Spiritual Surf Wear

Spiritual Surf Wear Put God 1st & Use your Gifts! Inspired Artist, Lisa Hornor's silk screened high quality tees and tanks. FREE SHIPPING Shop https://spiritualsurfwear.com

Proverbs 31:26“She speaks with wisdom, and faithful instruction is on her tongue.”
05/10/2026

Proverbs 31:26
“She speaks with wisdom, and faithful instruction is on her tongue.”

The Day You Stop Pretending Is the Day You Start Living Blog by Lisa Hornor, Artist and Devika Vishwakarma “Being the ea...
05/09/2026

The Day You Stop Pretending Is the Day You Start Living
Blog by Lisa Hornor, Artist and Devika Vishwakarma

“Being the easy one” comes with a hidden cost. People rely on you, but rarely pause to ask how you’re really doing. You adjust, you agree, and you keep things smooth for everyone around you.

But over time, your own needs start to fade into the background. It becomes harder to speak up or even notice what you feel. And quietly, you begin to wonder if anyone truly sees you.

The Quiet Exhaustion of People Pleasing

People pleasing doesn’t always look obvious. It looks like smiling when you’re overwhelmed. Saying “I’m fine” when you’re not. Being there for everyone, while quietly feeling unseen yourself.

It feels like carrying a weight no one else notices.

You may look okay on the outside, but inside, there’s a tiredness that doesn’t go away. Because pretending, no matter how gentle, disconnects you from who you really are.

“What does it profit a man to gain the whole world, yet forfeit his soul?” — Mark 8:36

You can have everyone’s approval… and still feel empty within.

God Sees the Real You

Here’s the truth your heart needs to hear—you don’t have to perform for God. You don’t have to be the “perfect” version of yourself. You don’t have to hide your emotions, soften your truth, or make yourself smaller to be accepted.

God sees the parts of you that you keep hidden. The tears you don’t show. The thoughts you don’t say out loud.

And there is where you’re met.

“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.” — Psalm 34:18 You are already known. Already loved. Just as you are.

The Moment You Start Listening Within

There comes a quiet shift—maybe you’ve already felt it.

A moment where saying “yes” feels heavier than saying “no.” A moment where staying silent feels more painful than speaking up.

It’s subtle, but it’s powerful. It’s your soul trying to come back to you.

“Be still, and know that I am God.” — Psalm 46:10

In the stillness, you begin to hear what you’ve been ignoring. Not the noise of expectations… but the truth God has been gently placing in your heart.

Choosing Truth Over Approval

The first time you choose yourself, it might feel uncomfortable.

You might say no to something you would’ve once agreed to. You might express how you really feel, even if your voice shakes. And yes, it may feel unfamiliar. But it will also feel… right.

“Am I now trying to win the approval of human beings, or of God?” — Galatians 1:10

That question changes everything.

Because when you start living for God instead of people, you stop chasing approval—and start walking in peace.

Living as Your True Self

As you begin to let go of pretending, something beautiful happens.

You start showing up as you really are. Your words feel more honest. Your relationships feel more real. Your heart feels lighter.

Even in small, personal ways, you begin to express your faith and identity more freely—whether it’s through prayer, quiet reflection, or something simple like choosing spiritual tshirts from Spiritual Surf Wear that reflect what you believe, or connecting with art like a Gabriel angel drawing that reminds you of protection and presence.

These aren’t just outward things. They are reflections of an inner shift—you are no longer hiding.

You Don’t Have to Be Who They Expect

Not everyone will understand your change. Some people may prefer the version of you that always said yes, always adjusted, always stayed quiet.

But you are not here to be what others expect.

You are here to be who God created you to be.

“Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” — Romans 12:2

You are allowed to grow beyond the version of yourself that was built on approval.

A Gentle Truth to Hold On To

You don’t have to keep pretending to be okay. You don’t have to keep shrinking to fit into spaces that don’t honor you. You don’t have to keep living a life that doesn’t feel like yours.

God is not asking you to be perfect. Just be real and truthful with yourself.

Because the day you stop pretending… Is the day your soul exhales. Your faith deepens and the day your life begins to feel like it truly belongs to you.

