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🐦 THE TAILORBIRD AND THE WISDOM OF STARTING SMALL PART 7: FINAL LAP-PURPOSE-DRIVEN LIVING — WHEN EVERYTHING FINALLY MAKES SENSE

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🐦 THE TAILORBIRD AND THE WISDOM OF STARTING SMALL PART 7- FINAL LAP: PURPOSE-DRIVEN LIVING — WHEN EVERYTHING FINALLY MAKES SENSE Philippians 3:13–14  “This one thing I do… I press toward the mark…” Proverbs 29:18  “Where there is no vision, the people perish…” In Part 6, we learned that true greatness is often built in silence. Through the tailorbird, we discovered that: Real excellence does not depend on noise or attention. Spiritual, physical, financial, and relational growth often happens in secret. Hidden consistency produces visible results over time. What is built quietly often becomes the strongest structure Not everything valuable needs visibility to be valid. There comes a point in every journey when confusion begins to fade. You begin to see patterns. You begin to understand timing. You begin to realize that even the small things were part of something bigger. This is what purpose does. It brings meaning to what once looked random. And when we look at the tailorbird...

THE MIRACLE YOU MUST WALK AWAY FROM PART 5 —FROM NETS TO NATIONS (FINAL LAP)

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THE MIRACLE YOU MUST WALK AWAY FROM PART 5 —FROM NETS TO NATIONS (FINAL LAP) Acts 2:14–41 “Then Peter stood up…”  What Happens After You Leave Everything? In Part 4, we discovered that the greatest test was not catching the fish — it was leaving them behind. We learned that: not everything that works is meant to be kept forever, some miracles are tests of attachment, and good can become the enemy of God’s best. The disciples left behind comfort, familiarity, and immediate profit to follow Jesus into purpose. Because sometimes: the greatest act of faith is not holding on — but letting go. Peter left the nets. He left the boats. He left the fish. He left the familiar life he once knew. At that moment, it probably looked like loss. But heaven saw something bigger. The fisherman who walked away from fish in Luke 5 later stood before thousands in Acts of the Apostles and preached a message that transformed nations. What looked like sacrifice became significance. Because whenever God ask...

THE MIRACLE YOU MUST WALK AWAY FROM PART 4 — THE MIRACLE YOU MUST WALK AWAY FROM

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THE MIRACLE YOU MUST WALK AWAY FROM PART 4 — THE MIRACLE YOU MUST WALK AWAY FROM Luke 5:11 “And when they had brought their ships to land, they forsook all, and followed him.”  Leaving What Works In Part 3, we discovered that Peter’s greatest revelation was not the fish — it was himself. After encountering Jesus, Peter became aware of his weakness and cried: “Depart from me; for I am a sinful man, O Lord.”  We learned that: divine encounters expose us, insecurity can fight against destiny, and many people fear becoming who God is calling them to be. But Jesus responded to Peter’s fear with purpose: “ Fear not… ” God saw beyond Peter’s weakness and saw his future. The miracle had happened. The nets were full. The boats were overflowing. Business had finally become successful. This was the perfect moment to stay. Yet the Bible says: “ They forsook all, and followed Him.” This is one of the greatest paradoxes in Scripture. Jesus blessed them…then called them beyond the blessing. ...

THE MIRACLE YOU MUST WALK AWAY FROM PART 3 — THE FEAR OF BECOMING

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THE MIRACLE YOU MUST WALK AWAY FROM PART 3 — THE FEAR OF BECOMING Luke 5 5:8–10 “Depart from me; for I am a sinful man, O Lord.”  “ Depart From Me, Lord” In Part 2, we discovered that not every blessing is meant to become a permanent destination. Peter and his companions experienced supernatural increase, yet Jesus still called them beyond the miracle. We learned that: provision is different from purpose, some blessings are only signs, and success can become dangerous when it competes with calling. The disciples received the miracle, but they refused to let the miracle replace the Master.   Peter had just witnessed the greatest miracle of his career. The nets were overflowing. The boats were sinking with fish. The breakthrough had finally come. Yet instead of celebrating himself, Peter fell before Jesus and said: “ Depart from me… ” Why? Because the miracle revealed more than God’s power. It revealed Peter’s condition. Sometimes when God begins to call us higher, we suddenly b...

