher education, state laws, Greek bylaws and federal laws. The federal SHCA (Stop Hazing on Campus Act), requires Institutions of Higher Education (IHE) to report hazing protocols in their Clery Reports, as of January 1, 2025. The Indiana University spring semester 2025 hazing conduct report, revealed 11 organizations hazed, and as a result some were suspended while others reprimanded. With such occurrences, one may wonder about the level of active oversight to ensure student safety?

Often, members of the organizations of interest are perpetrating the harm. In Wilson’s case, three other Omegas were charged in connection with his death. One could say, in essence, four lives are now lost.

Does Hazing Reflect God?
The risk to physical, mental, and emotional wellbeing, inflicted intentionally, and as a requirement for belonging is antithetical to the ways of Christ. However, it does reflect the last actions of those that hated Christ. He was mocked, beaten and humiliated before going to the cross, sacrificing His life for all mankind (Mark 15:15-20, Isaiah 53:5-8). God is love – in word and deed (1 John 4:7-21).

The Divine Nine
The Divine Nine is the nickname for the traditionally black sororities and fraternities. The word “Divine” indicates that one is of, from, or like God or a god. Each of the nine have a god(s). Initiation rituals reveal they are more than just mascots. All of the Divine Nine connect with Set/Seth when they incorporate hazing. Set/Seth is the Egyptian god of war, disorder, violence, pain, and god of the desert/desert storms (term used for underground hazing activities – physical and mental abuse, financial requirements, sleep deprivation, sexual immorality, eating raw onions and dog food, passing an egg from mouth-to-mouth, binding each other spiritually, etc.).

Two Case Studies
Consider the invocation of Minerva in the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority ritual. The Deltas use Minerva, the Roman goddess of art, wisdom, school and war in its crest and for its rituals. An excerpt from the Initiation Ritual describes the incorporation of the goddess and her symbolism:

“Minerva- torch of wisdom…burns wherever we assemble and guides our footsteps, when we work in the name of the sorority, guiding our footsteps… We believe in a spiritual life, but we leave to the individual the selection of the medium for its outward manifestation.”

The questions for those who participate is, who is guiding those steps? Who is source of wisdom? Who are the mediums?

Tommy Arbuckle pictured seated and smiling while holding two of his books, The Answer and The Knock
Word From a Brother
Tommy Arbuckle
Former Omega Psi Phi
Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity uses Apollo, the Greek god of sun and light, prophecy, healing and disease in rituals. Also, Aries, the Greek god of war/battle, and Thoth the Egyptian god of the moon, of wisdom, and magic are referenced. This excerpt from their Initiation Ritual pledges to bow and submit to God, gods, and brothers:

“Candidates kneel in front of the altar and give the oath: I … in the presence of Almighty God and the members of Kappa Alpha Psi, here assembled, and at the Sacred Delphic Shrine (Temple of Apollo), do solemnly swear that I will keep secret forever all things that may transpire or be revealed to me during my initiation.”

Do these rituals, agreements and covenants implicate our devotion? If the Bible says we can’t love two masters (Matthew 6:24) what happens to serving God, the Creator of all things? (Genesis 1:1).

selfie of Monica Mack
Word From a Sisters
Monica Mack
Former Alpha Kappa Alpha
I joined a “social service organization” influenced by my family and the success of its members. However, I later discovered it had religious elements, a god, hymns, prayers, rituals and benedictions for deceased members, which did not align with my expectations. Additionally, the oath-taking process was secretive and lacked transparency, which further raised concerns for me. I believe these organizations can be deceptive and harmful. When I joined in 1995, I wasn’t fully informed, though today many rituals can be found online. I encourage parents, churches and communities to better educate their circles and provide discernment about their true nature. Through God’s revelation, I came to understand that I had brought a generational curse on my family by being in covenant with this organization. God was not pleased with the organization or my involvement. I left and immediately destroyed all related items. My wife also left Delta Sigma Theta.

“When you join AKA, a covenant is made by taking an oath, kneeling and signing your name. This binds your life to it. But everything you seek — belonging, purpose, identity — is found in God’s family. Jesus has already done all to save you. Don’t reject His love. Choose a covenant with Him, not with an organization that can’t offer true promises. Trust His word and accept eternal life (Proverbs 8:13, Ecclesiastes 12:13, John 14:23).

headshot of Lanecia Jenkins
Lanecia Jenkins
Former Delta Sigma Theta

“Galatians 5:19-21 says works of the flesh are evident in these organizations, (sexual immorality, impurity, indecent behavior, idolatry, hostilities, strife); those who practice such things will not inherit the kingdom of God. All was witnessed when crossing over into these organizations, especially the quarrelling. We say it’s a brotherhood and sisterhood, but there’s a lot of division within the lines and in the organizations. The Lord showed that none of these organizations are evidence of the fruit of the Spirit – love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, and self-control. The Lord says that if these are based on Christian principles, why is the fruit of the Spirit not evident in these organizations? Drunkenness is praised with the alcohol of each organization: Omega oil, Alpha jungle, etc”

Why Recruit College Students/ Graduates?
Matthew 4:8-10: “Again, the devil took Him along to a very high mountain and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory; and he said to Him, ‘All these things I will give You, if You fall down and worship me.’ Then Jesus said to him, ‘Go away, Satan! For it is written: You shall worship the Lord your God, and serve Him only.’”

It is evident from this passage that Satan craves worship and imitates God (Isaiah 14:13–14). Though he failed to tempt Jesus, he deceives others, especially ambitious students and graduates aiming for success, charity, and leadership. Greek-letter organizations attract talented, friendship-seeking individuals, but their ties to rituals, gods, and oaths can pull people from God. Many eagerly sign binding agreements (oaths, contracts) without full understanding. Ask yourself, is this the direction you want for the next generation?

