Tag: seekers

  • What Jesus Said. Part One. Gospel According to Matthew.

    What Jesus Said. Part One. Gospel According to Matthew.

    What Jesus said. Part One. Matthew Chapters 3-4.

    The New Testament doesn’t tell us everything Jesus ever did or said, but it does give us everything God wants us to know in order to trust Him and follow Him. In this series I’m simply walking through the actual words of Jesus as the Bible records them—listening carefully, one passage at a time, and asking what they mean for us today.

    I’m starting in the Gospel according to Matthew and working right through it, taking all that Matthew records Jesus saying. Some posts will cover just a few verses; others will gather a larger section of His teaching together. Where Matthew has a saying that also appears in Mark, Luke, or John, I won’t usually write a separate post on every parallel—I’ll treat it once and mention the other places it appears.

    After Matthew, I plan to look at what is unique in the other Gospels: the sayings of Jesus in Luke that aren’t found elsewhere, then the unique material in John, and then in Mark. Finally, I’ll finish with His words in the book of Revelation. The aim is not to chase every theory, but to pay attention to the words Scripture actually gives us.

    This series is written for both long-time believers and honest seekers. Whether you’ve followed Jesus for years or are only just beginning to wonder about Him, my hope is that you’ll meet Him here in His own words. Unless otherwise noted, Bible quotations are from the ESV (2007 edition).

    The opening chapters of Matthew usher us into a landscape of anticipation, questions, and decisive movement. Before Jesus teaches crowds or heals the sick, Matthew draws our attention to two deeply human moments: His baptism and His temptation. Both scenes reveal a Saviour who steps fully into our world—not distant, not detached, but present, purposeful, and willing to walk the path we walk. Whether you come to these passages as a lifelong believer or someone cautiously exploring faith, Matthew 3–4 offers a story big enough to hold your questions, your curiosity, and your hope.

    The Moment Jesus Steps Into the Water.

    Matthew describes crowds travelling to the Jordan River to be baptised by John, a prophet calling people to turn from old patterns and move toward God. Then Jesus appears—quietly, unexpectedly—asking to be baptised too. John hesitates. Why would the sinless one stand in a place meant for sinners?

    Jesus answers with a gentle insistence: “Let it be so now, for thus it is fitting for us to fulfil all righteousness” (Matthew 3:15,). His choice to step into the water is not about His need but about His mission. He identifies with us—fully, willingly, lovingly. The God who created humanity chooses to stand among humanity.

    For seekers, this moment pushes against the image of a remote or uninterested God. Jesus does not wait on the riverbank for people to sort themselves out; He steps into the water with them. For believers, His humility invites us to rethink what strength and holiness truly look like. They are not cold or aloof. They are deeply compassionate, deeply present.

    The Wilderness and the Weight of Temptation.

    Immediately after His baptism, Jesus is led into the wilderness—a barren, silent place where physical hunger and spiritual testing converge. For forty days He goes without food, and Matthew tells us simply that He was hungry. It’s a detail so ordinary it’s almost startling, We are meant to notice it. Jesus, who Christians confess as fully God, is also fully human, experiencing vulnerability that many of us know all too well.

    In that place of hunger, the tempter comes. Each temptation is sharp, intelligent, and aimed at Jesus’ identity. And each time, Jesus responds not with clever arguments but with Scripture. His first reply is: “It is written, ‘Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God’” (Matthew 4:4,).

    To someone exploring faith, this may sound poetic but distant. Yet Jesus’ point is remarkably practical: physical needs matter, but a life fuelled only by what we can touch, or taste will always fall short. There is a deeper nourishment—a voice that speaks meaning, direction, and hope into the human heart.

    The second temptation presses Jesus to test God’s care, and again He responds: “Again it is written, ‘You shall not put the Lord your God to the test’” (Matthew 4:7,). Jesus refuses to turn faith into spectacle or power into self-protection. Many of us have cried out, “If God is real, prove it!” Jesus models a different posture: not blind trust, but relational trust—trust grounded in knowing who God is.