And that is where real living begins.

https://spiritualsurfwear.com

God inspired art on spiritual men’s t shirts and tanks designed with original wave art and line drawings of Wisdom and God Almighty paintings, silk screened onto 100% cotton assorted styles to fit your lifestyle! Breathable and very comfortable.

04/09/2026

Hi hope you are well! Here are some of Lisa Hornor's spiritual art collection silk screened on ready to wear apparel made in California
Check it out and please go check out our blogs on
https://spiritualsurfwear.com

Beyond the Clock: When a Day Becomes EternityBlog by Lisa Hornor, artist and Devika VishwakarmaHave you ever paused mid-...
04/05/2026

Beyond the Clock: When a Day Becomes Eternity
Blog by Lisa Hornor, artist and Devika Vishwakarma

Have you ever paused mid-rush, breathless and overwhelmed, and wondered how one moment can feel both fleeting and endless? One morning, it hit me: our human sense of time is so limited. We measure life in deadlines and appointments, yet God’s perspective stretches far beyond comprehension. What feels like a lifetime to us might be but a heartbeat to Him. Understanding this timelessness changes everything—how we wait, how we trust, how we live.

The Eternal Now
Scripture reveals something mind-bending about God’s relationship with time. 2 Peter 3:8 — “With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day.”

Sit with that for a moment. Every delay you experience, every season of waiting, every unexpected change—they are all instantaneous in God’s eternal view. A month of uncertainty is a blink to Him. A year of struggle is a breath.

This does not mean your pain is insignificant. It means your pain exists within a larger story, one where God sees the beginning and the end simultaneously. Imagine the freedom of releasing control over every minute, trusting that God operates on a scale we cannot yet comprehend.

Nature’s Patient Rhythm
Look outside your window. Trees grow slowly, rivers carve paths over centuries, yet everything follows God’s rhythm. The sunrise and sunset. The tides. The migration patterns of birds. All echo a divine timing that transcends human impatience.

I watched a river once, flowing steadily over smooth stones. It took thousands of years to shape those stones. The river did not rush. It did not stress. It simply flowed, trusting the pattern God embedded in creation.

We could learn from that river. What if we stopped fighting the pace of our lives and started trusting the One who set the rhythm?

Sacred Seconds, Eternal Impact
Every encounter, every decision, holds weight beyond what you can see. Ecclesiastes 3:1 — “There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens.”

I remember an afternoon conversation with a stranger at a coffee shop. We talked for maybe twenty minutes. But those minutes shifted my perspective on forgiveness in a way years of introspection had not. That casual encounter was not random—it was divine timing.

Who have you met recently? What seemingly small moments might carry more significance than you realize? When we view time through God’s eyes, ordinary seconds become sacred. A kind word. A shared smile. A listening ear. These ripple into eternity in ways we may never fully understand.

Waiting Is Not Wasting
Patience tests us. Waiting stretches us. But neither is wasted time. Psalm 27:14 — “Wait for the Lord; be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord.”

The word “wait” here is not passive. It is active, expectant trust. David understood that waiting draws us closer to God and teaches us to be patient in ways nothing else can.
I waited months for an answer to prayer once. Every day felt longer than the last. But looking back, I see how that period prepared me for greater responsibilities. The waiting shaped my character, deepened my faith, and taught me dependence on God.

What if your waiting season is not a delay but a divine preparation? What if God is building something in you that can only be formed in the quiet space of patience?

Surrendering the Illusion of Control
We plan our schedules with precision, yet life unfolds in ways we cannot predict. Proverbs 16:9 — “In their hearts humans plan their course, but the Lord establishes their steps.”

I once carefully planned a move, down to every detail. Nothing went as expected. Initially frustrating, the detour led to meaningful work and friendships I never would have found otherwise.

How often do we resist detours that could bring spiritual growth? Surrendering control opens doors to God’s purpose and timing. It reminds us that while clocks mark seconds, God orchestrates life on a scale that transcends human measurement.

Suffering as a Teacher
Hardship feels endless when you are in it. Yet those seasons often shape us most profoundly. Romans 5:3-4 — “Not only so, but we also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.”

