The Lost Authority, the Sleeping Church, and the Rising Kingdom (Authority Redeemed series: 1 of 3)

Why Do We Hunger for Power?

Humanity’s Twisted Pursuit of Power

Have you ever wondered why people relentlessly pursue control—over situations, over people, over their lives? Beneath the surface of ambition, obsession, and even religious striving is something deeper: a yearning for lost authority. This craving isn’t random—it’s the echo of something once entrusted to humanity and tragically handed over in the Garden.

Made to Rule & Reign within God

“You made them rulers over the works of your hands; you put everything under their feet:” — Psalm 8:6 (NIV)

“Then God said, Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness, so that they may rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock and all the wild animals, and over all the creatures that move along the ground.” — Genesis 1:26 (NIV)

We were made for dominion, not domination. Authority, not control.
But when Adam and Eve disobeyed, they handed over the keys of rulership to the deceiver.

Instead of surrendering to God, humanity now strives to be god, clawing for control—over outcomes, others, and even God’s timing. This craving for power isn’t arbitrary—it’s the echo of Eden, distorted by the Fall.

From the beginning, God didn’t create humanity to be passive observers. He designed us in His image—as royal representatives, entrusted with governance. Dominion wasn’t about domination. It was about stewardship, rulership under God’s authority, releasing His nature into the earth.

We were meant to be image bearers, living mirrors of His glory.

The Transfer of Authority: Satan was empowered through Us

Then that devil said with Him, ‘I will offer with you all that authority, that that praise from them for therewith has been given over to me, then I give that same to whosoever I may be willing. — Luke 4:6 (2020 New Testament)

When Satan tempted Jesus in the wilderness, he made a chilling claim: the authority of the world had been delivered to him. But by whom? Certainly not by God.

Lucifer wasn’t empowered to become Satan by God. Humans gave him the authority we were entrusted with. In the garden, it wasn’t just innocence lost—it was dominion transferred. Lucifer became Satan when man yielded to his word over God’s.

Satan operates through borrowed authority—what humanity gave up in exchange for the illusion of wisdom and control.

It was Adam and Eve—through disobedience—who handed over the keys. Lucifer was not empowered by Heaven to become Satan. He was empowered by humanity’s surrender, weaponizing the very dominion God gave us. He became the “god of this world” (2 Corinthians 4:4) by inheriting authority that was never meant to be his.

The Church’s Amnesia: Forgetting Our Inheritance

“Having a resemblance of the gospel, yet that miraculous power thereof having disregarded, yet these avoid” — 2 Timothy 3:5 (2020 New Testament)

“Have you not known that we will judge angels, how much more things that pertain to this life?” — 1 Corinthians 6:3 (2020 New Testament)

Much of the Church today has become neutered, not because God stopped moving, but because we stopped believing.
We preach salvation, but avoid authority.
We worship Jesus, but forget that He is the Firstborn among many (Romans 8:29)—a prototype, not just our sacrifice.

The same Church that should be binding and loosing, healing and proclaiming, now debates whether the power of the Sacred Spirit is still active.

Closing Exhortation: Fear Not, Wake Up, Rise Up Today

God didn’t change His mind about giving humanity dominion.
He just made a way—through Jesus—for that authority to be redeemed, recovered, and reinstated through the Sacred Spirit.

It’s time for the Church to stop living as though we’re waiting for permission.
We were born again (regenerated / engendered) to carry power.
We were sealed by the Sacred Spirit to enforce the victory from within Jesus the Messiah.
We were sent to release Heaven on Earth—not just pray about it.

Seeing that therewith luminousness is being rendered apparent everything. Wherefore, he utters, ‘That one falling asleep, awaken, yet raise up out of the dead, then He will illuminate within you the Messiah — Ephesians 5:14 (2020 New Testament)

Song Connection: “Authority Redeemed”
by Blessing Others

The Authority We Lost: Why We Crave Control (Authority Redeemed series: 2 of 3)

The Craving in Us Is the Echo of Eden

Now, in every human heart, there’s a restless desire for significance, influence, and control. Why?

Because we were wired for dominion, and that nature didn’t disappear after the fall. It became distorted.

“You long for, yet you have not, you are a murderer likewise you boil with anger, yet you have not been able to have obtained, yourselves having wrangled, in fact, you are engaged in warfare. Yourselves have not by reason of yourselves to have not asked, you ask yet you receive not, on the very account that you having asked improperly, so that wherewith your desires for pleasure you might have squandered.
James 4:2-3 (2020 New Testament)

Control becomes the idol. Power becomes the prize.
But it’s all a counterfeit. The flesh reaches for what only the Spirit can restore.