    The third temptation is blunt: authority, power, mastery of the world—if Jesus will bow to evil. Jesus replies with fierce clarity: “Be gone, Satan! For it is written, ‘You shall worship the Lord your God and him only shall you serve’” (Matthew 4:10,). Here the story invites both believers and seekers to consider what (or who) shapes our allegiance. We may not face the offer of ruling nations, but we do face daily decisions about the values we embrace, the voices we follow, and the stories we believe about ourselves.

    The Beginning of a New Kingdom.

    When Jesus leaves the wilderness, He does not return weakened or defeated. Instead, Matthew says, “From that time Jesus began to preach, saying, ‘Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand’” (Matthew 4:17,). The word repent can sound heavy, even accusing, but in Scripture it means to turn—to reorient, to recognise where we are and where we’re going, and to change direction. Jesus is not scolding; He is inviting. Something new has drawn near. A kingdom marked by restoration rather than domination. A kingdom where God’s presence meets ordinary lives.

    For someone exploring Christianity, this message may feel both hopeful and daunting. What does it mean that a kingdom is “at hand”? Jesus is saying that God’s nearness is not theoretical or far-off. It has entered the world in His person. And with that nearness comes the possibility of transformation—not forced, not demanded, but offered.

    The Call That Changes Everything.

    Walking beside the Sea of Galilee, Jesus calls two fishermen with a sentence both simple and world-altering: “Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men” (Matthew 4:19, ESV 2007). These men were ordinary, rough-handed workers. They were not scholars, leaders, or spiritual elites. Yet Jesus calls them first.

    This call—follow me—is one that echoes through history. For some, it becomes a lifelong commitment; for others, it begins as a quiet curiosity. But in every case, it is an invitation to walk with Jesus, not an instruction to fix ourselves first. He promises transformation, but He also promises to be the one who accomplishes it: “I will make you…”

    For believers, this reminds us that our identity and purpose flow from Him, not from our achievements. For seekers, this call is an open door rather than a checklist. Following Jesus begins not with certainty but with willingness—a step taken in honesty rather than perfection.

    A Story That Meets Us Where We Are.

    Matthew 3–4 describes a Jesus who enters our world, faces our struggles, speaks into our hunger, and offers us a place at His side. The story does not demand that we arrive already convinced. It simply invites us to look, consider, and respond.

    If you’re exploring faith, this may be your moment to pause and simply ask, “What if Jesus really is who He claims to be?” You don’t need to have all the answers. Many first-century followers didn’t. They started with a step—a conversation, a question, a willingness.

    And if you are a believer, these chapters call you back to the heart of the story: a Saviour who identifies with us, stands with us in temptation, speaks truth that frees, and calls us into a life of purpose.

    Wherever you stand today, His invitation is gentle, honest, and full of hope. The kingdom is near, and the path is open.

    In just these two chapters, we already hear Jesus say: “Let it be so now…,” “It is written…,” “Repent…,” “Follow me….” Together they sketch a picture of a Saviour who stands with us, speaks truth to us, and then calls us to walk with Him.

    In the next post, we’ll keep following what Jesus actually says as Matthew’s Gospel unfolds.

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  • What Jesus Said. What Jesus Said. Compared to Today.

    What Jesus Said. What Jesus Said. Compared to Today.

    Before I ever believed any of this, I had a long list of questions. Jonah swallowed by a great fish. Really? Miracles, fallen angels, heaven, and hell – it all sounded like something from a storybook.

    But there was one thing I couldn’t shake off.

    A carpenter in a dusty corner of the Roman Empire told a dozen ordinary men that the message He was giving them would go out to the “uttermost part of the earth.” No internet, no phones, no email, no global postal system, and no social media campaigns. Just twelve confused men – and a promise.

    If I said in a canteen on site, “What I tell you twelve men is going to reach the four corners of the earth,” it wouldn’t make it past the lunch break. If it did, the story would be twisted beyond recognition by the time it got to the car park.

    A Modern Comparison Worth Thinking About.

