When Death Comes Too Soon:  Understanding God’s Heart in Our Loss

Opening Prayer

“Lord, my heart is broken. I don’t understand why this happened. Help me to see Your truth in the midst of my pain. Give me courage to face the hard questions honestly and meet me in this place of grief. Amen.”

Part 1: The Hard Question – Did God Take Them?

Scripture

“The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life and have it to the full.” – John 10:10

Reflection

When someone we love dies too soon, our first instinct is often to ask: “Did God do this? Is this His plan?”

Here’s the truth that changes everything: Death was never God’s plan. Death is the enemy.

In the beginning, God created a world without death. When sin entered through human choice, death came with it; not as God’s design, but as the consequence of a broken world (Romans 5:12). Death is called “the last enemy” in 1 Corinthians 15:26. Enemies aren’t part of the plan; they’re what we fight against.

Jesus never once looked at death and said, “This is My Father’s will.” Instead, He wept at Lazarus’s tomb (John 11:35). He raised the widow’s son because He was moved with compassion at her grief (Luke 7:13). He conquered death through His resurrection because death is the enemy, not the ally.

Real Example: Sarah lost her 32-year-old husband to cancer, leaving her with three young children. Well-meaning people told her “God needed another angel” and “This was His perfect timing.” But as she studied Scripture, she discovered that God hates death, weeps with those who weep, and is actively working to destroy death itself. This didn’t remove her grief, but it removed the burden of believing God had cruelly orchestrated her husband’s death.

Have you been blaming God for something He grieves over too?

Part 2: The Enemy’s Hand vs. God’s Permission

Scripture

“We know that we are children of God, and that the whole world is under the control of the evil one.” – 1 John 5:19

“Then the LORD said to Satan, ‘Very well, then, everything he has is in your power, but on the man himself do not lay a finger.'” – Job 1:12

Reflection

There’s a critical distinction we must understand: God allowing something is not the same as God causing it or desiring it.

We live in a fallen world where Satan has temporary authority (2 Corinthians 4:4). Disease exists. Accidents happen. People make choices that harm others. God doesn’t cause these things, but in His respect for free will and the temporary state of this fallen world, He sometimes permits them.

Think of it like a parent allowing a teenager to make their own choices. The parent doesn’t want the teen to get hurt, doesn’t plan for them to fail, and grieves when they do but respects their freedom to choose. When consequences come, the parent didn’t cause them, even though they permitted the freedom that led to them.

Job’s story shows us this clearly. God didn’t send the disasters that killed Job’s children – Satan did. But Satan had to ask permission. God set boundaries (Job 1:12). This reveals something profound: God is not the source of evil, but He is sovereign even over how evil can operate.

Real Example: Michael’s 19-year-old daughter was killed by a drunk driver. For years, he raged at God: “You could have stopped this! You let this happen!” Through counseling and Scripture, Michael began to understand that God didn’t send that drunk driver, human sin and bad choices did. God grieved with Michael. God could have stopped it, yes, but doing so would require removing human free will entirely. Michael’s anger shifted from God to the real enemy: sin, death, and the evil one who “comes to steal, kill, and destroy.”

Can you distinguish between what God causes and what He permits in a fallen world?

Part 3: Death Before Its Time – The Thief’s Work

Scripture

“Do not be like Cain, who belonged to the evil one and murdered his brother. And why did he murder him? Because his own actions were evil and his brother’s were righteous.” – 1 John 3:12

“The enemy…comes to steal and kill and destroy.” – John 10:10

Reflection

The Bible is filled with “premature” deaths that break God’s heart:

  • Abel, murdered by his brother (Genesis 4)
  • The infants killed by Herod (Matthew 2:16)
  • Stephen, stoned while still young in ministry (Acts 7)
  • James, executed by King Herod (Acts 12:2)

Not once does Scripture say “This was God’s perfect timing” or “God needed them in heaven.” Instead, these deaths are presented as tragedies – results of sin, evil, persecution, and the fallen world we inhabit.

God’s original design was for us to live full lives. “You shall come to your grave in ripe old age, like sheaves gathered in season” (Job 5:26). When death comes early, it’s a theft, the enemy stealing what God intended.

