Let the Walls Speak
- Bishop Mesrop Parsamyan
- Aug 7
- 2 min read

While in Romania, I visited the famous Voroneț Monastery, often referred to as the "Sistine Chapel of the East." The church is entirely covered—inside and out—with vibrant frescoes. You see saints, angels, and powerful scenes from Scripture: Noah and the Ark, the Resurrection, the Last Judgment. It’s absolutely breathtaking.
What’s even more remarkable is that these frescoes were painted in the 15th and 16th centuries—more than 500 years ago. Over the centuries, they’ve endured snow, rain, wind, and the passage of time. The colors have faded a little, yes, but the message remains. The beauty still resonates. The stories still speak.
At that time, many villagers couldn’t read. They didn’t have Bibles in their homes like we do today. But that didn’t stop the message from reaching them. Artists painted the Bible directly onto the church walls. These churches were too small to hold the entire community. So artists, led by the Holy Spirit, had a powerful idea: “Let’s paint the Gospel on the outside. Let’s bring the message to the people.”
And that’s exactly what they did. They turned the outer walls into a canvas of faith, where everyone could see the Good News. The stones themselves began to preach. The walls became a living testimony to God’s Word.
And friends, isn’t that our calling too? To let our lives speak, to take the message out beyond the walls, and to be living witnesses of the Gospel wherever we go.
Jesus said, “You are the light of the world.” Not the light of the sanctuary. Not the light of Sunday mornings only. The light of the world—which means our faith isn’t meant to stay hidden inside walls. It’s meant to shine where people live, where they work, where they struggle, where they hope.
Your kindness can be a painting. Your joy can be a sermon. Your forgiveness can be a stained-glass window. The way you treat people—that’s your canvas. You may be the only Bible somebody ever reads. Your life may be the message someone’s been waiting for. Your prayer may be the answer someone didn’t even know how to ask for.
So let’s live in such a way that God’s love becomes visible, that His mercy becomes tangible, that faith becomes unavoidable. And let the world see the Gospel—alive in us.
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