Awlaw hngat koong ha keinih Hnadaga a äkiyä kini tawngei. Nangnih khäka keinih Hnadaga sidawng kini hiyawk khaw a, khrawng käh sidawng ting hiyah äini Hnadaga kheu ting nangnih nini khin hüt awlaw nini lawkei hüt. Awlaw lälä äi Hnadaga käh kheu dä. U aw yumtih nini thänei äm, nangnih lung äng äi kheu la dä bisaw.
What Does This Mean?
Paul is thanking God for the Thessalonians because they accepted his teachings as coming from God, not just from humans. He's praising their faith and how those teachings are working in their lives.
Explained for Children
Imagine if your parents taught you something very important, like always being kind to others. And instead of thinking it was just a fun idea, you believed it came from the most important person ever, God. That’s what Paul is so happy about—the people really listened and believed his message as coming from God.
Historical Background
This verse comes from the second letter of Paul to the Thessalonians, likely written around 50-52 AD. The audience was a group of new Christians in Thessalonica, Greece, facing challenges as they embraced their faith in a pagan environment.
Living It Out Today
Imagine receiving important advice at work and believing it’s just from your boss. Now imagine if you believed the same advice came directly from someone who knows everything about success. You'd probably take that more seriously and act on it with greater confidence, much like how these teachings are working in the believers' lives.
Topics
faithbeliefteachingspiritual growththe word of Godthanksgiving