13/06/2026
π§ππ π§π’π£ππ π’π π π¬ π ππ¦π¦πππ π§π’ π π¬ ππ’π‘ππ₯ππππ§ππ’π‘ π§π’πππ¬ πͺππ¦ βπ₯π-πͺπ₯ππ§ππ‘π π πππ§π§ππ₯ π¦π§π’π₯π¬.β
There are moments in life that donβt just hurt youβ¦ they redefine how you see your future.
Some people are not struggling because they are lazy.
They are struggling because life handed them a chapter that felt too heavy to survive.
However, one of the greatest mistakes people make is assuming that because a chapter was bitter, the entire story must end that way.
Naomi called herself βbitterβ because loss convinced her there was nothing left.
Joseph was thrown into a pit and it looked like destiny had changed its mind.
Hannah prayed so long that her silence began to feel like rejection.
But hear this clearly:
God is not only the author of beginnings⦠He is also the master of revisions.
He does not throw away a life just because it started painfully.
A bitter chapter is not proof of a finished story.
It is often the place where God quietly begins His deepest work.
Because what man calls βruined,β God calls βraw material.β
What looks like delay may actually be divine editing.
What feels like silence may be God rearranging the ending so it speaks louder than the pain.
So before you conclude on your life too quickly⦠pause.
Because the pen is still in His hand.
And when God finishes rewriting a story, He does not just fix itβ¦
He transforms it into testimony.
If you believe your story is still under divine editing, declare boldly:
βLord, rewrite my story for Your glory.β π₯