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Hope For The Remnants

Hope For The Remnants

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Hope For The Remnants Watch this on Rumble: https://rumble.com/v6vywrm-hope-for-the-remnants.html Christians are not to have fear. How can God ask that of us? Especially when we have weather weapons, surveillance up the wazoo and can barely make ends meet? People are scared, tired and drained of their solace and peace. What words of comfort can I give when I have never filled your shoes? The shoes of people who have been raped, beaten, tortured, lied to, betrayed and outcasted. So in essence, my words really carry no weight. For those who are on the path of ending their own life, how can I talk them down off the balcony? For I too am going through something that is impossible to overcome. Or at least, it feels like it. For the last 3 1/2 years, my son has been suffering from self harm. Being deaf and autistic, he isn’t getting the help he actually deserves. Not because we are dropping the ball, it’s because the west coast is less populated and those kind of resources are scarce. Yet, I have a choice. Here and now. I can choose to be mad and place blame elsewhere, and it might feel good for a time, or I can choose to not be upset and give all my worry and care over to God. After all, am I not supposed to be practicing Christianity? Proverbs 3:5-6 says, “Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding.” Was that a command or just something we can overlook? I want you to pause—and take a real breath. Not the kind shaped by fear or headlines, but the breath of remembrance. The breath of someone who knows who they are. You are not a statistic in someone else’s agenda. You are not a commodity in the Beast’s system. You are not forgotten, lost, or marked for wrath. You are a child of the Living God—named, chosen, sealed before the foundation of the world. Long before there were surveillance grids, digital currencies, and global decrees, there was a covenant. A blood-bought, Spirit-sealed covenant not written in the halls of governments but inscribed by the hand of God. You were not appointed to destruction—you were appointed to adoption. You were not called to panic—you were called to reign. The same voice that formed the stars spoke your name into eternity, and that voice still echoes over you now. Yes, the system is rising. Yes, the pressure will come. But we do not bow to the fear. The enemy wants you silent, breathless, trembling in the dark. But the blood speaks louder. The Lamb still bears the scars. And the Spirit within you testifies that you are not of this world—you are of a Kingdom unshakable. The wrath that is coming will not touch the ones marked by the seal of the Father. So we remember. We remember the cross, the breath, the promise. We remember that the same God who parted seas and fed prophets in famine is the God who walks with us now. Though Babylon builds its towers, and the Beast prepares its mark, we are not afraid. Because we know the end of the story. The saints overcome. The blood redeems. And the fire—though it rages—will not consume those who walk with the Holy One. You are not forgotten. You are not subject to wrath. You are His. And He has not forgotten His own. Part 1 – Tribulation Is Promised, But Wrath Is Not We must begin by dividing what the Word clearly distinguishes: tribulation and wrath are not the same thing. Tribulation is the pressure that purifies; wrath is the judgment that destroys. The saints are promised one, but delivered from the other. Jesus said plainly in John 16:33, “In this world you will have tribulation, but take heart; I have overcome the world.” He never promised escape from struggle—He promised presence in it, and victory over it. Tribulation is not a curse for the remnant—it is a furnace of refinement. It is the proving ground of loyalty. The apostles walked through it. The early church bled under it. And yet, in 1 Thessalonians 5:9, Paul affirms, “For God has not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ.” Wrath is different. Wrath is not about testing—it is about final verdict. And those marked by the blood are not appointed to that sentence. This truth should anchor the remnant in peace. The Beast system may rise. The economies may collapse. But God does not pour out His wrath on His bride. He disciplines sons—but He does not destroy them. He shakes the nations—but preserves His house. Those who are His will pass through fire, yes—but not to perish. The wrath of God is reserved for those who have rejected the blood. But the saints have already been judged—at the Cross. And that verdict cannot be overturned. So let this be known to every child of God: tribulation is not a sign you’ve been abandoned—it’s the evidence you are being refined. Wrath is not coming for you. You’ve already been rescued. You are not counted with the wicked. You are counted among the redeemed. And though the ...
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