We Reach When We Should Yield

The very thing we were created to hold—godly authority—can’t be seized. It must be received again through surrender. And yet the world, and even many in the Church, keep trying to take it back by effort, manipulation, or performance.

But power doesn’t come through pride. It comes through presence.

Conclusion: The Way Back Is Not Control—It’s Christ

Jesus didn’t come just to forgive us—He came to restore us. That includes our lost authority. But it won’t be reclaimed through the flesh.

The echo of Eden still calls. But only one voice leads us home.

Now He was saying with everyone, If anyone desires to have come after me, disregard one’s own interests, then take up that one’s own cross every day and follow me.
Luke 9:23 (2020 New Testament)

Reflection Question:
Are you grasping for control, or yielding to the One who gives true authority?

The Power We Forgot: Reclaiming Spirit-Filled Authority (Authority Redeemed series: 3 of 3)

Rich but Powerless?

The early Church turned the world upside down. Today, the Church often struggles to turn on the light. Why?

We’ve inherited spiritual riches beyond measure, yet many live as if we’re bankrupt of power. We’ve reduced Jesus to a moral teacher and forgotten He is our model of Spirit-filled living.

We don’t just have forgiveness. We have authority.
We don’t just follow Jesus’ teachings—we follow His Sacred Spirit.

But somewhere along the way, we forgot WHO we carry.

Jesus Wasn’t Just Redemption—He Was Our Example

Now Jesus returned from the Jordan full of that Sacred Spirit, then He was being led by that Spirit into that wilderness
Luke 4:1 (2020 New Testament)

Before His first miracle, Jesus waited on the Spirit. Though fully God, He operated as a man fully submitted to the Spirit to show us what is possible when Heaven lives in us.

He didn’t heal because He was God.
He healed because He was filled with God.

Verily, verily, I say with you, that one entrusting with me, these undertakings which I bring forth, likewise that one will bring forth, then an abundant of these that one will bring forth, because I having departed to the Father.” — John 14:12 (2020 New Testament)

That’s not poetry. That’s a Kingdom invitation.

The Promise of Power—The Spirit We’ve Been Given

“Yet you will have received miraculous power from that Sacred Spirit having come upon you, then you will have been witnesses of me both at Jerusalem and wherewith all Judea, that at Samaria, then unto the ends of the earth” — Acts 1:8 (2020 New Testament)

“Now if that Spirit from that one having raised up Jesus out of the dead dwells within you, that one having raised up the Messiah out of the dead likewise will give your mortal bodies life by the means of His Spirit dwelling within you” — Romans 8:11 (2020 New Testament)

Jesus told the disciples to wait in Jerusalem—not to be holy, but to be empowered.

Many in the Church today have the Spirit sealed in but not stirred up.
We walk like beggars when we’re sons and daughters with keys in our hands (Matthew 16:19).4. The Spirit We’ve Been Given: Heaven’s Return on Earth

Jesus never performed a miracle until the Spirit descended on Him at His baptism.
Everything He did—healing, commanding nature, casting out demons—was done as a man empowered by the Spirit, not as God flexing divinity.

And then He says to us: Wait for the same Spirit. When He comes, you’ll do even greater things.

We don’t just need to reverence Jesus, we need to follow Him—in truth, in obedience, in Spirit-led, Spirit-powered authority.

Heaven’s Order Is Upside Down—To the World

The Kingdom doesn’t come through worldly control, but through yielded vessels filled within God’s Spirit.
Heaven’s rule is upside down to earth’s standards—
power through surrender, victory through sacrifice, authority through submission.

“Let Your realm come, Your will cause to be, in that manner in Heaven likewise upon of this earth” — Matthew 6:10 (2020 New Testament)

“then He said, Of a truth I say with you, except you might have been converted then might have had caused to be in that manner these little children, you might not have ever entered into that realm of those heavens.” — Matthew 18:3 (2020 New Testament)


“It will not have been in this way among you, yet whosoever will be willing among you to have had caused to be great, will have been your servant.” — Matthew 20:26 (2020 New Testament)

Heaven’s dominion doesn’t look like earthly dominance.
It comes through servants, not emperors. Through crosses, not crowns.

