Jonah and the Whale: You Can Run from the Call, But You Can’t Run from God
God said go east. Jonah booked a ship going west. What happened next is one of the most dramatic — and surprisingly relatable — stories in all of Scripture.
Dramatic, faith-filled retellings of the greatest stories in Scripture — brought to life for today.
God said go east. Jonah booked a ship going west. What happened next is one of the most dramatic — and surprisingly relatable — stories in all of Scripture.
850 prophets of Baal. One prophet of God. One altar. One prayer. The contest on Mount Carmel that proved — once and for all — which God is real.
March in silence. Blow your trumpets. Shout. That was the battle plan for one of the most fortified cities in the ancient world. It made no military sense. It worked perfectly.
An orphan girl. A hidden identity. A death warrant signed for her entire people. And the question that changed history: will you stay silent — or will you speak?
Every neighbour thought he was mad. The sky was clear. The ground was dry. But Noah kept building — because he had heard something they hadn't. The story of faith before the storm.
Thrown into a pit by his own brothers. Sold into slavery. Falsely accused. Forgotten in prison. And then — in a single day — second in command of Egypt. The story of Joseph and how God turns betrayal into destiny.
They couldn't find a single charge against him — so they made his faithfulness illegal. Daniel kept praying anyway. What happened next shook an entire kingdom.
Two million people. An uncrossable sea in front. The most powerful army on earth behind. The story of Moses and the Red Sea is a thunderclap declaration: when God makes a way, nothing can stop it.
The strongest man who ever lived — brought down not by an army, but by a whisper. The story of Samson is a warning, a tragedy, and ultimately a story of grace that refuses to quit.
A teenage shepherd. A giant warrior. An impossible battle. The story of David and Goliath is more than a children's tale — it is a thunderclap reminder that God's power is perfected in human weakness.