Finding The Missing Peace

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Through the Bible in 66 Days - Romans

 





The book of Romans is one of the clearest and most powerful explanations of the Gospel found anywhere in the Bible. It was written by the apostle Paul, a man who once opposed Christianity. He persecuted believers and opposed the name of the Lord Jesus Christ. Yet God saved him by grace, and the very man who once tried to destroy the Gospel became one of its greatest preachers.


That alone is a message of hope. If God could save Saul of Tarsus, He can save anyone.


Paul writes Romans to carefully explain the Gospel message. He shows why salvation is needed, who needs it, how God provides it, and what happens when a sinner trusts in Christ.


Many people have heard the statement, “Christ died for our sins,” but what does that really mean? Why did He have to die? What difference does His death make? How can a guilty sinner be forgiven and accepted by God? And after someone becomes a Christian, how can they battle against sin and temptation?


Romans answers these great questions.

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Monday, May 18, 2026

Through the Bible in 66 Days - Acts







The Book of Acts is the second volume written by Dr Luke, the same careful historian who wrote the Gospel of Luke. He continues his account for his friend Theophilus, showing what happened after the Lord Jesus rose from the dead and returned to heaven. If Luke’s Gospel tells us what Jesus began to do and teach, Acts tells us what Jesus continued to do through His people by the power of the Holy Spirit.


Acts is a fast‑moving book—full of journeys, preaching, conversions, opposition, miracles, and changed lives. It begins in Jerusalem and ends in Rome, showing how the gospel spread from a small group of believers to the heart of the Roman Empire. In other words, it takes the message of Christ from Jerusalem to Rome, covering the whole known world.


Two Main Sections — Peter and Paul


The book divides neatly into two parts:

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Saturday, May 16, 2026

Through the Bible in 66 Days - John

 







John wrote his Gospel as an older man looking back over a lifetime of walking with the Lord Jesus. He wasn’t guessing. He wasn’t repeating rumours. He was an eyewitness. He had seen the miracles, heard the teaching, watched the crowds react, and stood at the foot of the cross. And now, near the end of his life, he tells us why he wrote it all down:


“These are written that you might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing you might have life through His name.” (John 20:31)


That is the heartbeat of the whole book. John wants you to know who Jesus really is and to have eternal life.


Seven Signs That Point to Jesus as the Son of God


John chooses seven signs—seven miracles—to prove that Jesus is not just a good teacher or a kind healer, but God Himself. Each sign is like a spotlight showing His power:


• Turning water into wine (John 2)

• Healing the nobleman’s son (John 4)

• Healing the lame man at Bethesda (John 5)

• Feeding the five thousand (John 6)

• Walking on water (John 6)

• Giving sight to the man born blind (John 9)

• Raising Lazarus from the dead (John 11)


These aren’t random acts of kindness. They are deliberate signs showing that Jesus has the power of God—power over sickness, nature, blindness, and even death.

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Thursday, May 14, 2026

Through the Bible in 66 Days - Luke






Luke’s Gospel opens with a doctor’s precision. He tells his friend Theophilus that he has carefully investigated everything about Jesus so that he can present an orderly, reliable account of the things Christians are certain about. Luke wants us to know that the Gospel is not a collection of nice ideas — it is history, truth, and fact.


Luke himself was not a Jew. He writes as an outsider, someone who understands what it feels like to be on the edge. And that is exactly why his Gospel is so precious. He shows us the Lord Jesus moving toward the people everyone else avoided — outcasts, foreigners, enslaved people, sinners, the poor, the broken, and especially women who were often overlooked in that culture. Luke shows us that Jesus sees, values, and welcomes every person.


Jesus — The Perfect Man


The Greeks admired the idea of the “perfect man” — wise, noble, balanced, compassionate, strong. Luke shows that Jesus surpasses every ideal they ever imagined. He is God in human flesh, living among us with perfect kindness, perfect purity, and perfect love.

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