*This weekly newsletter will share about the Bible Breakdown podcast, things about RLC, and my favorite things from around the web. My prayer is it will help you know God better.
Hello friends. Happy Saturday!
Waiting on God can feel uncomfortable, especially when answers seem delayed. Habakkuk 2 speaks directly to seasons of uncertainty and frustration. God reminds His people that He is still working, even when it feels slow. This devotion invites us to trust God’s timing with steady faith.
🎧 My Favorite BibleBreakdown Episode This Week>>>
📚 Scripture. 💪
(Habakkuk 2:2–4) Then the Lord said to me, “Write my answer plainly on tablets, so that a runner can carry the correct message to others. This vision is for a future time. It describes the end, and it will be fulfilled. If it seems slow in coming, wait patiently, for it will surely take place. It will not be delayed. “Look at the proud! They trust in themselves, and their lives are crooked. But the righteous will live by their faithfulness to God.
Observation: God’s plans often unfold more slowly than we expect. Delay does not mean denial or neglect. Faith requires trust even when outcomes are not immediate. Pride relies on self, while faith relies on God. God’s promises remain trustworthy regardless of timing.
Application: I will choose faith and patience instead of frustration while waiting on God’s promises.
Prayer: Thank You, Jesus, for being faithful even when I struggle to wait. Help me trust Your timing and live by faith rather than fear.

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🖤 My Favorite Links This Week.
📣 Sermon/Testimony. Break Free from the Grip of Temptation (Philip Anthony)
🤔 Apologetics. Questions that Reveal the Proof of God (Dr. Frank Turek)
✍️ Going Deeper. Biblical Theology.
This video looks deeper at working through the Apostle Paul's Letters.
📚 Book Recommendation. Becoming God's Family: Why the Church Still Matters (Dr. Carmen Imes)
Becoming God’s Family: Why the Church Still Matters by Carmen Imes offers a biblically rich and pastorally grounded vision of the church as God’s covenant family. Imes argues that from Genesis to the New Testament, God’s purpose has always been to form a people who live together under His rule and reflect His character to the world. Rather than treating the church as optional or merely functional, the book presents belonging as central to Christian identity and discipleship. With clarity and warmth, Imes shows how shared practices, mutual responsibility, and communal worship shape believers into God’s people. The book speaks directly to modern disillusionment with church while refusing to separate faith from embodied community. This book is highly recommended for pastors, church leaders, and Christians seeking a deeper, Scripture-shaped understanding of why life together in the church still matters.
✍️ Quote of the Week That Makes You Think
“Indeed, a quick glance around this broken world makes it painfully obvious that we don't need more arguments on behalf of God; we need more people who live as if they are in covenant with Unconditional Love, which is our best definition of God.” ― Robin R. Meyers
🤪 Dad Joke of the week
My friend was showing me his tool shed and pointed to a ladder. “That's my stepladder,” he said. "I never knew my real ladder.”
🤪 Meme of the week

Habakkuk reminds us that faith grows strongest in seasons of waiting. God is never rushed and never late. Our calling is not to control the timeline but to trust the One who holds it. Faith steadies us when answers are still forming.
