Section 1
It starts with something simple but powerful—getting your BFN in the book, because every time you open the Word of God, something new comes alive. That is not coincidence; it is because the Word is living and active, constantly revealing truth in fresh ways no matter how many times it has been read before. The encouragement is direct and unmistakable—stop neglecting the very source that gives understanding, direction, and connection with God. If someone wants to know what God sounds like, He has already provided it, and ignoring that is not just a missed opportunity, but a loss of something deeply valuable. The consistency of returning to Scripture is not routine—it is relationship, growth, and insight all wrapped together.
Section 2
From there, the focus shifts to Revelation and the message to the church in Ephesus, where Jesus makes it clear that He is fully aware of everything they are doing—their works, their endurance, and their commitment to truth. Yet even with all of that, there is a serious issue, because they have left their first love. That distinction matters, because it is not something lost accidentally, but something drifted away from over time. It becomes easy to get caught up in activity, responsibility, and even ministry itself, while slowly neglecting the relationship that should be at the center of it all. Jesus brings it back into focus with clarity—He must come first, not the work, not the effort, not the busyness, but the relationship itself, because everything else flows from that.
Section 3
Then the instruction becomes incredibly practical, laying out a clear path back—remember, repent, and return to what was done at the beginning. Remember what it was like when everything felt alive and vibrant, when the connection was strong and genuine, and when the relationship was the priority. Repent, meaning change direction and realign with what matters most, not with guilt alone, but with intentional movement back toward God. And finally, do those first things again—those simple, meaningful actions that built the relationship in the first place. The message is not complicated, but it is deeply important, because it calls for a return to what was once strong, reminding that what was real then can be real again when the focus is restored to where it belongs.