End Time Rivival Network - ETRIN

End Time Rivival Network - ETRIN

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10/07/2025

Know Your Identity: Salt and Light in a Fading World
“You are the salt of the earth... You are the light of the world...” (Matthew 5:13–16)

There is something profoundly grounding about being told who you are not by the world, not by your own fragile self-perception, but by Christ himself. In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus doesn’t ask his listeners to become salt or light. He doesn't give a five-step plan for achieving spiritual seasoning or brilliance. He declares it: You are. Present tense. Unconditional. You are salt. You are light.

But how often do we forget?
In a world of labels, expectations, and relentless noise, identity feels like shifting sand. One moment we are praised; the next, we're invisible. We define ourselves by what we do, what we own, or how others see us. But Jesus pulls us aside and whispers a greater truth into our weary souls: You already are something holy, something essential. Not because of your accomplishments, but because I say so.

Salt doesn’t draw attention to itself. It doesn’t demand applause. But let a dish lack it, and suddenly, something feels… off. Salt preserves, protects from decay. In the ancient world, salt wasn’t a garnish, it was survival. It kept food from rotting. And Jesus looks at his followers and says, You are the salt of the earth. You are what keeps this world from unraveling completely. You, with your integrity, your quiet acts of mercy, your refusal to join in cynicism or cruelty, you are preserving the goodness of the world.
But salt can lose its saltiness. The warning isn’t about losing salvation, but losing distinctiveness. When we stop living from our truest identity, we blend in. We go mute when the world needs seasoning. We compromise for comfort. And suddenly, the church becomes just another institution, not the living, breathing aroma of heaven on earth.

Then Jesus says, You are the light of the world. Not “you carry light” or “you shine when you feel spiritual.” You are light. Innately. Because the One who is Light dwells in you.
Light reveals. It exposes what is hidden. It gives direction. It offers warmth. Light doesn’t strive to shine, it simply shines because of what it is. But many of us hide. We cover our lamps with fear, shame, or insecurity. Maybe life has dimmed us. Maybe rejection taught us that being seen hurts. So we retreat. We mute our voice. We settle into the shadows.

But the world needs your light not your perfection, not your performance just your presence. Just your authentic, radiant self, standing in the truth of who God says you are. When you live from that place, others see. Not you, but the God who illuminates your life.

Finally, Jesus’ words are less of a command and more of a calling back. A remembering. In this passage, Jesus isn’t giving you a new identity, He’s revealing the one you’ve already been given. Knowing who you are in Christ isn’t pride; it’s humility. It’s the grace-filled confidence that you don’t have to create a self, only uncover the one He already sees.
So when the world calls you “not enough,” remember you are already salt. Already light. Called not just to survive but to flavor the world with grace and truth. Called not just to hide in holy huddles, but to shine boldly, kindly, humbly in the dark.

Let your life be seasoning. Let your presence preserve love, justice, and beauty. Let your light flicker with kindness in a culture bent on harshness. And when you're tempted to doubt your worth, hear again the words of the One who knows you best: “You are the salt of the earth. You are the light of the world.”

So… know who you are. And live like it.

09/07/2025

While men see and celebrate WHAT you do, God sees and checks WHY and HOW you do WHAT you do. Shalom!

23/04/2025

FEED MY LAMBS

John 21:15
So when they had dined, Jesus saith to Simon Peter, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me more than these? He saith unto him, Yea, Lord; thou knowest that I love thee. He saith unto him, Feed my lambs.

We have here Christ's discourse with Peter after dinner, so much of it as relates to himself, in which
He examines his love to him, and gives him a charge concerning his flock, John 21:15-17.
When Christ entered into this discourse with Peter--It was after they had dined: they had all eaten, and were filled, and, it is probable, were entertained with such edifying discourse as our Lord Jesus used to make his table-talk.

What was the discourse itself. Here was the same question three times asked, the same answer three times returned, and the same reply three times given, with very little variation, and yet no vain repetition.

Jesus command Peter to FEED HIS LAMBS if truly he loves Him

In our contemporary, the case is different. As a Christian leaders, God gives you the opportunity/avenue to lead for you to FEED HIS LAMB but for you to FEED HIS LAMBS you FEED ON THE LAMBS.

Remember you will give account of your steward one day

FEED HIS LAMBS
Don't FEED ON HIS LAMBS

Shalom.

01/02/2025

It's second step in the year 2025

I'm lifting you up in prayer as we start this new month, friend. May God give you strength, comfort, and guidance. May you trust in His goodness and provision. Amen.

Happy New Month

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