True Kingdom authority isn’t about control—it’s about release.
Jesus didn’t seize power. He gave His life—and then was exalted (Philippians 2:8–9).

This is how heaven invades earth.

Why the Church Feels Powerless

“Having a resemblance of the gospel, yet that miraculous power thereof having disregarded, yet these avoid” — 2 Timothy 3:5 (2020 New Testament)

Satan doesn’t fear a well-behaved Church. He fears a Spirit-filled, awakened one. The enemy has convinced many that the power of God was for “then,” not now.

But Scripture never teaches power was seasonal.
It teaches that power is a Person—the Sacred Spirit.

When we reduce Christianity to morality, we end up with rules but no reign.

Time to Wake Up

The Spirit within you isn’t a passive presence.
He’s the resurrection power of God.

You weren’t just saved to survive.
You were filled to reign in life within Jesus the Messiah (Romans 5:17).

The Church doesn’t need to wait for revival. The Church is the revival—if we remember who we are and Whose Spirit we carry.

Reflection Questions:
Are we living as a spectator of power, or a vessel of it?

Are we viewing the Scriptures as rules or keys with Heavenly access?

Are we clothed within that nature of Jesus or do we merely wear His name?

Are we restoring God’s original intent by revealing Jesus, and releasing Heaven into the earth?

Authority Redeemed: (series recap)

  1. The distortion of human nature’s longing for power.
  2. The forfeiture of divine authority to Lucifer.
  3. The Church’s amnesia to the power it carries.
  4. The Spirit as the Restorer and Activator of true dominion.
  5. Jesus the Messiah as model—not exception—for Spirit-filled authority.

God’s Original Design – Psalm 8 & Genesis 1

Psalm 8:4–6 (NIV):

“What is mankind that you are mindful of them, human beings that you care for them? You have made them a little lower than the angels* and crowned them with glory and honor. You made them rulers over the works of your hands; you put everything under their feet:

*Or than God

Genesis 1:26–28 (NIV):

Then God said, Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness, so that they may rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock and all the wild animals, and over all the creatures that move along the ground. So God created mankind in His own image, in the image of God He created them; male and female He created them. God blessed them and said to them, Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on the ground.

Key Illumination:
Humanity was created with divine authority and dominion as image bearers of God, called to govern the earth as stewards under God’s kingship.

The Fall: Authority Transferred to Satan

Luke 4:5–6 (2020 New Testament):

Then having taken Him up, he showed to Him all those kingdoms of this world in a moment of time, then that devil said with Him, ‘I will offer with you all that authority, that that praise from them for therewith has been given over to me, then I give that same to whosoever I may be willing.

Key Insight:
This shocking statement from Satan during Jesus’ temptation confirms that authority had been “delivered / given over” to him. By whom? Adam and Eve, through sin and disobedience. Satan didn’t seize dominion—he received what man surrendered.

The Nature of Fallen Humanity: Desire for Power

Because we were originally created for authority, there’s a deep imprint in our nature to govern and steward. But without being rooted in God, this desire becomes twisted into a lust for power, control, and dominance.

James 4:1–2 (2020 New Testament):

From what source are wars yet from what source are battles among yourselves? From not this place, from your desires for pleasure of which having served wherewith your members belonging to the harlot’s body? You long for, yet you have not, you are a murderer likewise you boil with anger, yet you having not been able to have obtained, yourselves having wrangled, in fact, you are engaged in warfare. Yourselves have not by reason of yourselves to have not asked.

Ecclesiastes 3:11 (NIV):

“He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart; yet no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end.”
This includes a longing for divine purpose, influence, and eternal significance—but without the influence of the Sacred Spirit, these yearnings turn inward and selfish.

Jesus the Messiah Restored Authority Through the Cross

Matthew 28:18 (2020 New Testament):

Then Jesus having approached talked with them saying, All authority has been granted to me in Heaven and upon this earth.

Colossians 2:15 (2020 New Testament):

“Having had plundered those magistrates, in fact, those powers of authority He exhibited without concealment, wherewith having caused to triumph over them.

Ephesians 1:20–23 (2020 New Testament):

Which was effectual with the Messiah having raised Him up out of the dead, yet having made to sit down at the right hand of Him in those heavenly regions, above any chief priest, yet of an authority over mankind yet from power, likewise of one who possesses dominion, yet of any authority being professed not only in this world, yet likewise with that one intending, then all things He put under His feet, yet He made Him the head over all in the church, which same is His body, that fulfilling of that having made complete all those things wherewith all those things.

