Comforting Verses

Comforting Verses is a Christian faith-based YouTube channel sharing comforting Bible verses, prayers, and devotional messages for encouragement, peace, and spiritual strength. We share uplifting Christian messages, powerful prayers, inspiring scriptures, and motivational devotionals to help you grow closer to God and strengthen your walk with Jesus Christ. Begin each day in God’s presence through thoughtful Bible readings, spiritual reflections, worship-filled moments, and teachings rooted in God’s Word. Our mission is to inspire hope, build faith, and remind you of God’s love, grace, and power in every season of life. If you are seeking God’s comfort, biblical encouragement, prayer, or quiet time with Scripture, this channel is for you. All content is rooted in the Bible, faith in Jesus Christ, and God’s unfailing love.
✨ New videos regularly | 📖 Scripture-based encouragement | 🙏 Prayer & hope


Comforting Verses

Why silence could be all you need sometimes. Check the video and remember to like, subscribe and share with others. A blessed week family.
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20 hours ago | [YT] | 45

Comforting Verses

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🙏 As you step into this new week, may God guide your steps, open new doors, and fill your heart with peace.
Declare this with faith today: “This week will be blessed, productive, and filled with God’s favor.”
“The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make His face shine upon you and be gracious to you.” — Book of Numbers 6:24–26
✨ If you believe God will bless your week, type “AMEN” and share this with someone who needs this blessing today.
SUBSCRIBE, LIKE AND SHARE THR VIDEO

21 hours ago | [YT] | 1

Comforting Verses

🙏 If you believe God is protecting your children, type AMEN and say this prayer over them today. May the Lord watch over every child, grant them long life, protect them from harm, and guide their steps always. ❤️ Subscribe, like and share. Check the full video on the link below.
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4 days ago | [YT] | 59

Comforting Verses

Why God Decided to Destroy Humanity in Genesis: A Biblical Perspective

The story of the Flood in the Book of Genesis (chapters 6–9) is one of the most dramatic and foundational narratives in the Bible. At its heart is a solemn declaration: God decided to destroy humanity. But why did God make that decision? The biblical text explains His reasoning in clear moral and theological terms.

The Book of Genesis states that by Noah’s time “the wickedness of man was great on the earth” and that “every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually” (Genesis 6:5). This description suggests not just occasional sin, but pervasive moral corruption — a condition in which the fundamental orientation of human life had turned away from God and toward destruction.

The next verse reinforces this: the earth was “corrupt” and “filled with violence” (Genesis 6:11–12). The Hebrew term used for “violence” (חָמָס, hamas) repeatedly refers to physical wrongdoing and harm toward others throughout the Old Testament.

This corruption was not isolated or superficial — it affected the whole world. Genesis records that when God observed the extent of human wickedness, “He was grieved in His heart” and “regretted that He had made them” (Genesis 6:6–7). These words express deep divine sorrow over the moral destruction humanity had wrought upon itself. God’s “regret” is not portrayed as a mistake in making humans, but as profound grief over the choices they made — choices that betrayed His intent for human life.

The narrative emphasizes that violence was not merely incidental but systemic: the entire earth was “filled with violence” and “all flesh had corrupted their way” (Genesis 6:11–12). Humanity’s wickedness was so pervasive that it had become the defining characteristic of the world they inhabited. This wasn’t merely bad behavior; it was a complete breakdown of moral order.

The Flood judgment is not depicted as an emotional outburst, but as a righteous response to entrenched evil. Genesis repeatedly links the decision to destroy the earth with the extent of human violence and corruption (Genesis 6:13: “the earth is filled with violence because of them”). In this understanding, God’s action was not random cruelty, but judicial: a consequence of the moral condition of humanity.

Even in a story of judgment, Genesis shows that God’s purpose includes preserving the righteous. Noah is described as “a righteous man, blameless among the people of his time” who “walked with God” (Genesis 6:9). God instructs Noah to build an ark — not as a way to save everyone, but as a means to preserve life where goodness was still found. In doing so, God balances justice with mercy.

After the Flood, God makes a covenant with Noah, promising never again to destroy all life by water and giving the rainbow as a sign of that promise (Genesis 9). This covenant marks a renewed beginning for humanity — one grounded in the hope that people will live in obedience to God’s standards rather than rebellion.

According to the biblical text, humanity’s wickedness had become pervasive and extreme — every thought and action was corrupted. Violence filled the earth — human life had become destructive toward itself. God experienced grief over this corruption, expressing profound sorrow at what humans had become. Divine judgment was the appropriate response to moral corruption, not arbitrary destruction. Noah’s righteousness provided a means of divine mercy, preserving a remnant and allowing life to continue. In the Genesis account, then, the Flood is a judgment rooted in moral catastrophe, not a mythological glitch or arbitrary act. It illustrates a God who is holy — unable to tolerate unmitigated evil — and merciful — preserving life through Noah and his family.

Review this video to understand more about the Noah's flood, the Nephilims and their origin, and explaination on the outcomes of human corruption and violence.

4 weeks ago | [YT] | 1