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The Greatest Fathers in the Bible - and - What They Got Right (and Wrong)

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The Bible's greatest fathers were flawed men who loved imperfectly — yet God worked through them anyway. Explore what Abraham, Jacob, Joseph, and others got right, got wrong, and what their lives still teach us today. Nobody warned them. No parenting books, no podcasts, no father figures who had it all figured out. The men we meet in the pages of Scripture stumbled into fatherhood the same way most men do — unprepared, overwhelmed, and absolutely certain they were about to change everything for the people they loved. Some of them did. Some of them broke things that took generations to heal. Most did both. And that tension — between the love a father carries and the damage he sometimes does — is exactly what makes the Bible's portrait of fatherhood so searingly honest and so deeply human. This Father's Day, we're looking at the greatest fathers in the Bible: not because they were perfect, but because their lives show us something true about what it costs to love a child ...

Feed My Sheep: The Three Questions Jesus Asked Peter That Changed Everything

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Feed My Sheep: discover how Jesus restored Peter with three deliberate questions beside a charcoal fire — and what that scene reveals about grace, recommissioning, and what it truly means to lead out of love rather than performance. The rooster had crowed. The fire had burned low. And Peter — the man who had declared he would go to prison and to death for Jesus, the man who had drawn his sword in the garden, the man Jesus Himself had named "the Rock" — had looked a servant girl in the eye three times and said he did not know Him. Three times. Around a charcoal fire. In the courtyard of the high priest. While Jesus was being tried inside. Luke tells us that after the third denial, Jesus turned and looked at Peter (Luke 22:61). Just looked at him. And Peter went outside and wept bitterly. That look, that weeping, and the silence that followed — stretching across the arrest, the crucifixion, the burial, and then the bewildering news of an empty tomb — must have felt to Peter lik...

2 Samuel Explained: David, Failure, and God’s Grace

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2 Samuel explained: explore David's triumphs, catastrophic failures, and the breathtaking grace of God that refused to let a broken king — or a broken you — stay down for good. If you want a hero without flaws, 2 Samuel is the wrong book. Its central figure — King David, the man after God's own heart — commits adultery, engineers a murder, fails as a father, and watches his own household tear itself apart in violence and betrayal. The biography is shocking in its honesty. Ancient literature almost never treats its heroes this way. Kings were gods in Egypt, demigods in Mesopotamia. In Israel, the greatest king who ever reigned is shown weeping, hiding, sinning, and breaking. And yet 2 Samuel is one of the most hope-filled books in the entire Bible. Because it is not ultimately a book about David's greatness. It is a book about God's covenant faithfulness — a faithfulness so deep and so stubborn that it holds even when the man it is extended to falls spectacularly short o...