We usually think of Jonah as the “whale guy”—the prophet who took a wrong turn and ended up as fish food. It’s a great Sunday school […]

Caeser’s Coin: The Coin & The Cross
March 11, 2026
The Signs of Jonah: The Core Revelation of Jesus Christ
March 11, 2026History has a strange way of repeating itself, but sometimes the repetition is actually a reversal.
In the early chapters of Genesis, a man named Lamech—a descendant of the first murderer—issued a chilling boast. He looked at the violence around him and claimed a right to a vengeance so extreme, it was measured by a specific, terrifying number: seventy times seven. Fast forward thousands of years. A disciple asks Jesus a question about the limits of patience, and the exact same number comes out of Christ’s mouth. But this time, it’s used to describe something the world didn’t think was possible.
It’s the same equation, but a completely different world.
One man used the number to build a monument to his own pride and retaliation. The other used it to tear down the walls of debt and bitterness. One spoke from a place of deep-seated anger; the other spoke from a place of radical, life-altering mercy.
In the full teaching, we’re looking at:
The Boast of the Sword: Why Lamech felt he was entitled to a “limitless” revenge.
The Reversal at the Cross: How Jesus took the language of a curse and turned it into the language of the Kingdom.
The Math of Grace: Why “seventy times seven” isn’t a quota you have to hit, but a spirit you have to live by.
Most of us are living by Lamech’s math without even realising it. It’s time to see how Jesus flipped the script on human history with a single sentence.
Read all in the PDF below:
Other Posts
History has a strange way of repeating itself, but sometimes the repetition is actually a reversal. In the early chapters of Genesis, a man named Lamech—a […]
We all know the scene: a crowd, a trap, and a single silver coin. When the Pharisees tried to corner Jesus with a question about taxes, […]
Have you ever wondered if God made a mistake? If He knew—with absolute certainty—that the very breath He gave man would eventually be used to curse […]
