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Revelation 14:6-11
Even in earth's darkest hour, God will not let a single soul slip into hell without hearing the truth. Revelation 14 unveils three angels blazing across the sky — one proclaiming the eternal gospel, one declaring the collapse of every godless empire, and one warning that those who reject the Lamb's cup of salvation will drink the cup of God's wrath forever.

Ezra 8:21-36
Ezra had everything he needed for the journey — funding, families, Levites — yet he refused to move an inch until God himself went with him. This study exposes why fasting and prayer preceded the march, why Ezra rejected the king's soldiers to protect his witness, and why the call to personal holiness is the non-negotiable price of being useful to God.

Revelation 14:1-5
A 144,000 sealed, hunted, and hated through the worst years in human history — and not one was lost. Revelation 14 fast-forwards past the nightmare of the Antichrist's empire to show Christ standing on Mount Zion with his people, every single one accounted for. If God kept them through the great tribulation, he will keep you through yours.

Revelation 13:15-18
What if the real danger of the mark of the beast isn't some barcode or microchip — but the ancient temptation to trade eternal glory for temporary survival? Revelation 13 reveals a coming system where buying bread requires bowing the knee, and 666 amplifies the oldest lie: that man can replace God. The urgent question isn't what the mark will be, but whose mark you already bear.

Ezra 8
Zero Levites volunteered. Out of an entire tribe set apart for God's service, not one signed up to return to Jerusalem with Ezra. Yet tucked inside this genealogy of names you cannot pronounce lies a staggering testimony: God's covenant with Phinehas still stands centuries later, the royal line of David still breathes, and even latecomers find grace when they finally say yes.

Hebrews 11:8-10
Abraham was an idolater before God's glory appeared to him — and that single encounter rewired his entire life. Hebrews 11:8-10 reveals three marks of faith that endures: it obeys without demanding a blueprint, it pitches tents instead of planting roots, and it fixes its gaze on a city God himself is building. The uncomfortable question is not whether you admire Abraham's faith, but whether yours looks anything like it.

Ezra 7:11-28
What drives your obedience—dread of punishment or delight in a God who loved you first? Ezra 7 places two givers side by side: Artaxerxes, whose generosity is an insurance policy against divine wrath, and David, whose extravagant offering overflows from a heart captivated by grace. The contrast strips bare a question every believer must answer honestly.

1 Kings 18:1-16
A man in the highest corridors of power feared God greatly yet could not bring himself to speak a single name before the king he served daily. From 1 Kings 18, Pastor Daniel Banna draws the devastating contrast between Obadiah, who hid his faith behind influence, and Elijah, who had nothing but stood before God and therefore stood before anyone. The sermon presses an urgent question: are you living as an Obadiah or an Elijah?


