• Home
  • Devotionals
  • BiblePhone
  • Blogs
  • TV
  • Prayer
    • Submit Prayer Request
    • Prayer Requests List
  • Contact us
  • Romanian

Intercer Adventist News

Closer To Heaven

  • About us
    • About Adventist Church
    • About Intercer Adventist News
    • About Intercer
    • About Lucian Web Service
    • Latest News
    • Romanian Church News
  • News and Feeds
    • Intercer Adventist News
    • 60 Second SlideShows
    • “Adventist Tweets” Paper
    • Adventists on Twitter
    • Adventists on Google Plus
    • Bible Resources
      • Adventist Universities Daily Bible
      • Answers For Me
        • Dear God
        • Healthy Living
        • Life Notes
        • Spiritual applications
        • Vegetarian recipes
      • Better Sermons
        • Spirit Renew Quotes
      • Daily Bible Promise
      • E-GraceNotes
        • Bible Says
        • City Lights
        • Family First
        • Staying Young
      • Story Harvest
        • Personal Stories
      • SSNet.org
    • Churches & Organizations
      • Adventist News Network
      • Adventist Review
      • Adventist World Radio
      • Avondale College
      • Babcock University Nigeria
      • BC Alive
      • British Union Conference
      • Canadian Adventist Messenger
      • Canadian Union
      • North American Division News
      • Outlook Magazine
      • PM Church – Pastor’s Blog
      • Potomac Conference
      • Record Magazine – Australia
      • Review and Herald
      • Trans-European Division
      • Washington Conference
    • Health
      • Dr.Gily.com
      • Vegetarian-Nutrition.info
    • Ministries
      • 7 Miracle (Youth)
      • A Sabbath Blog
      • Adventist Blogs
      • Adventist Today
      • ADvindicate
      • Creative Ministry
      • Grace Roots
      • Romanian Church News
      • Rose’s Devotional
      • UNashamed
    • Personal
      • Alexandra Yeboah
      • Iasmin Balaj
      • Jennifer LaMountain
      • McQue’s View
      • Refresh with Tia
      • Shawn Boonstra
  • Sermons & Video Clips
    • Churches
      • Downey Adventist Church
      • Fresno Central SDA Church
      • Hillsboro Adventist Church
      • Mississauga SDA Church
      • New Perceptions Television (PM Church)
      • Normandie Ave SDA Church
      • Remnant Adventist Church
    • Organizations
      • Adventist News Network (ANN)
      • ADRA Canada
      • Adventists About Life
      • Adventist Education
      • Adventist Mission
      • Amazing Facts
      • Adventist Church Connect
      • BC Adventist
      • Church Support Services
      • In Focus (South Pacific)
      • IIW Canada
      • NAD Adventist
      • NAD Church Resource Center (Vervent)
      • NARLA
      • Newbold
      • Review & Herald
      • SECMedia
      • Video Avventista (Italy)
    • Ministries
      • 3AngelsTube.com
      • Answered.TV
      • AudioVerse.org
      • AYO Connect
      • Christian Documentaries
      • GAiN #AdventistGeeks
      • GYC
      • Intercer Websites
      • Josue Sanchez
      • LightChannel
      • Pan de Vida
      • Revival and Reformation
      • Stories of Faith
      • SAU Journalism/Communication
      • Spirit Flash
      • The Preaching Place (UK)
      • Toronto East Youth Nation
    • Personal
      • Esther-Marie Hartwell
      • McQuesView
      • Pastor Manny Cruz
    • Sabbath School
      • Ecole du Sabbat Adventiste
      • Sabbath School Audio Podast
      • Sabbath School daily
  • Resources
    • Bible and Bible Studies
    • Health
    • Music
  • All articles
  • G+ News & Marketplace
    • G+ News & Marketplace Group
    • G+ Page
You are here: Home / All articles

You Can Never Go Home Again, and May Not Need To

March 20, 2025 By admin

While some folks say, things aren’t what they used to be, I say, yes, but they never were what they are now.

I am a historian by nature. When I visited the Litchfield Congregational church, pictured below, built in Connecticut in 1721, I tried to imagine all the sin-weary souls who had come to hear the Gospel preached for over three centuries inside those consecrated walls.

