For centuries, humanity has felt a deep, intrinsic pull to find its Creator.
The promise was always clear:
“Seek Me, and you will find Me” - Jeremiah 29:13
Yet in our desperation and distraction, we stumbled in the dark bowing before shadows instead of the Substance.
We built altars to the wrong ones.
Idols that promised power, protection, or prosperity,
yet remained silent and hollow.
🔹Baal — the storm god of the Canaanites.
🔹Moloch — the demanding deity of the Ammonites.
🔹Asherah — t... moreFor centuries, humanity has felt a deep, intrinsic pull to find its Creator.
The promise was always clear:
“Seek Me, and you will find Me” - Jeremiah 29:13
Yet in our desperation and distraction, we stumbled in the dark bowing before shadows instead of the Substance.
We built altars to the wrong ones.
Idols that promised power, protection, or prosperity,
yet remained silent and hollow.
🔹Baal — the storm god of the Canaanites.
🔹Moloch — the demanding deity of the Ammonites.
🔹Asherah — the goddess of the groves.
🔹The Golden Calf — a man-made substitute for the living God.
Humanity was searching for God but kept finding replacements.
The search reached its climax when Jesus arrived and declared:
“Whoever has seen Me has seen the Father” - John 14:9
In that moment, the mystery was unveiled. The God humanity had been reaching for was standing right in their midst.
And yet, the tragedy continues.
Even today, people search endlessly for meaning, for truth, for God often standing face to face with the very answer they seek, yet too blind to recognize Him.
✠Sir John Scivoletti✠
✠Turco, Joan of Arc Priory✠
Act and God will Act (Actus et Deus Act)