    Today, with the entire internet at our fingertips, the most-followed person on any social platform is Cristiano Ronaldo — around 668 million followers, with every algorithm in the world pushing his face everywhere. Elon Musk sits on enormous platforms too. That’s what happens when you combine global media, smartphones, social networks, advertising, and a world obsessed with celebrities.

    And what do they get famous for?

    Kicking a ball.
    Posting a meme.
    Launching a car into space, allegedly.

    Nothing wrong with any of that, if that’s your thing, but let’s be honest — none of it is going to change the human heart or answer the biggest questions of life.

    Now compare that with Jesus.

    No internet.
    No cameras.
    No global media.
    No marketing budget.
    No private jets, PR teams, sponsorships, or stadium screens.

    Just a carpenter, twelve ordinary men, and a message.

    Ronaldo can reach 668 million people with a single photo because the entire digital world is built to amplify him.

    Jesus reached billions over two thousand years without any of it — and His words are still spreading today, without needing a single algorithm to help Him. If you gave Ronaldo, the entire internet and Jesus none of it…
    Jesus still wins by an ocean.
    And He said it would be that way long before His disciples even understood what He meant. Ronaldo has 668 million followers. Jesus has 2.3 billion today — without Instagram.

    What Did Jesus Actually Say?

    Jesus said things like this:

    “Go ye therefore, and teach all nations…” (Matthew 28:19)

    “Ye shall be witnesses unto me… unto the uttermost part of the earth.” (Acts 1:8)

    Two thousand years later, with all our modern tech and global platforms, no one has had the reach, staying power, and influence that this carpenter from Nazareth has had.

    When People Die.

    Normally when someone dies, their influence dies with them. Their friends remember them for a while, the story gets told once or twice, and then it fades.

    That’s not what happened with Jesus.

    The exact opposite happened. He was crucified, buried, and yet His words spread outwards like a shockwave that hasn’t stopped. Different empires have tried to stamp them out. Educated people have mocked them. False teachers have twisted them. But still, everywhere you go in the world, you find people reading, quoting, and living by the words of this carpenter.

    That was the thing that started to get under my skin. If His words really have reached the four corners of the earth just as He said – no technology, no PR, no TV, Internet, or  social media for thousands of years – then maybe I needed to stop being distracted for five minutes and actually listen to what He said.

    Not what religious people say about Him.
    Not what angry people on the internet say.

    Not the divided denominations, not middle-class congregations.
    Instead, listen to what Jesus Himself said.

    Why the Words of Jesus Still Matter.

    There’s something different about hearing a person speak for themselves. Many of us have heard the opinions, arguments, and complaints about Christianity, but surprisingly few have ever sat down and listened to Jesus’ actual words. And if what He said two thousand years ago is still shaping lives today – across cultures, languages, and continents – then maybe His voice deserves more than a passing glance.

    For seekers, this can feel risky. What if I get sucked into something I don’t believe? What if I can’t make sense of it? What if this whole thing is just a relic of childhood religion or cultural habit? Those are fair questions. They’re human questions. And they’re questions Jesus wasn’t afraid of. He never told people to switch off their minds or silence their doubts. He invited people to come close, to listen, to weigh what He said, and to see whether His words rang true.

    Believers, too, sometimes drift from the raw, simple power of Jesus’ teaching. We get tangled in rituals, debates, or the pressure to “have it all together.” Yet Jesus’ words cut through noise with a clarity that disarms both cynicism and pride. When He spoke, ordinary people leaned in. Some loved Him, some hated Him, some weren’t sure what to think. But no one shrugged.

    The Carpenter Who Spoke With Authority.

    When Jesus started speaking publicly, people noticed something unusual: He didn’t sound like anyone else. He didn’t quote endless authorities, build philosophical defences, or soften His claims. He spoke directly, personally, and with an authority that startled those listening.

    Even those who doubted Him couldn’t deny that something was happening. A movement formed, not because He built a brand or organised a strategy, but because His words met people where they were and cut straight to the heart. They still do. Words about forgiveness that feels impossible, hope that survives darkness, truth that doesn’t shift with culture, and a God who steps toward us, not away from us.

