Episodes
-
Scripture makes it clear we’re all sinners deserving death. Actually, it’s because of sin that death and suffering exist at all.
-
Our public education system indoctrinates thousands of students each year not to believe the Bible. Most of them are taught evolution as fact.
-
Missing episodes?
-
Instead of blaming God for tragedies, suffering, and death, Jesus says “repent,” turn to the only one who can save you from eternal suffering—himself.
-
Genesis tells us that God’s original creation was “very good.” There was no death or suffering in that original world.
-
It doesn’t take many years of living in this broken world for someone to ask why God allows suffering.
-
This week we’ve seen that the idea of millions of years doesn’t come from the rocks. It came from a belief about the past!
-
This week we’re looking at where the idea of millions of years came from. Now you might wonder, “isn’t millions of years just science?”
-
Once the door was opened to reject the historicity of God’s Word, the Scriptures were no longer viewed as the ultimate authority.
-
Past scientists argued the catastrophe of Noah’s flood made more sense of the evidence than the idea of slow and gradual processes.
-
People stopped viewing the rock layers through the lens of a global flood, and they started arguing that the present is the key to the past.
-
This whole week we’ve seen that the Genesis text is clear: Noah’s flood was global. But it’s not just Genesis!
-
This week we’re looking at the question “was Noah’s flood local or global?” Well, consider this: Noah’s ark was huge.
-
This week we’re looking at the question “was Noah’s flood local or global?” Well, consider this: Noah’s ark was huge.
-
Some Christians, including many pastors and Bible colleges, teach that Noah’s flood was just a local event, not a flood that actually covered the entire earth.
-
I often hear from Christians who don’t believe Noah’s flood was a global flood. They’ll say it was just a local flood in Mesopotamia. But why?
-
Yesterday we learned that the apostle Paul treated Genesis as literal history and as foundational to the gospel. Well, the apostle Peter did too!
-
Paul always treats Genesis as literal history—and as history that’s foundational to the gospel message.
-
Many Christians today argue the first eleven chapters of Genesis were mythology but that’s not how Jesus treated those accounts!
-
Today’s Tigris and Euphrates don’t match the description of the rivers of Eden. So why do they have the same names?
-
Have you ever wondered where the Garden of Eden was? Many people assume the Middle East, but this is a wrong assumption.
- Show more