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John 14:6
“Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.”

Few words collide more sharply with modern sensibilities than these. Jesus does not present Himself as a way among many. He claims exclusivity without apology. Revival restores our willingness to believe—and proclaim—what Jesus actually said.

This statement is not arrogant; it is gracious. If there is only one bridge across a chasm, pointing people elsewhere is not kindness—it is cruelty. Jesus names Himself as the way because He alone has dealt with sin, satisfied justice, and conquered death.

The exclusivity of Christ is not rooted in narrowness, but in necessity. No one else lived sinlessly. No one else bore the cross. No one else rose victorious. Revival anchors evangelism here—not in comparison with other beliefs, but in the finished work of Christ.

This truth will provoke resistance. A pluralistic age prefers many paths and few absolutes. Revival prepares the church to speak clearly without hostility and confidently without apology.

We do not need to argue Jesus into relevance. He already is. Our responsibility is faithfulness. Revival frees us from the fear of being labeled intolerant by anchoring us in obedience to Christ.

Ask God today for courage to affirm what Jesus declared. Not harshly. Not defensively. But plainly. Christ alone saves—and eternity depends on that truth being spoken.