Our Redeemer with Redemption:
Jesus the Messiah reclaimed the dominion humanity lost and shares it with those in Him—a restored authority rooted in love and submission, not control or domination.

Our Restored Role within Jesus the Messiah

Romans 5:17 (2020 New Testament):

No doubt, if by which an offense of that one death reigned on account of that one, with a much greater degree those a superabundance of that graciousness, then from that justification from that gratuity receiving wherewith life, they will reign within of that one, Jesus the Messiah.

Revelation 5:10 (2020 New Testament):

In fact, you brought forth therewith a realm within our God, likewise priests, then they will rule upon of this earth.

Final Reflection: We are not called to seek worldly power, but to reign within Jesus the Messiah—by laying down our lives, walking in the influence of the Sacred Spirit, and stewarding what He gives us.

True dominion is restored through daily surrender and on-going submission.

The Only “Source” (The-Only series: 1 of 14)


Discovering the Matchless Majesty of God

Since by the means of Him, yet within Him, yet with Him all those things, in His glory, in those eons, of a truth.
Romans 11:36 (2020 New Testament)

“The-Only” series has been brought forth from something the Lord showed me several years ago which is: I had spent most of life placing my signature on His painting. Giving Him verbal credit for life’s blessings and accomplishments, yet my heart was a great way off. Heart problems my intellect could not detect. The difference between products of accomplishment vs. results of obedience. Pride vs. Surrender. Earthly deeds vs. Heavenly undertakings.
There’s something inside all of us that longs to create, to build, to bring something new into the world. We dream of starting a business, launching a ministry, releasing an album, or writing a book. But beneath even the purest of intentions, we sometimes find ourselves caught in a deeper pursuit—not just of goodness or excellence, but of being the only. The original. The incomparable.

This desire to build something unique is not wrong—it reflects the divine image we bear. But when that desire becomes a means of significance apart from God, it distorts. It moves from being creative to being competitive. From inspiration to striving. From reflection to comparison. From worship to self-worth.

And yet: there is only One true Source. One who originated all things—breath, beauty, time, purpose. He is not just first in a line of options—He is the Only.

Devotional Insight

This single verse contains the entire story of the universe: by the means of Him—He is the origin. Within Him—He is the means and sustainer. In Him—He is the goal and the end.

Everything comes from God. Every cell in your body. Every ray of light across the cosmos. Every sound of music, every spark of creativity, every law of nature.

The breath in your lungs right now? From Him.

The neurons firing in your brain? Through Him.

The very purpose for your life? To Him.

When we forget this, we start building towers instead of temples. We create identities instead of surrendering to His. We chase visibility, fearing we’ll be forgotten. But being connected to the Source means we don’t have to generate our own glory. We simply reflect His.

And here’s the beauty: when we let go of our need to be the only, we find rest in worshiping the One who already is.

Reflection Question

What are you building right now that needs to be surrendered back to the Source?
Where have you started striving instead of abiding?

Prayer Activation

Dear Lord, You are the beginning of all things—my life, my dreams, my identity. I surrender the parts of me that have been striving to prove or produce apart from You. Help me return to You as my Only Source. Let every idea, every effort, every undertaking, every breath be from You, through You, and unto You—for Your glory alone. Amen.

Song Connection: “The-Only”
by Blessing Others

The Only “Deliverer” (The-Only series: 2 of 14)


Returning to the God Who Alone Is Worthy of Praise

Yet there is not by anyone else deliverance, for there is not even another nature which having been offered under Heaven with individuals within which it is necessary ourselves to have been delivered.
Acts 4:12 (2020 New Testament)

We live in a world overflowing with solutions.
Need healing? There’s a program.
Need peace? There’s a podcast.
Need success? There’s a step-by-step system for that.
Our culture is saturated with self-help tools, wellness strategies, and “savior substitutes.”

But none of them—no matter how well-intentioned—can save your soul.

At the heart of every human is a longing for redemption: to be made whole, to be known and forgiven, to be rescued from sin and shame. And while the world offers hundreds of pathways and ideologies, the Gospel is clear: there is Only One Savior, One Redeemer, One Deliverer, One Messiah. His name is Jesus.

He’s not one of many. He’s not just the best option. He is the Only Way.

Devotional Insight

This declaration was made by Peter in the face of religious leaders who wanted to silence the name of Jesus. He didn’t shrink back. He didn’t water it down. He spoke the truth boldly: no one else can save.