Paul is not suggesting we celebrate pain. He is revealing a process: tribulation produces perseverance, which builds character, which births hope. Suffering is not random—it is purposeful, a tool in God’s hands for our good.

I have walked through seasons that felt unbearably slow. Days dragged. Pain lingered. But those periods forged resilience in me that comfort never could. They taught me to trust God when I could not see the outcome.

Could the challenges in your life be shaping you in ways you cannot yet see? Understanding God’s timeless perspective transforms how we endure hardship. Each difficulty becomes a chapter in the story God is writing for eternity.

Daily Devotion, Eternal Connection
Small, consistent practices anchor us in God’s rhythm. Psalm 5:3 — “In the morning, Lord, you hear my voice; in the morning I lay my requests before you and wait expectantly.”

I dedicate short moments each morning and evening to listen. Sometimes it is 3 minutes. Sometimes less. But those moments ground my day in divine presence. I often find insights that influence my choices and priorities.

Could setting aside intentional moments align your life more closely with God’s purpose? Small steps create enduring spiritual habits. The repetition mirrors God’s own constancy beyond time.

Relationships as Sacred Time
People are not interruptions—they are opportunities. Ecclesiastes 4:9-10 — “Two are better than one, because they have a good return for their labor: If either of them falls down, one can help the other up.”

I treasure moments spent listening to friends, encouraging coworkers, helping neighbors. These interactions often become lessons in empathy and patience. Sometimes I realize later that what seemed like a casual conversation was God’s appointment, perfectly timed.

Could the people around you be part of God’s timing in your life or theirs? Treating relationships as sacred aligns our human time with His eternal plan. Small acts of love ripple through eternity in ways we may never fully see.

The Gift of Rest
Rest is not laziness. It is obedience. Exodus 20:8-10 — “Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. Six days you shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is a sabbath to the Lord your God.”

God did not need rest after creating the world, yet He modeled it for us. Pausing for intentional rest restores perspective and connects us with God’s timing.

I carve out moments of reflection, prayer, and simply enjoying nature. These pauses provide clarity and renewal. Could you embrace rest as a way to live in rhythm with God’s timelessness? Observing rest enriches both spirit and body.

Even brief pauses throughout the day can become sacred. A quiet breath before a meeting. A moment of gratitude during lunch. A prayer before sleep. These small rests remind us that God is working even when we stop.

Decisions Through Eternity’s Lens
Every choice interacts with time in spiritual ways. Galatians 6:9 — “Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.”

Small actions—offering kindness, speaking truth, helping quietly—extend beyond immediate consequences into eternity. I helped an elderly neighbor with groceries once. It took fifteen minutes. But those minutes became a weekly rhythm, and that rhythm became friendship.

Could viewing decisions through eternity’s lens inspire more thoughtful living? Recognizing time as sacred reframes priorities and motivates intentional action. Each day provides countless moments where your choices reflect faith, love, and obedience.

Life as a Canvas
Each day is an opportunity for God to create beauty in your life. James 4:14 — “What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes.”

This truth is not meant to discourage but to awaken. Your life is brief and precious. Seemingly ordinary moments—a quiet morning, a walk in nature, a short prayer—can hold profound meaning.

Are you noticing these opportunities for reflection and connection? Treating daily life as a canvas allows God to reveal lessons, grace, and purpose in simple ways. Even routine tasks like cooking a meal or helping a neighbor become moments infused with spiritual significance.

The Seasons of Your Soul
Time brings change, and each season carries lessons. Just as nature cycles through spring, summer, fall, and winter, so do our lives.

Spring brings new beginnings. Summer brings growth. Fall brings harvest and reflection. Winter brings rest and preparation. Each phase serves a purpose. Fighting against your current season only creates frustration. Embracing it opens the door to what God wants to teach you.
What season are you in right now? Can you trust that it is exactly where you need to be, even if it does not feel comfortable?

The Eternal Woven Into Today
Understanding God’s timelessness invites you to live fully in the present while trusting His eternal plan. Every moment, conversation, and choice can reflect His divine purpose.

Symbols of faith, can remind you daily that your life exists within a greater, timeless narrative. Each day is an opportunity to align with God’s rhythm, invest in relationships, embrace rest, and practice patience.

