Abba Father’s Love Is Irreversible!
- Genesis Babru

- Aug 7
- 2 min read
There’s one truth that remains unmoved by our emotions, failures, or circumstances—Abba Father’s love is irreversible.
No matter where we find ourselves or how far we drift, His love doesn’t waver. It isn’t transactional. It isn’t based on our performance. My inactivity, my silence, my struggle—none of it disqualifies me from His love. His love is eternal. Amen.
I still remember the day of my baptism—standing among 30 to 40 people—and yet, in that moment, He made it personal. He broke every generational curse, every yoke of shame and rejection, and promised that He alone would be my Father. No one else. And that He would fulfill every desire of my heart.
From 2012 to today, He has never failed me. Not once.
He is Faithful. He always was, and He always will be.
Judging Him Faithful
Just like Sarah in Hebrews 11:11, who “judged Him faithful who had promised,” I’ve learned that faith is not just believing in God—it’s having a good opinion of Him.
To judge Him faithful means I choose to see Him as trustworthy, good, generous. It’s a faith vision that silences doubt and says, “If God is for me, who can be against me?” (Romans 8:31).
It’s personal. God’s not a distant deity—He’s Father. And Jesus came to reveal exactly that. The only name He came to make known was Father—not judge, not master, not even savior first. But Father.
He Loves to Provide
In Matthew 7, Jesus reveals the Father’s heart clearly:
“If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask Him!”
Our God is not reluctant. He delights to provide.
He loves when we ask. He loves when we come close. He enjoys being needed.
His grace is sufficient—especially when we’re weak. When we have no strength left, it’s His strength that becomes perfect in our weakness.
Stay Close. Stay Confident.
We must learn to lean on His strong shoulders.
To walk through life confessing His love the way the Apostle John did:
“The disciple whom Jesus loved…”
John never said “the one who loved Jesus most”—he was confident in how much Jesus loved him. That’s the posture that keeps us grounded, no matter the storm.
It’s Family.
This isn’t religion. This is family.
God doesn’t want us functioning like strangers in the house—He calls us sons and daughters. He wants us close to Him all the time.
What a loving, patient, generous Father we serve.
He never fails. He never changes. He never lets go.
Amen.



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