Not religion. Not effort. Not knowledge.
Not your background, your performance, or your pain.

Only Jesus.

And this deliverance isn’t abstract—it’s deeply personal. He stepped into our brokenness. He bore our sin. He died our death. And He rose in victory. That is not something anyone else has done or can ever do. The cross was not symbolic—it was sacrificial. It was complete.

The world may offer comfort, inspiration, or even imitation. But only Jesus the Messiah offers rescue.

Reflection Question

Where in your life have you looked to something or someone else to save, fix, or validate you?
Have you truly received Jesus not just as a savior, but as your only Savior?


Prayer Activation

Dear Jesus, You alone can save. You are not one of many—you are the Only One who gave Your life for me. Forgive me for trusting in lesser things to rescue what only You can redeem. I surrender every part of me to Your saving grace. Be my Savior. Be my Lord. Be my Only. Amen.

The Only “Sustainer” (The-Only series: 3 of 14)


Discovering the Matchless Majesty of God

Yet Himself is superior of all, yet all those things He has united within Him, yet Himself is the head of that body, that church, which is that commencement, the first brought forth out of the dead, so that He might have had caused to be in everything Himself being first.”
Colossians 1:17-18 (2020 New Testament)

It’s easy to believe in God as the Creator—He formed the stars, He spoke the world into motion. But we often forget something just as vital: He didn’t walk away after creating it. He didn’t step back and let the world spin on its own.

He’s not only the Maker. He’s the Maintainer. The Upholder. The Breath-Giver. The Bond that holds every cell, every law of gravity, every heartbeat, every atom, every unseen particle together.

And when life feels fragile—when our minds are overwhelmed, our emotions frayed, our plans uncertain—it’s not our strength that sustains us. It is His.

Devotional Insight

Paul wrote these words to remind the church of one breathtaking truth: Jesus is not just foundational—He is continual. He didn’t just launch creation; He is holding every molecule, every heartbeat, every soul in place at this very moment.

Your lungs are filling right now because He is sustaining them.
Your mind is processing these words because He is upholding your being.
The planet is rotating on its axis—not by chance, but by the unceasing word of God.

And this is not only true at a physical level. He sustains our spiritual lives, our trust, our purpose, our peace. When we try to hold it all together ourselves, we end up exhausted, anxious, and afraid. But when we let Him hold us together, we learn what it means to rest within His power, not our performance.

The One who sustains the stars can sustain you.

Reflection Question

Where in your life are you trying to hold everything together by your own strength?
What would change if you truly trusted God to sustain you?

Prayer Activation

Lord Jesus, I confess that I’ve tried to carry things You’ve already offered to hold. You alone hold all things together—including me. I surrender my need to control, to manage, to sustain. I rest within Your strength. Be the center, the anchor, the Sustainer of my life in all areas. Amen.

The Only “Name” (The-Only series: 4 of 14)


Returning to the God Who Alone Is Worthy of Praise

Wherefore then God exalted Him, then having granted with Him that nature which superior to any nature, that within that Nature of Jesus, every knee might have bowed of those heavenly, yet of those worldly, yet of those under the earth, then every tongue might have had acknowledged the Lord Jesus the Messiah wherefore that glory from God our Father.
Philippians 2:9–11 (2020 New Testament)

Names carry meaning. They tell a story, hold a reputation, build a legacy. In our world, names are attached to brands, to status, to family lineage. And for many of us, we’ve spent years trying to make a name for ourselves—through our work, our titles, our talents, or even our platforms.

But there is one name and nature that rises above them all. A name and nature that has never been built by human hands but revealed by divine glory. A name and nature that has never faded with time, never lost power, and never failed in purpose.

That name and nature has been granted to Jesus the Messiah, exalted above every name in heaven and on earth.

It is the Only Name worthy. It is the Only Nature pure.

Devotional Insight

Jesus, who humbled Himself to the point of death on a cross, is now exalted to the highest place. And with that exaltation came the Name above all names—a name rooted in the holiness of YHWH, the eternal I AM (Exodus 3:14). This is not just a title—it’s a declaration of identity.

Names in Scripture aren’t ornamental—they’re revelatory. And when we proclaim the name of Jesus, we’re not just speaking hope or comfort. We are declaring the power and presence of God Himself.

This is the name and nature that heals.
The name and nature that saves.
The name and nature that demons flee from.
The name and nature that calms storms and raises the dead.
The name and nature that every knee will bow to—whether willingly in worship or inevitably in judgment.