“[B]ut whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in Me to stumble, it would be better for him to have a heavy millstone hung around his neck, and to be drowned in the depth of the sea” (Matthew 18:6–9).

Is God Calling You to Pivot?
“Come out from among them” (2 Corinthians 6:17). If you walked into a church and saw images of Shekinah, Centaur, Minerva and 666 on a pentagram displayed, would you stay there? If not, why stay in organizations with these images?

Study to show thyself approved… a workman rightly dividing the Word of truth (2 Tim. 2:15). Make sure the light you are in is not actually darkness (Luke 11:35-36). For God will bring every act to judgment, everything which is hidden, whether it is good or evil (Ecclesiastes 12:14).

Pivots are part of life. No matter your role — parent, student, leader — ask God to search your heart and remove any offense (Psalm 139:23-24). If you’re in a Greek organization, prayerfully seek God’s guidance (Genesis 1:1; John 16:13). Compare the Word of God with your ritual book. Choose Him as your light and source of wisdom for eternal life. We are our brother’s keeper, as James 5:19-20 says, “My brethren, if any among you strays from the truth and one turns him back, let him know that he who turns a sinner from the error of his way will save his soul from death and will cover a multitude of sins” (NASB1995).

  • Hebrews 3:14-15 – For we have become partakers of Christ if we keep the beginning of our commitment firm until the end, while it is said, “today if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts, as when they provoked me.”
  • John 12:42-43 – Nevertheless, many, even of the rulers, believed in Him, but because of the Pharisees they were not confessing Him, so that they would not be excommunicated from the synagogue; for they loved the approval of people rather than the approval of God.
  • 2 Corinthians 6:14-18 – Do not be mismatched with unbelievers; for what do righteousness and lawlessness share together, or what does light have in common with darkness? Or what harmony does Christ have with Belial, or what does a believer share with an unbeliever? Or what agreement does the temple of God have with idols? For we are the temple of the living God; just as God said, “I will dwell among them and walk among them; and i will be their god, and they shall be my people. Therefore, come out from their midst and be separate,” says the lord. “And do not touch what is unclean; And I will welcome you. And I will be a father to you, and you shall be sons and daughters to Me,” Says the Lord Almighty.
  • Revelations 18:4 – I heard another voice from heaven, saying, “Come out of her, my people, so that you will not participate in her sins and receive any of her plagues;
  • 1 Peter 3:13-17 – And who is here to harm you if you prove zealous for what is good? But even if you should suffer for the sake of righteousness, you are blessed. And do not fear their intimidation, and do not be in dread, but sanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts, always being ready to make a defense to everyone who asks you to give an account for the hope that is in you, but with gentleness and respect; and keep a good conscience so that in the thing in which you are slandered, those who disparage your good behavior in Christ will be put to shame. For it is better, if God should will it so, that you suffer for doing what is right rather than for doing what is wrong.
  • Matthew 16:24 – Then Jesus said to His disciples, “If anyone wants to come after Me, he must deny himself, take up his cross, and follow Me.
  • Ephesians 5:11 – Don’t partake in the works of darkness, expose them.
  • James 4:4 – You adulteresses, do you not know that friendship with the world is hostility toward God? Therefore, whoever wants to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God.
  • Ecclesiastes 12:14 – For God will bring every act to judgment, everything which is hidden, whether it is good or evil.

Behind the Divine Nine (African American Fraternities & Sororities), Free Masons, Eastern Stars

  • Free Masons – Hiram Abiff (savior).
  • Eastern Stars – Baphomet
  • All of the Divine Nine – Set god, the god of violence.
  • Phi Beta Sigma – Horus, falcon god of Egyptians.
  • Zeta Phi Beta – Bastet, cat god of home and sunlight.
  • Omega Psi Phi – Athena and Anubis, the royal one Jackel god of the dead.
  • Kappa Alpha Psi – Toth, Egyptian god of wisdom and Apollo.
  • Alpha Kappa Alpha – Qetesh, goddess of fertility.
  • Delta Sigma Theta – Minerva, goddess of wisdom, known as the elephantine goddess and sorority mentor.
  • Alpha Phi Alpha – Sphinx, the god of the pyramids, blocks the doorway of death.
  • Sigma Gamma Rho – Maat, goddess of the heart.
  • Iota Phi Theta – Centaur, half human and half horse creature in Greek mythology.

Five Signs to Know if You Are in a Social Organization or Idolatry

  1. Presence of an Altar – The Divine Nine include bowing down at an altar in initiation rituals. Many include a Bible, candles, mentioning the spirit and the organization by name in ceremonies, taking a pledge or oath. For whom was the altar created? God will not share His altar with another god, (Matthew 6:24).
  2. Use of a ritual book/manual with moral guidance – Initiating rituals showing devotion to the Organization
    • Does the organization require allegiance/covenant with it?
    • Does the organization substitute the name of God with the name of the organization or gods?

Omegas:

  • Oath: I shall ask you to kneel upon both your knees, place your left hand upon the Holy Bible which I here give you, raise your right hand toward the heavens and repeat the oath after me.
  • Covenant with Omega: covenant made in the presence of Almighty God, whereby one brother becomes the custodian of the other.

Deltas:

  • Coming into covenant with the organization, agreement through kneeling, then the secrets of the organization revealed.
  • Delta Initiation Ritual: We believe in a spiritual life, but we leave to the individual the selection of the medium for its outward manifestation (fire, crystal, etc.).

