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Broward Church: In the Meantime

PODCAST · religion

Broward Church: In the Meantime

Go beyond Sunday mornings with our collection of biblical teachings. Dive into a variety of topics from different teachers.

  1. 101

    Luke & Acts Episode 07

    "The Road to Emmaus" Scripture References Luke 24:1, Luke 24:13–34, Matthew 21:9, Zechariah 9:9, Luke 24:25–27, Isaiah 40:28–31, Romans 8:26–27, Matthew 23:1–4, Matthew 23:15–17, Luke 1:13, Luke 1:18–20, John 3:10, Luke 9:51–56 I. Setting the Scene: Expectations of a King A. The Triumphal Entry created enormous expectations • Crowds shouted, “Hosanna in the highest heaven!” (Matthew 21:9). • “Hosanna” means “Save us.” • People believed the long-awaited Messiah had arrived. B. The prophecy shaping their expectations • Zechariah 9:9 describes the King entering Jerusalem riding a donkey. • When the crowd saw Jesus fulfill this prophecy, they believed: • Rome would be overthrown. • Israel would be restored. • The Messiah would establish His reign. C. The disciples’ emotional state • Three years of witnessing miracles and hearing about the Kingdom. • The crowd affirming Jesus as King. • Their hopes were at their highest. ⸻ II. The Sudden Collapse of Hope A. Events that shattered expectations • Arrest • Trial • Public humiliation • Crucifixion B. Confusion after the resurrection reports • The women report the empty tomb. • Peter investigates. • The disciples remain confused. C. The emotional weight of disappointment • The triumphal parade had turned into an execution. • Their understanding of God’s plan seemed to collapse. ⸻ III. The Road to Emmaus (Luke 24:13–24) A. Two disciples walking away from Jerusalem • Traveling about seven miles to Emmaus.• Discussing everything that had happened. B. Jesus joins them unrecognized • God prevents them from recognizing Him. • Jesus asks what they are discussing. C. Their confession of disappointment “But we had hoped that he was the one who was going to redeem Israel.” D. The meaning of “We had hoped” • Past tense faith. • Their discouragement came from: • Misunderstanding God’s plan. • Expecting glory without suffering. ⸻ IV. The Human Struggle with Disappointed Expectations A. Common modern versions of “We had hoped” • A different medical diagnosis. • A marriage restored. • A ministry flourishing. • A relationship healed. B. Personal testimony of disappointment • A daughter raised in church choosing not to follow Christ. • Feelings of betrayal, confusion, and anger toward God. C. A revealing truth When suffering hits, we fall to the level of our revelation of Christ’s love. D. The core issue • Hope placed in an outcome, not in God Himself. ⸻ V. Jesus’ Response: A Rebuke and a Revelation (Luke 24:25–26) A. Jesus rebukes their misunderstanding “How foolish you are, and how slow to believe…” B. A consistent pattern in Jesus’ ministry Jesus frequently rebuked: 1. Religious leaders who misinterpreted Scripture. 2. His disciples who misunderstood God’s plan.Examples: • Pharisees and teachers of the law (Matthew 23). • Nicodemus (John 3:10). • Peter (“Get behind me, Satan”). • James and John wanting to destroy a Samaritan village (Luke 9). C. A biblical example of misplaced expectations • Zechariah doubting Gabriel’s promise (Luke 1:13–20). • Knowing the story of Abraham but failing to apply it to his situation. Key lesson: God expects His people to apply Scripture to their present circumstances. ⸻ VI. The Greatest Bible Study in History (Luke 24:27) A. Jesus interprets the entire Old Testament • Beginning with Moses. • Continuing through all the prophets. • Showing how Scripture pointed to Him. B. The missing piece in the disciples’ theology They believed in: • Glory • Victory • Kingdom But not in: • Suffering • Sacrifice • The cross C. The Messiah’s path Suffering before glory. ⸻ VII. Renewed Strength Through God’s Word (Isaiah 40:28–31) A. God gives strength to the weary B. Those who hope in the Lord renew their strength C. The disciples’ response • After understanding the Scriptures, • They ran back to Jerusalem the same day. ⸻VIII. The Role of the Holy Spirit (Romans 8:26–27) A. The Spirit helps believers in weakness B. The Spirit intercedes when we do not know how to pray C. The Spirit opens our understanding of Scripture Just as Jesus opened the disciples’ minds, the Spirit performs that work today. ⸻ IX. A Personal Turning Point A. Wrestling with disappointment • Feeling abandoned by God. • Believing sacrifices had gone unnoticed. B. A challenging realization God revealed a question: “Am I your God, or is your daughter your God?” C. A shift in perspective • Hope moved from a specific outcome back to trust in God. ⸻ X. The Turning Point on the Road (Luke 24:31–34) A. Their eyes are opened • They finally recognize Jesus. B. Their hearts burn with renewed faith • Scripture had ignited understanding. C. Their response • Immediate action. • They return to Jerusalem to share the news. ⸻ XI. Resurrection Power A. Their circumstances had not changed • Rome still ruled. • The crucifixion had still occurred. B. What changed was their understanding • The cross was not defeat. • It was part of God’s plan. C. True resurrection power Not the removal of suffering, but the reinterpretation of suffering through God’s Word. ⸻ Key Takeaways 1. Disappointment often comes from misunderstanding God’s plan, not from God failing us. 2. When reality contradicts our expectations, we often assume God is absent, but He may be walking beside us. 3. Scripture, illuminated by the Holy Spirit, allows God to reinterpret our story and restore hope.

  2. 100

    Luke & Acts Episode 06

    "Zacchaeus & The Son of Man" Scripture References Luke 19:1–10, Genesis 3:8, Exodus 25:22, Leviticus 26:11–13, 2 Chronicles 7:1, Malachi 3:1, Matthew 1:22–23, John 14:23, Ephesians 2:21–22, Revelation 3:20, Revelation 21:3, 1 Timothy 1:14–15   Lesson Outline: Zacchaeus & the Son of Man I. The Encounter in Jericho Luke 19:1–4 • Jesus enters Jericho while passing through on His journey to Jerusalem. • Zacchaeus is introduced: • A chief tax collector • Wealthy, likely through corruption • Socially despised by fellow Jews for cooperating with Roman oppression. • Zacchaeus wants to see who Jesus is, but his short stature prevents him from seeing over the crowd. • His determination leads him to climb a sycamore tree, an act that shows both curiosity and urgency. Key Idea: Spiritual curiosity often precedes transformation. Zacchaeus seeks a glimpse of Jesus before he ever imagines Jesus will seek him. II. Jesus Seeks Zacchaeus Luke 19:5 • Jesus stops beneath the tree and calls Zacchaeus by name. • He tells him, “I must stay at your house today.” • This moment demonstrates: • Jesus’ intentional pursuit of sinners. • The divine initiative in salvation. • The urgency in Jesus’ words (“I must”). Key Idea: The story reverses expectations—Zacchaeus wanted to see Jesus, but Jesus came looking for him. III. God’s Longstanding Desire to Dwell With Humanity This moment connects to a larger biblical theme: God dwelling with His people. 1. God Walking with Humanity in the Beginning • Genesis 3:8 – God walking in the garden. 2. God Dwelling with Israel • Exodus 25:22 – God meeting His people above the Ark. • Leviticus 26:11–12 – God promises to walk among His people. • 2 Chronicles 7:1 – God’s glory fills the temple. 3. The Promise of God’s Coming Presence • Malachi 3:1 – The Lord will come to His temple. • Matthew 1:22–23 – Jesus is Immanuel, “God with us.” 4. God Dwelling with His People Through Christ • John 14:23 – God makes His home with believers. • Ephesians 2:21–22 – Believers become a spiritual dwelling place. 5. The Final Fulfillment • Revelation 3:20 – Jesus knocking at the door. • Revelation 21:3 – God dwelling with humanity forever. Key Idea: Jesus entering Zacchaeus’s home reflects God’s eternal plan to dwell with His people. IV. The Crowd’s Reaction Luke 19:7 • The crowd begins to mutter and complain. • Their objection: Jesus is staying with a sinner. Why the anger? Zacchaeus represents everything they despise: • Tax collectors worked for Rome, the occupying power. • They often exploited their own people for profit. • Zacchaeus is not just a tax collector but a chief tax collector, likely overseeing corruption. Key Idea: Religious people often struggle with the radical nature of grace. V. Zacchaeus’ Specific Repentance Luke 19:8 Zacchaeus publicly declares his change of heart: • He will give half of his possessions to the poor. • He will repay four times anyone he cheated. Observations • His repentance is: • Immediate • Concrete • Costly • Restorative Key Idea: True repentance produces visible change and restitution where possible. VI. Salvation Comes to Zacchaeus’ House Luke 19:9 Jesus responds: “Today salvation has come to this house, because this man too is a son of Abraham.” This statement reveals: • Zacchaeus is restored to God’s people. • Salvation is demonstrated through transformation of heart and life. VII. The Mission of the Son of Man Luke 19:10 Jesus summarizes His mission: “For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.” The Gospel in One Sentence • The Bad News: All people are sinners. • The Good News: Jesus came to save sinners. VIII. The Testimony of Grace 1 Timothy 1:14–15 Paul echoes this same truth: • Christ came into the world to save sinners. • Paul calls himself the worst of them. Connection to Zacchaeus Both Zacchaeus and Paul demonstrate: • The depth of human sin. • The overwhelming power of God’s grace.   Key Reflection Questions 1. How gladly do we welcome Jesus into our lives and homes? 2. Why might inviting Jesus fully into our lives feel intimidating? 3. Why do people sometimes resist grace being extended to obvious sinners? 4. What does specific repentance look like in our lives today? 5. Do we see ourselves the way Paul did—as sinners in need of grace? Core Takeaways • Jesus intentionally seeks those who are far from God. • God’s ultimate plan has always been to dwell with His people. • True repentance is specific, costly, and restorative. • No sinner is beyond the reach of God’s grace. • The mission of Jesus is clear: to seek and save the lost.

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    Luke & Acts Episode 04

     “The Good Samaritan"   Text: Gospel of Luke 10:25–37 I. The Question Behind the Question (Luke 10:25–29) A. The Expert’s Test “What must I do to inherit eternal life?” Jesus redirects him to the Law. The summary of the Law: Love God fully. Love your neighbor as yourself. B. Self-Justification “And who is my neighbor?” We often justify ourselves by: Prejudging who is worthy. Limiting who qualifies for our compassion. Key Insight: The issue is not defining neighbor — it’s becoming one. II. The Parable: A Contrast of Responses (Luke 10:30–33) A. The Situation A man was attacked, stripped, beaten, and left half dead. B. The Religious Passersby Priest — saw and passed by. Levite — saw and passed by. Recognition of need ≠ response of compassion. C. The Samaritan Saw the man. Had compassion. Moved toward him. Principle: Suspecting something is wrong is not spiritual. Compassion is. The Four Compassionate Steps III. Identify A. Sense Notice when something is wrong. Pay attention instead of avoiding. B. Choose Compassion is a decision. We choose whether to move toward or away. Application Questions: How is compassion a choice? Where do you tend to pass by? IV. Investigate A. Ask Questions Engage personally. Seek understanding. B. Get Details Details shape how we help. The Samaritan got closer. Principle: Distance protects comfort. Closeness cultivates compassion. Discussion: Why are questions important? How does nearness demonstrate care? V. Involve A. Get Messy Bandaged wounds. Used personal resources (oil, wine, and animal). B. Be Vulnerable Exposure to inconvenience. Emotional investment. C. Christ’s Example Epistle to the Philippians 2:7 — Jesus “emptied himself.” Compassion requires humility and self-emptying. Principle: Submitting to others’ needs requires vulnerability. VI. Invest A. Sacrifice & Effort Two denarii given. Ongoing commitment: “I’ll reimburse you.” B. Risk Financial risk. Personal safety risk. Social risk (a Samaritan helping a Jew). C. Broader Connection Gospel of Matthew 9:36–38 Jesus had compassion on the crowds. Compassion leads to labor. Principle: Compassion is evidence-based and action-oriented. VII. The Final Question (Luke 10:36–37) A. Jesus Reframes It Not “Who is my neighbor?” But “Who proved to be a neighbor?” B. The Reluctant Answer “The one who showed mercy.” C. The Command “Go and do the same.” Insight: Compassion softens hardened hearts. Even cynicism must bow to visible mercy. VIII. Iterative Compassion Compassion is not a one-time act but a pattern: Identify Investigate Involve Invest Then repeat. IX. Personal Application Which step do you need to grow in? What practical action can you take this week? Where might God be inviting you to choose compassion? Closing Thought: Compassion is not theoretical. It is visible, costly, vulnerable love in motion.