    And if He really rose from the dead – if His words were not simply good advice but God’s voice breaking into human history – then every one of us has something at stake in listening.

    Where This Series Begins.

    So that’s what this series is about.

    We’re going to walk through the words of Jesus – starting from the beginning of His public life – not as polished religion, but from the point of view of somebody who once thought, “How can any of this be true?”

    We’ll start where the Gospels start: with His baptism, His first public words, and the first time He begins to speak and tells people what God is really like, what’s wrong with us, and what He’s come to do about it.

    A Simple Invitation.

    If you’re curious, sceptical, hurt by church, or just unsure what to make of Jesus, you’re welcome to read along. You don’t have to agree with me. All I’d ask is this:

    Before you decide what to do with Christianity, take a serious look at what Jesus actually said.

    Because if a carpenter’s words really did travel to the ends of the earth without technology, campaigns – perhaps those words deserve a fresh hearing today.

    Part One coming soon.

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  • The Meaning of Hope.

    The Meaning of Hope.

    Grace, Faith, Hope, and Love Series. Part 3.

    Introduction.

    Hope can feel fragile in a world that disappoints us. Many people carry silent grief, private battles, or the kind of weariness that doesn’t show on the outside. Yet Scripture speaks of a hope that does more than help us cope — it anchors us. This hope is not wishful thinking. It rests on a God who keeps His promises. Whether you’re searching, doubting, or holding on by a thread, this is an invitation to explore a hope strong enough to steady your life.

    Biblical Hope.

    Hope is a small word that carries an enormous weight. We use it every day—“I hope the weather clears,” “I hope things get better,” “I hope this works out”—yet the hope spoken of in Scripture reaches far deeper than our ordinary wishes. It is not fragile optimism. It is not a mental trick to feel positive. It is not pretending everything will be fine. Biblical hope is something sturdier, firmer, more life-giving. It is grounded not in our circumstances but in God Himself.

    Many who follow Jesus have wrestled with this. And so have many who do not. If you are exploring faith, you might have wondered whether Christian hope is simply a comforting idea. If you are already a believer, you may have questioned why hope sometimes feels distant. But the Bible speaks of hope as a living, active reality—something that does more than lift our spirits. It anchors us. It steadies us. It draws us toward God in the darkest moments.

    The God Who Gives Hope.

    One of the clearest descriptions comes from the apostle Paul: “May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope” (Romans 15:13). Notice how hope is not something we manufacture. We do not work ourselves up into hopefulness. Hope comes from God—He is its source and sustainer.

    This introduces a radically different way of thinking. Christian hope is not an internal emotional experience; it is an external gift rooted in the character of a faithful God. This means hope does not rise and fall with our mood. It is not stronger on good days and weaker on hard days. Hope grows as we trust the One who does not change. For anyone exploring faith, this is a powerful shift: hope is no longer dependent on your ability to feel hopeful. It rests on God’s ability to keep His word.

    Hope as an Anchor.

    Life can feel as though it is constantly shifting beneath our feet. We face seasons when nothing is certain. Plans collapse. Health falters. Relationships break. We discover that even our strongest efforts cannot guarantee outcomes. Into this experience Scripture offers one of its most vivid metaphors: “We have this as a sure and steadfast anchor of the soul, a hope that enters into the inner place behind the curtain,” (Hebrews 6:19).

    Hope is described as something that holds us steady, not by tying us to our circumstances, but by tying us to God Himself. The imagery points back to the ancient temple: “the inner place behind the curtain” was the Holy of Holies, the symbolic place of God’s presence. In other words, hope connects us to the presence and faithfulness of God. It does not remove storms; it stops us from drifting within them.

    For someone who is unsure about faith, this image offers an honest and realistic invitation. The Bible does not promise a life without hardship. It promises a hope that remains firm when hardship arrives. Hope is not an escape from reality. It is the strength to navigate it.

    A Living Hope Through Jesus.

