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LLama Loo

✨ Prophecy Fulfilled: The Life of Yeshua (Jesus) – Episode 63 “The Way of Sorrows” (From Sentencing to the Place of the Skull) The verdict had been spoken. Pilate, having declared Yeshua innocent, nevertheless surrendered Him to the will of the crowd. With that decision, Roman justice concluded its deliberation and began its procedure. Yeshua was sentenced to die. As custom required, the crossbeam was placed upon His shoulders. Condemned men were made to carry the instrument of their execution through public streets—a warning meant to instill fear and enforce obedience. But Yeshua was not a typical prisoner. He had already endured severe scourging. Blood loss, shock, and exhaustion weighed heavily on His body. As the procession moved forward, His strength faltered. He stumbled beneath the burden. Roman soldiers, concerned only with efficiency, compelled a bystander—Simon of Cyrene—to carry the crossbeam. The Son of God allowed help. Not because He lacked authority, but because He had fully embraced the limits of human flesh. Women along the road wept openly. Yeshua turned to them—not to receive comfort, but to speak truth. He warned them not to weep for Him, but for themselves and for the days coming upon Jerusalem. Even while condemned, even while suffering, His concern remained fixed on others and on what was yet to unfold. This was no helpless victim being dragged toward death. This was a King walking a path He had already chosen. ⸻ The Destination The procession led deliberately to Golgotha—a Roman execution site located just outside the city walls. Scripture names it Golgotha, meaning “Place of the Skull.” The Latin term Calvary carries the same meaning. Whether the name referred to the appearance of the site or its long association with death, the implication was unmistakable. This was a place of finality. ✝️ CONTINUED IN COMMENTS ⬇️⬇️⬇️ #Bible #God #Jesus #BibleStudy #Help #Love #Calvary #ViadelaRosa #Salvation #Prayer #Gospel

LLama Loo

🙌 From Salvation to Servitude Following Christ is the easy part. He meets us with arms wide open—accepting us, forgiving us, giving freely. He is patient. He guides us. He ministers to us where we are, not where we should be. But there comes a point in our relationship with Him when the question must change. Not “What can You do for me today, Lord?” But “How may I serve You today?” This is often where believers begin to drift off the path. Our salvation is not conditional on works. Jesus made that promise clear. Grace is not earned, and redemption is not maintained through performance. But any truly loving relationship requires learning how to serve the one we love. Choosing a life together—any life together—requires participation. If one partner does all the giving while the other only receives, the relationship will eventually fracture. Not because love was absent—but because sincerity was. Love that never responds becomes entitlement, not devotion. In every relationship, a lack of mutual cooperation creates distance. Repairing that distance later requires far more effort than tending the relationship faithfully along the way. But when we enter our relationship with Jesus determined to love Him as He loves us—to serve Him as He serves us—something shifts. Obedience no longer feels like obligation. Service no longer feels like loss. Servitude becomes rewarding in and of itself. Not because it earns salvation—but because it reflects love. ✝️ CONTINUED IN COMMENTS ⬇️⬇️⬇️ #Bible #God #Jesus #Blessedservant #Jesuslovesyou #Partnership #Love #Faithfulservant #ServantHeart