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    Luke & Acts Episode 05

     “The Dishonest Manager"   Lesson Outline: The Dishonest Manager — Use Wealth Well Text: Gospel of Luke 16:1–13 I. Introduction: What Are Your Kingdom Dreams? Define a Kingdom Dream: A faithful vision, in partnership with God, to help others grow closer to Jesus. Connecting personal vision with stewardship Key Question: What does this parable have to do with my future, my finances, and my calling? II. Context Matters A. Part of a Triplet of Parables The Prodigal Son (Luke 15) The Dishonest Manager (Luke 16:1–13) The Rich Man & Lazarus (Luke 16:19–31) B. Shift in Audience Luke 15:1 – Pharisees Luke 16:1 – DisciplesLuke 16:19 – Pharisees Insight: This teaching is directed to disciples — people already following Jesus. III. The Problem: Mismanagement and Identity A. The Accusation (16:1–2) The manager is accused of squandering resources. No details are given — why? Accountability is unavoidable. B. The Manager’s Crisis (16:3–4) Fear of losing position Identity tied to role Social status and survival Discussion Questions: Do our jobs shape our identity? How does culture assign identity, status, and influence? How does this conflict with Galatians 3:27 (clothed with Christ)? IV. The Shrewd Strategy (16:5–7) Reduces the debts of the master’s debtors. Secures future relationships. Acts decisively with urgency. Key Question: Whose money is he giving away? Answer: Not his own — he is a steward. V. The Surprise: The Master’s Commendation (16:8–9) The manager is praised for wisdom, not dishonesty. “Children of this age” vs. “Children of light” Make friends by means of worldly wealth. Core Principle: Use temporary wealth to secure eternal impact. VI. The Big Teaching on Stewardship (16:10–13) A. Faithfulness in Little Leads to Much Character is revealed in small responsibilities. B. Wealth Is a Trust If unfaithful with worldly wealth, who will trust you with true riches? C. Divided Loyalty Is Impossible You cannot serve both God and money. VII. Theology of Stewardship A. What Is a Steward? One who manages what belongs to another. B. Whose Wealth Is It? Ultimately, God’s. C. Is Wealth Stewardship a Salvation Issue? It reveals allegiance. It exposes what we truly serve. VIII. Biblical Wisdom on Stewardship A. Planning and Attention (Proverbs 27:23–24)B. Generosity (Proverbs 11:24) C. Avoiding Debt (Proverbs 22:7) D. Building Legacy (Proverbs 13:22) IX. Connecting Stewardship to Kingdom Dreams A. Kingdom Dreams Require Preparation Vision without preparation lacks foundation. B. Prepare and Put Your Wealth to Work Practical Areas: Career, Debt, Retirement, Giving   X. Application Exercise Group Discussion (4–6 People) Share your Kingdom Dream(s). Share how you are preparing for that vision. Evaluate how your wealth management supports or hinders your dream. XI. Closing Challenge You are a steward, not an owner. Your financial faithfulness shapes eternal outcomes. Your Kingdom Dream will only grow as your stewardship matures. Final Question: Are you using what belongs to God in a way that advances what matters to Him?

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    Luke & Acts Episode 03

     “The Rich Man and Lazarus"   I. Introduction & Context A. Immediate Context Gospel of Luke 15:1–2 — Jesus welcomes sinners; Pharisees criticize. Gospel of Luke 16:13–15 — “You cannot serve both God and money.” Pharisees are described as lovers of money. Theme: What God values vs. what people value. B. Reading of the Text The rich man: clothed in luxury, self-indulgent. Lazarus: poor, suffering, lay at the gate. Death reverses their conditions. A great chasm fixed. Warning rejected: “They have Moses and the Prophets.” II. Life Application Discussion A. Identifying the Heart Issue Q: What are the sins of the rich man? Indifference? Self-justification? Love of money? Q: What is commendable about Lazarus? Endurance? Dependence on God? (His name means “God helps.”) B. Lessons from the Condemnation of the Rich Man Sin of neglect. Ignoring suffering at your gate. Proverbs 21:13 — Ignoring the poor has consequences. C. The Significance of “The Gate” Lazarus was not far away—he was visible. Compassion begins with noticing. D. Is Compassion Required for Salvation? Discussion Question: Does the Bible require compassion in action for salvation? Key Supporting Texts: Gospel of Matthew 25:31–46 — Sheep and Goats. Gospel of Matthew 6:14–15 — Forgiveness tied to being forgiven. Deuteronomy 15:7–8 — Openhanded generosity. Gospel of Matthew 6:2–4 — Giving in secret. E. Defining Mercy Compassion — Helping when not obligated. Forgiveness — Releasing punishment when not obligated. F. Modern Application What needs are at our “gate” today? How do we respond to foolish or ungrateful recipients? Motive matters more than recognition. III. Mercy Tied to Salvation?! A. The Tension Salvation by grace through faith: Epistle to the Ephesians 2:8–10 Faith without works is dead: Epistle of James 2:14–17 B. Clarifying the Relationship Good works do not earn salvation. Living faith produces compassion. Dead faith is intellectual belief without transformation. C. Judgment Reality Second Epistle to the Corinthians 5:10 — We will give account for deeds done in the body. Core Principle: Saving faith changes how you treat people. IV. The Afterlife Debate A. Description in the Passage “Abraham’s side” / “Abraham’s bosom.” Hades with torment. Fixed chasm. Conscious experience after death. B. Broader Biblical Considerations Gospel of Matthew 7:13 — Destruction. Gospel of Mark 9:47–48 — Unquenchable fire. C. Interpretive Questions Eternal Conscious Torment? Conditional immortality/termination after punishment? Is this a literal description or parabolic imagery? D. Is It a Parable? Reads like a parable. Symbolic elements (e.g., name Lazarus). Whether literal or parabolic, the message is clear: Repent. Listen to Scripture. Respond now. V. Historical & Scholarly Perspectives A. Cultural Background Intertestamental Jewish views of Hades. Similar motifs in ancient literature. B. Modern Voices in the Debate Douglas Jacoby Rubel Shelly Other contemporary scholars. C. Personal Caution Avoid forming a full doctrine of the afterlife from this single passage. Focus on the ethical urgency of the text. VI. Core Themes of the Lesson The danger of loving money. The sin of indifference. Mercy as evidence of living faith. Scripture is sufficient for repentance. Urgency — opportunity does not last forever. VII. Conclusion The issue is not wealth but the heart. The rich man’s problem was not ignorance—but neglect. Compassion is not optional for followers of Jesus. The story presses one urgent question: Who is at your gate?

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    Luke & Acts Episode 02

     “The Announcement of a Child"  "Songs of Change" Lesson Outline: Luke 1 — Announcing a Child, Singing of FulfillmentI. Introduction: Luke’s Story WorldLuke–Acts as one continuous narrativeGod announces salvation before He accomplishes itKey theme: fulfillment of ancient promises through unexpected peopleII. Birth of a Child: God Announces His Work(Luke 1:5–25 | Zechariah & Elizabeth)Faithful but VulnerableRighteous before God, yet barren and agingSocial shame and unfulfilled longingDivine InterruptionGabriel appears during temple worshipPrayer meets promiseAnnouncement of JohnChild set apart, Spirit-filled, Elijah-likePurpose: prepare a people for the LordHuman ResponseZechariah’s doubtGod’s corrective discipline (silence)God’s FaithfulnessPromise fulfilled “in its proper time.”Elizabeth’s joy and restored dignityIII. Another Announcement: The Greater Child(Luke 1:26–38 | Mary & Gabriel)A New Vulnerable RecipientYoung, poor, unmarried womanSocial risk and personal costThe MessageJesus: Son of the Most HighDavidic King with an eternal kingdomMary’s Question vs. Zechariah’s DoubtSeeking understanding, not proofTrusting God’s powerDivine AssuranceThe Holy Spirit’s role“Nothing will be impossible with God”Faithful Surrender“Let it be done according to your word.”IV. Recognition and Joy(Luke 1:39–45 | Mary & Elizabeth)Spirit-filled confirmationJoy leaps before Jesus is bornBlessing pronounced on belief and trustV. Echoes of the Past: A Repeating Biblical PatternAnnouncing a HeroCommon Elements:Vulnerable recipient (barren, enslaved, poor)Prayer or longingDivine messengerInstructions and prophecyCovenant transitionHuman reaction (faith or doubt)God’s confirming responseOld Testament ExamplesIshmael (Hagar)Isaac (Sarah)Samuel (Hannah)VI. From Child to Community: Acts as the Next Announcement(Acts 1–2)Who Is the Announced “Hero” in Acts?Not an individual childThe Spirit-empowered ChurchA New Vulnerable PeoplePersecuted yet chosenRoyal priests under the New CovenantAnother Question“Is now the time?”God redirects focus to the missionGod’s Promise FulfilledThe Holy Spirit poured outGlobal witness beginsVII. Theological Big IdeaGod’s plan to glorify Himself and rescue people was always intentionalJesus fulfills the promiseThe Church carries it forwardWe are part of a divinely announced storyVIII. Discussion & ApplicationWho is the “announced hero” in Acts, and why does that matter?Why does Scripture emphasize community over individual faith?What might God be calling you to change in how you reach others or engage in fellowship? 

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    Luke & Acts Episode 01

     “The Calling of the First Disciples"  The Calling of the First Disciples | Luke 5:1-11Scripture ReferencesColossians 4:10–14; Philemon 1:23–24; 2 Timothy 4:9–13; Acts 16:6–12; Luke 1:1–4; Luke 5:1–11; Matthew 6:33; Luke 16:10–13I. Introduction to the Gospel of LukePurpose of the study: understanding Luke’s Gospel and the calling of the first disciplesLuke as a unique voice among the Gospel writersLuke–Acts as a unified, two-volume work (the largest contribution to the NT)II. Luke the Man: Author Background and CredibilityA. Luke’s IdentityA Gentile believer and the only Gentile Gospel writerA physician by professionA close companion and “dear friend” of the Apostle PaulPresent with Paul during key imprisonments (Philippi, Caesarea, Rome)B. Luke’s FaithfulnessListed among Paul’s “fellow workers.”Remains with Paul when others desert him (2 Tim. 4:11)A model of loyalty, perseverance, and quiet service III. Luke the Historian and TheologianA. Luke’s Method (Luke 1:1–4)Carefully investigated eyewitness accountsWrote an orderly, researched narrativeGoal: certainty and confidence in the truth of JesusB. Literary ExcellenceExceptional command of GreekLargest vocabulary of any NT writerWrites with precision, detail, and clarityIV. Luke’s Place Among the GospelsFour Gospel authors: Matthew, Mark, Luke, JohnDistinctives:Luke: Gentile, researcher, physicianEmphasis on marginalized people, healing, prayer, and table fellowshipLuke–Acts together account for ~27.5% of the New Testament V. Major Themes Unique to LukeA. God’s Compassion for the MarginalizedEmphasis on the poor, outsiders, women, and sinnersFrequent use of table scenes and mealsB. Healing and RestorationJesus portrayed as the Great PhysicianPhysical, spiritual, and social healing are intertwinedC. The Upside-Down KingdomWealth, power, and status redefinedFaithfulness over richesDiscipleship over comfortVI. Content Unique to LukeA. Unique ParablesGood SamaritanProdigal SonRich Man and LazarusShrewd StewardPersistent WidowB. Unique NarrativesBirth narratives of John the Baptist and JesusMiraculous catch of fishZacchaeusRoad to EmmausThe thief on the crossVII. Transition to Luke 5: The Calling of the First DisciplesSetting: Jesus teaching by the Lake of GennesaretJesus enters Simon Peter’s workplace and daily lifeTeaching precedes the miracleVIII. The Miraculous Catch of Fish (Luke 5:1–11)A. Jesus’ Instruction“Put out into deep water and let down the nets.”Tension between human expertise and divine commandB. Simon Peter’s ResponseHonest doubt based on experience and exhaustionObedience rooted in trust: “Because you say so…”C. The MiracleImmediate, overwhelming successDemonstrates Jesus’ authority over creation and provisionHighlights God’s ability to bring instant fruit where human effort failsIX. The Call to DiscipleshipA. Peter’s ReactionAwareness of sinfulness in the presence of holinessFear met with reassurance: “Don’t be afraid.”B. Jesus’ InvitationFrom fishermen to “fishers of people.”A redefinition of purpose and vocationC. The CostLeaving boats, nets, and livelihoodChoosing Jesus over security and wealthX. Application and ReflectionWhy we doubt Jesus’ instructions todayWhy obedience often precedes understandingWhy Jesus does not use His power to make His followers richFaithfulness with little vs. trust with true riches (Luke 16:10–13)What it means today to “leave everything and follow Jesus”XI. Closing DiscussionOpen questions from Luke 5Personal reflections on calling, obedience, and trustInvitation to continued study through Luke’s Gospel