Photo of Litchfield church by William Earnhardt

Photo by William Earnhardt

Later, when I went to see the Rays and Red Sox play at old Fenway Park, it was not enough to watch the game. I had to picture what it must have been like for a father taking his son out of school to attend a game back in 1912. Millions of people with memories of that old ball park, and my mind wanted to capture them all. I walk by an old high school building built in 1927 in Tampa, and I have to stop and try to imagine all the scenes that may have taken place. All the loves and relationships that began on that campus. I stand on the sidewalk, looking at an old glass window. I ask myself, on the last day of school in 1942 did a young man stand where I stand now, and glance for the last time at a young girl on whom he had a crush standing in the window, before leaving to join the war, never to return?

In 1991 I drove to a remote little town in extreme western Oklahoma to preach. When I arrived at the church, I went downstairs to get water. While downstairs I saw several Sabbath School classrooms, all totally vacant and abandoned. The elderly couple who invited me home for lunch explained that all those rooms were packed with children back in the day. But they all grew up and moved away to find jobs. The husband was the school master back in the day, but he had been retired for decades. With no children around any more, the only traces of the school were distant memories. I remember a feeling of sadness as I thought of the hollow classrooms once full of life. I can’t say if it was the evangelist or the historian in me that made me wish there were a way to fill those classrooms with lively children again.

Over the years those hollow classrooms occasionally haunt my mind. Of course, in my lifetime, I have seen changes in my own childhood church. It still has a thriving church school and Sabbath School department, but when my friends and I go home to visit, we remember days gone by when the church was much fuller.  I have to keep in mind that when we were kids our church was The Adventist Church in the area. Today there are several Adventist churches in the area, and there really is no “The” Church now. This is where the evangelist in me wars with the historian in me. The historian in me wants to re-create the church I grew up in. I want to go home again. The evangelist in me rejoices that there are new churches, and the gospel is being preached all over the area now, instead of in just one place. I understand my childhood church is slightly smaller now because people are spreading out to other churches to share the gospel beyond my little neighborhood.

Now my mind looks back to those empty Sabbath School classrooms in the middle of nowhere in western Oklahoma. Is it really sad that the kids grew up and moved on to bigger places where they could find jobs? Not if moving gave them more opportunities to share Jesus with those in need! Now I look back at those empty classrooms in a different way. Maybe the primary Sabbath School teacher did not realize it at the time, but she was doing a lot more than teaching the children in her small town about Jesus. She was training them to be missionaries and take the gospel from those little rooms and spread it all over the world! The historian in me looks into those vacant rooms and sees a church that died. The evangelist in me looks into those hollow rooms and sees scores of children leaving those sacred halls to share the gospel in new places, meeting people around the world who need Jesus.

The church is a movement, not a history museum. The church is a people and not an old building standing out in a field where there used to be a town. While reality tells me that many of the kids probably left the church, I am sure many stayed in the church as well.. Many of the children who filled those old Sabbath School classrooms in western Oklahoma took the church with them when they moved away. The Sabbath School class did not die in those classrooms in western Oklahoma; the class just outgrew its walls! They grew all over the world. I look back now and realize children with whom I sat in Primary Sabbath School class in my home church are now scattered from the South Pacific Islands to New England and beyond.

You know what’s cool? We left four walls we used to meet in, but we never left the church. We took it with us. Just as importantly, we never left each other. We are in touch on Facebook and Sabbath School Net, where we still share ideas from theology to evangelism strategies. And of course we still get together personally when we can. A couple years ago, a former classmate, now a teacher, helped me put my Bible curriculum together while living 1200 miles away. You see, our little Sabbath School classroom did not die. Just the opposite. We grew so big we exceeded the boundaries of our four little walls.

I believe it to be the same with the little classrooms in a small town in western Oklahoma. If I ever get a chance to return, and I hope I do, I will go downstairs and look into those empty classrooms again. This time instead of trying to imagine a class that once was, I will see a class that still is and even more. I will see a classroom that has grown into something much bigger and greater than it ever was. I won’t see a class that died in a little room. I will see a class that grew all over the world to help people all over the world who need Jesus.

