God made you. He knows you. He sees everything about your life—your struggles, your thoughts, your failures—and He still loves you.
He created you to know Him, walk with Him, and live in the joy of His presence forever (Genesis 1:27). But like every one of us, you’ve sinned. You've turned from God, maybe tried to live life your own way. Sin isn't just breaking rules—it's breaking relationship with the God who made you. And sin brings real consequences: guilt, separation from God, and eventually death (Romans 3:23; Romans 6:23).
But here's where the good news begins: God didn’t leave you there.
Because of His deep love for you, He sent His Son, Jesus Christ—God in human flesh—to rescue you (John 3:16). Jesus lived the perfect, sinless life you haven’t lived. Then He died on the cross in your place, taking all the punishment your sins deserve (Isaiah 53:5; 2 Corinthians 5:21). He rose from the dead three days later, defeating death so you could have eternal life (1 Corinthians 15:3–4).
This is for you. Jesus didn’t die for perfect people. He died for sinners—real people with real regrets, real pain, and real shame. People like you and me (Romans 5:8).
And now, God is offering you forgiveness—not because you’ve earned it, but because Jesus paid for it. He’s offering you a new heart, a new life, and a new future—right now.
But you must respond.
God calls you to turn away from your sin and trust completely in Jesus—not in your good deeds, not in religion, but in what Jesus has already done for you (Mark 1:15; Acts 3:19). When you put your faith in Him, God forgives you fully, gives you His Spirit, adopts you as His child, and promises you eternal life (John 1:12; Romans 8:1; Ephesians 2:8–9).
And Jesus will come again. One day, He will judge the world (Acts 17:31). For those who belong to Him, it will be the beginning of everlasting joy. For those who reject Him, it will mean eternal separation from the God they were made for (2 Thessalonians 1:8–9).
But today, He’s calling you. Not to clean yourself up first. Not to fake it. Just to come—to repent and believe.
He’s not distant. He’s near. He’s calling your name.
Will you trust Him?
He created you to know Him, walk with Him, and live in the joy of His presence forever (Genesis 1:27). But like every one of us, you’ve sinned. You've turned from God, maybe tried to live life your own way. Sin isn't just breaking rules—it's breaking relationship with the God who made you. And sin brings real consequences: guilt, separation from God, and eventually death (Romans 3:23; Romans 6:23).
But here's where the good news begins: God didn’t leave you there.
Because of His deep love for you, He sent His Son, Jesus Christ—God in human flesh—to rescue you (John 3:16). Jesus lived the perfect, sinless life you haven’t lived. Then He died on the cross in your place, taking all the punishment your sins deserve (Isaiah 53:5; 2 Corinthians 5:21). He rose from the dead three days later, defeating death so you could have eternal life (1 Corinthians 15:3–4).
This is for you. Jesus didn’t die for perfect people. He died for sinners—real people with real regrets, real pain, and real shame. People like you and me (Romans 5:8).
And now, God is offering you forgiveness—not because you’ve earned it, but because Jesus paid for it. He’s offering you a new heart, a new life, and a new future—right now.
But you must respond.
God calls you to turn away from your sin and trust completely in Jesus—not in your good deeds, not in religion, but in what Jesus has already done for you (Mark 1:15; Acts 3:19). When you put your faith in Him, God forgives you fully, gives you His Spirit, adopts you as His child, and promises you eternal life (John 1:12; Romans 8:1; Ephesians 2:8–9).
And Jesus will come again. One day, He will judge the world (Acts 17:31). For those who belong to Him, it will be the beginning of everlasting joy. For those who reject Him, it will mean eternal separation from the God they were made for (2 Thessalonians 1:8–9).
But today, He’s calling you. Not to clean yourself up first. Not to fake it. Just to come—to repent and believe.
He’s not distant. He’s near. He’s calling your name.
Will you trust Him?