    Hope reaches its fullest meaning in the resurrection of Christ. Peter writes, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead,” (1 Peter 1:3). Here hope is called “living” because it is tied directly to a living Saviour.

    If Jesus had remained in the tomb, hope would be nothing more than a fragile human idea. But because He rose from the dead, hope becomes a present and future certainty. It is not abstract. It is personal. Hope is bound to the One who has faced death and overcome it.

    To the believer, this is a reminder that hope is not merely a doctrine to agree with. It is a relationship to enter. To the seeker, this presents a question worth exploring: if Jesus truly rose, then hope is more than wishful thinking—it is a historically grounded promise.

    Hope in the Midst of Turmoil.

    Hope does not ignore human emotion. Scripture never demands that we pretend everything is fine. The psalmist speaks with raw honesty: “Why are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you in turmoil within me? Hope in God; for I shall again praise him, my salvation, and my God” (Psalm 42:5). These words carry both anguish and confidence.

    This is a deeply comforting truth: hope and sorrow can coexist. Having hope does not eliminate the ache. But hope whispers that sorrow is not the end. The psalmist talks to his own soul, encouraging it to trust again. This is a gentle, compassionate picture for anyone who feels weighed down. You do not need perfect emotional balance to hold on to hope. Even in turmoil, hope gives you something to hold.

    And this verse highlights another important aspect—hope involves waiting. The Hebrew term used here carries the idea of waiting expectantly. Hope is not passive. It is the patient, steady looking toward God with the conviction that He remains faithful even when circumstances remain unresolved.

    Hope That Transforms the Present.

    Hope is often misunderstood as something purely future—something about heaven, eternity, or what comes after death. While Scripture certainly points us forward, biblical hope also reshapes the present moment. It gives courage. It strengthens patience. It fuels compassion. Hope makes room for joy even in uncertainty, because it opens our eyes to the larger reality of God’s presence.

    Many readers—whether believers or seekers—carry questions about the future. We wonder about our purpose, our direction, or what happens after death. Christian hope does not claim to erase all mystery. It claims something far more profound: that our lives are held by a God who knows the path ahead and walks with us through every part of it.

    Hope, then, is not a blind leap. It is a confident step towards the One who has already proven His love through Christ.

    The Invitation of Hope.

    If you are a Christian, these passages encourage you to rest again in the God who gives hope. You do not need to force confidence into your heart. You can simply open yourself to the One who fills you with hope by His Spirit.

    If you are exploring faith, consider what this hope might mean for your own life. It is not a demand. It is an invitation—an open door. Christian hope welcomes your questions and uncertainties. It does not diminish them. It simply offers you a place to anchor your soul, a living Saviour who walks with you, and a God who delights to give hope to those who seek Him.

    Here, hope is not an idea. It is a Person. And He invites you to draw near.

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  • The Meaning of Love

    The Meaning of Love

    Grace, Faith, Hope, and Love Series. Part 4.

    Introduction.

    Love is the greatest of these not because it is sentimental, but because it reveals the very heart of God. For many of us, the most powerful lessons in love came from the people who shaped our lives. My mother was one of those people. Her kindness was patient, her care was warm, loving, quiet and steady, and she carried her burdens without bitterness, she forgave like no one else I’ve met. The words of 1 Corinthians 13 — “love is patient, love is kind…” — were not abstract to her; they were lived truth. This post explores the kind of love God offers and the kind of love He grows in us — a love strong enough to heal, restore, and transform.

    Love is a word we use easily, yet it is one of the hardest realities to live out. We speak of love when we hold our families close, when we forgive a friend, or when someone shows unexpected kindness. Grace, Faith, Hope, and Love Series. Part 4.

    Introduction.

    Love is the greatest of these not because it is sentimental, but because it reveals the very heart of God. For many of us, the most powerful lessons in love came from the people who shaped our lives. This kind of love is not sentimental; it is purposeful, self-giving, and transformative. And according to the Bible, it finds its source in God Himself.

    Love at the Heart of God’s Story.

