Tumgik
#israel had truly ugly singing????
theskyexists · 1 year
Text
So. This year I really loved the diversity in music styles. Slovenia nice indie rock. Spain nice priestesses in a temple doing some kind of blood ritual. Belgium, well sung. Croatia, my dad's favourite - great satire. I thought there were a lot of good shows. My favourites were:
Czechia - my sisters crown (so catchy, so ominous, great act)
Ukraine - heart of steel (cool act, good song, good singing)
Portugal - Ai Coração (incredible singing)
Moldova - Soarele şi Luna (energetic primeval ritual!)
Norway - queen of kings (good show)
Armenia - Brunette (simple but effective spectacle)
U.K. - I wrote a song (I like the song, it wasn't performed very well)
FINLAND - Cha cha cha (SHOULD HAVE WON)
Songs I haven't seen performed in full but listened to and that I like nonetheless
Estonia - Bridges (sounds nice, well-sung)
France - Evidement (sounds nice)
Cyprus - Break A Broken Heart (sounds nice, beautiful shirt and effects)
Austria - Who The Hell Is Edgar? (Sooooooo catchy and silly and bizarre)
5 notes · View notes
shop-korea · 4 months
Text
ITZY "Mr. Vampire" M/V @ITZY
youtube
NOTICED - ALSO - SINGING
OF - MUSIC - VIDEOS - WAS
BETTER - THAN - LIVE - YES
PERFORMANCE - I - WOULD
LIKE - SINGING - LESSONS
DONE - 4 - ITZY - AESPA
IU - SE-KYUNG SHIN YES
PARIS - FRANCE - WILL
TEACH - US - HOW 2 KR
SING - STRENGTHEN OUR
MOST - POWERFUL HIGHS
DEEPER - LOWS - MAKE
MEDIUM - RANGE - YES
BETTER - ALSO - GLAD 4
ANY - CAMERA - 2 C THE
STAGE - EVERYWHERE
BUT - INFERIOR - STADIUMS
2 - MAKE - RIDICULOUS $$$
SEATS - THOUSANDS - $$$$
GBC - STADIUM
COMING - 2 - SEOUL
ALWAYS - OPEN - 24/7 - YES
HOLIDAYS - TYPHOONS
ABOVE - WILL - HAVE - THE
GBC - HOTEL - WHERE THE
STARS - ARE - STAYING
ALL - SEATS - MOVABLE
THE - STAGE - MOVES 2
SO - WE - CAN - MAKE IT
ANYTHING - WE - WANT
SINCE - KIDS - BABIES
ALWAYS - SLICED ON
THE - THROAT - THEY
WERE - JUST - ADMIRING
WOOD - ROSARIES - VERY
PRETTY - AS - SOMEONE
SAW - REPORTED - MEN
ARRIVED - SLICED THEIR
THROATS - SAME 4 - THE
BABY - AS - GOD - TRULY
PUNISHES - THEM AS THE
KOREAN - PEOPLE - TRUE
BECAME - UGLIER - NEXT
DAY - NOT - ALL - AS THEY
SCREAMED - HOW - UGLY
THEY - LOOKED - NEXT
DAY - AS - PUNISHMENT
ASIANS - AS - THEY YES
MASSACRE - EVEN THE
MOST - BEAUTIFUL YES
CAN - NEVER COMPARE
2 - PAULINA PORIZKOVA
NEVER - BE - SAID THEY
ARE - MORE BEAUTIFUL
MOST BEAUTIFUL ASIAN
CAN'T - HOLD - CANDLE
2 - EXTRAORDINARY
EUROPEAN - BEAUTY
BLUE EYES - MOSTLY
BLACKS - NO - ONE
HAS - EVER - HAD XO
BLUE - EYES AMONG
LIKE - THE - SKIES
OR - DARKER - SUCH
BEAUTY - BLUE EYES
ASIANS - THROUGHOUT
HISTORY - MOST - TRUE
VIOLENT - SLAUGHTER
OF - FAMILIES - VIPERS
WITH - WOMEN - ALSO
ASIANS - TRULY - GOD
PUNISHES - WITH YES
HARD - 2 - REMEMBER
WHO - THEY - ARE - XO
SUCH - UGLY - LOOKS 2
MARY - MOTHER - OF
JESUS - MOST - TRULY
BEAUTIFUL - MARY THE
COUNTRY - ISRAEL HAS
EVER - PRODUCED THINK
MS ISRAEL - 1984 - FR XO
MEMORY - 'WONDER
WOMAN' - IMAGINE - HER
AS - MARY - WHAT A TRUE
