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The Bougie Show
The Bougie Show
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Tuesday 30 June 2026 02:41:55 GMT
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meer.adnan.hussia
Meer Adnan Hussian :
Oooo wow please reply
2026-07-01 06:38:29
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mdmosharof3865
𝙰𝚕𝙾𝙽𝙴❗ :
2026-06-30 02:45:25
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leo698065
Leo :
nombre de la srta
2026-07-01 16:34:13
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toms.lpez61
Tomás López :
name the girl
2026-07-01 01:45:00
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pietrotasca795
Pietro tasca :
😊😁🤘👍
2026-06-30 19:03:26
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damnnnnnbigfellatv
DamnnnnnnBigFellaTV :
Can we get more African merican women?
2026-07-05 15:53:12
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🔥 “You cannot minister publicly what you haven’t received privately.” – Watchman Nee Watchman Nee (1903–1972) was a Chinese Christian teacher, writer, and church leader born in Shantou, Guangdong. Converted in 1920 through the ministry of Dora Yu and later shaped by Margaret E. Barber, he became one of the most influential Chinese Christian voices of the twentieth century. His ministry rose in a China marked by unrest, pressure, and deep hunger for indigenous church life. Through teaching, writing, training, and local gatherings, his labor helped shape what became known as the Little Flock movement, with churches spreading across China and later into other nations. Nee carried a burden that went deeper than outward ministry. He wrote often about the cross, the breaking of the outer man, the strengthening of the inner man, and the life of Christ expressed through the believer. He understood that a man can speak spiritual words and still be moving in natural strength. A preacher can stand before people with doctrine in his mouth while his spirit has grown thin before God. This is where many servants lose weight quietly. The work continues, the speaking continues, the planning continues, and people may still call it fruitful, yet prayer has become rare, Scripture has become preparation material, and the cross is explained more than it is embraced. The apostles did not separate public ministry from the hidden altar. “But we will give ourselves continually to prayer, and to the ministry of the word” Acts 6:4. In 1952, Nee was imprisoned and remained in captivity until his death in 1972. His public voice was taken away, but what God had formed in secret kept speaking through his writings long after men had removed his platform. 🔥 — #WatchmanNee #Quoted #SpiritBroods #SecretPrayer #InnerLife
🔥 “You cannot minister publicly what you haven’t received privately.” – Watchman Nee Watchman Nee (1903–1972) was a Chinese Christian teacher, writer, and church leader born in Shantou, Guangdong. Converted in 1920 through the ministry of Dora Yu and later shaped by Margaret E. Barber, he became one of the most influential Chinese Christian voices of the twentieth century. His ministry rose in a China marked by unrest, pressure, and deep hunger for indigenous church life. Through teaching, writing, training, and local gatherings, his labor helped shape what became known as the Little Flock movement, with churches spreading across China and later into other nations. Nee carried a burden that went deeper than outward ministry. He wrote often about the cross, the breaking of the outer man, the strengthening of the inner man, and the life of Christ expressed through the believer. He understood that a man can speak spiritual words and still be moving in natural strength. A preacher can stand before people with doctrine in his mouth while his spirit has grown thin before God. This is where many servants lose weight quietly. The work continues, the speaking continues, the planning continues, and people may still call it fruitful, yet prayer has become rare, Scripture has become preparation material, and the cross is explained more than it is embraced. The apostles did not separate public ministry from the hidden altar. “But we will give ourselves continually to prayer, and to the ministry of the word” Acts 6:4. In 1952, Nee was imprisoned and remained in captivity until his death in 1972. His public voice was taken away, but what God had formed in secret kept speaking through his writings long after men had removed his platform. 🔥 — #WatchmanNee #Quoted #SpiritBroods #SecretPrayer #InnerLife

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