The most beautiful art is the life you are living right now—this very moment, with all its ordinary glory and sacred potential.

A thousand years to God is as a single day. Let your life reflect His eternal perspective and your faith in action. Every choice, every hour, every encounter can honor the timeless Creator who holds all moments in His hands. Time is not your enemy. It is your canvas, and God is painting something beautiful, one sacred second at a time.
✝️☮️☀️

In the Stillness of Good Friday, Find God’s Grace Blog by Lisa Hornor artist  and Devika VishkaswarmaGood Friday marks t...
04/03/2026

In the Stillness of Good Friday, Find God’s Grace
Blog by Lisa Hornor artist and Devika Vishkaswarma

Good Friday marks the pivotal moment in Christian history when Jesus Christ endured immense suffering and gave His life for the redemption of humankind. It is a day that invites us into stillness, reflection, and deep gratitude. As we pause and consider His sacrifice, it’s essential to recognize that in the quiet moments of contemplation, God’s grace is present. This grace is not a distant hope, but a present reality, available for us to experience right now. It’s a reminder that in our stillness, God’s grace is always with us, guiding us, and offering peace.

The Bible offers many verses that speak to the present reality of God’s grace. One such verse is found in 2 Corinthians 12:9, where Paul writes, “But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me.” It’s in moments of quietness, vulnerability, and reflection much like the stillness of Good Friday that we can fully understand the sufficiency of God’s grace. This grace is available for us in the present, and it is in our moments of weakness that it shines the brightest.

The Significance of Good Friday: A Day of Reflection

Good Friday, often accompanied by somber reflections, calls us to pause and look inward. The day commemorates the ultimate act of selfless love when Jesus took on the pain and suffering of the world. It’s a time for us to acknowledge the depth of His sacrifice, yet also to recognize that this sacrifice is not in the past, but something that continues to affect us today. We are called to live in the present, in the light of His grace.

In Mark 15:37-39, we read, “With a loud cry, Jesus breathed his last. The curtain of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom. And when the centurion, who stood there in front of Jesus, saw how he died, he said, ‘Surely this man was the Son of God!’” The tearing of the temple curtain symbolizes that, through Jesus’ sacrifice, the separation between humanity and God was removed. Through this act, we gain access to God’s grace in the present. We no longer need to wait for future moments of grace; it is here now, available to us.

In the Quiet, God’s Presence Meets Us

The stillness of Good Friday can also offer us a unique opportunity to hear God’s voice. We often spend our days rushing, distracted by the demands of the world. But on Good Friday, we are invited to step away from the noise and find God’s presence in the quiet. It’s in these quiet moments that we can experience the fullness of His grace, not as something to be earned, but as a gift freely given.

Psalm 46:10 reminds us, “Be still, and know that I am God.” In the stillness, we find the ability to hear God’s voice, to experience His grace, and to receive peace. The world around us may be filled with noise, but in the quiet moments of reflection on Good Friday, we can rest in the assurance that God is with us.

In these moments, God’s grace isn’t something far away or distant; it’s a present reality that can be experienced right now. His love and sacrifice are not bound by time—they are available to us each day, particularly when we stop to reflect, as we do on Good Friday.

Living in the Present: Letting Go of the Past

One of the most powerful aspects of Good Friday is that it offers us the opportunity to let go of our past. Jesus bore the weight of our sins on the cross, so we no longer have to carry the burden of guilt and shame. His sacrifice allows us to experience freedom from the past, making space for grace in the present.

In Philippians 3:13-14, Paul writes, “Brothers and sisters, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.” This verse is a reminder that the past does not define us. Good Friday calls us to release the weight of past mistakes and regrets. Through Jesus’ death, we are free to move forward in God’s grace.

The present moment is all we truly have, and it is in this moment that we experience God’s grace. As we let go of the past, we can fully engage with the present, living in the freedom that Christ won for us. Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross is a continuous source of grace, offering us peace and healing for today.

Grace in Our Suffering: Finding Hope in the Present

Good Friday also provides us with a way to find hope and grace in the midst of suffering. As Jesus experienced immense suffering on the cross, He did not do so in vain. He endured pain for our sake, so that we could find hope in our suffering. His sacrifice reassures us that even in our most difficult moments, God’s grace is sufficient to see us through.

