What blessed assurance we can have today, knowing that even if destruction rages around us, we can take refuge in the Lord.

Gospel Corner

14/09/25

I remember reading about an art competition where the theme given was “peace.” The artist who most effectively depicted peace in his artwork would win the competition. The artists gathered their paints, canvases, and brushes and started creating their masterpieces.

When the time came to judge the artworks, the judges were impressed by the various scenes of tranquility illustrated by the artists. There was a majestic piece capturing the brilliance of the sun setting over lush greenery, one that depicted a serene landscape of moonlit hills, and another evocative piece that showed a lone man walking leisurely through a rustic paddy field.

Then, the judges came upon a peculiar piece that looked almost horrifying and perhaps even ugly to some. It was the very antithesis of every other piece that the judges had seen. It was a wild cacophony of violent colors and the aggression with which the artist had lashed his brush against the canvas was obvious.

It depicted a raging storm where the ocean waves were swollen to menacing heights and slamming against the craggy edges of a cliff with thunderous force. Lightning zigzagged across the blackened sky and the branches of the single tree that was perched atop the cliff were all swept to the side by the force of the gale. Now, how could this picture be the epitome of peace?

Yet, the judges unanimously awarded the first prize to the artist who painted the turbulent storm. While the results initially appeared to be appalling, the judges’ decision immediately became clear once you give the winning canvas a closer look.

Hidden in a crevice in the cliff is a family of eagles snug in their nest. The mother eagle faces the blustering winds, but her young chicks are oblivious to the storm and have dozed off under the shelter of her wings.

Now, that’s the kind of peace that Jesus gives to you and me! He gives us peace, security, covering, and protection even in the midst of a storm.

The psalmist describes this beautifully: “He who dwells in the secret place of the Most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty. . . . He shall cover you with His feathers, and under His wings you shall take refuge.”

There is no safer place than under the protective shelter of your Savior’s wings. It does not matter what circumstances may be raging around you. You can cry to the Lord for His unmerited favor, as David did in Psalm 57:1—”Be merciful to me, O God, be merciful to me! For my soul trusts in You; and in the shadow of Your wings I will make my refuge, until these calamities have passed by.”

The New American Standard Bible says, “Be gracious to me, O God, be gracious to me, for my soul takes refuge in You; and in the shadow of Your wings I will take refuge until destruction passes by.”

What blessed assurance we can have today, knowing that even if destruction rages around us, we can take refuge in the Lord.

Like Bartimaeus, your need is your qualification for His miracle. And when it comes to your need, it is NEVER too insignificant to Jesus!

Gospel Corner

13/09/25

Joel Osteen Ministries

Today’s Word

You prepare a feast for me in the presence of my enemies. You honor me by anointing my head with oil. My cup overflows with blessings.
Psalm 23:5, NLT

After the Dark Valley
It’s interesting that David says that after you walk through the darkest valley with God, then He will prepare a feast for you in the presence of your enemies. You have to go through the loneliness, through the sickness, through the betrayal before you get that fresh anointing, that new beginning. You have to go through the job where you’re not being treated right, through the struggle, the lack, the debt, before you make it to where your cup runs over.

Too often we want the overflow but not the valley. In the dark valley is where we prove to God what we’re really made of. Can God trust you with more of His favor, with greater influence and more resources? You have to be faithful in the darkness, when things aren’t going your way. It may not be easy, but faith is trusting in God when life doesn’t make sense. He is working something in your life that can only be worked in the difficulties. Dare to believe that He’s blessing you even in the dark places.

A Prayer for Today
“Father, thank You that when I go through the dark valleys, seasons of struggle and pressure, that I have Your promise of a coming feast. Thank You that my cup will overflow with blessings. I believe that Your grace will bring me through to victory. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.”

SECTION TWO

Bartimaeus was a blind beggar at the gate of Jericho. Talk about being insignificant. Not only was he just another beggar in a place probably swarming with them, he didn’t even have a real name—”Bartimaeus” merely means “son of Timaeus”!

Like Bartimaeus, your need is your qualification for His miracle. And when it comes to your need, it is NEVER too insignificant to Jesus!

And yet Jesus, the King of heaven and the incarnate Son of God, stopped in His tracks when this blind, nameless, and often-ignored beggar called out to Him. Jesus heard him and had compassion on him, and responded to his need. He treated Bartimaeus with respect, empathized with the desire of his heart, and set him free to see again.