MOST - BEAUTIFUL
NO - ASIAN - HAS - BEAT
THE - BEAUTY - OF - YES
EUROPE - LIKE - JEWELS
EXOTIC - ETHEREAL HAI
BLUE - EYED - BEAUTIES
THAT's - WHY - EXCITED
ABOUT - PLASTIC SURGERY
CAN'T - WAIT - 2 - COMBINE
ALL - THOSE - BEAUTIES
BRINGING - BACK - MARILYN
MONROE - 2 - LIFE - SUCH A
WONDERFUL STRONG - YES
WOMAN - CONTINUING HER
ROMANTIC - FUNNY - SUCH
BEAUTY - BUT - PROBLEM
WITH - USA - NO - MONEY
DEATH - THEN - IN - UNITED
STATES - WHY - WE'RE YES
HEADED - 2 - SHANGHAI CN
BUT - KOREA - HAS - TRULY
A - CHANCE - AS - WE - YES
ACTIVATE - PULSE SYSTEM
MURDERERS - ROBBERS
DEEP - HATRED - MORE
THAN - 5 MILLION - WILL
DISAPPEAR - MOSTLY
KOREAN - MALES - 2
SO - CAN'T - WAIT - WILL
EAT - MORE - JESUS - IS
LORD - EATING - SUB - 2
0 notes
eurosong · 4 years
Text
Undo my ESC 2020 (SF1)
Good evening, folks! “Undo my ESC”, my look at how I would have changed this year’s contest, is back! Even though the EBU, well, indeed sadly and very literally did undo the ESC this year, there is still room for changing about my personal ideal Eurovision 2020. Let’s have a look at the first semi-final! 🇦🇺 Australia: I continue to be mightily impressed with the quality of Australia Decides, an NF putting forward a number of credible options to represent Oz. I felt the juries helped dodge a bullet this year, because the televote winning song was a rather cliché and dated choice, out of step with the relatively vibrant and contemporary feel of the field. The actual winner was pretty decent albeit with dubious live vocals and an even odder stage concept. It could be improved by working on those two factors, though even better would be to send instead the dramatic Rabbit Hole, truly a title for our season, or even better, the searingly emotional Raw stuff which knocked me off my feet upon first listen and still packs that punch 🇦🇿 Azerbaijan: Once again, Azerbaijan went down the “buy in a song from elsewhere and attempt to put on a thin gloss of local instrumentation onto a generic pop song in lieu of some actual authenticity. I can’t say I even hate the song this time, though I do dislike how they reportedly nabbed it off non-oil-rich San Marino in a bidding war. I would have brought back Dihaj or... anyone who could produce something halfway Azeri? Also, something that doesn’t make me do a full-body cringe as much as the country ranked the worst in the ESC-sphere for LGBT rights sending a song about “gay or straight or in between.”
🇧🇾 Belarus: Belarus made the right choice - I can really rarely say those words. For only the second time ever, we got a song in Belarusian, and whilst it isn’t up there with the gorgeous Historyja majho žyccia for me, Da widna is still a pleasant listen that soars above many of the hyped pre-contest fan favourites and was a nice surprise from a bad NF. The only thing that I would change? That the unhinged comic brilliance of Pavloni be in the final. Watch from about halfway through to the end for an absolute mood whiplash odyssey. 