When I think of my experience in the church, I realize in one sense, I can never go home again. The building I worshiped in as a child will never be what it was. That’s just fine. It was never meant to stay what it was. It was meant to grow. It was meant to grow beyond those walls into the rest of the world where people need Jesus. My church is now all over the word. So in one sense, I can never go back to my home church again. In an even more real sense, my home church is all over the world now and is everywhere I go. And the even greater reality is, that I’ve never been home and never will be until Jesus comes. While the historian in me wants to reminisce about the way the church used to be, the evangelist in me says to keep growing the church. It’s not finished yet!

(0)

Source: https://ssnet.org/blog/you-can-never-go-home-again-and-may-not-need-to/

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading…

Filed Under: Adventist Sermons & Video Clips, SSNet.org

Inside Story: Stuck in the Middle East

March 20, 2025 By admin

Inside Story for Friday 21st of March 2025

By Andrew McChesney

Ki-nam’s world came crashing down after she arrived from South Korea to work as a student missionary in the Middle East. She arrived on a short-term tourist visa that needed to be upgraded to a residence visa, allowing her to stay for a full year. Her apartment landlord had agreed to sign the paperwork, giving her proof of residence for the new visa. But suddenly he changed his mind and demanded a large sum of money to sign the document.

Ki-nam didn’t have the money. The missionary leader overseeing the small group of student missionaries didn’t have the money. The small Seventh-day Adventist community didn’t have the money. The community mainly was comprised of poor refugees who worshiped in a house church.

Ki-nam’s choices were limited. She couldn’t simply move to another apartment because it was difficult to find landlords willing to rent to foreigners. Staying illegally in the country wasn’t an option, and she didn’t want to bribe an official for the resident visa.

She prayed, “Lord, if You sent me here, You should solve my problem.” She prayed every day for two months. Her parents in South Korea prayed. The missionary leader put Ki-nam’s name on the house church’s prayer list, and church members prayed.

Two months passed, and the landlord didn’t sign the document.

Then the day arrived when Ki-nam had to go for an interview for a new visa. But she didn’t have any documents to support a new visa.

Shortly before the interview, Ki-nam’s cell phone rang. It was the mis­sionary leader. “There may be a solution,” he said. “Let’s go.”

He explained that a church member had felt impressed to stop by a real estate agency just a few minutes earlier. The church member knew the agency owner and had asked, “Can you help my friend?” The owner had replied, “Bring her passport, and I’ll give her proof of residence.”

Ki-nam was stunned. She could only say, “Thank You, God.”

The owner signed the document, and Ki-nam received the resident visa.

After that, Ki-nam had no doubt that God would bless her year in the Middle East. And He did. Seven people were baptized through her work. “God called me and used me to save people,” Ki-nam said in an interview with Adventist Mission in Seoul, South Korea. “He was with me every step of the way, helping me. I realized that there are no mistakes in God’s calling, and it was a year of gratitude.”

The Seventh-day Adventist Church in South Korea sends missionaries around the world. Thank you for your Thirteenth Sabbath Offering on March 29 that will help South Korean Adventists spread the gospel at home. The student missionary’s name has been changed.

(0)

Source: https://ssnet.org/blog/25a-12-inside-story-stuck-in-the-middle-east/

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading…

Filed Under: Adventist Sermons & Video Clips, SSNet.org

Friday: Further Thought – Love and Justice: The Two Greatest Commandments

March 20, 2025 By admin

Daily Lesson for Friday 21st of March 2025

Read Ellen G. White, “The Sabbath,” Pages 281–289, in The Desire of Ages.
Spectacles on Bible

Image © Stan Myers from GoodSalt.com

“The spies dared not answer Christ in the presence of the multitude, for fear of involving themselves in difficulty. They knew that He had spoken the truth. Rather than violate their traditions, they would leave a man to suffer, while they would relieve a brute because of the loss to the owner if it were neglected. Thus greater care was shown for a dumb animal than for man, who is made in the image of God. This illustrates the working of all false religions. They originate in man’s desire to exalt himself above God, but they result in degrading man below the brute. Every religion that wars against the sovereignty of God defrauds man of the glory which was his at the Creation, and which is to be restored to him in Christ. Every false religion teaches its adherents to be careless of human needs, sufferings, and rights. The gospel places a high value upon humanity as the purchase of the blood of Christ, and it teaches a tender regard for the wants and woes of man. The Lord says, ‘I will make a man more precious than fine gold; even a man than the golden wedge of Ophir.’ Isaiah 13:12.