LAGOS STATE ACTIVATES EBOLA RESPONSE SYSTEM AMID DR CONGO OUTBREAK

Press Release

12/09/25

Lagos State Government has activated the Incident Management Structure (IMS) of the Public Health Emergency Operations Centre as part of measures to strengthen prevention and preparedness against any possible outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in the State.

The activation followed an emergency meeting held at the Mainland Hospital, Yaba, in response to the ongoing outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where 28 suspected cases and 15 deaths, including four health workers, have been reported. At the meeting, an epidemiology overview of the DRC outbreak was reviewed, while pillar leads presented a preparedness checklist spanning infection prevention and control surveillance, contact tracing, case management, laboratory capacity, evacuation, risk communication, budget and logistics.

Speaking after the meeting, the Permanent Secretary, Lagos State Ministry of Health, Dr. Olusegun Ogboye, who was represented by the Director of Epidemiology, Biosecurity and Global Health in the Lagos State Ministry of Health, Dr. Ismail Abdus-Salam, said the activation of the IMS is a proactive step given Lagos’ vulnerability as a major gateway with three points of entry.

According to him, Lagos is “largely ready,” with an isolation centre that can accommodate between 14 and 18 beds each for suspected and confirmed cases. He noted that surveillance, laboratory systems are functional, while the first batch of trainings for frontline health workers across all pillars will commence immediately.

Addressing public concerns, Ogboye urged residents not to panic, stressing that the State Government has taken control measures. He however advised strict adherence to hand hygiene, environmental sanitation, and early reporting of suspected cases, especially among travellers returning from outbreak regions.

Ebola virus spreads through direct contact with blood, body fluids, or contaminated items of an infected person, therefore Anyone with fever, sore throat or malaria-like symptoms who has recently travelled to affected regions should be reported immediately to 767 or 112 The Permsecretary advised

Robust surveillance measures are being put in place at the airports to prevent importation of the virus.

Don’t fight everything you don’t like. Don’t live bitter over the people who did you wrong, the door that closed, the company that pushed you out. It may have been unfair and painful, but you have to trust that God is working out His plan for your life…

Gospel Corner

12/09/25

Joel Osteen Ministries

Today’s Word
Today’s Scripture
The LORD will work out his plans for my life—for your faithful love, O LORD, endures forever.
Psalm 138:8, NLT

His Plan Will Work
When you look at the thirteen years of bad breaks in Joseph’s life, you realize they had to happen. It was all a part of God’s plan to get him into leadership in a foreign country. His brothers had to be jealous, throw him into a pit, and sell him into slavery. Potiphar’s wife had to falsely accuse him of a crime and have him put in prison where he would meet Pharaoh’s butler, who introduced him to Pharaoh. It was all leading him to his purpose.

Don’t fight everything you don’t like. Don’t live bitter over the people who did you wrong, the door that closed, the company that pushed you out. It may have been unfair and painful, but you have to trust that God is working out His plan for your life. There are difficulties along the way that you’re not going to understand. God’s plan is bigger. His plan is greater. There are levels that you can’t reach without going through the pit, without opposition, without adversity. That’s all leading you to greatness, to promotion, to levels higher than you’ve imagined.

A Prayer for Today
“Father, thank You that You are constantly moving me toward my purpose and reaching new levels. Thank You that one touch of Your favor can make the impossible suddenly become possible. I declare that I will stay in peace and believe that You are working out Your plan for my life. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.”

SECTION TWO

The Lord told me once, “Being under grace means being constantly under My supply. It means being conscious not of the need, demand, or crisis, but of My supply to you.”

My friend, the essence of grace is supply. See yourself under His grace by seeing yourself under the waterfall of His supply.

Do you need healing for your body today? See the area of affliction surrounded by His power to heal and His resurrection life!

Beloved, because of the cross, God’s grace is always supplying healing, protection, wisdom, and provision to you. And the more you are conscious of it, the more you will walk in it!

If you’re going to reach your full potential, you have to go deeper. Don’t be ruled by your emotions. Don’t let feelings dictate your day.