Alpha Kappa Alpha:

  • Pledge at each business meeting – we pledge heart and strength.
  1. Hymn or Devotional song
    • Designed for the purpose of giving adoration or prayer for the deity.
    • Will have words singing to the organization – not God.
    • Gives praise to the organization, who should all praise be given?
    • Iota Phi Theta, to thee our hearts we bring
    • Delta, with glowing hearts we praise thee, For the strength thy love bestows… Delta! With loyal hearts we gather To renew our vows of love
  2. Own Prayer
    • May mention the Lord and the Spirit of God, yet it’s to the god of the organization.
    • Alpha Kappa Alpha pray to eternal spirit when taking their oath.
    • Kappas kneel at the Delphic Shrine representing the god Apollo.
  3. Memorial Service – in the ritual book at death

Ritual service for a deceased member that takes place at the end of the funeral service.

Know the goal of the counterfeit….
To mirror the authentic; to bring confusion and allegiance to the false.

Lenessa Jones-Boddie holds a Bachelors from Florida A&M University in Graphic Arts Technology and a Master of Education from Wright State University. She holds certifications in pastoral care, marriage and family facilitation, and biblical life-coaching.
hands creating a heart shape with the sun shining through the middle
The Do Over Part 2: The Prayer for a Second Chance
By Beverly and David Sedlacek
digital outline of anatomical heart
HEART SCAN
We all make mistakes and venture down paths we later wish for an opportunity to start over. In the last lesson we took a glimpse into the life of David, a man who kidnapped a married woman, slept with her, got her pregnant, and sought to cover it up by calling her husband Uriah back from war to make him (Uriah) sleep with his wife.

When this plan failed, David eventually sent Uriah back to war with specific instructions to put him at the front lines in order for him to be killed. In this story we have sex, lies, and murder. Yet David was a great king and considered to be “a man after God’s own heart” (Acts 13:22). How is this possible?This is possible through the gift of repentance.

Repentance: is when a person feels sorry for the wrong they have done and have changed their behavior to not cause that hurt again.

  • When was the last time you felt deeply sorry for something you have done?
  • A popular statement says “never be a prisoner of your past. It was just a lesson not a life sentence.”What does this phrase mean to you?
Hope for the Hurting Heart
digital outline of lightbulb
DISCOVERY
  • Psalms 51
white right facing arrow in golden tan circle
Recognize
Read Psalms 51:1-2: How did David respond after he recognized his sins? David recognized God’s loving kindness for humanity and pleaded for His mercy. Then, David asked God to completely remove his sins from him and to wash him clean.

How have you responded after you recognized your sins?

white right facing arrow in golden tan circle
Start Fresh
Read Psalms 51:7-12: As you recognize your sins, what are some first steps you must take to get a fresh start?

The request David asked of God in verse 7 is to be “purged with hyssop” in order to be clean. This is significant because hyssop is a plant that was used to do deep cleansing. Therefore, David is asking God to do a deep cleansing in his life in order for him to be clean and have a fresh start.

white right facing arrow in golden tan circle
Reflect
David’s motivation for a fresh start is so that he can begin to do what is right out of love for God and for his fellow man. In addition to doing what is right, he wanted to help others to get a fresh start and teach them about Jesus who can forgive them for their sins and help them live a better life.
Do you believe you can start over?
How would you live differently?
digital outline of person going up stairs with a flag at the top
THE CHALLENGE
This week, think twice before making any decisions. Ask yourself, is this right? Will this help me become who I want to be? And will this honor God?
digital outline of praying hands
PRAYER
Dear Jesus, I have sinned against You by my actions. I have sinned against You by hurting the people You created. I ask You today for Your forgiveness for my sins. I ask that You do for me as You did for David. That You will create in me a clean heart, 0 God, and put within me a right spirit. God, I need You, I need Your help to live an honest clean life. I pray that You will help me to live right and that I can teach others how to live right too. In Jesus’ name I pray, Amen!
DAVID SEDLACEK, PHD, LMSW, CFLE, AND WIFE BEVERLY SEDLACEK, DNP, PMHCNS-BC, are a counseling, therapy and educational team that operates Into His Rest Ministries, Huntsville, Alabama.
Why We Don’t Get Prophecy… and Why That Matters
by C. Anslem Paul
We’ve witnessed an increase in Bible use and engagement in 2025, according to the American Bible Society. Some say the popularity of the biblical drama sensation, “The Chosen,” sparked curiosity. Others attribute the interest to a course correction after the COVID slump. This latest report from the American Bible Society confirms that as an ethnic group, African Americans lead the way in using the Bible and working to apply the Scriptures to their personal, social, and civic lives. Certainly now, headlines, policy shifts, and threats to human rights worldwide challenge our understanding of the word and prophecy, in particular.
When we understand that the framework of prophecy is liberation, the timelines stop feeling like charts and start looking like receipts; divine proof that oppression has an expiration date.
At the very time we require an understanding and commitment to biblical prophecy and its interpretation, its impact and power eludes many of us. I believe there are several major “design flaws” in our approach to prophecy.

First, few people have been actively framing their prophetic knowledge in ways that connect and speak powerfully to our present cultural, political, and spiritual moments. In the process they consider prophecy more about beasts and timelines than about Jesus Himself.

Second, framing prophecy as something separate from Jesus, or suggesting that the best way to honor Jesus is by stepping away from prophetic detail, misses something critical. In fact, it may be one of the very reasons so many missed Him when He came the first time.

Third, how we present prophecy tends to showcase Jesus as a Savior who is present there, where “they” are in Bible times and places. Much less often is Jesus presented through a framework that reveals Him as a Savior who is present here, where I am.

space galaxy in the shape of a clock
This matters. And it can make all the difference in the world.

  • Four fatal flaws in prophetic thinking:
  • Decrying the alleged inaccuracy of its details.
  • Bemoaning its perceived irrelevance.
  • Failing to exegete prophecy in the context of the original hearers and readers.
  • Lending more weight to the the literary and historical parts with all the word studies, variant translations, names, dates, and events that populate our charts and timelines, while minimizing the story of the people it was given to.