Real Example: Jennifer’s teenage son died by suicide after struggling with depression. The guilt and “what-ifs” were crushing. Then she heard a pastor explain that suicide is not God’s will, it’s a tragic result of mental illness, spiritual attack, and overwhelming pain. God didn’t orchestrate her son’s death; He wept over it. The enemy is a liar who whispers hopelessness. God is the one who grieves with her and promises to one day “wipe every tear from [our] eyes” (Revelation 21:4). This understanding didn’t erase her pain, but it helped her stop seeing God as her son’s killer and start seeing Him as her comforter.

Are you angry at God for something the enemy has done?

Part 4: Where Was God When It Happened?

Scripture

“The LORD is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.” – Psalm 34:18

“Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me.” – Psalm 23:4

Reflection

“Where was God?” is the cry of every grieving heart. The answer may surprise you: He was right there, grieving with you.

When Lazarus died, Jesus didn’t explain it away with theology. He wept (John 11:35). The shortest verse in the Bible reveals the longest truth about God’s heart: He mourns with us.

God didn’t abandon you when your loved one died. He was there:

  • In the hospital room
  • At the accident scene
  • In the moment of the heart attack
  • When the diagnosis came

He was there, not as the orchestrator of tragedy, but as the loving Father whose heart breaks when His children suffer. He catches every tear (Psalm 56:8). He stays close to the brokenhearted.

The question isn’t “Where was God?” but rather “Do I know He’s here with me now?”

Real Example: Robert’s wife died suddenly of an aneurysm at age 40. “Where were You, God?” he shouted in his empty house. Weeks later, looking through old photos, he found a journal entry his wife had written weeks before her death: “I feel God’s presence so strongly lately. Whatever comes, I know He’s with me.” Robert realized God hadn’t abandoned them – He had been preparing his wife and had been present with Robert even in his anger and questions. God didn’t leave when death came; He came closer.

Can you feel God’s presence in your grief, even if you don’t understand His ways?

Part 5: The Mystery of God’s Sovereignty and Human Suffering

Scripture

“For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways,’ declares the LORD.” – Isaiah 55:8-9

“Now we see only a reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully.” – 1 Corinthians 13:12

Reflection

Here’s where we must embrace mystery: God is both sovereign over all things AND deeply grieved by death and suffering.

How can both be true? We don’t fully know. But we see glimpses:

  • God is powerful enough to stop every tragedy, yet wise enough to know that a world without free will, natural laws, and consequences would not be a world of genuine love and relationship
  • God works within the brokenness of this world to bring redemption, not by causing evil but by redeeming it
  • God’s “plan” is not a detailed script where He writes every event, but rather an ultimate destination He will reach despite the chaos of a fallen world

Think of it this way: A master chess player knows they will win the game, even when their opponent makes moves they wish they wouldn’t make. God’s sovereignty means the final victory is secure; death will be destroyed, all will be made right, every tear will be wiped away. But it doesn’t mean He choreographs every painful move along the way.

Real Example: Pastor David lost his young grandson to leukemia. As a man who had preached God’s sovereignty for decades, he struggled with how to reconcile God’s power with this crushing loss. Through his grief, he came to this understanding: “God didn’t give my grandson cancer to teach us something. Cancer exists because we live in a fallen world. But God is so sovereign that He can take even this evil and somehow weave redemption through it. I don’t know how. I just know He promises to. And one day, in the resurrection, my grandson will have a body that will never know disease again.”

Can you trust God’s ultimate sovereignty even when you don’t understand His ways in the moment?

Part 6: What God Promises (And Doesn’t Promise)

Scripture

“And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.” – Romans 8:28

“He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.” – Revelation 21:4

Reflection

What God DOESN’T Promise:

  • Life without suffering or loss
  • Protection from all tragedy in a fallen world
  • That everyone will live to old age
  • That we’ll understand the “why” of every painful event
  • That death happens only when He specifically plans it

What God DOES Promise:

  • His presence in our darkest valleys (Psalm 23:4)
  • That He works redemption even from tragedy (Romans 8:28)
  • Resurrection and reunion with loved ones who died in Christ (1 Thessalonians 4:13-14)
  • The ultimate destruction of death itself (1 Corinthians 15:26)
  • That our present suffering doesn’t compare to the glory that will be revealed (Romans 8:18)
  • To be close to the brokenhearted (Psalm 34:18)

Notice the difference: God doesn’t promise to prevent every heartbreak, but He promises to redeem every heartbreak. He doesn’t promise to explain everything, but He promises to be present through everything.

