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Nov 30, 2023
Week 9: Bible Translations
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  • Nov 30, 2023Week 9: Bible Translations
    Nov 30, 2023
    Week 9: Bible Translations
  • Nov 27, 2023Legalism vs Holiness
    Nov 27, 2023
    Legalism vs Holiness
    Series: (All)
    Just as in Colossae, those who tend toward legalism are characterized by focusing on works, adding to the law being concerned with external appearances, and imposing those same things on others.  It often leads to despair and frustration and is not a result of what Christ has done in us but trying to add to what he’s already done.  The other temptation is to minimize the law and obedience to it, which also must be avoided. We ought to be concerned with holiness, which is always concerned with how God sees us rather than others and is a matter of the heart.  It’s about applying the law of God to all of life, where there are no loopholes or corners to be cut.  Though it doesn’t preclude a strong confrontation of sin since we are to be concerned with the holiness of God, it’s ready to give others the benefit of the doubt and is quick to forgive repentant hearts as Christ forgave us.
    Scripture: Psalm 119:97-104, Colossians 2:16-3:17
  • Nov 19, 2023A Time For Confidence
    Nov 19, 2023
    A Time For Confidence
    Series: (All)
  • Nov 19, 2023The Savior of All
    Nov 19, 2023
    The Savior of All
    Although most civilizations throughout history are extinct, the Jews have been held together throughout, and God is not done with them as a people.  As unfaithful as the Jews were in their rejection of the Messiah, his covenant promise remains that all of those whom he calls will be saved. Nobody is beyond his reach, and his promises and plan will not fail.  Just as the Gentiles were very far away 2000 years ago, the Gospel turned the world upside down, and the same will be true for the Jews in that a great multitude of them will be saved at the appointed time. 
     
    Scripture: Deuteronomy 7:1-11, Romans 11:25-26
  • Nov 16, 2023Week 8: The Divine Qualities of the New Testament Canon
    Nov 16, 2023
    Week 8: The Divine Qualities of the New Testament Canon
  • Nov 12, 2023Grafted In
    Nov 12, 2023
    Grafted In
    This text shows Paul's concern for the unbelieving Jews he was ministering to.  Although physical Israel rejected Christ, it will and has led to the salvation of the people of many nations.  It has been beneficial to us as Christians because the Gospel has gone out to the nations as a part of God's plan and is used as righteous jealousy to wake up the Jews to Jesus being the Messiah.  Paul wants people to see what they have that they took for granted, such as being a part of the covenant community. 
     
    While they will not be fully restored, God is not done with Israel in the sense that many will be saved through Jesus Christ.  As we see today and throughout history, Jews have been disproportionately despised, and as Christians, we are not to be arrogant toward them.  While they are not to be considered de facto Christians and need the Savior, we have much common ground in the 39 books of the Old Testament, and we need to make them jealous for Christ by living faithfully and showing them the Messiah with love, patience, and humility. 
     
    Scripture: Psalm 22, Romans 11:11-24
     
     
  • Nov 9, 2023Week 7: The Components of the Self-Authenticating Model
    Nov 9, 2023
    Week 7: The Components of the Self-Authenticating Model
  • Nov 5, 2023The Remnant
    Nov 5, 2023
    The Remnant
    Being born into a Christian family or having been descended from a Jewish community has many benefits, but it does not mean that one is saved.  Paul was the "perfect" Jew in every way, but that did not save him; instead, it was his faith in Jesus Christ alone that transformed his life.  Many people who are merely religious or profess to be believers will reject the faith, compromise the gospel, affirm sin, and eventually leave altogether, demonstrating that they never truly believed in one true gospel in the first place.  But amid widespread rebellion and throughout history, God has always kept his remnant as a witness to the nations, as soldiers in his army, so that he might show his power through them.  We need to guard against remaining only in our Christian huddles and be instruments in the hand of our Redeemer to an unbelieving world.    
     
    Scripture: 1 Kings 19:9-15, 18, Romans 11:1-6
  • Oct 29, 2023What About Israel?
    Oct 29, 2023
    What About Israel?
    Has God forgotten about Israel?  In these verses, there is underlying tension as Paul is speaking to the ethnic Jews, whom God has used throughout history as a part of God's unfolding redemptive plan.  Ethnic Israel rejected the Messiah, and many of the laws, ceremonies, and traditions that the Jews held pointed to and were fulfilled by Jesus Christ and his work on the cross.  With that said, God has not absolutely rejected all Jews, and Paul himself, as a Jew, was an example of this.  He was seen persecuting the church and not seeking salvation in Jesus Christ alone, but God saw fit to invade Paul's life and call him to himself, and he will do the same to a multitude in the future.  We must come alongside Israel and preach the Gospel as we must to all others.   
     
    Scripture: Isaiah 65:13-16, Romans 10:16-11:10
  • Oct 26, 2023Week 6: Community Determined Models
    Oct 26, 2023
    Week 6: Community Determined Models