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    A Tiny Seed With Massive Impact

     “Bible Parables EP09 - Tiny Seed With Massive Impact"  I. IntroductionTheme: Understanding the micro and macro effects of the Kingdom of God.Jesus uses agricultural parables to illustrate how God’s Kingdom grows quietly, steadily, and expansively.II. The Parable of the Growing Seed — A Micro ViewA. Scripture: Mark 4:26–29The man scatters seed.The seed grows “though he does not know how.”Growth happens in stages: stalk → head → full kernel.When ripe, the harvest is gathered.B. Key Elements (“Prop Check”)Seed, Ground/soil, Stalk, Head,  Full kernel, HarvestC. Main IdeaThe Kingdom of God grows quietly, gradually, and sovereignly—God causes the growth.Human participation exists (sowing), but God produces transformation.D. ApplicationBe patient with spiritual growth—yours and others’.Trust God’s unseen work.Stay faithful in the “sowing” even when results aren’t visible.III. The Parable of the Mustard Seed — A Macro ViewA. Scripture: Mark 4:30–32Kingdom starts like the smallest of seeds.Grows into the largest of garden plants.Large branches provide shade and shelter for birds.B. Key Elements (“Prop Check”)Mustard seed, Garden plants, Big branches, Birds perching in shadeC. Main IdeaAlthough the Kingdom begins small, it expands exponentially into something enormous and influential.It provides protection, refuge, and blessing for multitudes.D. ApplicationDon’t despise small beginnings.God can take tiny acts of faith and create global impact.We participate in a Kingdom meant to bless “all nations.”IV. Old Testament Prophecies about the KingdomA. Abraham — Genesis 22:15–18Descendants as numerous as the stars.Through his offspring, all nations would be blessed.B. David — 2 Samuel 7:12–13God establishes an eternal throne through David’s offspring.C. Daniel — Daniel 2:44; 7:14A Kingdom that will never be destroyed.All nations will worship the Son of Man.V. The Global Expansion of God’s Kingdom(Connecting the mustard seed to real-world historical growth)A. The Kingdom’s exponential growthChristianity grows from Jesus and a handful of followers to:2.6 billion believers50,000 denominations4.4 million congregationsB. Institutions Influenced or Initiated by the KingdomChurchesMarriage & FamilyGovernmentsJudicial/Legal SystemsHospitalsSocial ServicesColonial Expansion (religious motivations behind some movements)American Public EducationUniversitiesFinancial SystemsVI. Examples of Institutional Growth Through the KingdomA. ChurchesGrowth statistics worldwide.Thought experiment: “If Jesus were on X—how many followers?”B. Marriage & FamilyBiblical foundations of marriage (Gen. 2; Mt. 19).The honoring of parents (Ex. 20; Eph. 6).C. GovernmentsGod establishes governing authorities (Rom. 13; Prov. 21:1).Historical governments under God’s sovereignty.D. Judicial/Legal SystemsMosaic Law roots.Biblical examples of arrests, indictments, plea bargains, judges, and witnesses.E. HospitalsEarly Christian philanthropy.Jesus’ healing ministry as a foundation.F. Social ServicesCare for widows, orphans, and foreigners.Development of orphanages and adoption practices.G. Colonial ExpansionMotivations of religiously driven kingdoms and settlers.Mayflower Compact and the desire to advance the Christian faith.H. EducationPublic education was founded to teach Scripture.Universities founded by Christian groups.I. Financial SystemsExamples from Joseph and Solomon about resource management and investment.VII. ConclusionThe Kingdom begins small (mustard seed) and grows quietly (growing seed) yet transforms the entire world.God builds His Kingdom through both spiritual change and institutional influence.Our call:Keep sowing. Trust God for growth. Participate in expanding His Kingdom through faithfulness.

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    Lost, Found and Loved

     “Bible Parables EP08 - Lost, Found & Loved"  The Parables of the Lost Sheep, Coin, and SonsI. Introduction & Context (Luke 15:1–2)A. Audience and setting: Tax collectors and sinners are drawing near to hear Jesus, while Pharisees and scribes grumble because Jesus welcomes and eats with sinners. Table fellowship implies intimacy and acceptanceB. The three escalating parables1 of 99 sheep – loss and recovery1 of 10 coins – jeopardy and relief1 of 2 sons – grave loss and reconciliationIncreasing value, increasing relational depthII. Purpose of the Three ParablesA. All three address:What is lost → foundRepentance → reconciliationThe appropriate joy in heaven and among God’s peopleB. Jesus confronts the Pharisees’ failure to shepherd God’s people properlyEchoes Ezekiel 34’s rebuke of false shepherdsIII. The Lost Sheep (Luke 15:3–7)A. Key ThemesThe one lost sheep takes priority over the ninety-nineJesus draws from Ezekiel 34 to expose the religious leaders’ failuresThe shepherd takes actionable care—lifting, carrying, restoringB. Joy and CelebrationCommunal celebration is emphasizedJoy is the expected emotional response to repentanceScriptural connection: Nehemiah 8—joy is strengthC. Divine PerspectiveHeaven rejoices over one sinner who repentsExposes the hearts of:Pharisees/Scribes: accused, failing as shepherdsRepentant sinners: encouraged to rejoiceD. Key Reflection QuestionsWho is the shepherd?Who are the lost sheep?Are we aligned with God’s joy over restoration?IV. The Lost Coin (Luke 15:8–10)A. Parable StructureLost → diligent search → found → communal joy → divine joyB. Emphasis through ContrastA woman is the central figureThe coin is extremely valuable—only 1 of 10The woman’s intentional, detailed effort: lighting, sweeping, searchingC. JoyCommunity rejoicesHeaven rejoices—identical conclusion as the sheepGod celebrates repentanceV. The Parable of the Lost Son (Prodigal Son) (Luke 15:11–32)Part 1 – The Younger Son: Lost and FoundA. Setting the StoryYounger son requests early inheritance—culturally shocking but not unheard ofBoth sons receive their shareB. Descent into LostnessSon treats father as dead; squanders everythingLives among Gentiles—symbolic rejection of Jewish identityFamine strikes—external pressure exposes internal brokennessNo one helps him—complete isolationC. Turning Point (vv. 17–19)Suffering leads to realization and clarityRepentance involves:Humility, New posture, Recognition of unworthiness, Belief he can still go homeD. The Father’s Response (vv. 20–24)Father initiates restoration—runs, embraces, kissesSon’s confession is interrupted—not allowed to request servanthoodFull restoration: robe, ring, sandalsCommunity celebration; divine celebrationDead → aliveLost → foundPart 2 – The Older Son: The Call to Rejoice (vv. 25–32)A. The Older Son’s ResponseAnger and refusal to enter the banquetRejects father and brother linguistically (“this son of yours”)Focuses on sin, ignores repentanceMisremembers history—he also received his shareB. The Father’s AppealCompassion toward the older son“All I have is yours”—affirmation of relationshipInvitation to joy and family identityClarification: “this brother of yours”Restoring the relationship, the older son deniesC. Open-Ended ConclusionJesus leaves the older son’s response unresolvedThe Pharisees and scribes are left to decide their response to God’s graceVI. Key Theological Themes Across the Three ParablesGod seeks the lostRepentance is celebrated in heavenGod’s joy should become our joyMisunderstanding God leads to hardness of heartThe parables correct the religious leaders and comfort the repentant

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    Parable of The Vineyard

     “Bible Parables EP07 - The Vineyard"  🌿The Parable of the VineyardMain Scriptures📖 Isaiah 5:1–7📖 Matthew 20:1–16📖 Matthew 21:33–461. Why the Vineyard MattersThe vineyard is one of God’s favorite pictures of His people.It represents God’s care, our fruitfulness, and His expectations.The theme of bearing fruit appears all throughout the Bible.Examples:John 15:5 – Jesus is the Vine; we are the branches.Colossians 1:10 – We please God by bearing fruit.Revelation 14:19 – God gathers His harvest in judgment.2. How to Study a ParableIdentify the symbols.Decide what’s important vs. what’s just background.Find one or two main points.Ask: What did it mean to them?Ask: What does it mean for me today?3. Vineyard #1 – Isaiah 5:1–7Theme: God’s love and disappointment.Summary:God planted and cared for His vineyard (Israel), but it produced bad fruit.Because of rebellion, He removed His protection and allowed judgment.Main Point:God provides everything for His people, but if they rebel, they face the consequences.Symbol Guide:Vineyard → God’s peopleWatchtower, hedge, hillside → God’s protection and careBad fruit → Sin, injustice, rebellionBriers/thorns → JudgmentReflection:➡ Am I bearing fruit that pleases God?➡ Does my life reflect His justice and righteousness?4. Vineyard #2 – Matthew 21:33–46Theme: Accountability and leadership.Summary:God sends servants (prophets) to His vineyard, but the tenants (leaders) reject them—and even kill His Son. God then gives the vineyard to others who will bear fruit.Main Point:God entrusts His work to people, but He will hold them accountable for how they lead and respond to Him.Symbol Guide:Vineyard → God’s kingdomOwner → GodServants → ProphetsSon → JesusTenants → Israel’s leadersReflection:➡ How do I respond to God’s message and correction?➡ Am I faithful with what God has entrusted to me?5. Final Challenge“Let’s seek to please God by bearing much good fruit.”Discussion Questions:What kind of fruit is growing in your life right now?How do these parables show both God’s grace and His justice?Which of the three vineyard stories speaks most to your situation?

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    Binding The Strong Man

     “Bible Parables EP06 - Binding The Strong Man" Main Text: Matthew 12:22–37I. God’s Call to Seek and Understand His WaysSeek the Lord while He may be found — Isaiah 55:6–9God invites us to pursue His wisdom and perspective.His ways and thoughts are higher than ours.Ask for the ancient paths — Jeremiah 6:16God calls us to inquire about His ways and walk in them.God reveals hidden truths to seekers — Daniel 2:22He discloses mysteries to those who earnestly seek Him.II. Awareness of the Enemy’s SchemesWe must not be ignorant of Satan’s designs — 2 Corinthians 2:10–11.Our battle is spiritual, not physical — Ephesians 6:11–12.The early church recognized demonic influence — Acts 5:3; Ephesians 4:26–27.Peter discerned Satan’s influence in Ananias.Paul warned believers not to give the devil a foothold.III. The Divine Council Worldview (DCW)Definition:Yahweh presides over a divine council of elohim—spiritual beings who oversee nations (Psalm 82; Job 1–2).Some rebelled, becoming false gods.Jesus’ mission: to reclaim the nations and reestablish Yahweh’s rule over creation.Key Idea: Matthew 12 depicts Jesus binding the “strong man” (Satan/Beelzebul) as part of this cosmic reclaiming.IV. Understanding Satan’s Authority and Christ’s TriumphSatan as the chief rebel — identified with Beelzebul, Baal, Zeus, Enlil, Jupiter.Why does Jesus need to disarm Satan?Humanity’s sin gave the enemy authority.The “house” (the world) was occupied due to human rebellion.Jesus’ exorcisms reveal the clash between kingdoms — Matthew 12:22–28.V. Cosmic Context and Divine ConflictHeavenly Council Conflict: Yahweh vs. Rebel Powers — Psalm 82; Deuteronomy 32:8–9.Humans joined the rebellion through sin — Genesis 3; Romans 5:12–21.Idolatry became communion with demons.Jesus’ exorcisms and miracles = acts of divine warfare reclaiming territory.VI. The Stronger KingdomA kingdom divided cannot stand — Matthew 12:25–26.Jesus exposes the logic flaw in His accusers’ claims.By the Spirit of God, Jesus establishes His kingdom — Matthew 12:28; Isaiah 61:1–2.The Spirit’s power marks the arrival of God’s reign.VII. The Strong Man ParableThe strong man (Satan) guards his possessions—nations under his dominion.Jesus, the stronger one, binds him — Matthew 12:29; Luke 11:21–22.Christ disarms and plunders the enemy’s house.The Church continues this mission — Matthew 28:18–20; Acts 26:17–18.VIII. Reclaiming the NationsJesus reverses Babel’s disinheritance — Genesis 11; Deuteronomy 32:8–9.“All authority” is now Christ’s — Matthew 28:18.The Great Commission targets rebel territories — Acts 1:8; Acts 17:22–31.IX. Allegiance and Division“Whoever is not with Me is against Me” — Matthew 12:30.Neutrality equals siding with rebellion.Believers become part of Yahweh’s council family — Ephesians 2:6; 1 Peter 2:9.Our mission: to bear witness against spiritual powers — Ephesians 3:10; Revelation 12:11.X. Warning Against Blasphemy of the SpiritAttributing the Spirit’s work to Satan = ultimate rebellion — Matthew 12:31–32.Persistent rejection hardens the heart — Ephesians 2:2; 2 Corinthians 4:4.The unforgivable sin = continual allegiance to the rebel kingdom.XI. Tree and Its FruitTrue allegiance shown through fruit — Matthew 12:33–35.Rebel fruit: deception, violence, oppression, idolatry.Kingdom fruit: truth, love, and righteousness — John 15:1–8; Galatians 5:22–23.XII. Words, Accountability, and RestorationOur words reveal our allegiance — Matthew 12:36–37; Romans 10:9–10.Believers as restored council members and co-rulers — 1 Corinthians 6:2–3; Revelation 2:26–27.Final restoration: the dethroning of rebels and renewal of creation — Psalm 82:6–8; Revelation 20:10; 1 Corinthians 15:24–28.XIII. Summary ThemeThe Divine Council Conflict explains Jesus’ ministry as an invasion of enemy territory.The Stronger Kingdom — Christ’s reign through the Spirit — defeats the rebel powers.The Church’s mission continues this victory, reclaiming the nations and restoring humanity’s role as God’s divine image-bearers.

