Why do you stop praying when things start going well? You were on your knees when it hurt.
So why go silent when it’s peaceful?
Don’t wait for trouble to talk to God.
He wants to hear from you—always. Source: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/sO37JKw8_G4
Breaking Free from the All-or-Nothing Trap
God’s love isn’t earned by perfection—it’s given in our mess, right where we are. Even when we fall short, He calls us His, reminding us that we are enough because we belong to Him. #notperfect #godslove #selfacceptance #childofgod Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SL1eUlaHhdU
Andrews Alumnus Inspires Seniors to Get Active
At 73 years old, Ron du Preez, an Andrews University alumnus, pastor and lifelong advocate for healthy living, is walking and cycling his way across America. As part of his national campaign, Senior Strides, du Preez is traveling to all 50 U.S. … Source: https://adventist.news/news/andrews-alumnus-inspires-seniors-to-get-active
From Newborn to Delegate: A Family Legacy at GC Session
Jeff Fogelquist, North Pacific Union chief financial officer and first-time delegate at the 62nd General Conference Session, has a deep family history connected to this global gathering. He was just 10 days old when his parents, Gary and Debbie Fo… Source: https://adventist.news/news/from-newborn-to-delegate-a-family-legacy-at-gc-session
Inside Story: Monkeys or Church?
Inside Story for Friday 18th of July 2025
By Andrew McChesney
Monkeys threatened to destroy the crops of a family farm in Mozambique. António Cuchata received strict orders from his father to keep the monkeys away. However, António didn’t want to guard the farm on Sabbath. He recently had given his heart to Jesus in baptism, and he wanted to spend the Sabbath worshiping in a Seventh-day Adventist church.
What would António do? He prayed and went to church.
Vervet monkeys were a severe problem for small farmers in the coastal province where António and his family lived in southeastern Africa. The monkeys, with black faces and gray body hair, stood at 16 to 20 inches tall. Tribes of 10 to 70 monkeys raided small farms for cassava, sweet potatoes, beans, peanuts, and other crops.
Father worried that the family wouldn’t have food or income if the monkeys decimated their crops. He also didn’t approve of his son going to the Adventist church. He had raised António in another faith, and he didn’t understand why the boy wanted to worship on the seventh day, Sabbath. Father didn’t mind skipping worship services on Sunday to watch the farm, and he told António that he also should help on Saturdays.
António loved Father. He hadn’t planned to become a Seventh-day Adventist, but an Adventist cousin had studied the Bible with him. He had grown convinced that he needed to follow what he had learned, including the fourth commandment, “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days you shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord your God. In it you shall do no work” (Exodus 20:8-10, NKJV).
So, António knelt and prayed, “Dear God, please stop the monkeys from coming to our farm while I am at church.” Then he went to the Adventist church in Casa-Nova, located about 15 miles from the farm.
António wasn’t sure what to expect when he returned home. To his joy, the monkeys stayed away all day. He prayed and went to church the next Sabbath, and again the monkeys did not come near the farm. Every Sabbath while António lived at home, the monkeys avoided the farm while he worshiped at the church.
Father refused to acknowledge the miracle, but António was filled with gratitude to God. Even today, years later, he still marvels at God’s care.
“The monkeys also kept the Sabbath,” he said.
Pray for the gospel to be proclaimed in Mozambique and other countries in the Southern Africa-Indian Ocean Division, the recipient of this quarter’s Thirteenth Sabbath Offering.
(0)Source: https://ssnet.org/blog/25c-03-inside-story-monkeys-or-church/
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