“When Jesus turned upon the Pharisees with the question whether it was lawful on the Sabbath day to do good or to do evil, to save life or to kill, He confronted them with their own wicked purposes. They were hunting His life with bitter hatred, while He was saving life and bringing happiness to multitudes. Was it better to slay upon the Sabbath, as they were planning to do, than to heal the afflicted, as He had done? Was it more righteous to have murder in the heart upon God’s holy day than love to all men, which finds expression in deeds of mercy?”—Ellen G. White, The Desire of Ages, Pages 286, 287.

Discussion Questions

  1. Why and how is it true that “Every false religion teaches its ad­­herents to be careless of human needs”? How can we act intentionally so as to avoid such carelessness in our church communities and beyond?
  2. Who is my neighbor? Who is your neighbor? In what practical ways should following Christ make us more like the Samaritan who crossed the boundaries of his day to act out love?
  3. If God loves justice and mercy, how should we act in ac­cordance with what matters most to God? How can we be more focused on what Jesus called “the weightier matters of the law”?
  4. When we think and talk about judgment, how often do we emphasize that a primary way Jesus discusses judgment is in terms of whether, and to what extent, we actively love others, particularly the oppressed and downtrodden? Reflect on this in light of Matthew 25:31-46.

<–Thursday

(0)

Source: https://ssnet.org/blog/25a-12-further-thought-love-and-justice-the-two-greatest-commandments/

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading…

Filed Under: Adventist Sermons & Video Clips, SSNet.org

SATIRE: Eligible Adventist Males Declared Endangered Species

March 20, 2025 By admin

FONTAINEBLEU, France — The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has made its first human addition to the list of endangered species: eligible Adventist males. The IUCN said that numbers of single Adventist males with a job and basic hygiene had fallen dangerously low. The organization is calling for conservation efforts around the world, […] Source: https://atoday.org/satire-eligible-adventist-males-declared-endangered-species/

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading…

Filed Under: Adventist Sermons & Video Clips, Adventist Today

God First: Your Daily Prayer Meeting #948

March 20, 2025 By admin



"If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer" (Matthew 21:22, NIV). 
Tag someone in need of prayer, and kindly share your prayer requests here:
https://wkf.ms/3DBuapQ Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzrSouxQMOc

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading…

Filed Under: Adventist Sermons & Video Clips, Adventists About Life

Daniel 11, Kings of the North and South–The Final Battle (PART 3)

March 20, 2025 By admin



Uncover the Striking Parallels Between God, the True King of the North, and the Papacy, the Counterfeit King of the North. Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SgzSKTOGfPU

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading…

Filed Under: Adventist Sermons & Video Clips, Remnant Adventist

Luca 2:52 – Apri la porta del tuo cuore

March 19, 2025 By admin



“E Gesù cresceva in sapienza, in statura e in grazia davanti a Dio e agli uomini”. 📖 Luca 2:52 
—
💌 Apri la porta del tuo cuore
🗣 Speaker: Alessia Calvagno Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GNbKXpkI5RU

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading…

Filed Under: Adventist Sermons & Video Clips, Video Avventista (Italy)

¿Soy el villano?

March 19, 2025 By admin

«Dejamos de buscar monstruos debajo de la cama cuando nos dimos cuenta de que están dentro de nosotros». – Sr. Smith, Matrix Me atraen las historias que tienen a un villano como protagonista. A veces discuto con mi padre por ello. No entiende por qué me gustan las historias en las que el protagonista no […] Source: https://atoday.org/soy-el-villano/

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading…

Filed Under: Adventist Sermons & Video Clips, Adventist Today

These Bones

March 19, 2025 By admin

by Jack Hoehn  |  19 March 2025  |  “Prophesy to these bones and say to them, ‘Dry bones, hear the word of the Lord!” Ezekiel 37:4 Photographs of the creation of the elements used for life are coming to computers near you from the James Webb space telescope. This photograph is Orion, a constellation beloved […] Source: https://atoday.org/these-bones/