LLama Loo

✨ Prophecy Fulfilled: The Life of Yeshua (Jesus) – Episode 62 “Behold the King” (The Scourging and Mocking) What followed Pilate’s surrender to the crowd was not justice—it was humiliation. Having declared Yeshua innocent, yet unwilling to stand against public pressure, Pilate handed Him over to Roman authority. What unfolded next was not a trial, but a calculated display of power meant to satisfy the crowd and extinguish sympathy. Yeshua was subjected to Roman punishment. Scripture records this moment plainly, without spectacle or embellishment. The Gospel writers do not linger on details, but on meaning. The One declared innocent was treated as guilty. The King was mocked by those who could not see Him. Roman soldiers dressed Him in a robe meant to parody royalty. A crown—woven not of gold, but of thorns—was placed upon His head. They bowed in false reverence, struck Him, and ridiculed the title Pilate had spoken aloud: King of the Jews. Yeshua did not answer them. He did not resist. He did not protest. He endured. This was not weakness. This was obedience. What humanity intended as humiliation, heaven recognized as submission to the Father’s will. The suffering servant did not seize authority—He surrendered Himself to it. The mockery was meant to strip Him of dignity. Instead, it revealed the depth of His love. 🌿 A Note on Transparency Scripture records this moment with restraint, inviting reflection rather than graphic detail. Out of respect for platform limitations, this account has been presented carefully. For those who wish to explore this moment more fully—its prophetic depth, historical context, and spiritual weight—we warmly invite you to continue the study in the Llama Loo Facebook Group, where the complete teaching is shared without limitation. 📖 Scripture Sources • Matthew 27:26–31 • Mark 15:15–20 • John 19:1–3 • Isaiah 50:6 • Isaiah 53:3–7 • Psalm 22:6–8 • Zechariah 12:10 ✝️ CONTINUED IN COMMENTS ⬇️⬇️⬇️ #Jesus #Love #Salvation

Yehudah HaLevi

Spirit and Truth Devotional - The War is Real Series: Our Spiritual Weapons - Prayer (in the Spirit) Prayer is a powerful spiritual weapon God gives believers. Scripture calls us to pray in the Spirit at all times (Ephesians 6:18), reminding us that our battles are spiritual and require God’s power, not human strength (2 Corinthians 10:4). Prayer is more than speaking to God—it is fellowship with Him, the way we express our hearts, seek His strength, and stand firm in spiritual warfare. Through prayer, we use God’s Word and authority to declare victory, gain protection, and receive discernment. Effective warfare prayer involves aligning our hearts with God, praying the Scriptures, praying continually, and listening for His guidance. Spirit‑led prayer brings boldness, breakthrough, protection, and renewed strength. Jesus taught us to watch and pray (Matthew 26:41), to pray in trouble (James 5:13), to pray without giving up (Luke 18:1), and to rely on the Spirit’s help (Romans 8:26). In every situation, we present our needs to God through prayer (Philippians 4:6). Grace and peace #SpiritAndTruth #Devotional #SpiritualGrowth #ChristianGrowth #SpiritualWarfare #Jesus

LLama Loo

✨ Prophecy Fulfilled: The Life of Yeshua (Jesus) – Episode 61 “Barabbas or Yeshua” (Matthew 27:15–26; Mark 15:6–15; Luke 23:13–25; John 18:39–19:16) The sun was higher now. Jerusalem was awake. What had been decided in shadow during the night was about to be affirmed in daylight—before the people. The tension had not eased with morning; it had thickened. Yeshua was brought once more before Pontius Pilate. Still bound. Still silent. Still innocent. ⸻ ⚖️ A Governor Cornered Pilate knew exactly what stood before him. He had examined Yeshua. He had questioned Him. He had sent Him to Herod. He had received Him back mocked—but unchanged. No crime. No threat. No guilt. More than once, Pilate said it aloud: “I find no fault in Him.” Truth had been spoken clearly. But truth does not always halt injustice—especially when fear outweighs conscience. ⸻ 🧱 A Custom, a Crowd, a Calculation Pilate reached for precedent. Each Passover, one prisoner was released as a political gesture meant to ease unrest. Pilate saw an opportunity—a way to satisfy justice and preserve order without bloodshed. He presented the crowd with a choice. Two men were brought forward. One was Barabbas. A known insurrectionist. A man guilty of violence and murder. A name already stained with rebellion. The other was Yeshua. Unarmed. Unresisting. Called Messiah by some, threat by others. Pilate asked carefully: “Whom do you want me to release to you?” ⸻ 📣 Crowds and Propaganda Crowds are easily moved—not by truth, but by repetition, fear, and perceived authority. The city that had once celebrated Him now watched silently or joined the outcry, proving how quickly devotion collapses when propaganda replaces discernment. Praise without conviction is easily redirected, and public opinion—when untethered from truth—can be turned with frightening speed. ✝️ CONTINUED IN COMMENTS ⬇️⬇️⬇️ #Love #Sacrifice #Jesus #BibleStudy #Scripture #Salvation #Help

