This year, we'll be studying Paul’s letter to Titus once a month focusing on the various roles and instructions through the letter. To start this series, we first consider what the role of an evangelist is with a local church.
Some of your questions answered! Maybe. In fact. this is a fairly in-depth study of what many take for granted: we are going to heaven one day if we are good. Is that true? Yes, but it may not be as obviously spelled out in the Scriptures as you think. PDF handout available in the notes.
We look at Jesus' last 24 hours (or so) before and including his death.
Jesus began His ministry in manner this is both astonishing and easily taken for granted. In this lesson, we strive to consider the value of what Jesus accomplished when He endured 40 days in the wilderness being tempted by the Devil.
It can be easy to drift from what, or rather Who ought to be at the center of all that we are. In this lesson, we consider the importance of seeing Jesus in the same way that the apostles did, learning His love just as they did and being impacted by Him just as they were.
The last in our series in the book of Numbers. In chapter 35, the "Cities of Refuge" are established and we discuss the connection to Jesus Christ. In chapter 36, the book of Numbers ends in a seemingly anticlimactic way, with a legal matter about property rights, but we see that God is concerned with the details and cares for the disadvantaged.
Continuing our series in the book of Numbers. In these chapters, Israel is enriched greatly because of fighting the Lord’s battles. In this lesson, we consider how these events reflect the way we are still called to fight the Lord’s battles against sin, and how God enriches us when we do so.
While this Psalm contains multiple prophesies of Jesus’ crucifixion, it also looks forward to the fact that God would deliver Him in a way that would change the world from that time on forever. In this lesson, we consider how this Psalm teaches us about Jesus and the hope that we can have in God because of the way He uniquely fulfilled every aspect of this Psalm.
The ark of the covenant and the tabernacle (and temple) had use in their day but also served as symbols of what Christ would accomplish through his death.