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RonC

“God Is Light—In Him There Is No Darkness” First Epistle of John 1:5 declares: “God is light; in Him there is no darkness at all.” Light does not negotiate with darkness. It does not argue with it. It simply reveals and removes it. This morning, before emails, headlines, noise, and pressure — anchor your soul in this truth: God is pure light. No hidden motive. No shifting shadow. No corruption. No confusion. Absolute holiness. Absolute truth. Book of James 1:17 calls Him the “Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow of turning.” That means He is not moody. Not inconsistent. Not reacting to culture. He is constant. Darkness in Scripture often represents deception, fear, sin, chaos, and hidden things. But light exposes what is false and heals what is broken. Book of Psalms 119:105 says, “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.” Not always a floodlight for the next 10 years — but enough light for the next faithful step. When you walk in light: • You stop hiding. • You stop pretending. • You stop fearing exposure. Because light is not your enemy — it is your freedom. Gospel of John 1:5 reminds us, “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.” Darkness may feel loud — but it is temporary. Light is eternal. So ask yourself this morning: • What areas of my heart need light? • What fears dissolve when truth enters? • Am I walking toward light — or avoiding it? The same God who said in Book of Genesis 1:3, “Let there be light,” still speaks that command into chaos — including yours. Step into the light today. Not perfectly. But honestly. Because in Him — there is no darkness at all.

Zack D. Films

Happy ending: When the animal shelter rescued a tiny newborn kitten found abandoned under a porch, everyone doubted she would survive. She was freezing, weak, and barely the size of a hand. The team tried feeding her through a syringe, but she refused every drop. Then something unexpected happened. A senior shelter orange cat named Luna, known for being calm and distant, walked toward the baby. Volunteers held their breath — they had never seen Luna show interest in any other animal. Slowly, Luna curled her body around the newborn and began purring — loud and steady. The vibration of her purr seemed to calm the baby. For the first time, the tiny kitten drank milk while lying against Luna’s fur. From that moment, Luna became her mother. Luna let the kitten sleep on her belly, groomed her tiny head, and even carried her gently whenever she cried. Volunteers said it was like watching nature perform a miracle. The baby began to grow stronger each day — eyes opened, tiny paws stretched, playful meows replaced weak cries.Weeks later, when the kitten was finally ready for adoption, Luna refused to let her go. The new family who came to adopt her was so touched that they adopted both together. Now they live in a home filled with toys, soft blankets, and windows full of sunlight — a place where the bond of love, not blood, created a family.❤️ #animals #saveanimals #kitten #rescuekitten #humanity

Zack D. Films

The moment freedom touched his soul, he couldn’t stop hugging his rescuer.❤️🐾 This heartwarming moment shows Katy, a dog who had spent years chained up in a small, rundown yard in Cancún, Mexico. With little food, no comfort, and no love, his days were filled with loneliness and pain. But everything changed when Karin Jacobsmeier, a kind-hearted rescuer from Paws in Action Cancún, refused to give up on him. After months of pleading, Karin finally convinced the owner to surrender Katy — and the moment the heavy chain was removed, Katy did something unforgettable. He stood on his hind legs, wrapped his paws around Karin, and held her tight — as if saying “Thank you for saving my life.” 💔🐾 That single hug captured the world’s heart — a symbol of hope, trust, and the deep emotions animals feel. Katy’s story reminds us that even after years of neglect, love can heal the deepest wounds. Today, he lives free, loved, and safe — finally knowing what it means to be home. ❤️ #animals #animallover #rescuedog #rescue #kindness #humanity

RonC

Psalm 34 — A Midday Reflection Midday is an interesting hour. Morning faith is fresh. Evening faith is reflective. But midday faith is tested. The emails have stacked up. The body feels the strain. The mind is carrying visible and invisible battles. And right here — in the middle — Psalm 34 speaks. “The angel of the LORD encamps around those who fear Him, and delivers them.” Pause on that word: encamps. Not watches from a distance. Not checks in occasionally. Encamps. He has pitched His tent around you. Right now — in the middle of your workday, your responsibilities, your pressures — heaven is not absent. It is positioned. David wrote this not from comfort but from crisis. He had fled from Saul. He had stood trembling before Achish. He knew what it felt like to be hunted, misunderstood, exposed. Yet his testimony was not, “I avoided trouble.” It was, “I was surrounded.” Midday reflection asks a deeper question: What if the anxiety you feel is real — but so is the protection you do not see? Psalm 34 does not deny affliction. It says: “Many are the afflictions of the righteous…” Many. Not few. But then it declares: “…but the Lord delivers him out of them all.” Deliverance does not always mean removal at noon. Sometimes it means preservation until evening. Sometimes it means your spirit remains intact while pressure tries to fracture it. If your battle is external — workplace tension, family stress, financial weight — you are encamped. If your battle is internal — doubt, fatigue, private fear — you are encamped. The unseen realm is not passive. Right now, in this hour, you are not exposed ground. You are guarded territory. So breathe. Let reverence replace panic. Let trust replace haste. Let awareness of His presence quiet the noise. Midday is not just the middle of your schedule. It is the middle of your proving. And you are not alone in it.

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