Worthy Brief - June 1, 2026
Worthy Brief - June 1, 2026
You are living between two declarations!
John 19:30 When Jesus had received the sour wine, he said, “It is finished,” and he bowed his head and gave up his spirit.
Revelation 21:6 And he said to me, “It is done! I am the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end. To the thirsty I will give from the spring of the water of life without payment.
As we continue our study of the Kingdom of God, I want to pause and compare two remarkable declarations that stand like pillars at opposite ends of the redemption story. The first was spoken by Yeshua (Jesus) from the cross: “It is finished.” The second is declared from the throne in Revelation: “It is done.” At first glance, they may sound almost identical, but in the Greek they are not the same. They reveal two distinct moments in God’s unfolding plan. At Calvary, Yeshua cried out, Tetelestai. In the New Jerusalem, the Father declares, Gegonan. The first announces that redemption has been accomplished. The second announces that redemption has reached its final destination. The cross was not the end of the story; it was the guarantee of how the story would end.
The word Yeshua spoke, tetelestai, comes from teleo, meaning “to complete,” “to accomplish,” or “to bring something to its intended goal.” Even more powerful, it is written in the perfect tense, carrying the force of something completed in the past with results that continue. In other words, Yeshua was declaring, “It has been finished, and it remains finished.” This was not the cry of a defeated victim fading under Roman power. It was the royal proclamation of the King who had completed the mission entrusted to Him by the Father. The debt of sin had been paid. The sacrifice had been accepted. The veil was about to be torn. The way into the presence of God had been opened. The victory had been secured.
Yet when we come to Revelation 21, we hear another declaration. The Father says, “It is done.” The Greek word is gegonan, from ginomai, meaning “to become,” “to come into being,” or “to come to pass.” The emphasis is not merely on a mission completed, but on a promise fully realized. Everything purchased by the blood of Yeshua has now reached its fullness. The New Jerusalem has descended. Death has been abolished. The curse has been removed. God dwells openly among His people. What was secured at the cross is now visible throughout creation.
This distinction reveals a powerful Kingdom truth: we live between Tetelestai and Gegonan. We stand between what has already been accomplished and what is still unfolding. The cross secured our future, but the fullness of that future is still advancing toward its appointed day. This is why the message of the Kingdom carries both confidence and hope — confidence because Yeshua has already finished the work, and hope because everything He purchased is moving toward its ultimate fulfillment.
The enemy wants believers trapped in the tension. He wants us staring at what still looks broken, what still feels unfinished, what still seems delayed. But Heaven points us back to Calvary and reminds us that the outcome has already been determined. We are not striving to obtain victory; we are learning to live from a victory already won. Every salvation, every healing, every act of restoration, every transformed life, every answered prayer is a witness that the power of Tetelestai is still moving history toward Gegonan.
Do not let the unfinished places around you convince you that the finished work has lost its power. The cross still speaks. The blood still speaks. The King still reigns. What Yeshua accomplished at Calvary is not weakening with time; it is advancing through time. The story that began with a cry from the cross will culminate with a declaration from the throne. The Lamb has finished the work, and one day the Father will declare over all creation, “It is done.”
Your family in the Lord with much agape love,
George & Baht Rivka (Maryland)
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