🇧🇪 Belgium: A lot of people had plenty of hope when they heard that the veteran Hooverphonic were set to represent Belgium in 2020, and I was amongst them. My reäction to what they ended up bringing though was tepid. It’s got the quality rich instrumentation that I expected from this band, pleasant vox, but as a song, it goes nowhere for me, in part because of how repetitive it is and lacking in a hook I find it. I would have picked a more immediate song for Eurovision, because this felt like another DNQ for Belgium, following the same mistakes as 2018 and 2019. They will be back in 2021, and I will be interested to see if they take a slightly different tack. 
🇭🇷 Croatia: Following up on Belarus, Croatia was another example of a selection in which I had no hope providing something excellent to recompense for usually reliable countries going off the rails. I finally have from Croatia something to fit in with the likes of Adio from Montenegro and Nije ljubav stvar from Serbia as an epic Balkan ballad. Few people were expecting Divlji vjetre would win; I was over the moon that it did and would change nothing. I hope Croatia re-send the gentleman Damir next year with an equally strong song. 
🇨🇾 Cyprus: After giving us a literal replay of Fuego last year, this year they’ve gone a slightly different route, but no less generic (even coming with one of the several duplicately named titles of this year), no less uninspiring, no less completely detached from Cypriot music. I’m longing for Cyprus to send something like Eimai anthropos kai ego again.
🇮🇪 Ireland: So RTÉ came into Eurovision all guns blazing this year, promising “an almighty bop” that will be “remembered in 10 years’ time like Euphoria.” I had feared that their frame of reference for their song would be 10 years’ stale, but instead they cast their net even further back to the mid-2000s. It properly sent me into hysterics when I heard this being compared to EVERY major female singer of that period, depending on whom you asked, before this came into general release. You know what, though? I hold my hands up and admit that I adore the anthemic Story of my life. It’s just so drenched in colour that I feel uplifted every time I listen to it, which is often! Lesley has such a likeable, authentic charisma that adds to the song too. I am so gutted we’ll never see the staging because I feel this would have been a memorable party moment. This is just 3 minutes of happy nostalgia and I live for it.
🇮🇱 Israel: You know, usually, I am not a fan of single-artist national finals, because if you are not a fan of the artist, your choice is very limited indeed. However - I don’t know how one can nót be a fan of Eden to some degree. Her music is not up my street, but she sells it to me through sheer force of personality, positivity and presence. She had four songs and she put her heart and soul into them all. The winner was the vibrant Feker libi, which I would only change by altering the chorus a bit, as its odd 90s dance vibe doesn’t sit so well with the rest of the song. As for Eden, she cried when she reälised she couldn’t go to ESC 2020 and again when she found out she’d been picked for 2021. I wish all artists had this amount of passion. 
🇱🇹 Lithuania: There was a sea change in Lithuania this year. I don’t know what happened, but they went from punchline to packing a punch. Their national final had been one that pretty much no one watched, dragging on for several weeks and almost always to choose a mediocre, anticlimactic choice after all that effort. This year, it was one of the most entertaining and diverse NFs of the bunch. My early favourite to win was the powerhouse Monika Marija’s return with If I leave, very much up my street with its country stylings. However, by the time the final came, I had been won over also by the eventual winner, the offbeat and infectious On fire, whose victory I would not alter because it serves as a more dramatic turn of the page for Lithuania’s Eurovision presence. It was such a relief to see this prevailing, with a huge lead in the televote, over the awful, imported Unbreakable or the respectable but pedestrian Make me human. I hope the broadcasters will respect the support this has in Lithuania and allow the Roop to come back in 2021. 🇲🇰 Macedonia: Just no. No. No. Scrap everything about this, bring back Kaliopi and let her get her revenge for the juries screwing her out of qualification with the beautiful “Dona.” 🇲🇹 Malta: Malta have done the unthinkable and sent two songs in a row that I really like for the first time since 1997-8. As Ian would have put it, I was expecting a mere “vocal exercise” from Malta to show off the impressive range of Destiny. Instead, they came out with something so soulful that I have no choice but to enjoy. I hope they go a similar route in 21.