11/09/25

Gospel Corner

Joel Osteen Ministries

Today’s Word
Today’s Scripture
Weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning.
Psalm 30:5, NKJV

Choose Joy
It’s important to start the day off in faith. This is when the enemy works overtime to rule your day. Instead of letting him set the tone, why don’t you set the tone? Before you get out of bed, decide it’s going to be a good day that you live in faith. The Scripture says that God sends joy every morning just for you. It’s waiting for you. But the enemy sends you feelings in the morning as well. Guilt. “You got angry yesterday.” Bitterness. “He did you wrong.” Discouragement. “Nothing good is in your future.” Self-pity. “Why does it never work out?”

Now you get to choose. Here’s the key: Just going by what you feel, letting the negatives dictate your day, is easier. That doesn’t take any effort. But if you’re going to live a victorious life, if you’re going to reach your full potential, you have to go deeper. Don’t be ruled by your emotions. Don’t let feelings dictate your day. You can choose to have a good mood despite the feelings. Choose joy despite the discouragement, choose faith despite the doubt.

A Prayer for Today
“Father, thank You that no matter what I feel like in the morning, I don’t have to live guilty, discouraged, or defeated. Thank You that I can choose to live in faith, to be happy, and to enjoy this day. I believe and receive the fresh supply of joy that You have for me. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.”

SECTION TWO

Ephesians 2:4–7 tells us that by God’s unmerited favor, we are seated together with Christ at the Father’s right hand. To be seated in Christ is to rest, to trust in Him, and to receive everything our beautiful Savior has accomplished on our behalf.

My friend, God wants us to take the position of relying on Jesus for good success in every area of our lives, instead of relying on our good works and human efforts to achieve success. What a blessing it is to be in this position of dependence on our Savior!

But instead of looking at Jesus, believers are misled by the devil into looking at themselves. For thousands of years, the devil’s strategy has not changed. He is a master at accusing you, pointing out all your flaws, weaknesses, mistakes, and blemishes. He will keep on reminding you of your past failures and use condemnation to perpetuate the cycle of defeat in your life.

When the apostle Paul found himself sinking into self-occupation, he became depressed and cried out, “O wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me?” (Rom. 7:24). In the very next verse, he sees God’s solution and says, “I thank God—through Jesus Christ our Lord!”

Likewise, beloved, it’s time for you to step out from being self-conscious and self-occupied, and begin to be Christ-occupied instead.

Today, you should no longer be asking yourself, “Am I pleasing to God?” Instead, ask, “Is Christ pleasing to God?” Because as Christ is, so are you in this world (1 John 4:17).

The old covenant of law is all about you, but the new covenant of grace is all about Jesus! The law places the demand on you to perform and makes you self-conscious, whereas grace places the demand on Jesus and makes you Jesus-conscious.

Can you imagine a young child growing up and always wondering in his heart, “Am I pleasing to Daddy? Am I pleasing to Mummy? Do Daddy and Mummy accept me?” This child will grow up emotionally warped if he does not have the security and assurance of his parents’ love and acceptance.

That is why your loving heavenly Father wants you rooted, established, and anchored in His unwavering love for you. He demonstrated His love for you when He sent Jesus to become your sin on the cross so that you can become His righteousness.

Our part today is to turn away from ourselves and to look at Jesus!

Everything you and I require to reign in life was accomplished at Calvary on our behalf. That’s why we call what Jesus did on the cross His “finished work.”

Gospel Corner

10/09/25

Joel Osteen Ministries

Today’s Word
Today’s Scripture
As the soldiers led him away, they seized Simon from Cyrene, who was on his way in from the country, and put the cross on him and made him carry it behind Jesus.
Luke 23:26, NIV

Why Me?
Simon was from Cyrene, a city in North Africa. He was a foreigner, a stranger just traveling through who suddenly found himself carrying Jesus’ cross. He didn’t know who Jesus was. He didn’t know he would be chosen to be a part of history. God could have chosen one of Jesus’ disciples to be with Him in His final, critical moments. But He purposefully chose a stranger who didn’t look like he belonged. Simon could have tried to refuse, but I can imagine that deep down he heard a voice whispering, “I know you’re a stranger, but you’ve been chosen. This is your moment.” Simon accepted the calling and stepped into a destiny greater than he ever dreamed.