This is where, and sometimes why, the meaning and relevance of prophetic detail can unintentionally get lost and become little more than the monstrous melodrama of men, maps, and monotony.

Rightly Framed
When we detach the timeline from the trauma, we turn prophecy into noise. But when we read it through the lens of those who are hurting, marginalized, or living in exile, just like Daniel, we realize that prophecy was never just about information. It was always about intervention.
two rams facing each other while charging
Once we set the framework right, we begin to see precisely why the details — yes, the dates, the timelines, the prophetic math — matters. Because they show us that God is not just present in suffering, He’s punctual in His deliverance.

He sets appointments for justice. He schedules liberation. He marks time with mercy.

When we understand that the framework of prophecy is liberation, the timelines stop feeling like charts and start looking like receipts; divine proof that oppression has an expiration date. The 2300 days, the seventy weeks, the judgment hour, they aren’t just doctrinal concepts. They’re promises with time stamps. They tell us not only that God will act, but they tell us when He has acted and why we can trust Him to act again.

The Longest, Most Complicated Prophecy Satisfied Daniel’s Hurting Heart
Let’s look at Daniel 9 and apply these principles to the overlay of Daniel’s prophetic writings.

Daniel is no theologian sitting in a quiet study. He is a forced immigrant. A political exile. A marginalized minority trying to maintain faith in the capital of a regime of colonizers committed to oppression. He lives under a foreign empire with an alien religion, hostile policies, and systemic injustice. He is bound to an empire that has moved to enact policies directly intended to divest a conquered and subjugated people of their history and their culture. When he prays, he isn’t just confessing personal sin, he is crying out over generational trauma, institutional sin, and the long shadow of oppression that still haunts his people.

In response, God doesn’t just send comfort. He sends a prophecy. A divine schedule that says, “I have heard your cry, I am not indifferent, and there is a time coming when injustice will be judged, and righteousness will be restored.”

That is not abstract. That is not theological trivia. That is liberation theology. The kind rooted in time, place, people, and pain. That is a message for immigrants who feel invisible. For women who are underestimated and disrespected. For the disabled who are overlooked. For veterans discarded after their usefulness has been exploited. For people of color who navigate systems not built for them. For anyone who’s been pushed to the margins, treated as an afterthought, or made to feel like they don’t belong.

“A divine schedule that says, ‘I have heard your cry, I am not indifferent, and there is a time coming when injustice will be judged, and righteousness will be restored.’”
three angels above clouds facing a circle of fire
Conclusion
Rightly preached, prophecy reminds us that Jesus knows what injustice feels like. He knows empire. He knows exile. He knows the pressure of existing as a marginalized minority in the middle of an oppressive system. And even more, He knows the debilitating weight of sin, He Himself having become sin for us. He knows, and He acts.

And that 2300-day prophecy? It is all about Jesus. And because it’s all about Jesus, it’s about judgment. Not in the fearful, punitive sense, but in the hopeful sense. A divine assurance that one day lies will be silenced, truth will stand, oppression will end, and liberation will win. That righteousness will no longer be punished. That vindication is coming. That judgment is not about fear, it’s about justice.

This is the Jesus of prophecy. The Jesus who is not just in the past, but present in every struggle. The Jesus who walked with Daniel in Babylon.

C. ANSLEM PAUL is a pastor, author and radio host who writes from West Palm Beach, Florida.
Stained Glass Reflections
Organized for
Successful Mission
W

hen one thinks of an organization, ideas of structure, operation, energy currency, and governance come to mind. So what is an organization? “The organization is a central structure in the economy and society, consisting of a group of individuals who pursue certain goals together. They exist in various forms such as companies, associations, and non-profit organizations. An effective organization achieves its goals through good structure, clear task distribution, and efficient communication channels. The term organization is also used in relation to the organizing of processes and the structuring of workflows” (awork).

Thinking of the same structure, God is the Mastermind of systems, order and function. 1 Corinthians 14:33, 40 states, “For God is not a God of disorder but of peace—as in all the congregations of the Lord’s people,” “But everything should be done in a fitting and orderly way” (NIV). His principle of order is seen in His character, government, and creativity. “By faith we understand that the universe was created by the word of God, so that what is seen was not made out of things that are visible” (Hebrews 11:3, ESV). In Heaven there is order and function, and the creation of our solar system and our planet were done in order and in cooperative teamwork within the Godhead (Genesis 1-2, John 1:1-18).

Orderly functioning is a godly principle and extends into the mission of God (missio Dei) for the church and the various spiritual gifts given to chosen men and women to function in His mission, including wisdom, faith, and the gift of prophecy (1 Corinthians 12). Prophecy means prediction, and the bequest (legacy) gift given by God is the Spirit-endowed ability to declare/prophesy divine messages or predictions from God.

Latoya Hazell-Alcide, MDiv
Prophets And The Gift of Prophecy
God Needs a Good Press Secretary
T
he prophetic gift represents one of the most endearing gifts God has given to “those who are called by God to be His prophets” (Revelation 19:10).

God introduced us to His gift of prophecy in the garden of Eden during the discourse with the Godhead, Adam, Eve, and the Serpent (Genesis 3).

There, in that moment, God prophesied His plan for humanity and the end of the Serpent (Satan). Rather than a forbidden, eerie taboo or practice, God endowed this gift with meaning and power, bequeathing it to men and women in the history of His church from the beginning.

…For it is the Spirit of prophecy who bears testimony to Jesus” (Revelation 19:10, NIV).

In the organizational structure of God’s redemption wheelhouse, and to keep communication flowing with humanity despite the barrier sin created, God chose intercessory “Press Secretaries.”

We have seen this terminology before in government such as the White House and other organizations.