Real Example: Maria lost her mother to COVID-19 before vaccines were available. She felt cheated, her mother was healthy, doing everything right, and still died. “God could have protected her,” Maria kept thinking. A grief counselor helped her see that God never promised to prevent all sickness and death in this age. What He did promise was to be with Maria in her grief, to sustain her family, and that this separation was temporary. Maria’s mother knew Jesus; they will be reunited. God didn’t rob Maria of her mother – death did. But God promises that death won’t have the last word.

Are you holding God accountable for promises He never made, while missing the promises He has made?

Part 7: Moving Forward with Hope

Scripture

“Brothers and sisters, we do not want you to be uninformed about those who sleep in death, so that you do not grieve like the rest of mankind, who have no hope.” – 1 Thessalonians 4:13

“He has made everything beautiful in its time.” – Ecclesiastes 3:11

Reflection

Understanding that God didn’t take your loved one doesn’t erase the grief. But it does something profoundly important: It allows you to grieve without bitterness toward God.

You can bring your anger, confusion, and pain to God without believing He’s your enemy. You can weep in His presence knowing He weeps with you, not against you. You can trust Him for the future even when the present feels unbearable.

The death of your loved one was “too soon” by earthly standards. God agrees with you. But here’s the hope: This isn’t the end of the story. Resurrection is coming. Reunion is promised. Death will be destroyed. The “too soon” of today will be swallowed up in the “eternal forever” of tomorrow.

Paul doesn’t tell us not to grieve. He tells us to grieve with hope – the hope that:

  • Death is temporary
  • Separation is not forever
  • God is making all things new
  • The enemy’s theft will be restored a hundredfold

Real Example: One year after losing his wife Mary, John picked back up where his wife and him left off and continued to develop and populate their healing and deliverance website they had dreamed of together. He could finally say: “I don’t understand why Mary died when she did. I wish she were here. I miss her every day. But I don’t believe God robbed me of her. I believe the enemy stole time we should have had. And I believe God is so redemptive that He’s using even this loss to help others find freedom. Mary’s voice still speaks through this ministry. Death silenced her physically, but God is multiplying her impact. That’s not God’s ‘Plan A’ – His Plan A was for us to grow old together. But it shows me that God is so powerful, He can work redemption even through what the enemy meant for harm.”

  • How does it change your grief to know God didn’t take your loved one from you?
  • Can you trust Him with the future even when the past is so painful?
  • What would it look like to honor your loved one’s memory by helping others find hope?

Special Section: “But It Feels Permanent” – The Reality of Grief on Earth

The Honest Question

“I know the Bible talks about reunion and resurrection, but that doesn’t change the fact that I go to bed alone every night. My child won’t be at Christmas. My parent won’t meet my children. The chair at dinner is empty. How is this ‘temporary’ when it’s the rest of my earthly life?”

Scripture

“What no eye has seen, what no ear has heard, and what no mind has conceived—the things God has prepared for those who love him.” – 1 Corinthians 2:9

“For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal.” – 2 Corinthians 4:17-18

The Biblical Answer: Two Realities at Once

Here’s the truth the Bible holds in tension: Your grief is real AND the separation is temporary. Both are true simultaneously.

The Reality of Earthly Grief:

The Bible never minimizes earthly suffering. Consider:

  • David mourned his son for days, fasting and weeping, even though he said “I will go to him, but he will not return to me” (2 Samuel 12:23). He knew he’d see his son again, but that didn’t erase his present agony.
  • Jesus wept at Lazarus’s tomb (John 11:35) even though He knew He was about to raise him. The present pain mattered, even with resurrection minutes away.
  • Paul says we grieve – not that we don’t grieve (1 Thessalonians 4:13). The grief is legitimate, real, and honored by God.
  • Job mourned his children and God never said “Stop grieving; they’re in a better place.” God let Job grieve fully.

The Bible validates that decades of separation on earth IS a long time to the human heart. God doesn’t dismiss this.