THE MIRACLE YOU MUST WALK AWAY FROM PART 2 — THE MIRACLE THAT CHANGED NOTHING… YET

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THE MIRACLE YOU MUST WALK AWAY FROM PART 2 — THE MIRACLE THAT CHANGED NOTHING… YET Luke 5:6–7 “And when they had this done, they inclosed a great multitude of fishes: and their net brake.”  When Blessing Is Not the Final Destination In Part 1, we learned that empty seasons do not always mean failure. Peter and his companions toiled all night and caught nothing, yet that same moment of frustration became the setting for a divine encounter. We discovered that: God often visits people in seasons of exhaustion. Empty nets can prepare us for dependence on God. And one act of obedience can change everything. Peter’s failure was not the end — it was preparation for revelation. After a whole night of failure, the miracle finally came. The nets that were once empty suddenly became full. The boats that carried disappointment suddenly carried abundance. This was the biggest catch of Peter’s life. Yet something shocking happened: The miracle changed their condition temporarily, but it was not ...

THE MIRACLE YOU MUST WALK AWAY FROM PART 1 — THE EMPTY NETS BEFORE THE MIRACLE

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THE MIRACLE YOU MUST WALK AWAY FROM PART 1 — THE EMPTY NETS BEFORE THE MIRACLE When Human Strength Fails Luke 5:5 “Master, we have toiled all the night, and have taken nothing...” — Luke 5:5 There are moments in life when you give your all and still end up with empty nets. Peter and his companions were not lazy men. They were experienced fishermen. They understood the sea, the timing, and the process. Yet after working all night, they caught nothing. Sometimes life can look like that: Effort without results. Prayer without visible answers. Strength without progress. But Luke 5 teaches us something powerful: Empty nets do not mean God is absent.  Sometimes God allows emptiness so He can introduce us to dependence on Him. 1. Empty Nets Do Not Always Mean Failure Peter worked hard, yet caught nothing. This means: Not every delay means you are cursed. Not every closed door means God has rejected you. Not every empty season means you are useless. Sometimes God allows human strength to f...

THE UNPROFITABLE PROFIT: GAINS THAT BANKRUPT THE SOUL PART 12: FINAL LAP: THE PROFITABLE LIFE — WHEN THE SOUL IS PRESERVED AND REWARDED

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THE UNPROFITABLE PROFIT: GAINS THAT BANKRUPT THE SOUL PART 12: FINAL LAP: THE PROFITABLE LIFE — WHEN THE SOUL IS PRESERVED AND REWARDED Matthew 25:21 “Well done, thou good and faithful servant… enter thou into the joy of thy lord.”  In Part 11, we stood before the eternal verdict. We learned that: Eternity reveals what life concealed. The verdict is based on response, not information. What you lived—not what you claimed—will speak. He managed life well… but neglected his soul. After all the warnings…after all the losses… after all the consequences…There is still a question: “ What does it mean to truly profit?”  Because not all profit is dangerous. There is a kind of gain…that heaven approves. A life where nothing essential is lost—and everything that matters is preserved. The Profitable Life — When The Soul Is Preserved And Rewarded A profitable life is not measured by how much you have…but by what you keep. It is a life where: Your soul is intact. Your alignment is consisten...

THE UNPROFITABLE PROFIT: GAINS THAT BANKRUPT THE SOUL PART 11: THE ETERNAL VERDICT — WHEN THE SOUL FINDS ITS FINAL PLACE

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THE UNPROFITABLE PROFIT: GAINS THAT BANKRUPT THE SOUL PART 11: THE ETERNAL VERDICT — WHEN THE SOUL FINDS ITS FINAL PLACE Matthew 25:46 “And these shall go away into everlasting punishment: but the righteous into life eternal.”  In Part 10, we confronted the urgency of the Second Coming. We learned that: Time is limited and cannot be assumed. Delay is dangerous. The return of Jesus Christ will be sudden and final. The greatest mistake is not saying no… it is saying “ later .” There is something beyond the return. Beyond the separation. Beyond the end of time. It is the verdict. Not a suggestion. Not an opinion. But a final, irreversible decision. And in that moment… the question is no longer: “ What did you gain ?” But: “ Where does your soul belong?” The Eternal Verdict — When The Soul Finds Its Final Place Eternity is not one place. It is a destination determined. A conclusion drawn from a life lived. A verdict based on alignment, not appearance. Because at that point: Excuses hav...

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