Tag Page JesusTeachings

#JesusTeachings
REAL STORIES

Matthew 6:9–14 is part of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount and includes the famous “Lord’s Prayer.” In this passage, Jesus teaches a model for how to pray with humility, sincerity, and focus on God’s will. The prayer begins by honoring God (“Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name”), then expresses a desire for His kingdom and will to be fulfilled. It asks for daily provision (“give us this day our daily bread”), forgiveness of sins, and the strength to forgive others. It also seeks guidance away from temptation and deliverance from evil. The verses emphasize dependence on God, repentance, mercy, and alignment with divine purpose rather than selfish requests. #LordsPrayer #Matthew6 #BibleVerses #Faith #PrayerLife #ChristianLiving #Forgiveness #GodsWill #DailyBread #SpiritualGrowth #TrustInGod #Scripture #JesusTeachings

DidYouKnow

The Bible never says “the camel went through a gate called the eye of the needle.”

This explanation is extremely popular. Especially in sermons about wealth. But there is no historical evidence such a gate existed. Jesus was using exaggeration. Intentional impossibility. That matters, because we softened a hard teaching into a clever workaround. Jesus wasn’t saying wealth is manageable with effort. He was saying it is spiritually dangerous without surrender. Many believers search this passage while wrestling with comfort, security, and fear of loss. The Bible did not offer an escape clause. We added one. If this teaching always felt sharper than you were told, your discomfort may be closer to the original meaning. #BibleMisconceptions #MandelaEffect #JesusTeachings #WealthAndFaith #DidYouKnow

The Bible never says “the camel went through a gate called the eye of the needle.”
DidYouKnow

Jesus never said “Hate the sin, love the sinner.”

This phrase is quoted constantly in moral discussions. Many assume it comes directly from Jesus. It does not. Jesus never separates people into “sinner” and “acceptable object of love.” He eats with them. Touches them. Defends them. The phrase comes from much later theological language, not the Gospels. That matters, because this line is often searched by believers trying to justify emotional distance. They want to feel loving without being close. But Jesus’ pattern is relational, not theoretical. He engages people before correcting anything. If you have felt wounded by how this phrase was used on you, Scripture does not require you to accept that framing. The Bible never taught love from a distance. It taught love with risk. #BibleMisconceptions #MandelaEffect #JesusTeachings #ChristianLife #DidYouKnow

Jesus never said “Hate the sin, love the sinner.”
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