This is the beauty of our God. While we were yet strangers, while we were far off, God in His great mercy chose us. He didn’t choose you based on your performance; He chose you based on His love. Simon had no history with Jesus, but God had a divine purpose for his life. Who knows where God will take you if you simply answer His call.

A Prayer for Today
“Father, thank You that You are the Most High God, and You chose me and set me apart for Your own purpose. Thank You that Your call is based completely on Your love for me and not my performance. I am saying yes to Your call and to carrying the cross You have for me. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

SECTION TWO

Beloved, you reign in life through Jesus Christ just by receiving two things from Him: the abundance of grace and the gift of righteousness (Rom. 5:17). God’s way is not about achieving, but about receiving. But many Christians continue to live based on the world’s system of achievement.

The world’s system of success is built on the twin pillars of self-effort and diligence. The world tells you that the more you do, the harder you work, and the more hours you put in, the more success you will achieve.

The world’s way is to nag you to work harder, to forget about attending church on Sundays, to spend less time with your family, and to spend more time in the office working through the nights, weekends, and holidays. I’m sure you’ve heard that you need to “pay the price,” after all, “no pain, no gain,” right?

Yet, God’s way is not for us to be blessed by our own efforts. You cannot earn God’s blessings by your performance.

God’s blessings are based entirely on His grace. His blessings over your life are undeserved, unearned, and unmerited.

In other words, there is nothing you can do to deserve His blessings, for they are based entirely on receiving Jesus, and through His finished work, the abundance of grace and the gift of righteousness.

God wants us to stop trying to achieve and to begin receiving the favor, blessings, and healing that Jesus accomplished for us on the cross. When He hung on the cross some two thousand years ago, He cried out with a loud voice, “It is finished!”

Everything you and I require to reign in life was accomplished at Calvary on our behalf. That’s why we call what Jesus did on the cross His “finished work.”

He finished it. He completed it. It is done!

My friend, the only thing that works is the finished work. So stop trying to do what’s already done. Stop doing and start receiving what Jesus has done. Cease all striving and painful laboring to achieve your goals in your own strength and wisdom.

Choose instead to see that Jesus has already finished the work. All you need in this life He has already provided for you through the cross. Rest in His unmerited favor and love for you.

The Beauty of Good Health

09/09/25

Published By DICTA TD

The Beauty of Good Health

By Livy-Elcon Emereonye

Health is one of life’s greatest treasures. It is the silent wealth that often goes unnoticed until it is lost. The beauty of good health lies in the way it empowers us to live fully, work productively, and enjoy life’s simple pleasures.

Good health is not just the absence of disease. It is the presence of vitality, balance, and peace of mind. When we are healthy, we wake up each morning with energy and clarity. Our bodies feel light, our thoughts flow freely, and our spirits are lifted. This inner strength radiates outward as confidence, joy, and a natural glow that no artificial product can ever replace.

The beauty of good health is also seen in the way it connects us to others. A healthy person is better able to care for loved ones, contribute to society, and inspire those around them. Families and communities flourish when individuals are strong and well.

But the beauty of health is not automatic; it requires responsibility. It is built through daily choices—eating nourishing foods, exercising regularly, resting well, managing stress, and avoiding harmful habits. It also means listening to our bodies, seeking help when needed, and embracing preventive care.

To be healthy is to be free—free to dream, to create, to serve, and to enjoy the gift of life. Truly, the beauty of good health is that it makes everything else in life possible. Treasure it, nurture it, and let it shine through you every single day.

There’s no alternative to good so in all your pursuits, do things that will make you healthy.

Livy- Elcon Emeroenye

When a Society Destroys Its Best

09/09/25

Livy- Elcon Emeroenye

When a Society Destroys Its Best

By Livy-Elcon Emereonye

Any society that destroys her best is like the animal that eats its offspring. Such an animal extinguishes its lineage; such a society undermines its very survival. For in consuming the seeds of greatness, it forfeits the harvest of progress.

That we are all alike not the same should be enough reason for tolerance for mutual existence, but this is not the case as some feel threatened by the presence, exploits and progress of others, forgetting that a tree can never make a forest.

Every community, no matter how small or great, produces individuals who embody its highest possibilities. They may be thinkers whose minds reach beyond the ordinary, artists who give voice to the soul of the people, leaders who envision a nobler order, or reformers who speak truth to power. These are society’s best—not because they are flawless, but because they dare to rise above the average, to stretch the horizon of what is possible.