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    When a Parable is Not a Parable

     “Bible Parables EP05 - When a Parable Is not a Parable" I. IntroductionThe Bible is a tapestry of stories filled with metaphors teaching us about God.Psalm 34:8 — “Taste and see that the Lord is good; blessed is the one who takes refuge in Him.”Key theme: Experiencing God's invitation to feast on His WordII. The Biblical Thread of Food & DrinkA. Eden and the First MealGenesis 2:15–16 — Adam free to eat from every tree except one.From the very beginning, God offers humanity His Life.B. Manna in the WildernessDeuteronomy 8:3 — Man does not live on bread alone but on God’s word.God uses hunger to teach dependence.C. Invitation to True SatisfactionIsaiah 55:1–3 — “Come, buy and eat… why spend money on what is not bread?”God offers lasting satisfaction beyond material needs.D. God’s Provision in HardshipPsalm 23:5 Table prepared in the presence of enemies.Psalm 78:18–20 Israel’s unbelief: “Can God spread a table in the wilderness?”Psalm 107:5-9  God satisfies the thirsty and fills the hungry.E. Wisdom’s TableProverbs 9:1-6 Wisdom invites the simple to eat and live.III. Human Struggle with Appetite for evilRomans 7:18-19: Desire for good but inability to carry it out.Romans 7:25 — Deliverance through Jesus Christ.IV. Jesus: The Bread of Life (John 6)A. The Wrong MotivationJohn 6:25-29 People seek Jesus for physical bread.Jesus calls them to seek eternal food: belief in Him.B. The True Bread from HeavenJohn 6:30–35 — Jesus identifies Himself as the Bread of Life.Whoever comes to Him will never hunger or thirst.C. Eternal Life Through His Flesh and BloodJohn 6:47-58 Eating His flesh and drinking His blood = abiding in Him.His sacrifice brings eternal life.D. The Dividing PointJohn 6:66–69  Many disciples turn away.Peter’s confession: “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.”V. Growing in Salvation1 Peter 2:1-3 Crave pure spiritual milk to grow in salvation.The Christian life is ongoing growth in experiencing God’s goodness.VI. Eternal FulfillmentRevelation 2:7  To the victorious: the right to eat from the tree of life in God’s paradise.VII. Key TakeawaysGod’s story consistently uses food and drink imagery to reveal spiritual truths.True satisfaction is found only in God’s provision, not in self-seeking desires.Jesus Christ is the Bread of Life — the only source of eternal fulfillment.Spiritual growth means continually craving and experiencing God’s goodness.The ultimate promise: eternal life, eating from the tree of life in God’s paradise.

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    The Parable of The Bags of Gold

     “Bible Parables EP04 - The Parable of the Bags of Gold" I. IntroductionTitle: An Invitation to Share in Christ’s HappinessCentral passage: Matthew 25:14–30II. The Parable ExplainedThe Master Entrusts His Wealth (vv. 14–15)Servants = Us (followers of Jesus)Wealth = God’s gifts, people, opportunities, talentsDistribution according to abilityThe Servants’ Responses (vv. 16–18)Faithful servants: invested and doubled their portionUnfaithful servant: hid the talent out of fearThe Master’s Return (vv. 19–23)Settling accountsPraise and reward for faithfulness:“Well done, good and faithful servant”Greater responsibilityInvitation to share in the master’s happinessThe Wicked Servant’s Excuse (vv. 24–30)Fear and wrong view of the masterRebuked as wicked and lazyTalent taken away, judgment pronouncedIII. Theological MeaningWho Are the Servants?God’s people (John 12:26, Deut. 7:6, John 17:6, Isa. 43:1)What Is the Wealth?The world and all in it belong to the Lord (Ps. 24:1–2)Gifts and talents given by grace (Rom. 12:6–8)God’s treasured possession (Mal. 3:16–18)The Master’s HappinessEternal reward and fellowship with Christ (Isa. 53:12, 2 Pet. 1:10–11, Phil. 3:13–14)Promises to the victorious (Rev. 2–3 selections)The Consequences of Laziness and FearLoss of opportunity and blessingJudgment (Gal. 6:7–10: sowing and reaping principle)IV. TakeawaysGod entrusts us with His wealth (gifts, people, opportunities).He expects us to put them to work for His kingdom.Faithful stewardship brings great reward.Neglect and fear bring consequences.V. Discussion QuestionsWhat does it say about God that He entrusts His wealth to us?What keeps us from being like the first two servants?How can we ensure we live faithfully as the first two servants?Why do many fall into the third servant’s category? 

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    The Parable of the Treasure and Pearl

     “Bible Parables EP03 - The Treasure & The Pearl"  I. Introduction to ParablesParables are simple, relatable stories that convey spiritual points.Key features of parables:Truth – one main point.Challenge – calls for a decision.Action – requires urgent response.II. Principles for Interpreting ParablesThe original audience and cultural context must be considered.Parables are not full allegories, though some contain allegorical elements.Parables are intended to be understood but require open hearts.Parables often include an unexpected twist.They call for a personal response.III. The Parables of the Treasure and Pearl (Matthew 13:44–46)The Treasure Hidden in a FieldA man discovers hidden treasure.Out of joy, he sells everything to buy the field.The Pearl of Great PriceA merchant searching for fine pearls.Finds one pearl of surpassing value.Sells all to obtain it.IV. Key Interpretations and SymbolsTreasure / Pearl: The Kingdom of Heaven.Man / Merchant: Those who discover the Kingdom (whether by accident or intentional search).Selling all: Total commitment; giving up everything joyfully.V. Core Message of the ParablesEntering God’s Kingdom requires radical commitment.The Kingdom is of incomparable value—worth everything we have.There are two kinds of seekers:Those who stumble upon God’s Kingdom unexpectedly.Those who actively search and joyfully embrace it.VI. Supporting Teachings of JesusDenying oneself, taking up the cross (Matt 16:24–25).Losing one’s life to find it (Matt 10:39).Giving up everything to be a disciple (Luke 14:33).Trusting God for provision while surrendering self (Luke 22:35–36).VII. Synonyms for Entering the KingdomGiving up the old life for a new life in Christ.Losing your life for Christ.Wholehearted devotion / total commitment.Making Jesus the Lord of your life.Being “all in.”VIII. Practical ApplicationPersonal reflection questions:Do I truly believe in total commitment to Christ?What does it mean to give up everything practically?What parts of the Kingdom are priceless to me?What factors weaken or strengthen my devotion?Lifestyle changes:From ownership to stewardship—living as managers for God.Restoring and practicing: evangelism, discipleship, wholehearted devotion.IX. Challenges to CommitmentLife transitions (graduation, job, marriage, children, health struggles, retirement).Each stage requires renewed devotion to Christ.X. ConclusionThe Kingdom is worth everything we have.Jesus calls His disciples to wholehearted commitment.Our joy, devotion, and willingness to sacrifice reflect how much we value the Kingdom of Heaven.

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    The Parable of The Sower

     “Bible Parables EP02 - The Parable of The Sower" 1. The Setting of the Parable (Matthew 13:1–3)Jesus teaches by the lake, addressing a large crowd.He begins with a story about a farmer scattering seed.2. The Four Types of Soil (Matthew 13:4–9, 18–23)Hard Soil (The Path) – The seed is snatched away by the enemy because there is no understanding (v. 19).Shallow Soil (Rocky Ground) – Quick growth but no roots; faith withers under trials and persecution (vv. 20–21).Thorny Soil – The word is choked by worries, distractions, and the deceitfulness of wealth (v. 22).Good Soil – A receptive heart that hears, understands, and produces a multiplied harvest (vv. 23, Luke 8:15).3. Why Jesus Taught in Parables (Matthew 13:10–14)To reveal truth to those willing to hear while concealing it from the hard-hearted.Fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy: some will hear and see, but never understand or perceive.4. The Disciple’s PotentialEvery disciple has the potential for abundant fruitfulness—thirty, sixty, or a hundredfold.Yet not all reach this potential because of hardened hearts, shallow roots, or worldly distractions.5. Call to Self-Examination (2 Corinthians 13:5)Believers are urged to test themselves:Am I truly in the faith?Which type of soil best describes my heart?6. Characteristics of Good SoilPsalm 1:1–3 – Delighting in God’s Word and staying rooted like a tree by water.Psalm 126:6 – Persevering through trials and reaping joy.Good soil requires a noble and persevering heart that clings to God’s Word (Luke 8:15).7. Discussion and ApplicationWhat prevents us from truly hearing and understanding?What persecutions or troubles shake our faith?What worldly worries or distractions choke spiritual growth?How can we cultivate a heart of “good soil” that bears lasting fruit?

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    How to Parable

     “Bible Parables EP01 - How to Parable” 1. IntroductionDifferent views on parables:Symbols with many interpretationsThinking exercisesRelatable stories pointing to kingdom principles with kingdom actionsCore definition:StoryReveals a truthRequires action2. Why a Parable?Parables follow a movement:Kingdom Truth → Challenge → Choice → ActionThey provoke reflection that leads to transformation.3. What is a Parable?A simple, relatable story with spiritual impact.Calls the audience to:Change their mindset and take action4. When to Use a ParableIntroducing people to Jesus’ kingdom principlesReminding believers of those principlesTeaching a simple truth that requires a clear response5. How to Read and Apply a ParableRead the parable.Check if Jesus explains it.Identify the key elements.Ask: Who is the immediate audience?Ask: What kingdom truth is being revealed?Determine the call to action.Apply the kingdom truth to your life.Key Point: Jesus intends parables to be understood.6. Warnings (Parable “Gotchas”)Avoid:Over-analyzingLiteralizingOver-allegorizing (example: Augustine’s over-interpretation of the Good Samaritan)7. Case Study: The Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25–37)Walkthrough of the steps:Read the textIdentify the audienceDraw out the kingdom truthRecognize the call to actionApply it todayDiscussion:What background details would you need to explain to someone unfamiliar with the Bible?8. Conclusion & Group QuestionsList as many parables as you can.Why are parables effective as introductions to God?Why do kingdom truths demand urgent action?When is it important to provide cultural or historical context for your audience?