    The most familiar verse in the Bible captures the vastness of divine love in a single sentence: “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.” John 3:16 is often quoted, but its meaning is worth pausing over. Love, here, is shown not merely in affection but in action. God gives. He gives at a cost. He gives in order to rescue. For the believer, this verse is the foundation of faith. For the seeker, it offers a glimpse of what God is really like—a God who does not wait for people to sort themselves out, but who steps toward us first.

    Love as the Mark of God’s People.

    The Bible doesn’t just reveal God’s love; it calls us to embody it. In a short yet profound instruction, John writes, “Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God.” Love is not optional for followers of Jesus. It is the evidence of belonging to Him. John continues even more plainly: “Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love.” These words might feel uncomfortable—they cut through excuses and religious appearances. But they also offer clarity. To know God is to grow in love. To refuse love is to close the door on the very life God offers.

    This is good news for those who feel they fall short (most of us), because the invitation is not to perfection but transformation. God does not ask us to generate love on our own. He asks us to receive His love and then let it flow outward.

    Love in Real Life: Not Idealised, but to be Practised.

    We might accept the idea of love yet struggle to live it out in the grit of daily life. Paul the apostle grounds love in everyday behaviour when he writes, “Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant.” These qualities are not dramatic or glamorous. They show up in quiet moments—waiting calmly instead of snapping, choosing kindness when irritated, celebrating others rather than competing with them. Love, in this sense, is not merely an emotion but a posture of the heart.

    For seekers or new readers of Scripture, this description offers a practical glimpse of what Christian love looks like. It is not abstract; it shapes how we should speak, react, and choose to value others. For believers, Paul’s words act as a mirror. They invite honest reflection: where am I learning patience? Where do envy or pride still hold sway? Love requires humility, but it also leads to freedom—freedom from comparison, from self-protection, from fear.

    Love Displayed in Christ’s Sacrifice.

    At the centre of the Christian story is the cross—a place of suffering, yet also the fullest expression of divine compassion. “but God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” This means God did not wait for humanity to improve or behave. He acted when we were at our worst. This is agapē, the Greek word often used in the New Testament to describe devoted, self-giving love.

    For Christians, this verse is a reminder that grace is not earned. For those exploring faith, it reveals something surprisingly tender: God’s love is not a reward for the good, but a gift for the lost. The cross shows how far He is willing to go to bring people back to Himself.

    Love Commanded and Modelled by Jesus.

    Jesus not only demonstrated love; He commanded it. “This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you.” His “as I have loved you” sets the measure—not minimal, but sacrificial; not occasional, but constant. Jesus washed feet, welcomed outsiders, forgave enemies, and bore suffering on behalf of others. He asks His followers to love with the same self-giving spirit.

    This command can feel overwhelming, but it is rooted in relationship. Jesus does not command from a distance; He invites us into the love He already shares with us. As we receive His love, we become able to reflect it.

    Love that Reorients the Whole Life.

    When Jesus summarised the heart of God’s law, He began with this: “And he said to him, ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’” These words call us to a love that is not half-hearted or compartmentalised. It involves emotion (heart), identity (soul), and thought (mind). It reaches into every part of who we are.

    For believers, this is a lifelong journey of aligning desires, fears, habits, and hopes with God’s goodness. For seekers, this verse offers a window into what faith truly is: not ritual, but relationship; not blind obedience, but wholehearted devotion.

    Love as an Invitation, Not a Burden.

    These seven passages reveal a consistent picture: love begins with God, is shown in Christ, and is shared among His people. Love is not a vague ideal nor an unreachable standard—it is a path that God walks with us. Whether you come to this topic with faith, curiosity, or caution, the invitation is the same: explore the love that the Bible speaks of. It is a love that meets us where we are but does not leave us unchanged.

    For those who believe, let these verses draw you deeper into Christ’s heart. For those seeking, consider what it might mean if this kind of love is true—if there really is a God whose posture toward you is not rejection but welcome, not indifference but compassion, not distance but nearness.

    Love, in the Christian story, is not simply what God does. It is who He is. And He invites each one of us to know Him.

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