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading…

Filed Under: Adventist Sermons & Video Clips, Adventist Today

Lesson 12.Love and Justice: The Two Greatest Commandments | 12.5 Who Is My Neighbor? | THE GOD OF LOVE AND JUSTICE | LIVING FAITH

March 19, 2025 By admin

12.5 Who Is My Neighbor?
True Neighborly Love in Action
Read the parable of the Good Samaritan in Luke 10:25–37. What does this passage say in light of the prophets’ call for mercy and justice and considering the injustices that various groups of people have inflicted on “others” throughout human history?
The question posed by the legal expert in Luke 10:29 – “Who is my neighbor?” – reveals an attitude that is, unfortunately, still common today: people want to know exactly whom they are obligated to help and whom they can ignore. But Jesus does not provide a legal definition. Instead, he tells the parable of the Good Samaritan, which carries a radical message:
  1. Neighborly Love Knows No Boundaries
Jesus prioritizes the heart’s attitude over religious and social boundaries. The Samaritan helps the injured man, despite the fact that Jews and Samaritans were considered enemies. Through this, Jesus makes it clear: Our neighbor is not just the one who is close to us but anyone in need—regardless of origin, status, or religion.
This parable responds to the injustices of human history:
  • Exclusion, prejudice, social inequality – Jesus calls us to break down these walls.
  • Ignoring the suffering of others – Like the priest and the Levite who walked past, we, too, might ask: “Do I have time?” or “Is this my responsibility?”
    But true justice means seeing and acting.
  1. Jesus: The Embodiment of Justice and Mercy
Jesus didn’t just speak about justice—he lived it. In Luke 4:16–21, he quotes Isaiah 61:1–2, making it clear that he came to:
✔ Bring good news to the poor.
✔ Free the oppressed.
✔ Bring healing and restoration.
He humbled himself to identify with those who suffer. His justice is not just judicial punishment but restoration and healing.
  1. Our Mission: Living Out Mercy in Action
📖 Psalm 9:9–10 & Psalm 146:7–9 show that God is the protector of the oppressed. But He wants to use us as instruments of His justice.
🔹 Whom do we help today – or do we walk past?
🔹 Do we have prejudices that prevent us from being merciful?
🔹 Do we do only the necessary – or do we live out true neighborly love?
God’s Word is clear: Our task is to serve those in need—not out of obligation, but out of love, just as Christ loved us.
True justice is not just about big speeches but about practiced, boundless mercy.
What Can We Learn from Jesus’ Life and Actions Regarding Helping Those in Need? Even though we cannot perform miracles like Jesus, how could our help seem miraculous to many suffering people?
Jesus was not just a teacher but a living example of active neighborly love. His help was not limited to certain groups—he healed the sick, comforted the outcast, forgave sinners, and gave hope to the desperate. His love knew no boundaries, and that is exactly what we can learn from him.
  1. Jesus Saw the Individual – Do We?
Jesus didn’t just see the crowd but the individual and their needs:
✔ He saw blind Bartimaeus and stopped for him (Mark 10:46–52).
✔ He took time for the Samaritan woman at the well, even though others despised her (John 4:1–26).
✔ He had compassion for the hungry crowd and fed them (Matthew 14:13–21).
🔹 Lesson for us: Do we see the needs around us—or do we just walk on? Sometimes, a sincere conversation, a listening ear, or a small act of kindness can feel miraculous to someone who feels invisible.
  1. Jesus Helped the Whole Person – Body, Soul, and Spirit
Jesus cared not only for people’s physical needs but also for their inner wounds. He healed illnesses, but also broken hearts:
✔ He forgave the adulterous woman and gave her a new perspective (John 8:1–11).
✔ He valued children and blessed them (Mark 10:13–16).
✔ He healed the paralyzed man both physically and spiritually (Mark 2:1–12).
🔹 Lesson for us: Sometimes, the greatest miracle is not material help but making someone feel valued. A word of encouragement, an act of acceptance, or a prayer can bring deep comfort.
  1. Jesus Expected Nothing in Return – Do We Help Unconditionally?
Jesus healed people without expecting gratitude or repayment. He said:
📖 “Freely you have received, freely give.” (Matthew 10:8)
He didn’t help to receive praise—he helped because it was in his nature.
🔹 Lesson for us: Do we help only when we expect something in return—or simply because it is the right thing to do? Unconditional love can be the greatest miracle for someone who has only experienced rejection.
How Can Our Help Be “Miraculous”?
Even if we cannot perform miracles like Jesus, we can meet people in ways that transform their lives:
✔ Practical help: Sharing food, donating clothes, visiting the lonely.
✔ Emotional support: Listening to someone, speaking words of encouragement, giving hope.
✔ Spiritual encouragement: Praying for others, showing them that God loves and does not forget them.
Often, the greatest miracle is not a supernatural healing but a person who feels seen and loved.
Because when we help as Jesus helped, we become the miracle for someone who desperately needs it.
The parable of the Good Samaritan reveals a radical truth: True neighborly love knows no boundaries. It is not limited to those we like or those from our own background—it applies to everyone in need.
  1. What Does “Who Is My Neighbor?” Mean in Our Daily Lives?
Jesus makes it clear that the real question is not “Who is my neighbor?” but “Am I a neighbor to others?”
This means: Neighborly love is a decision, not just a feeling.
✔ In the family:
  • Do I make time for my loved ones, or am I too busy?
  • Do I forgive when someone hurts me, or do I hold onto resentment?
✔ At work / school:
  • Do I notice colleagues or classmates who are ignored or excluded?
  • Do I stand up for fairness and justice, or do I remain passive?
✔ In society:
  • Do I help people in need, or do I walk past them?
  • Do I engage in social justice, or do I ignore injustice?
🔹 Our “neighbor” is not just our friend—it is also the stranger, the helpless, the difficult person, the wounded.
  1. Jesus as Our Role Model for Practical Neighborly Love
📖 “The Son of Man came to seek and save the lost.” (Luke 19:10)
✔ He saw the individual – he didn’t overlook anyone but stopped and helped.
✔ He healed not only the body but also the heart – forgiveness, acceptance, and hope were central to his message.
✔ He helped unconditionally – he expected nothing in return but gave out of love.
🔹 Are we willing to help unconditionally, as Jesus did?
  1. Neighborly Love as a Lived Faith – How Can Our Help Be “Miraculous”?
💛 Practical help: A meal, a visit, a smile—small gestures that make a big impact.
💛 Emotional support: Listening, showing compassion, not forgetting the lonely.
💛 Spiritual encouragement: Praying for someone, offering words of hope.
Because true justice is not just in words—it is in lived-out love.
👉 When we help as Jesus helped, we become the miracle for someone who desperately needs it.

