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Come and Hear: A Testimony That Transforms
“Come and hear, all you who fear God, and I will tell what He has done for my soul.”
Psalm 66:16.
David does not make a formal or religious invitation; he issues an urgent call that flows from real experience, because when God truly acts in someone’s life, it cannot remain hidden—it must be shared, lived, and testified.
He speaks as someone who faced battles, persecution, failures, and new beginnings, and who learned something many young people still overlook today: God responds to sincere hearts, not to spiritual appearances, polished words, or a faith that exists only on the surface.
David says he cried out with his mouth and exalted God with his tongue, showing that living faith is expressed, declared, and revealed, because those who experience God’s grace cannot remain spiritually silent.
But he also brings a strong challenge when he says that if he had cherished iniquity in his heart, the Lord would not have listened, revealing that the greatest barrier between us and God is not a lack of prayer, but the choice to hold on to hidden sin, unhealthy habits, and decisions we know do not please Him.
Many young people want God’s answers, direction, and peace, yet refuse to surrender what holds their hearts, expecting God to act while continuing to live the same way.
The hope appears in David’s final testimony: God heard him and answered his prayer, proving that when there is genuine repentance and a real desire for change, God responds, restores, and transforms lives.
Today God calls you to stop living a shallow faith and choose a true one, where your heart is fully surrendered.
The appeal is simple and direct: come, listen, examine your heart right now, let go of whatever separates you from God, and decide to live a real experience with Him, so your life may become a living testimony of what the Lord can do.
By Cleandro VianaCome and Hear: A Testimony That Transforms
“Come and hear, all you who fear God, and I will tell what He has done for my soul.”
Psalm 66:16.
David does not make a formal or religious invitation; he issues an urgent call that flows from real experience, because when God truly acts in someone’s life, it cannot remain hidden—it must be shared, lived, and testified.
He speaks as someone who faced battles, persecution, failures, and new beginnings, and who learned something many young people still overlook today: God responds to sincere hearts, not to spiritual appearances, polished words, or a faith that exists only on the surface.
David says he cried out with his mouth and exalted God with his tongue, showing that living faith is expressed, declared, and revealed, because those who experience God’s grace cannot remain spiritually silent.
But he also brings a strong challenge when he says that if he had cherished iniquity in his heart, the Lord would not have listened, revealing that the greatest barrier between us and God is not a lack of prayer, but the choice to hold on to hidden sin, unhealthy habits, and decisions we know do not please Him.
Many young people want God’s answers, direction, and peace, yet refuse to surrender what holds their hearts, expecting God to act while continuing to live the same way.
The hope appears in David’s final testimony: God heard him and answered his prayer, proving that when there is genuine repentance and a real desire for change, God responds, restores, and transforms lives.
Today God calls you to stop living a shallow faith and choose a true one, where your heart is fully surrendered.
The appeal is simple and direct: come, listen, examine your heart right now, let go of whatever separates you from God, and decide to live a real experience with Him, so your life may become a living testimony of what the Lord can do.