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    Your Ninivite Unboxed - Jonah Chapter Four

     “Jonah Chapter 4– Your Ninivite Unboxed” 1. Jonah’s Anger at God’s Mercy (4:1–3)Jonah is “exceedingly displeased” that God spares Nineveh.He sees God’s good action as evil because it conflicts with his desires.Jonah’s prayer reveals his frustration: he knew God was gracious, merciful, and abounding in love—and he didn’t want Nineveh to experience it.Jonah would rather die than live in a world where God forgives his enemies.2. God’s Patient Response (4:4)The LORD gently asks Jonah: “Do you do well to be angry?”God does not rebuke with force but invites Jonah into reflection.This shows God’s character—He shepherds us even in rebellion.3. The Object Lesson: Plant, Worm, and Wind (4:5–8)God appoints a plant to give Jonah shade, which makes him glad.Then God appoints a worm to destroy it and a scorching east wind to test him.Jonah’s joy turns to despair, exposing his self-centered heart.Jonah is more concerned about his personal comfort than about the lives of thousands in Nineveh.4. The Greater Lesson (4:9–11)God questions Jonah’s anger over the plant—something Jonah didn’t create or sustain.Contrast: Jonah pities a plant, but resents God’s pity for an entire city filled with people and even animals.The chapter ends unresolved, forcing the listener/reader to examine their own heart.5. Key Themes & QuestionsGod’s Mercy vs. Our Boxes: We want God’s compassion to fit our categories of “worthy” and “unworthy.”Who is Your Ninevite? The people you resist showing compassion to reveal how you see God’s mercy.God’s Names Matter: He is not one-dimensional—He is Provider, Judge, Shepherd, Lord of Hosts. A full view of God reshapes prayer and faith.Grace That Offends: God’s mercy often confronts our pride and challenges our limits.The Call to Self-Examination: The book ends with a question mark—will we embrace God’s heart, or cling to our boxes?

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    Forty Days to Mercy - Jonah Chapter Three

     “Jonah Chapter 3– Forty Days to Mercy” I. God’s Word Comes a Second Time (Jonah 3:1–3)God repeats His command to Jonah—evidence of His patience and persistence.Difference in wording:Chapter 1: “Preach against it”Chapter 3: “Preach the message I give you”Jonah now obeys, showing the contrast between his earlier rebellion and his renewed obedience.Lesson: God doesn’t discard us when we fail—He restores and recommissions us.II. Jonah’s Message of Judgment (Jonah 3:4)A simple, direct sermon: “Forty more days and Nineveh will be overthrown.”The number “forty” in Scripture often symbolizes testing, waiting, and divine judgment (e.g., Noah’s flood, Moses on Sinai, Jesus’ fasting).Lesson: God’s warnings are acts of grace, giving space for repentance before judgment.III. Nineveh’s Radical Repentance (Jonah 3:5–9)Immediate response: “The people of Nineveh believed God.”Corporate action: Fasting, sackcloth, and humility—from the least to the greatest.The king leads by example, descending from his throne, wearing sackcloth, and sitting in ashes.Even animals included in the fast—symbolizing total surrender.Their repentance was not shallow but marked by turning from violence and evil.Lesson: Genuine repentance is active, visible, and heartfelt.IV. God’s Merciful Response (Jonah 3:10)God “saw their actions” and relented from the disaster He had threatened.Shows God’s consistent character: compassionate, merciful, and responsive to repentance.Jonah’s prayer in chapter 2 contrasts with Nineveh’s actions—Nineveh lives out repentance while Jonah only speaks it.Lesson: God’s mercy triumphs over judgment when people humbly turn to Him.V. Key Themes and ApplicationsSecond Chances: God’s call is patient and persistent—He doesn’t give up on His people.The Power of God’s Word: A simple message, spoken in obedience, can transform nations.True Repentance: Involves humility, action, and turning from sin.God’s Mercy: No one is beyond the reach of His compassion.Testing and Waiting: God often allows seasons of warning and delay as opportunities to respond.

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    The Fish Psalm - Jonah Chapter Two

     “Jonah Chapter 2– The Fish Psalm” 1. Setting the SceneJonah, after fleeing God’s command, has been swallowed by a great fish (Jonah 1:17).Chapter 2 is his prayer from inside the fish — not a cry for rescue from drowning, but a thanksgiving for being saved from drowning.His situation: he had sunk to the depths, nearly died, but God intervened.2. Structure of Jonah’s PrayerOpening cry (v.2) – Jonah calls to God in distress from “Sheol” (the place of the dead). God hears and answers.Recollection of peril (v.3–6a) – Jonah describes being cast into the sea, overwhelmed by waves, sinking to “the foundations of the mountains,” trapped forever in death’s realm.Key Point: Jonah sees God as the one who “threw” him into the sea — acknowledging God’s sovereignty over his situation.The imagery echoes Genesis 1:2 (chaotic deep) and portrays ultimate helplessness.Turning point (v.6b–7) – God raises Jonah’s life from the Pit; Jonah remembers the Lord, and his prayer reaches the temple.Confession and resolution (v.8–9) – Jonah contrasts idol worshipers (who abandon loyal love) with his own vow to sacrifice and give thanks.Climaxes with: “Salvation belongs to the LORD.”Resolution (v.10) – God commands the fish, which delivers Jonah to dry land.3. Key ThemesGod’s Sovereignty in TroubleJonah recognizes God’s control over the storm, the sea, and his deliverance.Even being “thrown” into the sea is part of God’s plan, not random fate.Recognition Before RedemptionTrue deliverance requires acknowledgment of God’s hand and our own rebellion.Jonah’s turning point comes when he remembers the Lord and directs his prayer toward God’s temple.Incomplete RepentanceNotably, Jonah’s prayer is thanksgiving for survival, not a confession for fleeing God’s mission.This hints that while he acknowledges God’s power, his heart is not fully aligned with God’s compassion (seen later in Jonah 4).Idolatry vs. FaithfulnessClinging to idols causes people to turn away from God’s steadfast love.Jonah contrasts himself with idolaters, but the narrative later shows he still struggles with God’s mercy toward others.God’s Deliverance“Salvation belongs to the LORD” — God is the source of rescue, whether from physical danger or spiritual death.This is ultimately fulfilled in Jesus’ resurrection (Matthew 12:38–42; Luke 11:29–32), the ultimate sign of God’s saving power.4. Foreshadowing & New Testament LinksMatthew 12:38–42 / Luke 11:29–32 – Jesus uses Jonah’s three days in the fish as a sign pointing to His own death and resurrection.Luke 16:31 – Even with the greatest sign (resurrection), those unwilling to believe God’s Word will not be persuaded.The fish episode anticipates God’s greater act of deliverance through Christ — salvation from the finality of death.5. Literary Movement – “Down to Up”Jonah’s journey is a descent:Down to Joppa → Down into the ship → Down into the sea → Down to the roots of the mountains.Then, by God’s power, a reversal:Up from the pit → Up to dry land → Sent again to Nineveh.This movement mirrors the spiritual journey from death to life.6. Contrast with Jonah 4Jonah 2 – Thanksgiving from distressJonah 4 – Complaint from discomfortGrateful for personal deliveranceAngry at Nineveh’s deliveranceDeclares “Salvation belongs to the LORD”Protests God’s mercyHopes for salvation in God’s templeWaits to see Nineveh destroyedGod uses a fish for rescueGod uses plant, worm, and wind for teachingAffirms God’s saving powerConfronted with God’s compassion lesson7. Main Takeaways for TodayGod is sovereign over all circumstances, even those that feel like judgment.Remembering the Lord in crisis is essential — but God desires heart-level repentance, not just gratitude for survival.Salvation is entirely God’s work; our role is to trust, obey, and worship Him.The ultimate sign of deliverance is the resurrection of Jesus — if we ignore that, no other sign will convince us.Jonah’s mixed motives warn us that knowing God’s power is not the same as sharing His compassion.

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    Who’s Your Ninevite? Jonah - Chapter One

     “Jonah – Who’s Your Ninevite?”I. Introduction: The Challenge of JonahJonah is more than a fish tale—it’s a deeply layered story about God’s character, human resistance, and grace to outsiders.The lesson asks us to wrestle with this: Who is your Ninevite? (i.e., who do you resist extending grace to?)The story functions on multiple levels: historical narrative, parable, and theological mirror.II. Setting the StageWho: Jonah, a prophet from 2 Kings 14:25, is introduced as God’s messenger—but he’s reluctant, disobedient, and emotionally volatile.When: The events occurred in the 8th century BC, though the book may have been written later (post-exile).Where: Tarshish (opposite direction of obedience), Nineveh (enemy capital), the sea (chaos and death).What: God calls Jonah to preach to Nineveh, but he flees.Why: This is what we are invited to explore: Why does Jonah resist? What does that reveal about God and us?III. God’s Sovereignty: Over All ThingsGod controls:Nature: Storms, sea, fish, wind, plants, and worms.Nations: Nineveh is a foreign, Gentile city, yet God cares.Death: Jonah goes to the depths (Sheol) but is preserved.People Outside the Covenant: Gentiles (sailors, Ninevites) respond to God better than the prophet does.IV. Literary Depth & StructureThe book uses chiastic structure (mirrored patterns) and callbacks to earlier scriptures (Genesis, Kings).Key words (“down,” “great,” “threw”) help readers trace Jonah’s descent and God’s movement.Echoes of Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen 18) and Elijah’s despair (1 Kings 19) frame Jonah as a deeply flawed but relatable prophet.V. Chapter 1 – Flight and Storm: Jonah vs. the GentilesA. Jonah’s DisobedienceGod calls, Jonah runs—to Tarshish, the opposite direction.His flight is not just physical but theological: he flees God’s mercy toward his enemies.B. The Storm at SeaGod hurls a storm. Sailors panic and pray; Jonah sleeps.The Gentiles show spiritual awareness; Jonah, the prophet, is indifferent.C. The Great ContrastJonah confesses belief in “the Lord of heaven, sea, and dry land,” but his actions deny his theology.The sailors fear God, pray, and make vows—Jonah must be thrown overboard to bring peace.Reflection Questions:Do our actions match our theology?How does Jonah mirror us in disobedience or selective compassion? 

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    Unveiling Revelation

    Revelation - Eschatology Week 06I. IntroductionFocus of this lesson: High-level overview of the Book of RevelationGoals:Review interpretive frameworksDiscuss symbolic structureExamine timeless themes II.The Five Major Views of RevelationFuturist: Most events still to comeIncludes ideas like Pre-/Post-Trib Rapture, 1,000-year reignDispensationalist elements: Antichrist, 3rd temple, Israel’s landPreterist: Events fulfilled in the 1st centuryInterprets Revelation as symbolic of Roman persecution and fall of JerusalemLuke 21:20–22 cited as key supporting textHistoricist: Events unfold progressively through historyExamples: 7 churches = 7 church eras, Pope = AntichristPopular during ReformationIdealist (Symbolic): Revelation conveys timeless truthsNot chronological; spiritual battle between good and evilEclectic: Combines multiple viewsEmbraces symbolic elements with historical and future applicationsIII. Outline of the Book of RevelationCh. 1–3: Introduction and Letters to the 7 ChurchesCh. 4–5: Throne Room of HeavenCh. 6–7: Seven SealsCh. 8–11: Seven TrumpetsCh. 12–14: War in Heaven and Symbolic VisionsCh. 15–16: Seven PlaguesCh. 17–22: Final Judgment, Return of Jesus, New Heavens and EarthStructure emphasizes three sets of seven (seals, trumpets, plagues)IV. Key Symbolism and Numbers in RevelationSymbolic meaning of biblical numbers:3 = divine4 = creation/universal6 = man7 = completion12 = God’s government1,000 = vastnessWords/phrases repeated 7 times: “Blessed are…,” “sat on the throne,” “prophecy,” etc.V. The Bible Project Summary (Parts 1 & 2)Highlights symbolism, literary design, and OT referencesOT books referenced: Zechariah, Isaiah, Joel, Exodus, Ezekiel, Daniel, etc.Major themes:Spiritual resistance against “Babylon” (Rome or empire)Hope and perseverance in persecutionRevelation as a call to faithfulnessKingdom of God coming on earthBible Project’s view aligns most closely with Idealist or EclecticVI. Timeless Theological Themes in RevelationEmpires win temporarily but face divine judgmentGod’s people suffer now but are vindicated in the end“Babylon” is a metaphor for corrupt systems in every eraChristians are called to resist evil and remain faithfulJesus reigns as a victorious King who dwells with His people foreverVII. ConclusionRevelation isn’t meant to confuse, but to comfort, challenge, and encourageRegardless of your view:The core message is hope, endurance, and ultimate victoryEncouragement to reflect:“Will you stay faithful when Babylon rises?”