True neighborly love begins when we stop asking, “Who is my neighbor?” and instead become a neighbor ourselves.           

Source: https://fulfilleddesire.net/lesson-12-love-and-justice-the-two-greatest-commandments-12-5-who-is-my-neighbor-the-god-of-love-and-justice-living-faith/

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading…

Filed Under: Adventist Sermons & Video Clips, Fulfilled Desire

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 622
  • 623
  • 624
  • 625
  • 626
  • …
  • 5005
  • Next Page »

SkyScraper

Intercer Ministry – Since 1997!

We’re on Pinterest!

Partners


The Seven Thunders Ministry

Recent Posts

  • 🌧️ Ci prepariamo a tante cose, eppure le difficoltà arrivano lo stesso.
  • CAREER OR JESUS?
  • The Lord Almighty Regins
  • 144,000 Living Without A Mediator | Michael Pedrin
  • Monday: Foolishness to Those Who Are Perishing

About Intercer

Intercer is a website with biblical materials in Romanian, English, Hungarian and other languages. We want to bring the light from God's Word to peoples homes. Intercer provides quality Christian resources...[Read More]

Lucian Web Service


Intercer is proudly sponsored by Lucian Web Service - Professional Web Services, Wordpress Websites, Marketing and Affiliate Info. Lucian worked as a subcontractor with Simpleupdates, being one of the programmers for the Adventist Church Connect software. He also presented ACC/ASC workshops... [read more]

Archives

Follow @intercer

Categories

[footer_backtotop]

Website provided by: Intercer Romania · Intercer Canada · Lucian Web Service · Privacy · Log in


%d