LLama Loo

How Living Vertically Changed My Whole Life—for Good From the age of six until eighteen, I was raised in a foster home—not out of love, but as part of a financial arrangement between adults. Love was withheld. Abuse was allowed. Guidance and protection were absent. I learned early how to survive—but not how to be nurtured. By the grace of God—and through circumstances unrelated to spiritual intent—I was taken to church. It was not a vibrant congregation, but there was one teacher who truly believed in the saving grace of God. That mattered. A seed was planted, even if the soil was thin. When I left the foster home, life did not become peaceful. I lived in constant fight-or-flight, operating almost entirely on what I now understand as a horizontal plane. My focus was survival, self-protection, validation, and control. I believed in God, but my life was directed by fear rather than trust. Horizontal living looks outward for stability. It seeks meaning through relationships, accomplishments, distractions, or approval. When peace is tied to circumstances or people, it is always fragile. I spent years chasing a life that never delivered what it promised. That way of living led me through repeated trauma and loss. Again and again, I found myself empty—still searching, still striving, still wounded. I believed God existed, but I had not yet learned how to let Him lead. Eventually, life stripped away every illusion I relied on. At rock bottom, there was nothing left to manage, perform, or control. That was the moment everything shifted. I began to live vertically. Vertical living does not ignore pain or pretend life is easy. It simply changes the reference point. Instead of measuring life against circumstances or emotions, it becomes anchored upward—rooted in God rather than outcomes. ✝️ CONTINUED IN COMMENTS ⬇️⬇️⬇️ #Bible #God #Jesus #BibleStudy #Help #Afterlife #Christ #Prophesy #Heaven #Love #VictoryInChrist

LLama Loo

✨ Prophecy Fulfilled: The Life of Yeshua (Jesus) – Episode 60 — Yeshua Before Herod: The Power of Holy Silence After Pilate learns that Yeshua is a Galilean, he sends Him to Herod Antipas, who happens to be in Jerusalem for Passover. On the surface, it looks like a simple jurisdictional handoff. In reality, it becomes one of the most profound moments in the Passion narrative—not because of what is said, but because of what is not said. Herod has long wanted to see Yeshua. Not out of faith. Not out of repentance. But out of curiosity. He hopes for a sign. A spectacle. A miracle on demand. He questions Yeshua at length. And Yeshua answers him nothing. This silence is not weakness. It is authority. Herod represents corrupt power that treats truth as entertainment and righteousness as a novelty. He has already silenced John the Baptist. He has already proven that conviction means nothing to him when it threatens comfort. To such a man, words would be wasted. So the Word made flesh remains silent. Mockery follows. Soldiers dress Yeshua in an elegant robe—meant to ridicule His kingship—and send Him back to Pilate. In their cruelty, they unknowingly proclaim the truth: the King stands before them, unmoved by scorn, untouched by their authority. In this moment, alliances shift. Herod and Pilate—previously at odds—become friends. Truth has a way of uniting those who wish to suppress it. Yeshua does not defend Himself. He does not perform. He does not negotiate. He entrusts Himself fully to the Father. And in doing so, He fulfills prophecy—not with thunder, but with restraint; not with argument, but with obedience. This episode teaches us something uncomfortable and essential: There are moments when testimony is not spoken. There are times when silence itself is faithfulness. The Lamb stands silent before those who think they hold power—while heaven watches, and redemption moves forward exactly on time. ✝️ CONTINUED IN COMMENTS ⬇️⬇️⬇️ #Bible #God #Jesus #Love

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