The Legacy Act
When Grace Gets Personal!
God knew we would rebel, and He planned for it, not with a system, but with a Savior.
The Legacy Act is not about man finding God, it’s about God coming down, stepping into the mess with mercy and fulfilling what only He could.
From the promise to Abraham, to the blood at Calvary, to the return of the King, this is the legacy of grace, and His name is Jesus.




The Hebrew Age
When the Promise Was Made!
God didn’t wait for perfection, He called a man out of nowhere and made a covenant of grace that would shape eternity.
To Abraham, He promised a Seed, a Land, and a blessing that would reach every nation, a whisper of Jesus in every word.
The Hebrew Age is where legacy begins, not with law, but with faith, not with works, but with a promise that would echo all the way to the cross.
The Gospel Age
When the Promise Was Fulfilled!
Jesus came to finish what was promised, fulfilling every prophecy with nail-pierced hands.
The Word became flesh, grace walked among us, and the Lamb of God bore our rebellion so we could receive His righteousness.
The Gospel Age is the turning point of time, where mercy triumphed over judgment, and the cross became the bridge back to God.




The Power Age
the Promise Rules the World!
Jesus came once to save, but He’s coming again to reign, this time, not with a crown of thorns, but with fire in His eyes and a sword in His mouth.
Every rebellion will be silenced, every tear wiped away, and the King will establish His Kingdom in righteousness and glory.
The Power Age is the final chapter, when the legacy of grace becomes the government of God, and Jesus rules forever as Lord of all.
One Is Remembered
The End Was Always the Beginning
The Legacy Act isn’t just about what God did, it’s about who He is: the Promise Maker, the Promise Keeper, the King who never breaks His word.
Through every failure, God was faithful, through every rebellion, His grace made a way, and that way has a name: Jesus.
This is the legacy that believers inherit, not judgment, but joy; not wrath, but righteousness; not a second chance, but a new creation in Christ.

