Let me invite you into a thought experiment. What if you became a Christian? What would change? Iām talking about an actual disciple of Jesus, not...
Yesterday (that is, on the day Iām writing this), I was walking alone in a lush forest, breathing in pristine air, listening only to the crunch of...
What does the apostle Paul mean when he uses the word āveilā in 2 Corinthians 3:12-4:3? For years I didnāt really understand 2 Corinthians 3:12-4:3...
My oldest turned fifteen a few months ago, and this summer heās working through the California DMVās approved online drivers education curriculum....
Certain biblical themes are increasingly becoming political ā at least in many peopleās minds. But keep in mind that all six of the biblical themes...
One of my favorite documents from the early church is āTo Diognetus,ā written sometime in the second century. We donāt know the identity of the...
We need to talk about the human heart. Confusion abounds. Perhaps we should start with the Scriptures. The Hebrew word rendered āheartā in English...
Your question is not about Jesusā ability to sin, but about his conscious knowledge: āWas Jesus aware that he could not sin?ā Your answer, āYes, he knows that he could not sin,ā does not actually address the question. The question was not whether Jesus knew that he could not sin, but whether he was aware that he could not sin.
Godās control of the future is first revealed when Daniel 1:2 states that āthe Lord delivered Jehoiakim king of Judah into his [Nebuchadnezzarās] power.ā
When coming at the atonement from a perspective of eternal conscious torment, how do you understand the reasoning behind the necessity of Christ's death as a payment, and why the damned's payment seems so different from what Christ did?