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    The Spiritual World

    The Spiritual World - Eschatology Week 05I. IntroductionMain theme: Exploring the reality, structure, and function of the unseen spiritual realmFoundational Scripture:Ephesians 6:10–18 – The spiritual battle and the armor of GodII. God and the Spiritual RealmA. God is SpiritJohn 4:24 – “God is spirit, and his worshipers must worship in the Spirit and in truth”John 1:18 – Jesus reveals the unseen GodB. Understanding “Elohim”Hebrew term אֱלֹהִים (Elohim) used widely in the OT (2250 times)Can refer to:Godgods (plural)spiritual beingsspirits of the deadsupernatural forcesIII. The Divine CouncilKey Text: Psalm 82:1 – God presides in the assembly of the “gods”1 Kings 22:19–21 – Micaiah’s vision of God’s throne and the spiritsOther supporting texts: Job 1:6, Deut. 32:8–9, Psalm 89:5–7, Daniel 4:7, Isaiah 6Scholarly comparison: Michael Heiser’s “Divine Council” worldviewGod engages a council of spiritual beings in decision-makingIV. Angels & CherubimTypes of Spirit BeingsAngelic interventions throughout the BibleGenesis 19:13 – Angels destroy Sodom & GomorrahJudges 6 – Angel calls GideonIsaiah 37:36 – Angel strikes down 185,000Daniel 10 – Michael, the archangel, battles for nationsGuardian angels implied:Matthew 18:10, Hebrews 1:14Call to action: “Are you helping your angel help you?”V. Satan & DemonsA. Satan in the Old TestamentHebrew term “Satan” often used with the definite article (“the satan”)Described as a role or title, not a proper nameJob 1–2, Zechariah 3:1–2 – Satan as accuser in God’s courtOnly later developed into a proper name for the devilB. DemonsAssociated with pagan worship and idolatryDeut. 32:17, Psalm 106:37New Testament teachingsMatt. 25:41 – Eternal fire for the devil and his angels1 Tim. 4:1 – Deceptive spirits and doctrines of demonsC. Victory Over Satan1 John 4:4 – Greater is He who is in youJames 4:7, 1 Cor. 10:13 – Resist and overcome temptationLuke 4:13 – The devil waits for opportune momentsVI. Human Beings in the Spiritual WorldChristians have a high spiritual status:1 Cor. 6:1–3 – We will judge the world and angels2 Tim. 2:11–12 – Reign with ChristSaved humans will:Receive eternal lifeBe incorruptibleReign and judge with ChristVII. Life Application: Living Aware of the BattleA. Awareness and VigilanceRecognize we are in a spiritual war2 Cor. 2:11, 1 Peter 5:8–9Know the enemy’s strategies:Sin trapsUnrighteous relationshipsGreed and materialismDisillusionment with peopleSpiritual apathy and discontentB. Call to ActionPut on the full armor of God – Ephesians 6:10–18Live spiritually sharp, strong, and preparedCol. 3:1–4 – Set your heart on things aboveC. What’s at StakeEternal lifeThe souls of othersThe glory of God

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    Heaven & Hell

    Heaven & Hell - Eschatology Week 04Big Ideas:I. Definitions and Origins of Heaven and HellA. Sheol / HadesHebrew (Sheol) and Greek (Hades) terms for the realm of the dead.Described as the invisible world of departed souls.Differentiation:Wicked go to “hell”Righteous go to “paradise”Referenced by Jesus in the parable of the Rich Man & Lazarus (Luke 16) and on the cross (Luke 23:43).B. GehennaA physical valley near Jerusalem, later symbolized eternal destruction.Used by Jesus to describe hell in the Gospels.Constant fire and refuse—imagery of judgment and punishment.C. Pyros (Greek for fire)Associated with the “lake of fire” in Revelation 20:14–15. II. Views on the Duration and Intensity of HellA. Traditional ViewEternal, conscious punishment for the wicked.B. Terminal ViewHell is finite; time in torment could range from moments to millennia.C. Annihilationist ViewNo prolonged suffering; souls are destroyed instantly.D. Biblical and Philosophical ConsiderationsGod’s immortality vs. the soul’s conditional immortality.Eternal life is a gift, not inherently possessed (1 Tim. 6:15–16; John 3:16).III. Scriptural Interpretations and Conflicting VersesMatthew 25:46: “eternal punishment” vs. “eternal life”Emphasis on “destruction,” “consumed,” and “perish” as biblical terms.IV. Biblical Imagery and Descriptions of HellPsalms and Hebrews describe God’s enemies as consumed by fire.Jesus warns of the destruction of body and soul (Matt. 10:28).Emphasis on God’s justice and the consequences of unrepentance.V. Heaven: Its Nature and LocationA. Heaven is “Above”Cited verses: John 3:31, John 8:23, Acts 7:55–56, Col. 3:1–3.Heaven is where Christ is seated with God.B. Heaven as a City: The New JerusalemDescribed in detail in Revelation 21–22:Precious stones, pearly gates, streets of gold.No more pain, death, or sorrow.God dwells with His people.VI. The Second Coming and the ResurrectionA. Jesus Returns in the Clouds1 Thessalonians 4:16–17: The dead in Christ will rise, believers will meet Him in the air.B. Transformation of BelieversGlorified bodies (Phil. 3:20–21; 1 Cor. 15:51–54).C. Final Judgment2 Corinthians 5:10: Each will be judged for deeds in the body.VII. Eternal Destiny and WorshipBelievers will see God’s face (Rev. 22:4).A great worship scene in heaven (Rev. 15:2–3).Earth and creation will be destroyed and renewed (2 Peter 3:10–13). VIII. Entrance into HeavenAccess through the blood of Christ (Rev. 22:14).A call to faithfulness, purity, and hope in eternal life.

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    Rapture, Tribulation & The Kingdom

    The Rapture, Tribulation, and The Kingdom - Eschatology Week 03Big Ideas:I. The Rapture: Hope or Misunderstood Doctrine?Definition: The belief that believers will be “caught up” to meet Christ at His return.Diverse Interpretations:Some see it as a separate event from the Final Judgment.Others interpret the “Rapture” as part of the final return of Christ.Critical Observations:The same scriptures are often used both to support and challenge the idea of a separate rapture.Emphasis on context and a broader scriptural view is essential.Debate Highlights:No clear biblical separation between the resurrection of the dead and the rapture of the living.Some interpretations may incorrectly assume a “third coming” of Christ.Jesus’ warnings (e.g., Matthew 24) are often about destruction and judgment, not a secret rapture.II. The Tribulation: Catastrophe Past, Present, or Future?Three Main Views:A future 7-year period of suffering involving the Antichrist.A historical period centered on the destruction of Jerusalem (AD 66–70).The general suffering experienced by all people throughout life.Historical View (Preterist):Focus on the First Jewish–Roman War and the siege of Jerusalem.Detailed accounts from historian Josephus support this intense period as a true “tribulation.”Massive loss of life, destruction of the temple, and end of Old Covenant systems.Application:The Tribulation may already be fulfilled historically, shifting focus to enduring present difficulties faithfully.III. The Millennial Kingdom: Literal or Already Here?What is the Millennium?Referenced in Revelation 20 as a thousand-year reign of Christ with His saints.Two Views:Literal/Future: A real 1,000-year reign after Christ’s return.Spiritual/Preterist: A symbolic representation of Christ’s current reign through His resurrection and the church.Key Considerations:The term “kingdom” appears hundreds of times in scripture beyond Revelation 20.Jesus taught that His kingdom is not of this world and has already begun (Mark 9:1, Colossians 1).Prophecies in Daniel and Ezekiel trace the unfolding of God’s eternal kingdom from Babylon to Rome, with Christ as the final king.Conclusion:A full biblical theology of the kingdom reveals its presence now and forever, rooted in the resurrection and reign of Jesus.Key Bible Passages ReferencedRapture:1 Thessalonians 4:13–181 Corinthians 15:51–53Matthew 24:36–41Luke 21:20–22Tribulation:Luke 21:20–21Matthew 24:1–2Flavius Josephus (historical context)Millennial Kingdom:Revelation 20:1–6Daniel 2, 7, 9Ezekiel 37:21–27Mark 9:1Colossians 1:13–14John 18:362 Peter 3:8Psalm 84:10Deuteronomy 6:4–9

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    The End of Time - What Happens Next?

    The End of Time - Eschatology Week 02Big Ideas:There are various eschatological perspectives, such as:Futurist – Believes most biblical prophecies will be fulfilled in the future.Preterist – Holds that many End Times prophecies were fulfilled in the first century, particularly during the fall of Jerusalem in AD 70.Historicist – Views prophecy as unfolding throughout church history.Idealist (Symbolic) – Sees Revelation as a depiction of timeless spiritual truths rather than chronological events.Eclectic – Combines elements of the other views.The discussion highlights key theological distinctions between Dispensationalism and Covenantal Theology, particularly regarding Israel, the Church, and prophetic fulfillment. The speaker also shares their current personal stance: a blend of Partial Preterist and Idealist perspectives.Throughout the episode, listeners are challenged to reflect on how their beliefs about the End Times affect their worldview:Is the future primarily hopeful or filled with doom?Are the End Times about divine rescue or spiritual perseverance?Should we look for physical signs or trust in timeless truths?This episode is an invitation to approach eschatology with humility, curiosity, and a willingness to explore Scripture with fresh eyes. It sets the foundation for next week’s deep dive into the Millennial Kingdom, the Rapture, and the Tribulation. 💡 Key Scriptures Referenced:Luke 21:20–22 “When you see Jerusalem being surrounded by armies… this is the time of punishment in fulfillment of all that has been written.”(Used to support the Preterist view and the fall of Jerusalem in AD 70.)Joel 1 (Prophecy of locusts, symbolizing a coming judgment — often viewed as already fulfilled.)Isaiah 13 (Prophecies of the Day of the Lord — interpreted as fulfilled judgments in some views.)Ezekiel 40–43 (New temple vision — seen by some as symbolic of the Church or Kingdom.)Matthew 24; Mark 13; Luke 17, 21 – The Olivet Discourse (Prophetic words of Jesus often debated between Preterist and Futurist interpretations.)Revelation 9:1–4 (A symbolic passage involving the Abyss, locusts, and judgment — explored across interpretive views.)Luke 10:17–20 (Jesus speaks of Satan falling from heaven and spiritual authority — connected to symbolic interpretation.)Romans 8:18–21 (Creation longing for redemption — supports views involving bodily resurrection and new creation.)

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    Life After Death - What Happens Next?

    Life After Death - Eschatology Week 01Big Ideas:There are more theories than facts about the afterlife, so beware of overconfidence.Resurrection, not reincarnation, is the biblical hope.The soul’s immortality may not be intrinsic, but a gift from God.Eternal life is defined by a relationship with God, not just unending time.Our ultimate hope is the return of Christ and the resurrection of the body.💡 Key Scriptures Referenced:Matthew 24:361 Corinthians 152 Corinthians 5:10Philippians 3:20-21John 17:3Colossians 3:1-4 

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    Enoch, The Man Who Never Died

    Enoch, the Man Who Never DiedI. IntroductionA. Scripture Reference – Jude 14–15B. Introduction to Enoch: The seventh from AdamC. Overview of Enoch’s unique legacy: He did not experience deathII. Enoch Walked with GodA. Genesis 5:21–24 – A life marked by faithfulnessB. The metaphor and reality of walking with GodC. The intimacy of relationship – “My God and I” hymn excerptD. Reflection: What does it mean to walk with God today?III. Enoch Pleased GodA. Hebrews 11:5–6 – Commended for faithB. The role of faith in pleasing GodC. Comparison with Abraham – James 2:23D. Reflection: Why is faith so central to pleasing God?IV. Enoch Defended GodA. Jude 14–15 – Enoch’s prophetic voiceB. Historical context – Genesis 6 and the growing wickednessC. The Book of Enoch – Angels, corruption, and violenceD. Biblical examples of zeal for God:1. Phinehas (Numbers 25:11–13)2. David (1 Samuel 17:26)3. God’s favor toward defenders of His honorE. Reflection: Do we see the world as God sees it?V. Enoch Was Taken by GodA. Hebrews 11:5 – Enoch did not see deathB. Other biblical examples of being taken:1. Elijah (2 Kings 2:11)2. Jesus (Acts 1:9–11)3. The Church (1 Thessalonians 4:17)C. Reflection: The hope of being with God eternallyVI. Broader Context and LegacyA. Two family lines: Cain and SethB. God chose the line that walked with HimC. Connection to Noah – Another man who walked with GodD. The importance of spiritual lineage and legacyVII. Discussion and ReflectionA. Choose one to reflect or comment on:1. Walking with God2. Pleasing God3. Defending God4. The Hope of Being Taken by GodVIII. ConclusionA. Enoch’s life as a model of faith, intimacy, courage, and hopeB. Challenge to live a life that walks with, pleases, and defends God

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    Contending for the Faith: The book of Jude