This is a model found in the Bible, when God chose men and women to speak to His people on His behalf. Here is a Kingdom definition: God’s press secretary, is the senior human official (prophet) who oversees the communication of the Godhead and who communicates on behalf of the King of Kings in days of old, down through the ages, in modern and end times across print, broadcast, and internet channels. God’s press secretary is appointed by God, inspired by the Holy Spirit and testifies of Jesus.

  • 2 Peter 1:20-21 (NIV) “Above all, you must understand that no prophecy of Scripture came about by the prophet’s own interpretation of things. For prophecy never had its origin in the human will, but prophets, though human, spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit.”
  • Numbers 12:6 (NIV) “he said, “Listen to my words: “When there is a prophet among you, I, the LORD, reveal myself to them in visions, I speak to them in dreams.
  • Amos 3:7 (NIV) “Surely the Sovereign LORD does nothing without revealing his plan to his servants the prophets.
  • Hebrews 1:1-2 “In the past God spoke to our ancestors through the prophets at many times and in various ways, 2 but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed heir of all things, and through whom also he made the universe.”
Diversity In The Gift of Prophecy
There are 40-plus prophets mentioned in the Bible, but it is imperative to note that the office of the prophet was not gender exclusive. God chose both Holy men and women who had close relationships with Him to be His spokesperson to the people.

Deborah rose to lead Israel, both as a prophet and judge:

“Now Deborah, a prophet, the wife of Lappidoth, was leading Israel at that time” (Judges 4:4).

In the New Testament, Anna heralded the arrival of Christ:

“There was also a prophet, Anna… She never left the temple but worshiped night and day… and spoke about the child to all who were looking forward to the redemption of Jerusalem” (Luke 2:36-38).

God’s press secretaries, His prophets, are not extinct! They are present, diverse, and Spirit-filled, called to amplify God’s voice in every generation.
And most decisively, the prophecy of Joel 2:28-29, fulfilled in Acts 2, makes it clear:

“‘I will pour out my Spirit on all people. Your sons and daughters will prophesy, your old men will dream dreams, your young men will see visions. Even on my servants, both men and women, I will pour out my Spirit in those days.’”

In addition, the role of the prophet who carries the Spirit of Prophecy or the Testimony of Jesus is not taken lightly by God, and a stern warning and judgment awaits anyone who despises or assigns violence to these chosen men and women beginning with Abel son of Adam “…[F]rom the blood of Abel to the blood of Zechariah, who was killed between the altar and the sanctuary. Yes, I tell you, this generation will be held responsible for it all” (Luke 11:51, NIV).

Seventh-day Adventist (SDA) believers consider these biblical teachings consistently presented from Genesis to Revelation. The Scriptures affirm that the Testimony of Jesus proclaimed by the office of a prophet is revealed in the church until the end of time. Further, Scripture supports the working of the gift in relatively modern times, as was “manifested in the life and work of Ellen G. White.

Just as the Bible has written accounts of prophets in the Old and New Testaments, the spiritual gift continued beyond the pages of the Bible and is an identifying sign of the remnant church foretold in the book of Daniel and ratified in Revelation 12:17, NIV:

“Then the dragon was enraged at the woman and went off to wage war against the rest of her offspring—those who keep God’s commands and hold fast their testimony about Jesus.” God’s press secretaries, His prophets, are not extinct! They are present, diverse, and Spirit-filled, called to amplify God’s voice in every generation.

The only question that remains is: are we listening…today?

Latoya Hazell-Alcide, MDiv
The Law of God
“Marriage Vows”
A smiling couple embracing outdoors in a sunlit field, with a warm sunset in the background.
A smiling couple embracing outdoors in a sunlit field, with a warm sunset in the background.
The Law of God
“Marriage Vows”
P
icture you and God at the marriage altar. He shares first in the vow exchange. The promises in His Word are the vows He lovingly makes to you.

“I will never leave you nor forsake you…I love you with an everlasting love…” Hebrews 13:5. There are over 7,000 of these vows!

Now it is your turn. If you find yourself scrambling for words, that is normal. How could I possibly make better vows than God? The truth is, you can’t, but, because He desires a successful marriage with you, He doesn’t leave you silent at the altar.

He instead tells you His expectations. His commandments become your vows to Him.

In John 14:15, Jesus says, “If you love me, you will keep my commandments.”

Obedience is the fruit of your love for God. “Because I love Him, I will not have other gods, or steal, or kill, etc. (Exodus 20:1-17). This is what your vows will look like.

But how can I keep them if I am sinful? The reality is, we are all inherently sinful. We violate our vows to God everyday (James 2:10). In our flesh, we can’t love God the way He asks to be loved.

Thankfully, in the verses following John 14:15, Jesus promises that the Holy Spirit will help us keep His commandments. Be encouraged, you aren’t doing it in your strength. When you accept the help, the law will no longer seem overbearing.

The bottom line: God didn’t create the law to restrict us, but instead to teach us how to live in love with Him and His creation! Ezekiel 36:26–27 affirms this:

“I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh. And I will put my Spirit in you and move you to follow my decrees.”

When you accept the help, the law will no longer seem overbearing. As Romans 8:3–4 puts it: “For what the law was powerless to do… God did by sending his own Son… in order that the righteous requirement of the law might be fully met in us.”

And again, Psalm 119:32 gives us this promise:

“I run in the path of your commands, for you have set my heart free.”

Pricilla Josiah
The Greatest Commandment:
To the law and
Two stone tablets with ancient script against a cloudy sky.
to the Prophets
One of my pastors recently shared a clearer lens on the role of the Commandments (Exodus 20) and it is fitting to add the role of the Spirit of Prophecy (Testimony of Jesus).

The commands of God act as mirrors, giving clarity to the state of our souls and relationship with God.

