Who Is the Remnant?

There’s a stirring happening across the world right now. Quiet, but undeniable. A deep unrest in the spirit—felt most by those who can’t seem to find peace in religion, politics, or culture anymore. If you’ve felt out of place lately… even in the spaces where you used to feel safe, you’re not alone. There is a reason. And it’s not anxiety. It’s not overthinking. It’s the voice of Yahuah calling His remnant back to Him.

The remnant is a recurring theme throughout Scripture. Not a group of perfect people, but a chosen few who remain loyal when the masses fall away. They’re the ones who survive judgment, who endure exile, and who eventually return to rebuild. Whenever Israel disobeyed and was scattered, Yahuah always preserved a remnant, a small group who would not bow to idols or follow the nations into rebellion. A group who, even after being broken, would remember the covenant and come home.

In Isaiah 10:20–22, Yahuah makes it plain:

“And it shall come to pass in that day, that the remnant of Israel… shall stay upon the Lord… in truth… For though thy people Israel be as the sand of the sea, yet a remnant of them shall return.”

The remnant isn’t large. It’s not mainstream. It’s rarely celebrated. In fact, being part of the remnant often means being misunderstood, rejected, or even mocked. It means seeing through deception when others are comfortable with the lie. It means asking questions others are afraid to ask. It means walking away from what’s popular in order to obey what’s holy.

So who is the remnant today?

They’re the ones who’ve started waking up to the truth of who they are and who Yahuah really is. The ones who read the Bible now and see it differently than they did before. The ones who are no longer satisfied with “church as usual” or with the watered-down faith they were raised in. They feel the contradiction in their spirit and they can no longer ignore it.

They’re often the black sheep in their families. The ones who stopped celebrating holidays no one could explain. The ones who asked why the Messiah looked different in paintings than He does in Scripture. The ones who couldn’t shake the feeling that they were being called out of something; religion, politics, culture, or confusion and back into something ancient, pure, and sacred.

If that sounds like you, there’s a reason. You’re not just curious. You’re being called.

Being part of the remnant doesn’t mean you have all the answers. It doesn’t mean you’ve lived perfectly. It simply means that your heart is still soft enough to hear when Yahuah calls and bold enough to respond when He says, “Come out of her, My people.”

This journey won’t be easy. The remnant walks against the current. But it will be worth it. Because the Most High isn’t looking for a crowd. He’s looking for covenant. And He’s calling the remnant now not to escape, but to rebuild.

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