🇳🇴 Norway: So, finally Norway saw some sense and reverted to making the most of having a talented composer, Kjetil Mørland, who is so enthusiastic about Eurovision that he has come back since his success with A monster like me a few times. He should have won with En livredd mann; I wouldn’t have been unhappy at all had he won with Who we are, and indeed, Attention was another song that I had to consider as being amongst the best of its (bizarrely organised) selection. The one thing I’d change? The lyrics. It sounds like an infatuated 12 year old with low self-esteem singing, not a grown woman.
🇷🇴 Romania: It’s not up there with Goodbye or On a Sunday, but Romania have returned with a third song I really enjoy. Alcohol you was head and shoulders above the others in the single-artist selection, and I am still sent by the way she sabotaged the bop that was predicted to win the final so that she could send this more meditative, confessional effort. What would I change? The unnecessary revamp that abruptly shifts the direction of the song in the last third.🇷🇺 Russia: When this first came out, I thought “well done, Russia. Kept us waiting on you until way past the deadline, and all for this bizarre Aquaësque troll entry.” Despite myself, “Uno” has grown on me to some degree. Maybe it’s because of the death stare of the female backing singer who’s giving me some strong Rosa from Brooklyn 99 vibes, and I live for that. Maybe it’s because it’s serving a flourescent lime green in a year when there is so much beige that even an ugly odd colour seems pleasing. I wouldn’t change this, and I hope they get sent again next year because it’s delightful seeing Russia unpaired from Kirkorov. 
🇸🇮 Slovenia: Again, I am going to find myself in a small minority, but Slovenia was, like Belarus and Croatia, an unappetising selection that nonetheless yielded a gem for me. They really said screw you to underlying trends and went for a song that moves at a glacial pace fitting of the title, Voda. This was constantly in last place on the Eurovision scoreboard app, which just speaks to the limited taste tolerance of many of its users. There is so much here to enjoy: Slovenia sticking with its language yet again; the ethereal vibes; the deep, rich voice of the singer; the melancholic and poëtic lyrics; and the fact that it was perhaps the only good “revamp” of the season, going in the opposite direction of Albania and inserting an orchestra to make it that much richer in sound. Wonderful stuff and hope she returns in 2021.
🇸🇪 Sweden: So, for the first time since 2014, Sweden has sent a female artist - 3 in fact - and with them, left the cookie cutter niche they’d occupied since then behind. They sent my favourite of their songs since 2013, Move, a joyous gospel-infused effort where the love and positivity of the Mamas gave me tingles to watch. And yet, it wasn’t my ideal choice. My personal winner would have been my favourite entry from Sweden since... possibly as far back as I morgon är en annan dag in 1992. I’m talking ‘bout Dotter of course. The artist whose beautiful Melodifestivalen début with Cry got bizarrely ignored had a superb redemptive arc this year, becoming the huge favourite with Bulletproof. I watched her performance of this over 200 times so far and still watch often. I find the song so poignant, the performance and her presence so bewitching. It’s a rarity for songwriters who also perform their songs to get this far in MF these days, and Dotter lost out by the narrowest of margins, but would have been a great encouragement to others like her had she won. It was widely said that Sweden had the potential for a record-equalling seventh win if they had sent Bulletproof. As much as I cherish Ireland’s record, had it been Dotter to equal it, I wouldn’t have been mad at all. 🇺🇦 Ukraine: Widbir got over their Maruw drama in great style, once again being one of the coolest and most alternative national finals out there. Well done, Ukraine! There were a number of propositions that I would have been happy to see represent the country. My initial favourite was Vegan, one of my most streamed songs of the season and one which always puts a smile on my face with Jerry’s facial expressions and puns like “‘cause I’m vegan, I can’t even call you honey.” And honestly, I would have loved to have seen it in Rotterdam. I also loved, amongst others, Tam kudy ja jdu and Picz, which were both the victims of being in a semi-final with all the good songs whilst the second semi-final was nowhere near as competitive. Having said all that, I am not sure that I would change the eventual winner, Solowej, because it’s its own brand of delightfully authentic. I would undo their unnecessary revamp and keep it as the live version linked to above, though. And the automatic qualifiers: 🇩🇪 Germany: As you would expect from