DidYouKnow+FollowThe Bible never says Satan was a fallen angel. Most people are sure of this. Satan was an angel. He rebelled. He fell from heaven. But the Bible never clearly says that. The idea comes from later interpretations, not a single explicit verse. Isaiah’s “morning star” passage is about a human king, not Satan. Revelation uses symbolic imagery, not a biography. That matters, because many believers imagine evil as a tragic fall from light. A cosmic backstory that explains everything neatly. But Scripture presents Satan less as a fallen hero, and more as an accuser. A disruptor. A tester. This changes how temptation feels. Less dramatic. More subtle. More ordinary. If evil in your life never looked grand or obvious, that does not mean you missed something. It may mean the Bible never described it the way we remember. #BibleMisconceptions #MandelaEffect #SpiritualWarfare #BiblicalTruth #DidYouKnow351691Share
DidYouKnow+FollowThe Bible never says suicide automatically sends you to hell. This belief is widespread. Many assume it is explicitly biblical. It is not. The Bible does not outline an afterlife rulebook for suicide. It records suicides—but does not assign eternal verdicts to them. That matters, because this belief has caused enormous fear and silence. Especially among older believers struggling quietly with despair. Scripture treats life as sacred. But it never claims God’s mercy stops at a single moment. If this teaching ever filled you with terror rather than hope, that fear did not come from the text itself. It came from conclusions added later. #BibleMisconceptions #MandelaEffect #MentalHealthAndFaith #BiblicalTruth #DidYouKn547745Share
Christ Follower+FollowTruth doesn’t need volume. It needs fruit. Scripture used to control, wound, or manipulate is not being handled with clean hands or a pure heart. This is a call to examine fruit, not platforms. Light exposes. It doesn’t abuse. #TruthOverDeception #Discernment #BiblicalTruth #FruitNotFame #SpiritualAbuse 201Share
Dawn Flores+Follow #DailyBibleVerse #BibleVerse #BibleVerseOfTheDay #Scripture #ChristianQuotes #Faith #Jesus #BibleStudy # christianLiving #BiblicalTruth #BibleQuotes #Gospel #Worship20Share
DidYouKnow+FollowThe Bible never lists the “seven deadly sins.” Most Christians can name them. Many are sure they come straight from Scripture. They do not. The list comes from later church tradition, not the Bible itself. Scripture talks about sin often—but never as a fixed list of seven. That matters, because many believers were taught to rank sins, as if some were manageable and others fatal. But the Bible focuses less on counting sins and more on the condition of the heart. If you’ve spent years measuring yourself against a list that Scripture never gave, your anxiety did not come from the text. It came from tradition filling in gaps. #BibleMisconceptions #MandelaEffect #ChristianDoctrine #BiblicalTruth #DidYouKnow194Share
DidYouKnow+FollowThe Bible never says Eve ate an apple. Almost everyone remembers an apple. Paintings. Children’s books. Sunday school walls. But the Bible never names the fruit. Genesis simply says “fruit from the tree.” No apple. No description. That matters, because we turned a story about disobedience and trust into a story about a specific object. By naming the fruit, we made the mistake feel smaller. Almost harmless. Almost childish. But Scripture keeps it unnamed on purpose. The problem was never the fruit. It was the choice to take what was not given. If you’ve spent years fixating on the surface detail, you’re not alone. We remembered the picture. Not the point. #BibleMisconceptions #MandelaEffect #Genesis #BiblicalTruth #DidYouKnow4830Share
OneWordStudy+FollowLoneliness Isn’t a Lack of Faith. It’s a Biblical Condition. You can be faithful, married, active in church—and still feel deeply alone. That confusion often comes with shame. Yet Genesis describes Adam as “alone,” before sin entered the world. The Hebrew badad means separated, isolated, singular. Loneliness is not always a spiritual problem to fix. Sometimes it’s a human condition to be acknowledged. If your later years feel quieter than you expected, emptier than sermons prepared you for— you’re not broken. The Bible doesn’t rush to correct loneliness. God sits with it first. #Loneliness #BiblicalTruth #FaithAndEmotion #OlderChristians #SpiritualCompanionship271Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels forgotten because life moved on Life kept changing around me. People moved forward. Seasons shifted. And I felt left behind. That’s why I think about Joseph in prison—not the dreams, not the promotion, but the years in between. Scripture says he was forgotten by the cupbearer. That word is intentional. The Bible doesn’t deny the forgetting. It names it. If you feel left behind today, Scripture doesn’t rush to say “God remembered you” too quickly. It sits with the truth that forgetting can be part of the story—and not the end of it. #FeelingForgotten #Joseph #FaithInWaiting #BiblicalTruth #ChristianEndurance21Share
DidYouKnow+FollowThe Bible never says angels have wings like that. Most people picture angels with large white wings. That image feels biblical. But most angels in Scripture appear as ordinary men. No wings. No glow. No warning. Winged beings do appear—but they are cherubim and seraphim, not the messengers most people imagine. That matters, because we turned angels into symbols of comfort, when the Bible often describes fear as the first reaction. “Do not be afraid” is said for a reason. If divine encounters in Scripture feel unsettling rather than gentle, that does not mean something is wrong. It means we remembered the artwork, not the text. #BibleMisconceptions #MandelaEffect #AngelsInTheBible #BiblicalTruth #DidYouKnow327Share
OneWordStudy+FollowOne Hebrew word changed how I understand righteousness. In English, righteous sounds moral. Rule-following. Proper behavior. But the Hebrew word tsedeq is relational. It means being rightly aligned. Tsedeq is less about personal perfection and more about being faithful within relationships— with God and with others. This is important for those raised with strict moral teaching. Righteousness is not about never failing. It is about staying aligned, even after failure. Tsedeq tells us righteousness is lived, not performed. #BibleStudy #HebrewWord #Righteousness #BiblicalTruth #FaithAndLife172Share