Episodes
-
The seven seals in Revelation represent the Divine process for working with people. The first four seals speak of the conditions under which people respond to God's invitation, while the final three reveal God's plan for gathering those followers.
-
The witch hunts from the era of King James I have echoes in today's political landscape. Just as religious authorities once twisted Bible verses to justify persecuting women, religious nationalists now use faith-based arguments to marginalize and restrict roles for women in society.
-
Missing episodes?
-
We each have an arc in our lifetime Bible-reading habits, and some people eventually choose to set aside regular reading. Others maintain the practice despite having read the Bible many times. Bible reading can be like therapeutic coaching that provides perspective, correction, and renewal, much like how athletes and artists require ongoing training.
-
For Christians, change is a crucial aspect of living a spiritual life. While we tend to want to keep things just as they are, God has different plans. God pushes us to grow and develop in a gradual process that requires trust.
-
The author shares his experience with a major health emergency: an aorta dissection. He explains the subsequent surgery, and his emergence with renewed perspective. The discussion touches on mortality and faith, approach to prayer, the importance of acceptance, and the overwhelming impact of love from family and community.
-
The crucifixion of Jesus is examined through the lens of honor-shame culture, highlighting the public humiliation he endured. His cry on the cross is interpreted as a biblical lament, demonstrating faith rather than doubt. God's vindication of Jesus' honor is shown through supernatural signs and ultimately his resurrection.
-
Burnout arrives with recognizable signs, and there are biblical strategies to overcome it. Mitigating burnout requires rest, reliance on God, reframing purpose, honest prayer, trusting God's timing, and community support. Elijah's story and various Bible verses illustrate these points and can encourage us when facing burnout.
-
We explore how Job's experiences reveal that a right relationship with God stems from His grace, not our own righteousness. Through suffering and divine encounters, Job learns to trust in God's sovereign grace rather than relying on religious observance or moral perfection. This understanding parallels Paul's theological journey and remains crucial for our faith today.
-
Biblical interpretation can face challenges in understanding aspects of the text such as genre and context. Christadelphian community bible study could benefit from improved hermeneutics, engagement with scholarship, emphasis on humility, and recognition of interpretive authority. These practices can reaffirm beliefs, reduce division, and help adapt to new challenges.
-
A Christian morality of sex should be based on virtues like respect for others and faithfulness, rather than just rules or consequences. Sex should occur within committed relationships motivated by mutual care and benefit, not merely consent.
-
Ecclesias face challenges accommodating diverse generational perspectives and expectations regarding worship styles, gender roles, and community engagement. Unity amid diversity is exhorted by examples like the Council of Jerusalem and many of Paul's teachings, and there are good practical approaches to promoting mutual respect and collaboration.
-
The biblical account of Israel's conquest of Canaan should probably not be read literally – as an exercise in genocide – but understood through the lens of ancient literary conventions using hyperbolic language to convey spiritual lessons rather than factual history.
-
Churches must prioritize creating welcoming spaces for worship and spiritual growth, not hindering access through traditions. New approaches can facilitate authentic worship and community. Embracing positive change requires humility, open-mindedness, and active participation from all members to shape the future of our churches.
-
Christian theological views on sexuality could use some responsible re-evaluation as some commonly-held beliefs may be problematic. The body and sexual desires are not sinful, but part of God's good creation. Virginity does not equal purity, lust is not equivalent to adultery, nor is procreation the sole purpose of sex within marriage.
-
The book of Revelation consists of two parts: God redeeming His people (churches, seals, trumpets) and God redeeming the world (woman, dragon, beasts, bowls of wrath). Symbols may be interpreted as representing God's work rather than historical events, with the overall message intended to inspire believers.
-
The biblical command to "love your neighbor as yourself" implies the relevance of self-love, yet in modern Western culture, self-judgment and lack of self-acceptance are common issues, which may stem from misinterpreting biblical teachings on humility and selflessness. Readers are encouraged to embrace self-love as a necessary complement to loving others.
-
God calls us to walk by faith, not sight; embrace the invisible; let go of fear, doubts, hindrances; receive forgiveness; travel together; keep God central.
-
Jesus proclaimed good news of God's kingdom advancing through healing, teaching, and compassion. Global data shows remarkable progress in health, education, and quality of life, suggesting a present aspect of God's kingdom is growing like seed, though imperfectly.
-
Christians seem overly focused on condemning sexual sins like premarital sex and homosexuality, neglecting other sins that Jesus and the apostles prioritized, like greed, hypocrisy, and injustice. This disproportionate emphasis on sexual matters may stem from theological roots linking sexuality to impurity, and scapegoating sexual freedoms for Christianity's declining dominance.
-
There is a depressing predictability to what’s currently happening in the Middle-East. An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. If you live like that, the whole world ends up blind and whole world ends up toothless. Jesus, didn’t lead a violent revolt, and he didn’t attack other religions. He taught his disciples to be meek, to love their enemies, to lose their lives and take up the cross.
- Show more