Cursed No More
When the Curse Ends and God Dwells With His People
The Bible begins with a curse and ends with its removal. What was broken in Eden is not abandoned — it is restored. Revelation does not describe escape from creation, but the renewal of it.
John’s vision reaches its climax with a declaration that echoes across all of Scripture: “No longer will there be anything accursed.” This is not symbolic comfort. It is finality. The curse that entered through sin is permanently undone.
The curse touched everything. Work became toil. Authority became oppression. Creation itself groaned. Death entered and refused to leave. Revelation does not soften this history — it answers it.
God does not merely restrain the curse. He removes it. The throne of God and of the Lamb stands at the center, not as distant rule, but as dwelling. God lives with His people. Separation is gone.
This is why the language of Revelation is so severe and so hopeful. Judgment clears the ground. Renewal follows. The curse cannot coexist with God’s unveiled presence.
The Cursed No More design exists to proclaim this certainty: the story does not end in decay. Sin does not get the last word. Death does not retain authority. The curse is not eternal — God is.
For the believer, this is not wishful thinking. It is promised inheritance. Those united with Christ already live under a broken curse, awaiting the day when its remnants are fully erased.
Revelation does not point us backward in fear, but forward in hope. What was lost is restored. What was corrupted is healed. What was cursed is made clean.
The Lamb reigns. God dwells with His people. And the words stand unchallenged: Cursed no more.
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