That’s all. They show and tell us our condition in sin and how that condition has and is weakening our love and connection with God. But the commandments are not the solution; they are the signal to us that we must go to the One who can clean us up and present us to God as acceptable. The law and the prophets speak to us with the voice of the Holy Spirit and remind us of the God who redeems and of the sacrificial blood of Jesus.

Matthew 22:34-38, NIV
“Hearing that Jesus had silenced the Sadducees, the Pharisees got together. One of them, an expert in the law, tested him with this question: ‘Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?’ Jesus replied: ‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: Love your neighbor as yourself. All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.’” In other words, if you lose love, you’ve lost the whole law. Every commandment, from Sabbath to “Do not covet,” exists to teach us how to love better: how to love God rightly, and how to love each other well. Even prophetic warnings and judgments are, at their core, divine love letters begging us to return to our first love. Romans 13:10 puts it plainly:

“Love does no harm to a neighbor. Therefore, love is the fulfillment of the law.”

And so, to keep God’s commandments isn’t to live under a yoke of bondage; it is to learn the rhythm of Divine Love. To hear the prophets is not to tremble in fear, but to be awakened to hope, called back to covenant, reminded that God is still speaking. This is why we must not settle for understanding the Spirit of Prophecy as a human person or personality, but rather as a conduit of the gift.

Those conduits, God’s press secretaries, are very much alive. This gift dwells in men and women, present across generations, richly diverse, and Spirit-empowered to carry God’s message forward.

Are we listening to hear their voices today?

Latoya Hazell-Alcide, MDiv
A diverse group of Black children and young adults are gathered around a smiling man with a beard and long, brown hair, who is wearing a white robe and a reddish sash. He is looking down and smiling at the children, who are looking up at him with joyful expressions. The image is a stylized, colorful illustration.
The Blessing of Jesus’ Touch typography
“Then little children were brought to Him that He might put His hands on them and pray, but the disciples rebuked them. But Jesus said, ‘Let the little children come to Me, and do not forbid them; for of such is the kingdom of heaven.’ And He laid His hands on them and departed from there,”

(Matthew 19:13-15, NKJV).
A REFLECTION
When Others Neglect Them, Jesus Feels the Sorrow of Mothers
From “The Desire of Ages,” p. 429
By Ellen G. White
“The children of our hearths are as much the purchase of His blood as were the children of long ago.

“Jesus knows the burden of every mother’s heart. He who had a mother that struggled with poverty and privation sympathizes with every mother in her labors. He who made a long journey in order to relieve the anxious heart of a Canaanite woman will do as much for the mothers of today. He who gave back to the widow of Nain her only son, and who in His agony upon the cross remembered His own mother, is touched today by the mother’s sorrow. In every grief and every need He will give comfort and help.

“Let mothers come to Jesus with their perplexities. They will find grace sufficient to aid them in the management of their children. The gates are open for every mother who would lay her burdens at the Saviour’s feet. He who said, ‘Suffer the little children to come unto Me, and forbid them not,’ still invites the mothers to lead up their little ones to be blessed by Him. Even the babe in its mother’s arms may dwell as under the shadow of the Almighty through the faith of the praying mother. John the Baptist was filled with the Holy Spirit from his birth. If we will live in communion with God, we too may expect the divine Spirit to mold our little ones, even from their earliest moments…In His teaching He came down to their level. He, the Majesty of heaven, did not disdain to answer their questions, and simplify His important lessons to meet their childish understanding. He planted in their minds the seeds of truth, which in after years would spring up, and bear fruit unto eternal life.”

ELLEN G. WHITE (1827-1915), one of the most published authors in the world, named one of the “100 Most Significant Americans of All time” by the Smithsonian Institution, was a co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. You can read The Desire of Ages at whiteestate.org.
The Experience Study
What Children Bring to the Table
I have spent the vast majority of my ministry working in schools with young people. Here’s what I have learned. If we want to break cycles in our community, we have to invest in children and families. By investing significantly in children and their families of origin we nourish the tree at the root; ensuring that the fruit of later years will be plentiful and sweet.
READ
Matthew 19:13-15
The first thing we should reflect on is that the disciples (chosen by Jesus for the work of ministry) discouraged children from coming. Is your church accommodating to children? Do you see children as a burden or a bother? Are they a cherished, treasured, gift from God?
REFLECT
Luke 13:13-15
The disciples’ mistake was not the first time that religious leaders denied the people from receiving a divine blessing. What kind of worldview must one have to deny a person in need a blessing, especially small children? What can we do to reverse this kind of thinking?
COMPARE
Matthew 19:14 with Luke 18:17
Notice what Jesus said about those who receive/are welcome into the kingdom of heaven. What is it that children bring that makes them prime candidates for citizenship in the kingdom of heaven? How can we embody these characteristics?
CONTINUE
Luke 18:18-25
Pay close attention to verse 25. Could it be that we become so focused on amassing material wealth that we lose those characteristics that make us innocent, hopeful, and impressionable as children? Make a list of the ways that this disrupts our families and communities. For example, the primary reason we don’t take fun vacations is overwork.
REREAD
Matthew 19:13
Reflect on the fact that the people were actively and intentionally bringing their children to Jesus. There is a shift happening in our world. People are becoming more family-oriented and more spiritual. List three things you can do to place your children before Jesus regularly.
STUDY
James 1:27
Here is straight talk from the very brother of Jesus. Known throughout antiquity as James the Just. His epistle reflects it too. He specifies that true religion takes care of children and families that are destitute. What’s one thing we can do to invest more into children and families; especially those who are at risk?
READ
Psalm 127:3, Mark 9:36-37, Matthew 18:10, Ephesians 6:4, Proverbs 22:6, Isaiah 49:25
Children are our posterity. They are the ones who will carry our values into future generations. Let’s commit to being the kind of caregivers they are proud of rather than ones who are the reasons why they are broken.
CHRISTOPHER C. THOMPSON is an adjunct professor in the School of Religion and Theology at Oakwood University. He serves as the Executive Director of Thumbs Up, Inc., and pastor of Lighthouse Church in Beaufort, South Carolina.
Futurecast
By Debleaire Snell
woman laying on bed with phone in her hands with headphones on
STAY OUT OF THE COMMENT SECTION
border line of slanted line with hand clicking at the end
I
’m old enough to remember the birth of “social media.” In its infancy, there seemed to be a certain genuineness as people engaged with each other, but little did we know what we had gotten ourselves into; more specifically, the comment sections.

