What do you do when justice feels delayed and life starts rewarding the loudest, not the righteous? We open Habakkuk 1 and step into a raw, unfiltered dialogue where a prophet dares to ask God why courts are crooked, violence is normal, and the faithful feel forgotten. The answer is not neat: God will use Babylon—a ruthless empire—to discipline Judah. It sounds backwards, even offensive, until we realize the larger story at play and our own habit of judging the whole book from a single page. ...
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What do you do when justice feels delayed and life starts rewarding the loudest, not the righteous? We open Habakkuk 1 and step into a raw, unfiltered dialogue where a prophet dares to ask God why courts are crooked, violence is normal, and the faithful feel forgotten. The answer is not neat: God will use Babylon—a ruthless empire—to discipline Judah. It sounds backwards, even offensive, until we realize the larger story at play and our own habit of judging the whole book from a single page. ...
Romans 13 Round Two: The Survival Guide to Surviving People
The Bible Breakdown: Daily Bible Reading
16 minutes
6 days ago
Romans 13 Round Two: The Survival Guide to Surviving People
What if the real survival guide for a chaotic world is not sharper comebacks but deeper character? We open Romans 13 and find two anchors—respect and love—that reshape how we live among people who test our patience, convictions, and hope. Rather than retreating into outrage or resignation, we walk through Paul’s call to honor legitimate authority, pay what we owe, and keep a clear conscience while remembering that God’s sovereignty is larger than any election cycle or unfair citation. From t...
The Bible Breakdown: Daily Bible Reading
What do you do when justice feels delayed and life starts rewarding the loudest, not the righteous? We open Habakkuk 1 and step into a raw, unfiltered dialogue where a prophet dares to ask God why courts are crooked, violence is normal, and the faithful feel forgotten. The answer is not neat: God will use Babylon—a ruthless empire—to discipline Judah. It sounds backwards, even offensive, until we realize the larger story at play and our own habit of judging the whole book from a single page. ...