The world is full of names we chase. But only one name can carry the weight of eternity.

Reflection Question

What names have you elevated in your heart above Jesus—your own, others’, or cultural idols?
Do you truly live as if Jesus’ name is the highest in your life?

Prayer Activation

Dear Jesus, Your name is above every name. Please clothe me within Your nature. Thank you for forgiving me for the ways I’ve sought to exalt my own name or the names of others. I reverently bow before You—in awe with humble gratitude. May Your name be lifted high in every part of my life—my words, my thoughts, all undertakings, my worship. Amen.

The Only “Rest” (The-Only series: 5 of 14)


Discovering the Matchless Majesty of God

Come to this place within Me all those being wearied and having been overburdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you then learn from Me, for I am meek and humble within that heart, then you will find rest for your souls, for my yoke is useful, yet my invoice is light.
Matthew 11:28-30 (2020 New Testament)

We live in a culture obsessed with hustle. We’re constantly moving—physically, mentally, emotionally—checking boxes, meeting deadlines, chasing after productivity. Even in our spiritual lives, we often carry the pressure to “do more,” “be more,” or “prove more.”

But all of this striving leaves us weary, fragmented, and hollow.

There is a kind of rest that no vacation can provide. A rest deeper than sleep. A soul rest. And there is only One who offers it.

He doesn’t say, “Try harder.”
He says, “Come to Me.”
He is the Only Rest.

Devotional Insight

Jesus extends a sacred invitation—not to the successful or the strong, but to the weary. He doesn’t offer escape from work, but peace within it. He doesn’t promise a burden-free life, but a burden shared with Him—a yoke that is light because it’s carried in union within the One who is rest Himself.

So many of us live with internal pressure to perform, to compare, to meet invisible standards we were never meant to carry. But rest is not found in completion—it’s found in communion. It’s not the result of finishing everything; it’s the result of being with the One who finished it all.

Rest is not a reward. It’s a person.

When we come to Jesus—not to a task, not to a formula—we find the only rest that satisfies.

Reflection Question

What burdens are you carrying that Jesus never asked you to bear?
Where is He inviting you to trade striving for surrender?

Prayer Activation

Dear Jesus, I come to You. I lay down the weight of perfection pursuit, performance, and pressure. You are my rest—not just on the Sabbath, but every moment. Teach my heart to abide within You. Always entrusting You fully. Let my soul breathe again within the stillness of Your love. Amen.

The Only “Redeemer” (The-Only series: 6 of 14)


Returning to the God Who Alone Is Worthy of Praise

This is what the Lord says—Israel’s King and Redeemer, the Lord Almighty: I am the first and I am the last; apart from me there is no God.”
— Isaiah 44:6 (NIV)

We all carry stories—of brokenness, regret, sin, shame, and loss. Sometimes, they’re the result of our own choices. Other times, they’re the scars of what was done to us. Either way, the ache is the same: Can this be restored? Can this be made new? Can God use a person like me?

We try to move on, to rewrite our past through productivity or performance, but deep down, we long not just for healing—we long for redemption.

We don’t need a do-over or a second chance in life, we need a Clean Slate.

And there is only One who can take what’s been lost, broken, or shattered and make it whole again.
Only One who paid the price not just to forgive, but to restore.
He is the Only Redeemer.

Devotional Insight

To redeem means to buy back, to reclaim, to restore value to what has been lost or broken. In the Old Testament, God is called Israel’s Redeemer because He constantly rescued them from slavery, exile, and spiritual rebellion—not because they deserved it, but because He loved them.

In the New Testament, we see this fulfilled within Jesus the Messiah, who gave His life as a ransom for many (Mark 10:45). He didn’t just forgive our sins—He reclaimed our purpose. He didn’t just patch up the broken pieces—He made all things new.

You don’t need to redeem yourself. You can’t.

Jesus already paid the price with His blood to redeem your past, your pain, your identity.
And the beauty of redemption is this: what the enemy meant for evil, God now uses for glory.

Reflection Question

What areas of your life still feel too broken to redeem?
Have you surrendered those places fully to Jesus the Messiah, the Only Redeemer?

Prayer Activation

Dear Lord, thank You that You are not just the God who forgives, but the One who redeems. I give You the pieces of my past—the wounds, the sins, the shame, the mistakes—and ask You to do what only You can do. Reclaim what was lost. Restore what was broken. Redeem it all for Your glory. Amen.