While I rarely engage with social media, I am no stranger to how out of control the comment section can become. Years ago, while pastoring a church, we launched an evangelistic series with Sunday morning services. With only the flyer to spur them, the comment section flooded with individuals who disagreed with what we were doing.

Through posts that rivaled dissertations, a small group of people accused me and the church of misconstruing beliefs. These weren’t constructive criticisms or challenges based on biblical facts; instead, they were mainly outlandish claims and unfounded accusations. Although I would reply to some to correct genuine misinformation, I refused to engage in any back-and-forth with others who refused to believe the facts, as I saw it as a waste of time. My church members, however, did not share the same sentiment.

For several days, social media spaces erupted into vicious arguments and name-calling. What started as a few disagreeable posts morphed into negative attention that moved through social media with pyroclastic cloud-like intensity. Soon, the purpose of the evangelistic series became lost among the debris of posts and comment sections.

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I REFUSE TO ENGAGE IN ANY BACK-AND-FORTH WITH OTHERS WHO REFUSE TO BELIEVE THE FACTS…”
I don’t often give directives from pulpits. As a pastor, I recognize that my colleagues and I must be very careful about what we instruct our congregants to do. But this problem had become far too great for me to ignore. Before my sermon on the following Sabbath, I gave the church a simple instruction: “Stay out of the comment sections.”

Proverbs 29:9 says, “If a wise man contends with a foolish man, whether the fool rages or laughs, there is no peace.” (NKJV). The disruption of comment sections often steals peace and envelops us in numerous unnecessary interactions, distracting us from our original purpose.

Sometimes, I wonder what the Israelites’ Twitter would have looked like as they made their way out of Egypt. I contemplate what that family group chat looked like as the ark floated on day 25. I imagine the tags on David’s Facebook page moments before he faced the Goliath. In all of these moments, if these individuals had chosen to engage in arguments, accusations, and misunderstandings, they would have missed their overall calling from God.

What comment section are you continuously engaging in that’s holding you back from your calling? Friends, God is calling us out of life’s comment sections. Lay aside the distractions and answer the call.

DeblEaIre Snell headshot
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DeblEaIre Snell is the Speaker/Director of Breath of Life, a media ministry, and the senior pastor of the Oakwood University Seventh-day Adventist Church in Huntsville, Alabama.
A group of people are gathered around a table with a variety of food items. The scene appears to be an outdoor community event, possibly a food drive or distribution. The background shows some trees and houses.
COMMUNITY
COMES TOGETHER
NOW’S THE TIME TO PREPARE FOR DISASTER
W
hen an EF3 tornado sliced a seven-mile path of destruction through St. Louis, Missouri on May 16, 2025, it claimed five lives, destroyed homes, businesses, houses of worship, and caused more than $1 billion in damage.

For me, the storm felt personal. My daughter’s eighth-grade graduation was held the night before in a church that was damaged by the tornado. I couldn’t help but think—what if the tornado struck one day earlier? We were spared, yet I don’t think that God spared our lives for us to simply boast in our fortune.

The day after the tornado, several church members entered the disaster zone to clear fallen trees and debris, allowing trapped residents to leave their homes. Others distributed water, food, and essential supplies. In the weeks that followed, members continued delivering items like bottled water, sanitary products, snacks, non-perishable food, wipes, and toiletries. Seeing physically challenged individuals step up to serve deeply moved me.

Another support role that our church members volunteered for was at the central warehouse. We helped unload and distribute bulk donations from major retailers such as Target, Sam’s Club, Home Depot, and Walmart. These much needed supplies were then sent to local service providers.

The greatest reward in serving is seeing the joy on the faces of those we help—a smile over a bottle of water or a pack of toiletries makes every effort worthwhile.

The amount of natural disasters is increasing rapidly. The cost of natural disasters is skyrocketing. But this tornado showed me that disasters can happen anywhere. Every person should do their part to ensure that they are ready. We recently offered an emergency preparedness workshop to help our community get ready for any future disasters. Find one where you are.

You can see God working in the disasters in a few ways. First, I count it tragic that any life is lost, but if a tornado bulldozes through seven miles of a major city and claimed no more than five people, that is a miracle. That’s God’s mercy on display. The damage was bad, but it could have been significantly worse. I believe the eyes of faith can see God’s goodness even in the middle of this disaster. Secondly, God is present through his sons and daughters. The gracious response of churches, civic organizations and people demonstrate the love of God. God wraps people in the blankets that his children give each other. God feeds the vulnerable through the food that was distributed. God continues to support us through the generous donations that are given.