one of the musical monoliths of Europe, Germany once had some of the best and most diverse national finals of the continent, but something went wrong - they kept inviting wild cards, whose scrappiness endeared them to the public even when their songs were mediocre, and so we saw complete no-marks getting the Teutonic nod despite star-studded competition. Nonetheless, “Unser Lied für” was always worth tuning in for, an annual dose of getting mesmer-eyes’d by Barbara Schöneberger too. This year, they threw it all away for one of the most repetitive songs of the year, with a young, confused looking Slovenian being the god knows how many’th contestant to channel his inner Justin Timberlake with another knockoff that sounds as German as fajitas. I would have kept the national final - or, if they’re really going to start doing internal selections, go daring with Lily among clouds, whose Surprise was one of the crown jewels of the previous NF season. 🇮🇹 Italy: Sanremo, which actually predates Eurovision, is so much more than an NF, but its own cultural institution, and the quality is such that a song can be your fifth or sixth in Sanremo but still rank really highly in your ESC rankings. Performing with, and composing for, the orchestra, seems to give its entries a timeless quality that few others compare with. My initial favourites were Tosca’s Ho amato tutto, which from its first strains to the final, saudadic “eh” that serves as an unofficial coda, breaks my heart still sublimely; Viceversa, a heartwarming effort by the unbelievably charming Gabbani and Tikibombom, a slice of Sicilian excellence with trenchant lyrics. My most streamed has been Sincero, remembered more for the hugely memetic moment of one of its representatives changing the lyrics and the other walking out disgusted, but which I adore for its synthy vibes and its brilliant lyrics. The eventual winner was Fai rumore, which I also love too much to propose that it be changed. The lines about “an unnatural silence between us” are all the more poignant now. Lowkey think this could have won Italy its long-awaited third victory. 🇳🇱 Netherlands: Now, this is what I call a host nation song. The way I see it, if you’re hosting, you have a direct ticket to the final that you may not enjoy again for a long time, so why not go for a risk? And a risk NL indeed took. Grow is a very atypical song. It builds in a way we do not expect it to. It is mostly minimalist, focusing most of our attention to Jeangu’s voice, making this an intimate, almost confessional track. The crescendo is cathartic. After Albania destroyed itself with an unnecessary revamp, this became my #1 and I would change nothing about it. It really sucks that a song so personal to its writer and performer won’t be allowed on the stage in 2021 - that’s what I would change. A ridiculous decision on the EBU’s part.
7 notes · View notes
eretzyisrael · 5 years
Link
I have just spent several dark weeks back inside Palestine Live. Today I publish a new report that focuses on the activity of American anti-Zionists, many of them Jewish (download link below). It is impossible to do a 262-page report justice in a small blog. The catalyst was the unfolding events in the United States. Jewish life for American Jews is different to the experience of Jews in the UK. Yet there are also similarities. I read an interesting article by Jonathan S Tobin, editor in chief of JNS.org, that was titled ‘How progressives are destroying the Jewish ‘big tent‘.
The subject matter will be familiar with Jewish people in the UK – Tobin discusses fringe organisations and where you draw the line when deciding which Jewish groups can be allowed in the ‘big tent’. Tobin had written the article because the week before, the Boston Jewish Community Relations Council votedto start a process to by which one of their constituent organizations might be booted out – why? Because they had indicated support for the Boycott movement, BDS.
I see the daily news in the US and it reminds me of the UK a few years ago. There are signs they are on a similar divisive path. Antisemitism rises and Jewish anti-Zionists leap into action, claiming it is about ‘criticism of Israel’. Creating an industry of antisemitism denial that legitmises antisemites. They write articles, they sign petitions, they appear on TV. In the States they have vocal anti-Zionist Jewish activists running organisations such as JVP and Codepink. Did you see the way they ran to protect Ilhan Omar? They create an environment within which antisemitism is given protection. Just like the anti-Zionists of Jewish Voice for Labour did in the UK. Only in the US, both anti-Zionist Jews and antisemites are more numerous.
News outlets such as Mondoweiss push their propaganda at an alarming rate. This air of legitimacy is attracting people. Yet I know the truth.
