Sharp Sword Said
I was watching a true story of a murder mystery. In it, one of the murderers was called: “the hammer”. Guess what […]
I was watching a true story of a murder mystery. In it, one of the murderers was called: “the hammer”. Guess what […]
When Rosina Hernandez was in college, she once attended a rock concert at which one young man was brutally beaten by another. […]
In Revelation 2.18-29 we read of a Church located in the Turkish city of Akhisar, in the Manisa Province. Better known to […]
In his ‘First Law of Motion’, Sir Issac Newton asserted, “Everything continues in a state of rest unless it is compelled to […]
The Oxford dictionary defines the phrase “hold fast” as: 1) To remain tightly secured. 2) To continue to believe in or adhere […]
Jesus knows. He knows the beginning from the end. He knows the heart. He knows what no one else could possibly know. […]
Some names seem to be just names. Like: Bill, Fred, Sam, etc. Some names carry a deeper meaning. When the 1960s ended, […]
The U.S. standard railroad gauge (distance between rails) is four feet, eight-and-one-half inches. One may ask, why such an odd number? Because […]
The story is told of Franklin Roosevelt, who often endured long receiving lines at the White House. He complained that no one […]
Have you ever been broken about your own spiritual condition? How about the spiritual condition of people you love? Are there times […]
Moses was born during a troubled time for the Israelites in Egypt. The King made a decree that midwives were to kill […]
John 15.1-4 says— “I am the true vine, and my Father is the husbandman. Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he […]
The last words of people amaze me. It shows, at times, the fundamental belief of the person speaking them. Take Bob Marley’s […]
I want to introduce you to a word… paranggelia (par-ang-gel-ee’-ah) which means: “an urgent command handed down from a superior officer.” The […]
What is ministry? Some consider it to be a short-term trip to Mexico. Others see their own ‘work’ as a ministry, like […]
Warren Wiersby illustrated the problem of thankfulness. Not the use, but the absence. It comes natural to man to be unthankful. Maybe […]