Yet history tells us that societies often turn against their brightest lights. The prophet is rejected, the reformer is ridiculed, the visionary is silenced, and the innovator is cast away. Out of fear, envy, ignorance, or the comfort of mediocrity, societies devour those who could deliver them from stagnation. The tragedy is double: not only are individuals destroyed, but the community that destroys them ensures its own decline.

To kill a thinker is to murder tomorrow’s wisdom. To exile an innovator is to donate one’s future to another land. To silence a truth-teller is to plunge into deeper falsehood. In each case, the society that commits such acts is diminished.

The pattern is as old as humanity. Athens condemned Socrates. Nations expelled their prophets. Colonies rejected their liberators. The cycle repeats itself because humanity struggles with the discomfort of truth and the challenge of change. But truth buried always resurrects, and change resisted always returns, sometimes in harsher forms.

More than anything, we now in an era where we take one step forward and two backwards because we thrive on the primitivity of preferring mediocrity to excellence and elevate tribalism to a national order.

When a society eats its offspring, it does not die suddenly. Instead, it withers gradually—its institutions corrode, its creativity dries up, its youth lose faith, and its future slips away. What remains is a shadow of what might have been. Such a society may boast of age, wealth, or numbers, but without its best, it is hollow—like a body that has lost its soul.

How long will this pathetic scenario last?

The wisdom of survival is to cherish the best among us. To protect the courageous, even when they disturb us. To listen to the visionary, even when their dreams seem strange. To honour the reformer, even when their words cut deep. A society that safeguards its best safeguards itself; a society that destroys them digs its own grave.

The measure of a people is how they treat their noblest minds and bravest hearts. Animals that eat their offspring cannot endure, and neither can societies that consume their best. The future belongs only to those who nurture greatness, who preserve vision, and who refuse to let envy or fear devour their brightest lights.

To destroy the best is to destroy oneself. To defend the best is to defend the future.

Yes, to destroy the best is to mortgage tomorrow; to defend them is to secure eternity.

Societies do not collapse from outside first; they collapse when they devour their own within.

Any society that destroys her best is like the animal that eats its offspring—its end is certain.

And the way it is, the society may be in the past tomorrow!

When a Society Destroys Its Best

09/09/25

Livy- Elcon Emeroenye

When a Society Destroys Its Best

By Livy-Elcon Emereonye

Any society that destroys her best is like the animal that eats its offspring. Such an animal extinguishes its lineage; such a society undermines its very survival. For in consuming the seeds of greatness, it forfeits the harvest of progress.

That we are all alike not the same should be enough reason for tolerance for mutual existence, but this is not the case as some feel threatened by the presence, exploits and progress of others, forgetting that a tree can never make a forest.

Every community, no matter how small or great, produces individuals who embody its highest possibilities. They may be thinkers whose minds reach beyond the ordinary, artists who give voice to the soul of the people, leaders who envision a nobler order, or reformers who speak truth to power. These are society’s best—not because they are flawless, but because they dare to rise above the average, to stretch the horizon of what is possible.

Yet history tells us that societies often turn against their brightest lights. The prophet is rejected, the reformer is ridiculed, the visionary is silenced, and the innovator is cast away. Out of fear, envy, ignorance, or the comfort of mediocrity, societies devour those who could deliver them from stagnation. The tragedy is double: not only are individuals destroyed, but the community that destroys them ensures its own decline.

To kill a thinker is to murder tomorrow’s wisdom. To exile an innovator is to donate one’s future to another land. To silence a truth-teller is to plunge into deeper falsehood. In each case, the society that commits such acts is diminished.

The pattern is as old as humanity. Athens condemned Socrates. Nations expelled their prophets. Colonies rejected their liberators. The cycle repeats itself because humanity struggles with the discomfort of truth and the challenge of change. But truth buried always resurrects, and change resisted always returns, sometimes in harsher forms.

More than anything, we now in an era where we take one step forward and two backwards because we thrive on the primitivity of preferring mediocrity to excellence and elevate tribalism to a national order.

When a society eats its offspring, it does not die suddenly. Instead, it withers gradually—its institutions corrode, its creativity dries up, its youth lose faith, and its future slips away. What remains is a shadow of what might have been. Such a society may boast of age, wealth, or numbers, but without its best, it is hollow—like a body that has lost its soul.

