How does divine healing actually work?
We can look at healing in much the same way we view manna from Heaven.
We can look at healing in much the same way we view manna from Heaven.
Shouldn't it be our natural instinct to consider that when the visible world cannot explain something, the source of the true answer may lie in the invisible, the supernatural?
While we say we love God, are we equally willing to embrace the processes through which He refines us?
As we navigate an era of unprecedented moral and ethical upheaval, a growing number of religious scholars and teachers of prophecy are sounding a clarion call.
By accepting Jesus and embracing our spiritual nature, we can look forward to an eternity devoid of pain and filled with unending joy.
This dual act of dying, once in a garden and once on a cross, underscores a mystical yet fundamental principle of Christianity: to gain life, one must first lose it.
In the face of advancing technology, in the rush of daily life, in the quiet moments of contemplation, the question remains — whose will you be?
The extent to which we are not seeking God’s will correlates directly to the degree we are engaged in idolatry.