In Romans 8:18, Paul writes, “I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us.” This verse offers a perspective shift: our present struggles are temporary, but the grace we receive through Christ is eternal. Good Friday calls us to look at suffering not as a punishment but as a place where God’s grace can enter and transform us.

When we face hardship, it can be easy to lose sight of God’s grace. However, Jesus’ sacrifice reminds us that we are never alone in our suffering. His grace meets us where we are, giving us the strength to endure and the hope that, even in the hardest moments, God’s love will prevail.

Reflecting on God’s Grace in the Present

As we reflect on Good Friday, it’s important to remember that the grace we receive is not just for a distant future. God’s grace is available in the present moment. His sacrifice on the cross allows us to experience forgiveness, peace, and freedom every day. The call to live in the present is a call to live in His grace.

Hebrews 4:16 encourages us: “Let us then approach God’s throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.” No matter where we are in life or what challenges we face, God’s grace is available to us now. It is not something we have to wait for or earn; it is a gift that we can accept and experience today.

A Life Transformed by Grace:

As we go through life, we are called to remember the grace we’ve received. When we live in the present, with the grace of God guiding us, we can find peace, hope, and strength in every circumstance.

Walking in God’s Grace Every Day

Good Friday reminds us of the deep sacrifice that Jesus made for us. His pain and suffering were not in vain; they opened the door for us to experience God’s grace today. As we reflect on His sacrifice, we are reminded that grace is not a distant promise it is a present reality.

In the stillness of Good Friday, we are called to find God’s grace, not in the past or in some distant future, but in the present moment. Let us live each day in the freedom and peace that His grace offers. As we reflect on this day, Let it remind us that we are clothed in God’s grace, empowered to live fully in the present, and to share His love with the world

04/01/2026
Love: The Origin and the Eternal One💫⭐️Blog by Lisa Hornor artist and Devika VishwakarmaThe world speaks endlessly about...
03/17/2026

Love: The Origin and the Eternal One💫⭐️
Blog by Lisa Hornor artist and Devika Vishwakarma

The world speaks endlessly about love. It writes songs about it, builds stories around it, searches for it in relationships, and mourns when it seems to disappear. Love is often reduced to emotion — something we fall into, something we feel intensely, something that either grows or fades depending on circumstances. But if love can fade, was it ever the fullness of love to begin with? If it can be lost so easily, was it truly eternal?

To understand love, we must ask a deeper question than how it feels. We must ask where it came from.

The Origin of Love

Love did not originate in human emotion. It was not created by poetry or discovered through romance. Before there were marriages, before there were families, before there was even breath in human lungs, Love already existed. Scripture reveals something profound: God is Love. Not that it was learned. Not that it was developed. Not that the One choose it occasionally. The true nature of Love is God. It is not something that does — it is the true essense of the One Creator.

If God is Love, then love is not unstable. It is not temporary. It is not dependent on moods or seasons. It is as eternal as God. When Ephesians speaks of being rooted and grounded in love, it reveals that love is meant to anchor us, not merely move us emotionally. Roots grow in unseen places, deep beneath the surface. They hold steady when winds rise and storms press against the branches. To be rooted in love is to be rooted in God — to draw life from, to remain steady because the One remains steady.

Why We Love

Why does the human heart long so deeply for connection, devotion, and belonging? We love because we were created by Love. The imprint of our Creator rests within us. Even in a broken world, there is a memory within the soul of something pure and eternal. We search for love because we were formed by it. We crave it because it is woven into our origin.

Yet the world often confuses love with desire. It confuses it with chemistry, excitement, or temporary affection. Scripture offers a different vision. In 1 Corinthians, love is described not as a rush of feeling but as a posture of being. It is patient. It is kind. It does not envy. It does not boast. It does not keep record of wrongs. It endures. It hopes. It remains. These are not merely moral instructions; they are revelations of God’s own character. The One is patient with us beyond measure. The Almighty is kind even when we are unaware of this kindness. God does not treat us as our failures deserve. The Creator endures our wandering and remains faithful when we are not.