Understanding “Temporary” from an Eternal Perspective

Here’s what the Bible reveals about time and eternity:

1. Our Current Time Perspective is Limited

“With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day.” – 2 Peter 3:8

We experience time linearly – minute by minute, day by day. From our earthly perspective, 20, 30, or 50 years IS a lifetime. It’s not wrong to feel the weight of that.

But Scripture reveals that time operates differently in God’s eternal reality. This doesn’t invalidate your earthly experience; it means there’s a perspective beyond what you can currently see.

Think of childbirth. When a woman is in labor, the pain is intense and feels endless. Jesus Himself used this analogy: “A woman giving birth to a child has pain because her time has come; but when her baby is born she forgets the anguish because of her joy that a child is born into the world” (John 16:21).

While in labor, if someone said “This pain is temporary,” the woman might think “Easy for you to say!” The pain is very real and very present. But from the perspective of holding that baby years later, the hours of labor truly were temporary, even though they didn’t feel that way in the moment.

Our earthly separation is like that labor, excruciating and long while we’re in it, but genuinely temporary from eternity’s viewpoint.

2. Eternity is Not Just “A Long Time” – It’s Outside Time

Scripture describes eternity not as “a really long timeline” but as something altogether different:

“He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart; yet no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end.” – Ecclesiastes 3:11

When you’re reunited with your loved one in the resurrection:

  • There won’t be a sense of “Wow, those 40 years felt so long”
  • The separation will feel like it never happened compared to the forever you’ll have
  • The pain of separation will be “the former things” that have passed away (Revelation 21:4)

Biblical Example: When Lazarus was raised from the dead, he didn’t spend his remaining life talking about how long those four days in the tomb felt. The interruption was swallowed up by the reality of his continued life.

3. The “Already But Not Yet” Kingdom

Jesus taught that God’s Kingdom has already begun but is not yet fully here:

“The kingdom of God is in your midst” (Luke 17:21) – Already here “Your kingdom come” (Matthew 6:10) – Not yet fully here

In the same way, reunion is:

  • Already true in spiritual reality – your loved one is “present with the Lord” (2 Corinthians 5:8) in a realm where they still exist and are more alive than ever
  • Not yet experienced by you in physical reality – you’re still in the temporal realm where separation is felt acutely

Both realities are simultaneously true.

Why This Matters: It Changes How We Grieve

Understanding this doesn’t remove the pain, but it does three important things:

1. It Validates Your Current Pain The Bible never says “Don’t feel sad because it’s temporary.” It says feel the grief fully, but don’t grieve as those without hope. Your tears for the next 20, 30, or 40 years matter to God. He’s collecting them (Psalm 56:8).

2. It Provides True Hope This isn’t false comfort or wishful thinking. The resurrection is God’s certain promise. Your loved one who died in Christ is not gone – they’re in another location. You haven’t lost them; you’re separated from them temporarily.

Think of it like this: If your spouse moved overseas for a work assignment that would last several years, you’d miss them terribly every single day. The separation would be painful and feel long. But you wouldn’t say “I’ve lost them forever” because you know they still exist and you’ll be together again. The pain is real, but it’s the pain of separation, not the pain of permanent loss.

3. It Gives Purpose to the Waiting Paul says our present sufferings are “achieving for us an eternal glory” (2 Corinthians 4:17). The grief you’re walking through isn’t meaningless. God is doing something in you and through you during this time that has eternal significance.

The Honest Struggle: Living Between Two Realities

The Biblical Pattern for This Tension:

The entire book of Psalms shows God’s people crying out in present pain while holding onto future hope:

“How long, LORD? Will you forget me forever? How long will you hide your face from me? How long must I wrestle with my thoughts and day after day have sorrow in my heart?” – Psalm 13:1-2

But then: “But I trust in your unfailing love; my heart rejoices in your salvation.” – Psalm 13:5

Notice: David doesn’t resolve the tension. He lives in it. He feels the “how long” deeply while trusting God’s promises.

You’re Allowed to Do the Same:

  • You can believe resurrection is coming AND feel the crushing absence today
  • You can trust God’s promises AND cry out “How much longer?”
  • You can have hope for eternity AND struggle with getting through today

This isn’t weak faith. This is biblical faith, holding onto God’s promises while being honest about present pain.

