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AlaskaByte Christian owned and operated spreading the word of God through scripture and testimony.

When you feel surrounded by wrongdoers but you stand your ground by the Armor of God, you can overcome anything. Music w...
01/29/2026

When you feel surrounded by wrongdoers but you stand your ground by the Armor of God, you can overcome anything. Music was written about Ephesians 6:11 and I titled it, "Full Armor".

Join us at our website https://alaskabyteministry.org Welcome to our channel, where divine ✨ inspiration meets daily life! Join us on a journey of spiritual ...

When you are feeling overwhelmed, depressed or just feel like you are alone, you're not! God is with you at all times. W...
01/11/2026

When you are feeling overwhelmed, depressed or just feel like you are alone, you're not! God is with you at all times. We just need to listen with our hearts. If you are in need, I hope that this song gives you God's comfort, peace, and glory.

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17kAX8BpFA/

Join us at our website https://alaskabyteministry.org Welcome to our channel, where divine ✨ inspiration meets daily life! Join us on a journey of spiritual ...

Team Jesus! Rock'in it with Christ you might say. I made this video to capture ones heart and how great our God really i...
07/25/2025

Team Jesus! Rock'in it with Christ you might say. I made this video to capture ones heart and how great our God really is! Be sure to like and share it if you were motivated by the music video. It helps us grow the channel and also helps us to produce more videos that you like. Thank You!

"Team Jesus!" is written and produced by Scott Stansbury at SSP Studio & Gallery. Copyright 2025, All rights reserved. I created this song as it has so much ...

About the Video: “God, I’m Coming Home”I created this music video as a heartfelt reminder and invitation for reflection....
07/13/2025

About the Video: “God, I’m Coming Home”

I created this music video as a heartfelt reminder and invitation for reflection. “God, I’m Coming Home” touches on a question each of us must eventually face: Are you ready to go home? It’s not an easy topic to confront, but it’s one that speaks deeply to our walk with Christ.

None of us know the day or the hour when God will call us home. But until that moment comes, I’ve made it my mission to remain ready—and to use the gifts God has given me to share His truth, His love, and His greatness with others.

I pray this video stirs something within you and draws you closer to the heart of our Heavenly Father. If it blesses you, please take a moment to like and share it with your friends. Your support means more than you know—and you never know who might need to hear this message today.

Let’s continue to walk in faith, stay ready, and proclaim His name until the day He calls us home.




"God, I'm coming home" is written and produced by Scott Stansbury at SSP Studio & Gallery. Copyright 2025, All rights reserved. I created this song as it has...

Should We Be Required to Serve?By Scott Stansbury | scott@alaskabyteministry.org | 907-231-7373When our youth graduate f...
06/23/2025

Should We Be Required to Serve?
By Scott Stansbury | [email protected] | 907-231-7373

When our youth graduate from high school, should they be required to serve?

I don’t mean just military service—though I have the deepest respect for those who serve in uniform. I’m talking about something broader. Something foundational. I’m talking about serving our fellow man. Whether it’s working with charities, caring for the elderly, feeding the hungry, or comforting the broken—should we expect every young person to commit at least two years of their lives in direct service to others?

The Bible doesn’t just suggest service. It commands it.

Jesus said in Mark 10:45, “For even the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.” If Christ Himself—the Savior of the world—did not place Himself above others, how much more should we, His followers, humble ourselves to serve?

I believe in this calling not just because it’s scriptural, but because I’ve lived it.

For 25 years, I served my community in Volunteer Fire and EMS departments. I’ve crawled into burning buildings, pulled people from wrecks, and held hands during last breaths. I didn’t do it for praise or thrills. I did it because God put a deep love in my heart for people. People I didn’t know. People who could never repay me. People in desperate need.

One night during a house fire, the roof collapsed on me. Trapped, with less than two minutes of air remaining in my tank, I was rescued just in time. That experience could have ended my life—but instead, it renewed my purpose. I wasn’t just fighting fire. I was fighting for life.

One of the most humbling moments in my service came a year after my first CPR save. A man walked into the firehouse with his wife and two children. The kids ran to me, hugging me through tears. Their father—whom I helped revive—looked me in the eyes and said, “Because of you, these two children still have a father.” We wept together in that fire station, overwhelmed by grace. But I knew it wasn’t really me who saved him. It was God, and I was simply His willing vessel.

Galatians 5:13 reminds us: “You, my brothers and sisters, were called to be free. But do not use your freedom to indulge the flesh; rather, serve one another humbly in love.”

There’s power in that kind of love—humble, sacrificial, compassionate service. I’ve seen it change lives. Including my own.

So why should we require young people to serve?

Because service teaches what the world often does not: humility, empathy, perseverance, respect. When you carry groceries for a struggling senior, when you comfort someone grieving, when you clean up after a disaster—it reorients your heart. You stop seeing people by their labels—homeless, rich, broken, difficult—and you start seeing them as children of God.

Philippians 2:3-4 tells us, “Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but each of you to the interests of the others.”

Imagine a world where young people—before pursuing careers, wealth, or fame—first spent two years in the trenches of real human need. How different would our culture be if the next generation learned to love through service?

I’m not talking about forced labor or empty gestures. I’m talking about meaningful opportunities to grow character and deepen compassion. Service that honors the image of God in every person.

I didn’t serve for accolades. I wasn’t thinking of “paying it forward.” I was doing what God calls us all to do: Love your neighbor as yourself (Matthew 22:39). Now, years later and living with disabilities of my own, I often find myself needing help in simple ways. And let me tell you—asking for help is its own act of humility. But I have received it. And through that, I’ve experienced the same love and compassion I once offered others.

