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Choose the Lamb, Enter the Promise

When Israel came up out of the Jordan River, Scripture marks the moment with precision: it was the tenth day of Nisan. This detail is not incidental — it is deeply prophetic. It was on this very same day, forty years earlier, that each household in Egypt was commanded to choose a lamb for Passover (Exodus 12:3).

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Testimony That Carries the Promise!

After Israel crossed the Jordan on dry ground, the Lord gave Joshua a surprising instruction. Twelve men—one from each tribe—were told to return to the riverbed and carry out stones. These stones were not meant to decorate a campsite or mark a victory monument for pride. They were to be placed as a memorial so that when future generations saw them, they would ask, “What do these stones mean?”

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Walking in Spiritual Authority!

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Spiritual authority is not rooted in personality, position, or human strength—it flows directly from identity. When we know who we are in Yeshua (Jesus), we begin to understand what has been entrusted to us. Authority is not something we seize; it is something we receive. And once received, it must be exercised with courage, faith, and obedience.

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Co-Heirs With Messiah — Sharing His Inheritance and Destiny

One of the most breathtaking truths of your identity in Yeshua (Jesus) is this: you are not merely forgiven — you are an heir. Not a servant in the house, not a distant relative, and not an outsider tolerated at the table, but a co-heir who shares the inheritance, authority, and destiny of the Son Himself. Paul declares, “If children, then heirs — heirs of God and joint heirs with Messiah” (Romans 8:17), a truth that reshapes everything about who you are.

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Adopted into the Father’s Family: From Orphans to Heirs

Every heart longs to know where it truly belongs. Deep within every human soul is the question of identity — Who am I? Where do I come from? It’s why, when someone is adopted in the natural, they often spend years searching for their biological parents. There’s an ache to know their true origin, a longing to connect the story of their beginning with their present. And until that longing is resolved, there is often a sense of incompleteness, a struggle to move forward — because to understand where we are going, we must first know where we came from.

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