Who Made The Mac N Cheese
This powerful message challenges us to confront a question we've all faced during family gatherings: 'Who made the mac and cheese?' While seemingly trivial, this question reveals something profound about human nature—we judge the future based on the past. We want to know who prepared something because their history tells us whether we can trust what's before us. But here's the beautiful truth: our origin stories don't have to define our destinations. Through testimonies of deliverance from addiction, homosexuality, abuse, and suicidal thoughts, we discover that God specializes in redemption. Isaiah 1:16-19 reminds us that though our sins are scarlet, they can become white as snow. The message isn't about denying our past—it's about refusing to let that past write our future. When we introduce our broken stories to Jesus, everything changes. We receive power through the Holy Spirit to overcome what once defined us. The challenge before us is simple yet profound: will we keep going despite what's behind us? Will we learn to do good, even when doing wrong felt natural? Our past may have told us we shouldn't be here, but God's grace declares otherwise. Every day is an opportunity to rewrite the narrative, not by erasing where we've been, but by choosing where we're going.
