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Revelation 1:4
4John, to the seven assemblies that are in Asia: Grace to you and peace, from God, who is and who was and who is to come; and from the seven Spirits who are before his throne;
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Exell's Victorian homily isolates four charges against this congregation, each applicable to contemporary faith communities.
Revelation 1:4-8 draws us into mystery—truth tasted through worship, not merely analyzed—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 humbles pride—if salvation depends on you, you’re trusting the wrong savior—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 exposes pious excuses—if faith never costs power, it’s probably not liberation—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 names what we avoid: neutrality in injustice is still a choice—today, not someday.
In Revelation 1:4-8, God’s mercy is not a moment; it is a life we learn through prayer and love.
Revelation 1:4-8 traces the red thread to Jesus—He is the meaning beneath the words—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 offers a prayer-shaped life: grace received in worship, carried into ordinary days—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 confronts delay—tomorrow’s obedience is today’s disobedience—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 invites weary hearts: receive God’s promise, then take the next faithful step—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 invites stillness: in God’s presence, the soul is healed by grace—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 joins personal faith with practical holiness that touches neighbor and society—today, not someday.
If Revelation 1:4-8 feels too concrete, remember: God uses means, not vibes—today, not someday.
In Revelation 1:4-8, Jesus meets us in weakness and offers Himself as our hope—today, not someday.
In Revelation 1:4-8, hope steadies the Church—God’s promises will not fail—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 won’t let us separate altar from neighbor; communion demands compassion—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 encourages hungry hearts: ask, receive, and keep seeking God’s presence—today, not someday.
If Revelation 1:4-8 feels foreign, it may be because we’ve reduced faith to information—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 shows that God’s power is for love, not spectacle—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 encourages small-faithfulness: the peaceable way is quiet, steady, and strong—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 reminds us: God’s presence is not distant—He strengthens the weak and fills the hungry.
In Revelation 1:4-8, God meets ordinary people and turns them into carriers of hope—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 speaks hope under pressure—God hears the cry and bends history toward freedom—today, not someday.
Revelation 1:4-8 makes room for the wounded: God sees the overlooked and calls the Church to solidarity.