I know that these people ally themselves with hard-core antisemites. I have watched as they have organised petitions, events and demos with people who share neo-Nazi and white supremacist material.
Ariel Gold, Rebecca Vilkomerson, Medea Benjamin, David Mivasair are just some of the key American activists who have played inside the antisemitic swamp that is Palestine Live. A group that contains other members such as Greta Berlin, Cynthia Mckinney, Miko Peled and Alison Weir. Daniella Ravitzki, Larry Derfner, Ofer Neiman, Pam Bailey, Jonathan Ofir, Jennifer Loewenstein, Mark Levine, Seth Morrison and many more.
I’ve watched people like Codepink’s Ariel Gold deploy her Jewish identity, time after time, just as she aligns with people who push the ideology of the Renegade Tribune in a fight against Israel. Several key JVP figures are inside the group, people from the Rabbinical council, academic council and the JVP Board. Almost the entire front line of Codepink are inside too. Why are Amnesty personnel inside a secret antisemitic Facebook group?
In public they put pretty profile pictures up suggesting they stand ‘together against antisemitism’. They adamantly suggest they fight against it. In private the bitter truth is revealed. Time after time, these actvists are found alongside people who share rabid white supremacist or neo-Nazi material. Not once, not twice, but EVERY time. These people have created an industry of antisemitism denial to protect their precious cause, no matter who they need to align with.
David Mivasair, from the JVP Rabbinical council was in one thread with FIVE people who share material from neo-Nazi or white supremacist websites. FIVE. He conspires with them to weaken Israel, jokes about antisemitism with them and then in public he sings a different tune. Almost NONE of the activists were EVER seen confronting any antisemitism, inside a group that is overburdened with hard-core antisemites. All they did is engage in joint initiatives to attack the Jewish state. The antisemites and the anti-Zionist Jews. Attacking Israel together.
These activists consider me the enemy because I am a Zionist. They align themselves with people who share material from the Renegade Tribune, Rense, Stormfront, Daily Stormer and Whiteresister. Those people are their allies – and I am the enemy?
And Mondoweiss? I lost count of the number of contributors to Mondoweiss I found active in the group. It is the same story. In public they write articles suggesting the allegations of antisemitism are a smear – in secret, knowingly or not, they hold hands with people who share some of the most viciously antisemitic websites on the net.
I also captured an anti-AIPAC demonstration in 2017. Analysed the people present and the findings are truly horrific. When you remove Jewish people and Palestinians from the crowd, what is left is a mob of rabid antisemites. This is what those Jewish activists hold hands with when they attack the Jewish state. These people are their allies.
Remember this when you see angry crowds outside AIPAC next week. This is a message that must be spread around. These people are either playing with us or have no idea what antisemitism is. Opposition to Israeli policies is legitimate, but Zionism acts as a protective layer around the Jews outside and inside Israel. Once you remove it as a central requirement, by not caring if members support BDS or Israel’s core right to exist, you will inevitably dance with the devil. Just as JVP, Mondoweiss and others such as Codepink have already chosen to do.
There are 262 pages in total. Hundreds of examples and dozens of activists. I found it shocking to write, I have no choice but to show the ugly truth. You can download the report here (DOWNLOAD REPORT)-  Please if you can  – consider contributing something towards the research.
12 notes · View notes
Text
I am beautiful...
 “I am beautiful.” This quick sentence is one of the hardest phrases to; speak, think and believe. It is a phrase I never once spoke, thought or believed until I embraced Jesus. He came in and radically changed my life along with my perspective. We live in a world that is full of broken people. I spent a great deal of my life as one of these broken people. I was broken and hurting because I never felt beautiful. In all I honestly I never even felt fully loved. 
 I grew up in a house full of girls. I was smack in the middle of 6 girls. I very often felt like the “ugly duckling” and “black sheep.” I spent my entire childhood comparing myself unfairly to my sisters and this comparison overflowed into every aspect of my life. Feelings of resentment even began to grow in my heart. The deep sad feelings and emotions I was experiencing were in no way my sibling’s or any other girls fault. I allowed the enemy to feed me lies day after day. Satan had me repeatedly fooling myself into believing I was no way beautiful. In believing these lies I began to completely count myself out, put myself down and regrettably hide who I truly am from the world. 