What Love Requires

This is why love requires more than emotion. Love requires surrender. It requires discipline. It requires the willingness to lay down pride, to forgive when it costs something, to remain when it would be easier to withdraw. The world teaches that love is something we fall into. God reveals that love is something we choose to walk in. It is covenant, not convenience. It is obedience, not impulse. It is surrender, not self-preservation.

To love truly is to lose something of ourselves — not our identity, but our ego. It means choosing humility over dominance. It means vulnerability over control. It means giving without demanding repayment. This is not weakness; it is spiritual strength. Love stretches the soul beyond selfish boundaries. It teaches us to reflect the One in whose image we were made.

The Ultimate Expression of Love

The ultimate expression of Love is not found in human romance but in divine sacrifice. God did not merely speak of love; He demonstrated it. The Creator entered creation. The Holy One bore suffering. The Innocent carried guilt. This was not an emotional impulse. It was eternal intention. From the beginning, the names of God have revealed this redemptive heart — Provider, Healer, Shepherd, Righteousness, Peace. Each name tells a story of Love moving toward humanity, not away from it. Love willing to descend so that we might be lifted.

This is why love never fails. Human expressions of love may falter, but the Source does not. Faith will one day become sight. Hope will one day be fulfilled. But love remains because God remains. It is infinite. It is unchanging. It is not extinguished by rejection or diminished by time.

Living Rooted in Love

When we begin to understand this, love stops being something we chase emotionally and becomes something we live intentionally. It becomes a daily surrender. A quiet obedience. A steady devotion. It reshapes how we speak, how we forgive, how we endure. It calls us higher than our feelings and deeper than our fears.

Love is not a season. It is not a cultural theme. It is not a fleeting experience.

Love is the eternal nature of God.

And sometimes, even simple reminders in our daily lives help us stay anchored in that truth — whether through prayer, scripture, or quiet reflections that point our hearts back to the One. Spaces like spiritualsurfwear.com exist as small reminders that faith is not meant to stay hidden in private moments, but to be lived, carried, and remembered daily.

In the end, Love is not something we define.

It is Someone we return to.

And in returning to God Almighty, we discover that Love has always been the beginning, the center, and the everlasting infinity.



See more at https://spiritualsurfwear.com

I AM is The Almighty bigger than the universe came not for a certain group but for the people of all religions of the wh...
03/16/2026

I AM is The Almighty bigger than the universe came not for a certain group but for the people of all religions of the whole world! Don’t get it mistaken -Just believe!
And know you are enough Just as you are! Hope you like our blog: who we are:

We are Spiritual SurfWear
by Lisa Hornor, artist

Spiritual SurfWear

Who are we? We are warriors

of God The Almighty, I AM, who is

The power of the Holy Spirit

The respect of the Almighty.

We live for the Glory

To receive the Lord and be forgiven and be absolved of the world’s sins

Jesus says, “My peace passes ALL understanding.” God is Love

We go before the cross

The blood that was given up for us.

So that ALL sins for All people, will be forgiven.

Christ, the cross gives ALL people who don’t know God, the way to know God, and Be Love And be forgiven so that we may become like God so that we forgive each other through the gift of Grace!

WHY? Because warriors fight, we wrestle not against flesh and blood

Ephesians 6:12

Paul said to the Ephesians:

But against the rulers of darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places. In Christ

Amen

WHAT? Wherefore take unto you the whole armor of God that you may be able to withstand the evil and having done all to stand in Christ Amen.

What? 6:14 Stand Loins girt with Truth

Breast plate of righteousness

The shield of faith where with you shall be able to quench the fiery darts

Helmet of salvation

Sword of the Holy Spirit which is the word of God

HOW TO DO IT? 6:18 Praying always with all prayer and supplication in the spirit and watching

in Christ Amen

6:19 Paul said, “…and for me, that utterance may be given unto me, that I may open my mouth boldly to make know the mystery of the Gospel.

And use Mathew 18:18 “Very I say to you, Whatever you shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven Whatever you shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.”

Mathew 18:1 Disciples asked the Lord Who is the greatest among us?

Jesus said, “Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. 4 Therefore, whoever takes the lowly position of this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. 5 And whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me.

Mathew 18:11 The Son of Man came to save that which is lost.

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