How long will this pathetic scenario last?

The wisdom of survival is to cherish the best among us. To protect the courageous, even when they disturb us. To listen to the visionary, even when their dreams seem strange. To honour the reformer, even when their words cut deep. A society that safeguards its best safeguards itself; a society that destroys them digs its own grave.

The measure of a people is how they treat their noblest minds and bravest hearts. Animals that eat their offspring cannot endure, and neither can societies that consume their best. The future belongs only to those who nurture greatness, who preserve vision, and who refuse to let envy or fear devour their brightest lights.

To destroy the best is to destroy oneself. To defend the best is to defend the future.

Yes, to destroy the best is to mortgage tomorrow; to defend them is to secure eternity.

Societies do not collapse from outside first; they collapse when they devour their own within.

Any society that destroys her best is like the animal that eats its offspring—its end is certain.

And the way it is, the society may be in the past tomorrow!

We love when God gives us a dream, we know something big is in our future, but we have to realize along with the dream come tests. How we respond will determine whether that dream comes to pass.

GOSPEL CORNER

09/09/25

Joel Osteen Ministries

Today’s Word
Today’s Scripture
Until the time came to fulfill his dreams, the LORD tested Joseph’s character.
Psalm 105:19, NLT

A Time of Testing
As a teenager, God gave Joseph a dream that he would be in leadership and see great favor and influence. He was excited. He knew big things were in his future, and he shared it with his parents and brothers. It’s significant that after God gave him that dream, He said, “I’m going to test your character to see if you can handle it. Will you be good to people who are not good to you? I’m going to test your endurance. Will you give up if it doesn’t happen fast enough? I’m going to test your integrity. Will you do the right thing when no one is watching? I’m going to test your attitude. Will you get sour when things don’t go your way?” What followed was thirteen years of testing through betrayals, injustice, and imprisonment before the dream came to pass.

We love when God gives us a dream, we know something big is in our future, but we have to realize along with the dream come tests. How we respond will determine whether that dream comes to pass.

A Prayer for Today
“Father, thank You for loving me so much that You work to refine my character and bring me up higher. Thank You for the training and preparation process that You are taking me through even now. I believe that I will pass the tests and get to where You are taking me. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.”

SECTION TWO

As a believer, have you ever been plagued by thoughts of how you haven’t been good enough or haven’t done enough to deserve God’s blessings? That your imperfection disqualifies you from receiving anything good from God?

If you’ve been struggling with these thoughts, I want you to read and reread today’s scripture, Hebrews 10:12, 14, and let the verses saturate your heart, mind, and conscience. Let the knowledge of how you are completely forgiven and forever perfected by Jesus’ finished work at the cross sink in.

You are not going to be forgiven and perfected one day through all your hard work. No, my friend, the good news is, you already are forgiven and perfected—once and for all time—through Jesus’ sacrifice.

And how long is forever? I checked the original Greek word for forever in the verse and guess what? “Forever” means forever! You have been totally forgiven and perfected forever by Jesus’ cleansing blood, not by the blood of animal sacrifices that can never take away sins.

Pastor Prince, how can I be fully assured that all my sins have already been forgiven?

Good question! Notice that after Jesus offered His life as a sacrifice and payment for all our sins, He “sat down” at the Father’s right hand. Jesus sat down to demonstrate to us that the work is indeed finished!

Under the old covenant, the priest who served in the tabernacle of Moses never sat down, but “stands ministering daily” because his work could never be finished. The blood of bulls and goats could “never take away sins” (Heb. 10:11).

Interestingly, in the holy place of the tabernacle of Moses, there was not a single piece of furniture prepared for the priest to sit on. You would not find a single chair in the holy place. You would find the altar of incense, the menorah, and even a table of showbread, but not chairs. This was because the work of the priest was never finished. Only Jesus’ work is a finished work.

My friend, you can rest easy in your heart and mind today. You can relax because Jesus has finished the work. In God’s eyes, you are forever perfect, spotless, and washed whiter than snow by the precious, eternal blood of His Son. And it’s permanent!

Your part is simply to believe and receive all that Jesus has done for you. That’s how you reign in life over sin, addictions, and whatever the enemy throws at you. That’s how you come up tops in all of life’s challenges!