    Contending for the FaithI. Introduction to Jude    A. Authorship: Jude, brother of James (and likely Jesus)    B. Audience: Jewish Christians familiar with OT and apocryphal texts    C. Purpose: Address false teachers misusing grace    D. Date and Location: ~60 AD, possibly from Southern IsraelII. Structure of the Epistle    A. Greeting (vv. 1–2)    B. Body Introduction (vv. 3–4)    C. Body Proper (vv. 5–16)        1. Historical examples of judgment        2. Description of false teachers    D. Call to Action (vv. 17–23)    E. Benediction (vv. 24–25)III. Central Themes    A. Contending for the Faith    B. The misuse of grace as a license for immorality    C. The denial of Jesus as LordIV. Warnings and Illustrations    A. Historical Judgments:        1. Egypt (unbelievers destroyed)        2. Fallen angels (Gen 6 / 1 Enoch)        3. Sodom and Gomorrah    B. Examples of Rebellion:        1. Cain – murder        2. Balaam – greed and immorality        3. Korah – rejection of authority    C. Descriptions of False Teachers:        1. Waterless clouds, fruitless trees, wandering stars        2. Relying on instinct, not the Spirit        3. Dangerous to the communityV. Call to Faithful Living (vv. 17–23)    A. Remember the Apostolic Warnings    B. Build your faith and pray in the Spirit    C. Stay in God’s love, await Christ’s mercy    D. Rescue and show mercy to those waveringVI. Theological Closing (vv. 24–25)    A. God’s power to preserve believers    B. Christ’s eternal authority and glory    C. Doxology affirming hope and confidenceVII. Use of Extra-Biblical References    A. 1 Enoch (vv. 14–15)    B. Assumption of Moses (v. 9)    C. Purpose: Common knowledge as illustrative toolsVIII. Additional Scriptures Galatians 5:13, 1 Timothy 4:1, Titus 1:16, Matthew 7:15, Ephesians 4:14, Romans 6:1-2, 2 Timothy 3:1-5

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    Living with the End in Mind – A Study of 2 Peter 3

    "Living with the end in mind"II. IntroductionA. Purpose of Peter’s Letter (v.1-2)B. Reminder to Think Wholesomely and Remember God’s WordII. The Reality of Scoffers and the Last Days (v.3–7)A. The Rise of Scoffers (v.3–4)B. Their Willful Ignorance of God’s Past Judgment (v.5–6)C. Future Judgment Reserved by God’s Word (v.7)III. God’s Patience and Perspective on Time (v.8–9)A. God’s Timelessness (v.8)B. His Desire for Repentance, Not Perishing (v.9)IV. The Coming Day of the Lord (v.10)A. Suddenness and Totality of the DayB. Cosmic and Earthly Judgment by FireV. Living in Light of Eternity (v.11–13)A. The Call to Holy and Godly Living (v.11)B. Eager Expectation of God’s Day (v.12)C. The Promise of a New Heaven and New Earth (v.13)D. Cross-references: Isaiah 65:17, 66:22; Revelation 21:1–5VI. Practical Exhortations for Believers (v.14–16)A. Be Diligent: Spotless, Blameless, at Peace (v.14)B. Understand God’s Patience as Salvation (v.15)C. Paul’s Writings and the Danger of Misinterpretation (v.16)VII. Final Warnings and Encouragement (v.17–18)A. Be on Guard Against Error (v.17)B. Grow in Grace and Knowledge of Jesus Christ (v.18)C. Doxology: To Him Be the GloryVIII. Discussion QuestionsHow should we handle scoffers? Should we be surprised?How does the knowledge of judgment and renewal shape our spiritual life?How does God’s patience motivate our evangelism?What does it mean to be secure in Christ but still be on guard?VIV. Additional ScripturesEcclesiastes 12:13–14, Isaiah 40:8, Matthew 24:42, Luke 12:35–40, John 14:3, Colossians 3:1–4, Philippians 3:20–21, 1 Thessalonians 5:2–6, Titus 2:11–13, Hebrews 10:23–25, Revelation 22:12

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    Exposing False Teachers – A Study of 2 Peter 2

    "Exposing False Teachers"I. IntroductionA. Purpose of the LetterB. Structural Overview (ABBA pattern)NT Apostles (1:16–18)OT Prophets (1:19–21)OT False Prophets (2:1a)NT False Teachers (2:1b–3)II. The Rise and Traits of False Teachers (2:1–3)A. Origin “Among You” – Internal ThreatB. CharacteristicsDestructive HeresiesDenial of Christ (in doctrine and practice)Depraved BehaviorExploitation and GreedUse of Made-Up StoriesC. ConsequencesSwift DestructionMaligning the Way of TruthCondemnation is CertainIII. Old Testament Precedents of Judgment (2:4–10a)A. Angels (Gen 6 / 1 Enoch references)B. Noah and the Ancient WorldC. Sodom and GomorrahD. Lot’s RescueE. Lesson: God Judges the Wicked and Rescues the RighteousIV. Description of False Teachers’ Behavior (2:10b–16)A. Arrogance and BoldnessB. Slander of Spiritual BeingsC. Carnal and Animalistic InstinctsD. Hypocrisy and Deception within the CommunityFeasting and FellowshipHidden Sin (Adultery, Greed)Targeting the UnstableE. Comparison to BalaamDriven by GreedRebuked by a DonkeyV. The Hopeless End of False Teachers (2:17–22)A. Empty Promises – “Springs without Water”B. Preying on New Believers and the VulnerableC. Slaves to Corruption Despite Promising FreedomD. Worse Off Than Before Knowing the TruthE. Illustrations: Dog Returning to Vomit, Sow to MudVI. Discussion Questions and ApplicationA. Why do false teachers gain a following?B. Who are their primary targets?C. What are the warning signs?D. Why is the doctrine of judgment and Christ’s return essential?VII. Additional ScripturesMatthew 7:15–20, Matthew 24:11, Matthew 24:24, Luke 6:26, John 8:44, Acts 20:29–30, Romans 16:17–18, 1 Corinthians 11:19, 2 Corinthians 11:13–15, Galatians 1:6–9, Ephesians 5:6, Colossians 2:8, 1 Thessalonians 5:21–22, 1 Timothy 1:6–7, 1 Timothy 4:1–2, 2 Timothy 3:13, Titus 1:10–11, Hebrews 13:9, James 3:1, 1 John 4:1

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    A Legacy of Truth – A Study of 2 Peter 1:12-21

    “A Legacy of Truth”I. IntroductionA. Context: 2 Peter was written around 60 AD; Peter’s impending death (c. 64 AD)B. Central Question: What would you say if you knew you were dying soon?II. Peter’s Urgency to Remind (2 Peter 1:12-15)A. The importance of reminders in faithB. Living in the “tent” of the bodyC. Peter’s commitment to ensure remembrance after his deathIII. The Reliability of Eyewitness Testimony (2 Peter 1:16-18)A. Apostolic testimony is not based on mythsB. Peter as an eyewitness of Christ’s majesty (Transfiguration)C. Legal and biblical significance of multiple eyewitnessesIV. The Trustworthiness of Prophetic Scripture (2 Peter 1:19-21)A. The prophetic message as a light in darknessB. Scripture’s divine origin, not human interpretationC. Role of the Holy Spirit in inspiring prophecyD. Unity between prophets and apostles in revealing God’s messageV. Key Themes of Peter’s Final TestimonyA. The Word of God is completely reliableB. Faith must be grounded in both personal witness and ScriptureC. The unified work of the Holy Spirit through historyVI. Reflection & Discussion QuestionsA. How does the metaphor of a tent change our view of life and death?B. Are we clearly communicating our faith to those we influence?C. Why is it crucial to affirm the reliability of Scripture today?D. What does it mean that the Holy Spirit worked through both prophets and apostles?VII. Additional ScripturesDeuteronomy 6:6–9, Psalm 119:105, Proverbs 3:1–2, Isaiah 40:8, Matthew 24:35, John 14:26, Acts 1:8, Romans 15:4, 1 Thessalonians 2:13, 2 Timothy 3:16–17, Hebrews 2:1–4, Revelation 1:3

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    Growing In Faith Through Knowing Jesus – A Study of 2 Peter 1

    Growing in Faith Through Knowing JesusI. IntroductionA. Context of 2 PeterAuthor: Peter (Simeon Peter)Date: Around 64 AD, shortly before Peter’s deathAudience: Possibly the same as 1 Peter (speculative)Occasion: Farewell addressPurpose: Combat false teaching, emphasize the return of ChristB. Central Theme: God provides everything for life and godlinessII. The Foundation: Knowledge of JesusA. Definition: ἐπίγνωσις (epígnōsis) – full discernment and acknowledgmentB. True vs. False KnowledgeFalse teachers claimed “knowledge” (possibly proto-Gnostic)Peter only attributes true knowledge to knowing ChristC. Key Verse: 2 Peter 1:2 – Grace and peace through knowledge of God and JesusIII. God’s Divine ProvisionA. Divine power gives all we need (v.3)B. God’s promises allow us to:Share in the divine natureEscape corruption and evil desiresC. Entry into divine community through the Holy SpiritIV. The Growth Process: Spiritual Virtues (vv. 5–7)A. Faith as the foundationB. Add to your faith: Goodness, Knowledge, Self-control, Endurance, Godliness, Brotherly affection, Love (agape)C. Key Ideas:Growth is intentional and requires effort.We are empowered, but must partner with GodV. The Evidence of Growth (v.8)A. Spiritual maturity keeps us from being:Useless (ἀργός – inactive, idle)Unfruitful (ἄκαρπος – barren)B. Fruitfulness reflects increasing knowledge of ChristC. Warning against busyness that lacks fruit VI. The Danger of Stagnation (v.9)A. Lacking growth leads to:Spiritual blindnessForgetting Christ’s cleansing workDrifting away from gratitude and purposeVII. Confirming Your Calling and Election (vv.10–11)A. Make every effort to confirm callingB. Divine invitation and participation in God’s planC. Balance of God’s sovereignty and human responsibilityD. Assurance of eternal reward: Entry into the eternal kingdomVIII. ConclusionA. Spiritual growth is a lifelong, active processB. God empowers us—but we must respond with intentional effortC. Growing in Christ leads to stability, fruitfulness, and eternal hopeIX. Additional Scriptures:Psalm 1:1-3, Matthew 7:13-20, John 15:5, John 17:3, Romans 8:16-17, Romans 12:1-2, 1 Corinthians 9:24-27, 2 Corinthians 3:18, Galatians 5:22-23, Ephesians 4:15-16. Philippians 1:6, Colossians 2:2-3, Hebrews 10:24-25

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    How to Stand Against the Enemy – A Study of 1 Peter 5

    How to Stand Against the EnemyI. Message to Older Christians - 1 Peter 5:1-4II. Message to Younger Christians - 1 Peter 5:5III. God is the One Who Strengthens & Lifts Up - 1 Peter 5:6-7, 10-11IV. Be Alert to Satan’s Schemes - 1 Peter 5:8-9V. This World is Not Our Home - 1 Peter 5:12-14VI. Discussion Questions:If you are an older Christian, what is a lesson for you?If you are a younger Christian, what is a lesson for you?In what ways does God strengthen & lift us up?Why is it important to remember that the REAL ENEMY is thedevil, and not other people?What are some practical ways to remind ourselves that thisWorld is not our home?VII. Additional Scriptures:Proverbs 1:8-9, Psalm 27:1, Psalm 55:22, Isaiah 40:29–31, 1 Timothy 5:17, 2 Corinthians 5:20, Colossians 3:1-3, 1 Thessalonians 5:6, Titus 2:2-5, Hebrews 13:7, James 4:7

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    Be Strangers to the World – A Study of 1 Peter 4

    Be Strangers to the WorldI. Living with the End in Mind (1 Peter 4:1-7)    A. Arm Yourself with the Attitude of Christ    B. Cease from Sin, Not Suffering    C. The Time is Short – Live for God’s Will    D. Expect the World’s Surprise and Resistance    E. The End is Near – Stay Clear-Minded and PrayerfulII. Loving One Another Deeply (1 Peter 4:8-11)    A. Love Covers a Multitude of Sins    B. Offer Hospitality Without Grumbling    C. Use Your Gifts to Serve Others    D. Speak and Serve with God’s Strength    E. All Glory to God Through Jesus ChristIII. Rejoicing in Suffering (1 Peter 4:12-19)    A. Don’t Be Surprised by the Fire    B. Suffering for Christ is a Blessing    C. Let No One Suffer for Doing Evil    D. Suffer as a Christian – Without Shame    E. Trust Your Faithful Creator and Keep Doing GoodIV. Additional Scripture ReferencesMatthew 5:10-12, Matthew 24:13, Luke 6:22-23, John 15:18-20, Romans 5:3-5, Romans 12:11-13, 1 Corinthians 10:31, 2 Corinthians 1:5, Galatians 6:9-10, Philippians 1:29, Colossians 3:23-24, 2 Timothy 3:12, Hebrews 12:3-11, James 1:2-4, James 1:12, Revelation 2:10