Practical Truth: The Separation IS Long by Human Measure

Let’s be completely honest: If you’re 40 years old and your spouse died, and you live to 80, that’s 40 years of earthly separation. That’s half your life. That IS a long time to a human heart.

The Bible doesn’t ask you to pretend it’s not.

What it does ask is that you:

  1. Don’t grieve as though it’s permanent – because it’s not
  2. Don’t grieve as though death wins – because it doesn’t
  3. Don’t grieve as though you’re alone – because God is with you
  4. Don’t grieve without purpose – because your life continues with meaning

Real Life Example

Margaret lost her husband when she was 35. Twenty years later, at 55, she reflected:

“These twenty years have been the hardest of my life. Anyone who told me early on ‘It’s just temporary’ made me want to scream. It didn’t feel temporary – it felt like forever. And you know what? Twenty years IS a long time. I don’t minimize that anymore.

But here’s what I’ve learned: I’m not grieving a permanent loss. I’m grieving a long separation. My husband is alive in Christ, just in another realm. I haven’t lost him; I just can’t see him or touch him right now.

Some days that distinction doesn’t help much. Other days, it’s everything. I’ve stopped trying to force myself to ‘feel’ like it’s temporary. I just choose to believe what God says is true, even when my experience screams otherwise.

And I’ve found that God honors both my tears and my trust. He’s never told me to stop crying. He just keeps promising me that one day, He’ll wipe every tear away. And when that day comes, when I see my husband’s face again and we’re reunited in resurrection bodies that never age or die, these twenty years, and however many more I have left, will feel like the blink of an eye compared to the eternity we’ll have together.

I can’t feel that reality yet. But I believe it. And that belief carries me through.”

The Bottom Line

The loss feels permanent because from your current earthly perspective, it is very long. God doesn’t ask you to deny that reality or pretend it doesn’t hurt deeply.

But the loss IS temporary because from God’s eternal perspective, the perspective you’ll one day share, the separation truly is brief compared to the forever that’s coming.

Both truths exist together. You’re living in the painful gap between them. And God meets you right there in that gap, honoring your tears while whispering His promises.

Closing Prayer

“Father God, I’m still hurting. I still have questions. But I’m choosing to believe that You are good, that You grieve with me, and that You didn’t rob me of my loved one. Help me to direct my anger at the real enemy – sin, death, and the evil one – rather than at You. Give me hope for the reunion that’s coming. Use even this pain for Your glory and for helping others. Until that day when You wipe away every tear, hold me close. In Jesus’ name, Amen.”

For Further Reflection

Mini-lesson Main Message: Many ask what kind of God would do such a thing or allow such a thing? The truth is God didn’t rob you of your loved one – death did. God grieves with you and promises resurrection and redemption, even though He didn’t orchestrate the tragedy.

Key Truths to Remember:

  1. Death is the enemy, not God’s design or desire
  2. God permits but doesn’t cause the tragedies of a fallen world
  3. God is present in our suffering, grieving with us
  4. “Too soon” deaths are the enemy’s theft, not God’s plan
  5. Resurrection and redemption are coming
  6. We can grieve with hope, knowing this isn’t the end

Scripture to Meditate On:

  • John 11:1-44 (Jesus weeps and conquers death)
  • 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18 (Hope in resurrection)
  • Revelation 21:1-5 (Promise of no more death)
  • Romans 8:18-39 (Nothing separates us from God’s love)

This devotional is dedicated to all who have lost loved ones “too soon” and to the memory of my loving wife Mary, whose life and legacy continue to bring healing to others.

How Healing & Deliverance Ministry Can Help

Grief is natural and necessary, but sometimes our pain becomes complicated by spiritual interference. The enemy loves to use our legitimate grief as an entry point for:

  • Lies that keep us stuck: “God is punishing you,” “You’ll never recover,” “Life is meaningless now”
  • Bitterness that becomes a stronghold: Anger that hardens into a barrier between you and God
  • Spiritual oppression: Heavy darkness that goes beyond normal grief into something that suffocates hope
  • Unhealthy patterns: Turning to destructive coping mechanisms that become bondage
  • Unhealed trauma: The shock of sudden loss that needs specific ministry beyond time alone

Healing and Deliverance ministry addresses the spiritual dimension of grief. While grief counseling and time help with the natural mourning process, sometimes we need ministry that:

  • Breaks agreement with the enemy’s lies and replaces them with God’s truth
  • Releases bitterness and unforgiveness (even toward God) that’s blocking healing
  • Confronts spiritual oppression that’s making grief unbearable
  • Helps heal trauma wounds that keep you locked in the moment of loss
  • Restores your sense of purpose and hope for the future
  • Equips you to stand firm when the enemy attacks your faith through grief

You can grieve in healthy ways while also receiving freedom from the enemy’s attempts to use your grief against you. This isn’t about “getting over it quickly,” it’s about ensuring that as you walk through the valley of the shadow of death, the enemy doesn’t take up permanent residence in your pain.