 “Comparison is the thief of Joy.” –Theodore Roosevelt 
 We all have had what I like to call the “what ifs.” You know what I’m talking about the moment when you feel like if you just had that one thing, or looked like that then all of your problems would be gone and solved. I know I spent entirely too much time chasing the things I honestly thought would bring me the satisfaction that can only be met in a relationship with Jesus. My biggest regret in life is hiding myself away, not being my true self. I kept myself locked up and hidden for a very longtime, constantly afraid that if I let anyone in they would see me with ugliness I felt. 
 In Isaiah 64:8 we read that we are the clay and God is the potter, and then Ephesians Paul says we are God’s workmanship.Let’s all remember that God created the entire world from the highest mountains to the lowest points. This same creator also molded and shaped every part of who you are. So who are we to tell ourselves we aren’t also beautiful. Would we say the mountains, or the sea are not beautiful? No, because they are indeed deeply beautiful because they are from God.
 “For you formed my inward parts; you knitted me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made.[a]Wonderful are your works; my soul knows it very well.my frame was not hidden from you, when I was being made in secret, intricately woven in the depths of the earth.” Psalm 139:13-16 
Every part of you has been carefully put together piece by piece by God. I’m not just speaking to your physical self. (This however is completely beautiful.) I am also speaking to you as a person. 
 “Those who look to him are radiant, and their faces shall never be ashamed.” Psalm 34:5 
 When we are walking with the Spirit we are a reflection of who He is. He makes you radiant. Never be ashamed of who you are. Shortly after feeling less than beautiful the feeling of being unloved joins in. Well my beautiful and lovely friend let me drop some truth into your life. 
“For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” John 3:16 
“He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things?” Romans 8: 32 
(If you ever need to be reminded of truth, please read Romans and John.) 
 You are so deeply loved the same God that careful pieced together every inch of this earth and each aspect of you, gave up his one and only son. He made this ultimate sacrifice in order to have a deep and intimate relationship with you. ”But because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions—it is by grace you have been saved.And God raised us up with Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms in Christ Jesus.” Ephesians 2:4-6 Let us focus on this. Even though we have wronged the one who created us, doubted and been ashamed of who he has made us to be, He still loves each of us enough to continually offer us grace.
 “Sing, O people of Zion! Call out, O Israel! Have joy and be happy with all your heart, O people of Jerusalem!The Lord has taken away your punishment. He has taken away those who -hate you. The King of Israel, the Lord, is with you. You will not be afraid of trouble any more. On that day it will be said to Jerusalem: “Do not be afraid, O Zion. Do not let your hands lose their strength.The Lord your God is with you, a Powerful One Who wins the battle. He will have much joy over you. With His love He will give you new life. He will have joy over you with loud singing. I will gather those who have sorrow for the special days, and take away their shame.At that time I will punish all those who made it hard for you. I will save those who cannot walk and gather those who have been driven away. And I will turn their shame into praise. They will be known all over the earth.At that time I will bring you home, at the time when I gather you together. I will make you known all over the earth, and all the nations will praise you, when I return your riches before your eyes,” says the Lord. Zepheniah 3:14-20
               GOD DELIGHTS IN YOUR BEAUTIFUL RADIANT SELF. 
 Let’s start realizing the grace we have been given and our beauty and start sharing the beauty of Jesus with the world. 
 “There is an abundant need in this world for your exact brand of beautiful.” Lysa TerKeurst 
 As children of God and heirs with Jesus we need to need to stop allowing the enemy to feed us lies, disqualifying ourselves, and comparing ourselves to one another. Since we are under grace we should start acknowledging the truth of whom we belong to, what He has done for us. There is a desperate need for us to all embrace how uniquely beautiful we are. 
                            Say it, think it, embrace it. “I am beautiful.”
0 notes