1 Peter 4:10 says, “Each of you should use whatever gift you have received to serve others, as faithful stewards of God’s grace in its various forms.”

This is why I ask the question: Should we be required to serve?
And I say yes. Not because society demands it, but because the world needs it. Our youth need it. And God commands it.

So ask yourself today:
“Who around me needs help?”
“How can I serve?”

Because one day, you too may find yourself in need. And when love shows up through another person’s hands, you’ll know just how powerful service truly is.

The experience is priceless.
And all glory belongs to God.

Leave comments as to what you think about this post as to whether you liked it or didn’t, agree or disagreed. What other subjects would you would like to see covered?

---Who is Scott Stansbury?
Before becoming a full-time photographer and videographer, Scott worked as a consultant in Process Safety Management across industries such as oil, gas, chemical, nuclear, military, and NASA. His life changed after surviving a horrific accident that left him clinging to life and undergoing many surgeries. During one operation, he had a powerful afterlife experience that reshaped his entire journey. Though now disabled, Scott doesn’t see it that way. He says, “Naa. I’m just different—with parking privileges, that’s all.”

🖥️ Visit: Alaska Byte Ministry
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God Is in Every Step – A Message of EncouragementBy Scott Stansbury | scott@alaskabyteministry.org | 907-231-7373(I wrot...
06/20/2025

God Is in Every Step – A Message of Encouragement
By Scott Stansbury | [email protected] | 907-231-7373

(I wrote this for a young Christian man I had met the previous day and decided to make it a post for all to see and learn from.)

I no longer question the paths I walk. I’ve come to understand that God often leads us through specific journeys—not to confuse us, but to teach us, grow us, and bring us closer to Him.

As I shared in my testimony video, I don’t ask “why” anymore. Instead, I say, “Whoo Hoo! There’s a lesson here, and I can’t wait to find out what it is!”

Life isn’t always a straight road, and it rarely comes with simple answers. What matters most is how we respond—and what we learn through it all—in the eyes of God.

Since everything happened to me, I see things differently. I can hear words of clarity that others may not notice. I can feel the presence and power of God within me, even when others are simply observing from the outside. No matter the path God chooses for me, I embrace it with all my heart.

People often ask me, “Can you heal others?” My answer is a firm, heartfelt No. I can’t heal anyone—but I can pray. I often lay hands on others and feel God’s energy flow through me and into them. When someone is sick, I beg God to take their illness and heal them. In fact, I’ve had people stop me mid-prayer and ask me not to take their sickness onto myself.

There have been moments—more than once—where people have said that I healed them, but I always correct them: “No! I don’t heal. God heals.”

While praying, I can feel God removing the sickness, not me. I feel it leave their body and pass through me. I sense God destroying the illness—and it humbles me every time.

God speaks to each of us. He places things right in front of us, yet we often ignore them. It's easy to put on blinders or drown out His voice with the noise of life. But I’ve learned to look for the good—not the bad. I could easily throw myself a pity party, but I don’t. I’m grateful. I thank God for all I’ve endured and continue to go through, because it has made me a better man than I ever was before.

And for that, I thank God every day.

I’ve been blessed in ways I didn’t always recognize. But today, I see it. I hear Him. And I do my best to follow what He asks of me.
Some people deny miracles simply because they cannot see them. But God is real. He is within each of us—whether we acknowledge Him or not.

People sometimes ask if I’d like to be healed from all that I’ve been through. My answer is simple: Nope. I like me just the way I am. God has given me unique experiences and skill sets so I can testify to others in ways others can’t. My prayer is that God uses me to reach those who don’t yet believe, so they too may come forward and declare their faith in Jesus Christ—being baptized in His holy name.

God placed me in your path yesterday for a reason. He wanted you to see the good, even in the midst of the bad. One day—years from now—when you’re older and I’ve long since gone, you’ll remember the moment you met that old man... and realize he was right.

If you find this message encouraging, please feel free to share it. It just might bring hope to someone else that might need it.

God is GREAT!

— Scott Stansbury
https://alaskabyteministry.org/interviews-and-testimonies/

Who is Scott Stansbury?
Before becoming a full-time photographer and videographer, Scott worked as a consultant in Process Safety Management across industries such as oil, gas, chemical, nuclear, military, and NASA. His life changed after surviving a horrific accident that left him clinging to life and undergoing multiple surgeries. During one operation, he had a powerful afterlife experience that reshaped his entire journey. Though now disabled, Scott doesn’t see it that way. He says, “Naa. I’m just different—with parking privileges, that’s all.”

Scott StansburyWhy Me? - Journey into the Afterlife: What Really Happens When You Die Scott is a professional film maker and photographer. Through the years, he fell in love with photography. It is when he came to Alaska for the first time, he though he was in heaven due to its beauty. One day he

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/5FgWJushXSA
02/08/2025

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/5FgWJushXSA

Feeling overwhelmed or unsure? Let the words of Isaiah 12:2 inspire and empower you. This verse reminds us to trust God completely, lean on His strength, and...

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02/07/2025

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In Peter's powerful verse, ' joy overcomes the world,' discover how joy can transform your daily life. This video offers uplifting insights and practical enc...

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02/06/2025

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In Deuteronomy 31:6, you'll discover how resting on your scaffold and trusting God can provide strength through His goodness. This video explores the verse, ...

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02/05/2025

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/pjriUW4f_Xw

In Peter's powerful verse, ' joy overcomes the world,' discover how joy can transform your daily life. This video offers uplifting insights and practical enc...

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