God wants to heal your broken heart, not minimize your loss. He wants to deliver you from the lies and darkness the enemy tries to attach to your grief, so you can mourn as someone with hope, faith, and freedom.

If your grief feels heavier than it should, if you’re stuck in patterns that don’t lead to healing, or if the enemy is using your loss to destroy your faith and future, healing and deliverance ministry can help you find the freedom to grieve well and live fully again, even while you wait for the reunion that’s coming.

Additional Reflection: The Essential Role of Salvation and the Holy Spirit in Healing and Deliverance

As we walk through grief and the battles that come with it, we must remember the foundation of all healing and deliverance: the born-again experience and the baptism of the Holy Ghost.

1. The Born-Again Experience

To be born again is to receive a new heart and new spiritual life in Christ.
Without this, true freedom from the enemy is impossible.

It was never God’s intention for anyone to perish, but for all to receive eternal life through Jesus Christ.
— John 3:16; Hebrews 9:27

Salvation breaks the enemy’s claim and opens the door to healing, deliverance, and restoration.

2. Baptism in the Name of Jesus Christ

After salvation, believers need the baptism of the Holy Ghost with the evidence of speaking in tongues (Acts 2:38).
This is not optional, it is the power Jesus promised.

Without the Holy Spirit’s power, we cannot:

  • Live a holy, righteous life
  • Walk in sanctification
  • Resist spiritual attacks
  • Love God with all our heart, soul, and strength
  • Love our neighbor as ourselves
    — Matthew 22:36–39

The Holy Spirit gives us divine enabling grace to live the life God has called us to.

3. Freedom Is God’s Will, However it is our Choice to Choose It

God is full of mercy, patience, and compassion. He stands ready to heal our broken hearts, deliver us from oppression, and restore what the enemy has stolen.

But our choices still matter.

“It is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment.” Hebrews 9:27

“He that overcomes… his name will not be blotted out of the Book of Life.” Revelation 3:5

“He that endures to the end shall be saved.” Matthew 24:13

These verses remind us of three truths:

  1. God desires all to be saved.
  2. God equips us with the power of the Holy Ghost so we can walk in freedom.
  3. But ultimately, our eternal destiny is shaped by the choices we make.

God calls us to respond, to repent, to believe, to be filled with the Spirit, to walk in righteousness, and to persevere in faith until the end.

Our final eternity is shaped by the decisions we make today.

4. Deliverance Requires Being Filled

A Christian can face spiritual oppression, torment, anxiety, spiritual heaviness, cycles of defeat but victory comes through being filled with the Holy Spirit.  Deliverance is not just about removing the enemy; it’s about being empowered to stay free.

Because deliverance doesn’t end with expulsion, it continues with infilling.
The Holy Ghost is the One who:

  • Cleanses
  • Empowers
  • Strengthens
  • Sanctifies
  • Guards the heart
  • Reveals truth
  • Breaks deception
  • Enables holiness

The Spirit-filled life is the victorious life.

Bottom Line: God’s Invitation to Walk in Fullness, Walk in Freedom

God is with you in your grief. He is patient with your questions. He is merciful toward your struggles. He is not ashamed of your tears.

But to live in lasting freedom, strength, and hope, you must be:

  • Born again
  • Baptized in the Holy Ghost
  • Walking daily in His power

This is the life God intended for you, a life where grief does not crush you, the enemy does not bind you, and the Holy Spirit empowers you to overcome.

Your loved one’s story is not over.
Your story is not over.
God is still writing redemption through every chapter of your life.

“Ye shall receive power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you.”  Acts 1:8

That power is available.
That power is necessary.
And that power is God’s gift to you.

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