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LLama Loo

✨ Prophecy Fulfilled: The Life of Yeshua (Jesus) – Episode 55 “Not My Will” They crossed the Kidron Valley beneath a darkened sky. The city lights of Jerusalem faded behind them as they entered a familiar place— a garden called Gethsemane. It was a place of olive trees and oil presses. A place where weight is applied until something precious is poured out. Yeshua knew it well. ⸻ 🌿 The Weight of the Hour He brought the disciples with Him, then asked Peter, James, and John to go a little farther. And there—away from the others— the weight descended. Scripture tells us He became deeply distressed and troubled. Not fearful of death, but bearing something far heavier: the full knowledge of what obedience would cost. He said to them: “My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death. Stay here and keep watch.” Then He went a little farther still. ⸻ 🌑 Alone Before the Father Yeshua fell to the ground. This was not performance. Not teaching. Not metaphor. This was raw, human anguish poured out before God. He prayed: “Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from Me.” The cup—the full measure of judgment, the weight of sin, the separation His holiness had never known. And yet… His prayer did not end there. “Nevertheless, not My will, but Yours be done.” This is the moment the cross was accepted. Before a hand was raised against Him. Before a word of accusation was spoken. Obedience was chosen here. 😴 Sleeping Disciples He returned to the disciples and found them asleep. Not once. Not twice. But three times. Their bodies could not stay awake, even as eternity hung in the balance. Yeshua did not shame them. He named the truth: “The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.” Then He went back to pray again. 💧 Sweat Like Drops of Blood Luke tells us that His anguish became so intense that His sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground. ✝️ CONTINUED IN COMMENTS ⬇️⬇️⬇️ #Bible #God #Jesus #BibleStudy #Help #Love

LLama Loo

Jude — A Brief Introduction to the Bible Part 60** The book of Jude is a warning shot across the bow of the Church. Brief, unapologetic, and surgically precise, it confronts a danger that thrives in every generation: false teachers who infiltrate quietly, corrupt truth subtly, and exploit grace destructively. Jude, the brother of James and half-brother of Jesus, writes with urgency born of necessity. What he intended as a general encouragement quickly becomes a call to action: “Contend earnestly for the faith once for all delivered to the saints.” Jude does not argue with deception. He exposes it. He does not soften the message. He defends the faith. ⸻ Audience & Setting Jude writes to believers facing internal corruption rather than external persecution. False teachers had slipped into the church unnoticed — not denying Christ openly, but distorting grace, rejecting authority, and indulging sinful desires while claiming spiritual freedom. This is not accidental error. Jude describes willful rebellion dressed in religious language. His concern is not theoretical theology — it is the spiritual survival of the Church. ⸻ Major Themes 1. Contending for the Faith Faith must be defended. Not reinvented. Not modernized. Not diluted. The gospel was delivered once — complete and sufficient — and believers are responsible for guarding it. 2. False Teachers and Apostasy Jude paints stark portraits of false teachers: • They pervert grace into license • They deny the authority of Christ • They are driven by appetite, not truth • They exploit others for personal gain Their presence is not neutral — it is destructive. 3. Judgment and Accountability Jude draws from Israel’s history, fallen angels, Sodom and Gomorrah, and ancient rebellions to show that God does not ignore persistent rebellion. Grace does not cancel accountability. ✝️ CONTINUED IN COMMENTS ⬇️⬇️⬇️ #Love #Bible #God #Jesus #BibleStudy #Help #Jude