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    Christian Living in a Secular World – A Study of 1 Peter 3

    Christian Living in a Secular WorldI. IntroductionA. Overview of 1 Peter B. Theme: Living faithfully in a secular worldII. Instructions for Wives and Husbands (1 Peter 3:1-7)A. Wives: Submission with a gentle and quiet spiritB. Husbands: Honor and understandingIII. Living in Harmony with Others (1 Peter 3:8-12)A. Call to unity, sympathy, love, and humilityB. Responding to evil with blessingC. The importance of seeking peace and righteousnessIV. Suffering for Doing Good (1 Peter 3:13-17)A. Encouragement to remain faithful despite sufferingB. Overcoming fear and standing firm in faithC. Being prepared to defend the faith with gentleness and respectV. Christ’s Example of Suffering and Victory (1 Peter 3:18-22)A. Christ’s suffering for the righteous and unrighteousB. His victory over sin and deathC. The significance of baptism in salvationVI. Discussion QuestionsA. How is submission godly?B. How is sympathy and compassion crucial in helping one another live in a pagan world?C. What connection exists between seeking peace with loving life and seeing good days?D. What does submission have to do with not giving way to fear?VII. Additional ScripturesProverbs 31:10-12, Isaiah 53:5, Micah 6:8, Matthew 5:9-12, Matthew 5:44, Romans 8:18, Romans 12:16-18, 1 Corinthians 10:31, Ephesians 5:22-25, Colossians 2:15, Colossians 3:18-19, Galatians 6:9, Philippians 2:3-4, James 1:2-4, James 1:19-20, 2 Timothy 3:12, Hebrews 12:2-3

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    A New Community in Christ – A Study of 1 Peter 2

    A New Community In ChristI. A Holy Community (1 Peter 2:1-10)A. Characteristics of the New CommunityB. Failure and Success in FaithC. The Identity of God’s PeopleII. Demonstrating Holiness (1 Peter 2:11-25)A. Living Honorably Before the WorldB. Submitting to AuthorityC. Suffering for Doing GoodIII. Identifying with Christ Through SufferingA. Christ suffered as an example for us to followIV. The Role of SufferingA. The Cause of SufferingB. The Context of SufferingC. The Role of Community in SufferingV. Reflection Questions1. What is the purpose of our community? Why is it important to operate as a community?2. Why is it important to submit to authorities? Is the command to submit qualified?3. What is the benefit of unjust suffering?

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    Living as Citizens of Heaven – A Study of 1 Peter 1

    Living as Citizens of HeavenI. Citizens of HeavenA. Believers are God’s elect, exiles in the worldB. First-century context of scattered Christians (Acts 18:1-4, Acts 18:24-26)C. Our inheritance is in heaven, not on earthD. Our true citizenship is in heavenE. Encouragement in our heavenly hope II. Understand SufferingA. Suffering refines faith like gold in fireB. Examples of faith through sufferingC. Sharing in Christ’s suffering leads to sharing in His gloryD. The joy of salvation sustains us through trials III. Special to GodA. The prophets longed to see Christ’s workB. Even angels long to understand God’s salvation plan IV. Mindset: Be HolyA. Set your hope fully on God’s graceB. Being holy means being set apartC. Live as foreigners with reverent fearD. We are ransomed by Christ’s blood V. Love One Another DeeplyA. Sincere love for one another is a mark of true faith VI. Born of Imperishable SeedA. We are born again through the enduring Word of God VII. Bible ReferencesLeviticus 20:23-25, Psalm 34:17-19, Acts 18:1-4, Acts 18:24-26, Romans 8:17, Philippians 3:20-21, 1 Thessalonians 4:16-18, Hebrews 11:35b-38, 1 Peter 1 , Revelation 5:9-10 VIII. Discussion Questions1. Do you see yourself more as a citizen of heaven or an earthly nation?2. How do you view suffering in light of God’s plan?3. What does being set apart by God mean to you?4. Who in your life do you love deeply?5. How does being born of imperishable seed shape your faith? 

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    Overcoming a Complaining Heart | Al Williford

    Gratitude vs ComplainingI. Complaining Offends GodGod's anger is aroused when people complain.Old Testament people complained despite God's provision after delivering them from slavery.Complaining led to the Jews wandering in the desert for 40 years.Complaining takes away joy.II. The Root of Complaining: SelfComplaining is often rooted in wanting change and feeling frustrated when it doesn't happen.It can stem from a lack of humility and a sense of entitlement.III. Complaining Hurts WitnessComplaining can make Christians look weak.Others may doubt God's blessing.IV. Overcoming ComplainingCultivate gratitude by giving thanks.Remember examples such as David, Paul, and Silas.Shift focus to God's sovereignty and trust in Him.God works for the good of those who love Him.Replace complaining with gratitude.Practice Lament.V. Learn to LamentLamenting is expressing sorrow to God.It involves coming to God with a humble heart.VI. Practical Ways to Encourage Others and Be ThankfulOffer a kind word or prayer.Practice gratitude daily.Ask God to help see blessings.VII. The Importance of AttitudeShift thinking to change attitude.Avoid being a grumpy person.VIII. Is it Wrong to Complain?Complaining to God (lamenting) is biblical.Avoid complaining to others.IX. ChallengeTry to go 30 days without complainingJournal about the good things and blessings in life for a week.Encourage others instead of complainingX. Scripture ReferencesPhilippians 2:14-15, 1 Thessalonians 5:18, Numbers 11:1, Exodus 16:8, James 5:9, Proverbs 17:22, Ephesians 4:29, Colossians 3:17, Lamentations 3:22-23, Job 1:21, Romans 8:28 

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    Truth in Action: Would You Lie to Save a Life? | Al Williford

    I. Honesty vs. DeceitHonesty is equated with truth, integrity, honor, and uprightness.Deceit involves lying, trickery, fraud, and duplicity.The concept of honesty/deceit involves more than just words.Integrity is defined as wholeness.II. Biblical Perspective on Honesty/DeceitOld Testament Examples:The integrity of the upright guides them, but the unfaithful are destroyed by their duplicity (Proverbs 11:3).Whoever walks in integrity walks securely, but whoever takes crooked paths will be found out (Proverbs 10:9).The Lord detests lying lips but delights in trustworthy people (Proverbs 12:22).New Testament Examples:Followers of God should not lie to each other (Colossians 3:9).Followers of God should put off falsehood and speak truthfully (Ephesians 4:25).Followers of God should not use deception, nor distort the word of God, but set forth the truth plainly (2 Corinthians 4:1).III. God and the TruthImage of God:Humanity was created as God's imagers, meant to be His representatives.Humans are to be a mirror to reflect God’s image on Earth.As emissaries, humans are to have God's qualities.God is a God of truth.It is impossible for God to lie (Hebrews 6:18).The Holy Spirit and the Truth:The Spirit of truth guides people into all truth (John 16:13).Jesus and the Truth:Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life (John 14:6).God's word is truth (John 17:17).IV. Results of Honesty/TruthEnables people to hear the voice of Jesus (John 18:38).Knowing the truth makes people free (John 8:31-32).The truth sanctifies people (John 17:17).Leads to God’s dwelling place (Psalm 43:3-4).Enables people to worship the Father (John 4:23).Brings favor from God and people (Proverbs 3:3).Gives a piece of armor to resist evil (2 Timothy 2:25-26).V. Origin of DishonestyThe devil is the father of lies (John 8:44).There is a spiritual war between the Kingdom of Heaven and the powers of this world (Ephesians 6:12).The dragon was hurled down to earth and leads the whole world astray (Revelation 12:7-9).The powers of this world work to deceive (2 Thes. 2:10, Rev. 13:14, 2 Cor. 4:4).VI. Results of DishonestyLiars will be consigned to the fiery lake of burning sulfur (Revelation 21:8).VII. Additional Scripture References:Proverbs 12:19, Psalm 15:2, 1 Peter 3:10, Colossians 3:9-10, Psalm 119:160, Proverbs 19:9, Zechariah 8:16

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    Godly Honor & Shame in Community | Phil Spadaro

    I. IntroductionThe concepts of honor and shame may not be easily understood or fit one's values.Goal: Be aware of Honor/Shame.The lesson will explore how Honor/Shame contrasts with Innocence/Guilt,Honor is essential to God. God values honor and expects it to be pursued.II. Understanding Honor and ShameHonor/Shame is about reputation and community connection, defined by others, and focused on "Us, Others, Community".Honor is connected to a good reputation and glory, while shame is connected to a bad reputation and bad behavior.Proverbs 22:1 states that a good name is to be chosen over great wealth.III. Implementing HonorPursue honor from God. Romans 2:6-8 speaks of seeking glory, honor, and immortality.Promote and protect the honor of others. Ruth 3 illustrates protecting someone's reputation.Honor God and His Community. Romans 2:24 notes that the name of God can be blasphemed because of our actions. 1 Corinthians 6 addresses resolving disputes within the community to avoid shame.1 Peter 2:17 states to honor everyone.IV. Discussion & ApplicationHow can I implement honor in my life?Will this bring honor to God?Does this bring honor to God’s people?Interpret 1 Timothy 2:9 and Ephesians 5:3 considering the community.Who is influencing your perception of honor/shame?Is our community rightly encouraging honor?How are we protecting the reputation of the community and those within it?Here are the scripture references mentioned or alluded to in the sermon:V. Scripture ReferencesProverbs 22:1, Proverbs 10:23, 1 Timothy 3:7, Genesis 2:25, Genesis 3:10-11, Genesis 3:21, Genesis 1:26, Romans 2:6-8, Matthew 6:2, Ruth 3:14, 1 Peter 2:17, Romans 2:24, 1 Corinthians 6:1-5, 1 Corinthians 6:20, 1 Timothy 2::9, Ephesians 5:3VI. Additional Scriptures1. Romans 12:10 - "Be devoted to one another in love. Honor one another above yourselves."2. Genesis 1:27 - "So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them."3. 1 Thessalonians 4:3-5 - "It is God's will that you should be sanctified: that you should avoid sexual immorality; that each of you should learn to control your own body in a way that is holy and honorable, not in passionate lust like the pagans, who do not know God."

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    Submission as God's Love Language | Richard Rodriguez

    I. Why Submit?A. Submission is God’s Love LanguageJohn 14:15, 23-241 Samuel 2:35B. Submission is ChristlikeJohn 10:17-18Philippians 2:5-11 III. What Submission Looks Like: JesusA. Example from Matthew 26:39-43IV. Danger of Rebellion: God’s OppositionA. God Opposes the Proud1 Peter 5:5B. Obedience is better than Sacrifice1 Samuel 15:22-23V. Discussion QuestionsWhat are the benefits of submission?What are the challenges of submission?What does submission look like to you?In what ways have you learned about the perils of rebellion?

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    Preacher's Cut | Genesis 25 | Tony Fernandez

    Tony touches on a few of the theological and practical points behind the story of Jacob coaxing Esau's birthright away from him in Genesis 25.

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    The Biblical Virtue of Work | Joe Stearns

    Genesis 1:26Genesis 2:15Genesis 2:2-3Genesis 3:17-19Genesis 8:20-21John 5:17Ephesians 2:8-10Romans 12:2Colossians 3:17Colossians 3:23-24Proverbs 22:29Daniel 6:3-5Galatians 6:4-5Titus 2:9-10Numbers 21:4-6Proverbs 6:6-8

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    Spiritual Preparation | Phil Spadaro

    Are we truly prepared for life's unexpected challenges? This message encourages us to shift our focus from rigid planning to spiritual preparation. The key lesson is that while planning is good, preparation is better. We're reminded of the parable of the ten virgins from Matthew 25, where five were prepared with extra oil and five were not. This story beautifully illustrates how being spiritually ready can make all the difference when faced with unforeseen circumstances. The message challenges us to develop our character through daily, divine-driven disciplines like prayer, Bible study, and meditation. By doing so, we're not just preparing for specific scenarios, but building a foundation that will serve us in any situation. It's a call to put God at the center of our preparation, aligning our motives and purposes with His. This approach frees us from the tyranny of unfulfilled plans and opens our eyes to seize God-given opportunities.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Go beyond Sunday mornings with our collection of biblical teachings. Dive into a variety of topics from different teachers.

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Broward Church

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