TREVOR BARNES JR. is the Pastor of the Northside Seventh-day Adventist Church.
A landscape orientation digital graphic map image display of church locations presumably in the United States and parts of Canada, Mexico, and the Caribbean; The map is marked with numerous dark purple/violet colored location pins, primarily across the U.S. and in certain cities all over like Vancouver, Seattle, Minneapolis, Chicago, Toronto, and New York for instance; A illustrative logo for ADVENTIST COMMUNITY SERVICES is in the bottom left corner situated on top of a dark burgundy shield icon with a gold or orange colored inner stroke outline trace plus a minimalistic flame torch object icon symbol
Find resources near you by going to this link https://www.communityservices.org/resources/acs-centers-near-you/
Atlanta, GA
Berean Outreach Ministry Center
291 Hamilton E. Holmes Drive
Atlanta, GA 30318
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 404-799-7288
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website icon http://atlantaberean.com/bomc
A simple, orange digital vector illustration graphic of a sealed envelope, typically used as an email icon [email protected]
West End Seventh-day Adventist Church
845 Lawton Street, SW
Atlanta GA 30310
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 404-755-5927
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website iconhttps://westendsdachurch.org
Ashton, MD
Emmanuel Brinklow Seventh-day Adventist Church
18800 New Hampshire Ave
P.O. Box 519
Ashton, MD 20861-0519
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 301-774-0400
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website iconhttps://www.emmanuelbrinklow.org
A simple, orange digital vector illustration graphic of a sealed envelope, typically used as an email icon[email protected]
Baltimore, MD
Berea Temple SDA Church
1901 Madison Ave
Baltimore, MD 21217-3803
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 410-669-6350
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website icon https://www.bereatemple.org
A simple, orange digital vector illustration graphic of a sealed envelope, typically used as an email icon[email protected]
Liberty
3301 Milford Mill Rd
Windsor Mill, MD 21244-2042
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 410-922-0050
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website iconhttps://www.libertysda.org
A simple, orange digital vector illustration graphic of a sealed envelope, typically used as an email icon[email protected]
Chicago, IL
Hyde Park SDA Church
4608 South Drexel Road
Chicago, IL 60653
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 773-373-2909
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website iconhttps://www.hydeparksda.org
Shiloh Seventh-Day Adventist Church
Independence Blvd Community Center
7000 South Michigan Avenue
Chicago, IL 60637
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 773-224-7700
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website iconhttp://www.shilohsdachicago.org
Denver, CO
Denver Park Hill SDA Church
3385 Albion St
Denver, CO 80207-1813
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 303-333-5089
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website icon https://denverparkhillco.adventistchurch.org
Detroit, MI
Burns Church
10125 E Warren Ave,
Detroit, MI 48214
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 313-924-5535
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website icon http://theburnschurch.org/contact-us
Conant Gardens SDA Church
18801 Joseph Campau Ave,
Detroit, MI 48234
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 313-369-1227
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website iconhttp://conantsda.org
Kansas City, MO
Linwood Boulevard SDA Temple
4300 E. Linwood Blvd
Kansas City, MO 64128
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 816-924-8550
A simple, orange digital vector illustration graphic of a sealed envelope, typically used as an email icon [email protected]
Memphis, TN
Longview Heights SDA Church
685 E Mallory Ave,
Memphis, TN 38106
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 901-774-5431
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website icon http://longviewheights22.adventistchurchconnect.org
Miami, FL
Mt. Pisgah SDA Church
3340 NW 215th St,
Miami Gardens, FL 33056
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 305-624-0679
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website icon https://www.mtpisgahsda.com/pisgah-pantry
Perrine SDA Church
9850 E, 9850 W Datura St,
Palmetto Bay, FL 33157
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 305-378-2192
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website icon https://www.perrinesda.org/contact
Montgomery, AL
Maranatha SDA Church
18900 NW 32nd Ave,
Miami Gardens FL 33056
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 305-620-9091
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website icon [email protected]
Orlando, FL
Mt. Sinai SDA
2610 Orange Center Blvd,
Orlando, FL 32805
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 407-298-7877
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website iconhttp://www.mountsinaisdaorlando.org
Guilgal French SDA Church
5668 N Pine Hills Rd
Orlando, FL 32810
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 407-704-6963
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website icon https://www.guilgalsda.org/ministries/community-service
St. Louis, MO
Berean SDA Church
1244 Union Blvd
Saint Louis, MO 63113-1520
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 314-361-6446
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website icon https://bereanmo.adventistchurch.org
A simple, orange digital vector illustration graphic of a sealed envelope, typically used as an email icon [email protected]
Northside SDA Church
9001 Lucas & Hunt Rd
St. Louis, MO 63136-1500
A simple, dark blue digital vector illustration graphic of a retro vintage landline telephone with a nine-button keypad and a coiled handset 314-868-0707
A simple, red digital vector illustration graphic of a globe with a grid pattern, typically used as an internet or website icon https://www.northsidesda.org
A simple, orange digital vector illustration graphic of a sealed envelope, typically used as an email icon [email protected]
Message is the oldest, black, Christian magazine in North America whose longevity is owing to its critical function of sharing the message of redemption, relationship, and readiness.
Redemption
We believe that God, recognizing how irretrievably broken our lives and world would be following the influence of the enemy’s lies, sent His Son Jesus in whom we are created anew. He has promised the total righting of everything that is wrong in this world. Seek Him. Reach for Him, and He will in no way cast you aside. He wants you to know Him, and assures that He will be there when you look for Him. No matter who you are, this opportunity is for you.
Relationship
We’re here to operate as a set of His hands and feet, to come alongside all who preach, teach, and work with this good news. We fight against the destructive effects sin has had on us, the personal, systemic and perpetual division that plagues this world. In particular, we target and counter the false narrative of who God is. Together we affirm His image found in the black mind and body that has so often borne the brunt of brutality and untruth. Together we seek to align with God’s Kingdom at work in the here and now.
Readiness
Finally, we prepare for that day when all of God’s people reunite with Him in person. That preparation includes a complete opening of our minds and hearts to Him, allowing Him to do the work of getting us ready. We’re reading His Word with an open mind, seeking the special blessing of the Spirit especially on His Sabbath, and we eagerly watch for His return!
Let’s walk together, fam.
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