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Nearly eighteen centuries have passed since Demetrius laid down his pastoral labours and died, yet Christ has not yet returned to judgment.
First, Christ will return with inexpressible dignity and grandeur to vindicate the honour of the Divine administration, demonstrating the admirable wisdom and justice with which Yahweh has governed creation.
Exell's Victorian homiletic analysis illuminates two essential truths about spiritual sustenance.
Before we can be struck down, Elohim must be wounded and overpowered.
There is no tribulation—in kind or degree—that Elohim cannot comfort.
Just as miners extract precious metals from the earth's hidden depths, believers discover spiritual wealth concealed in the shadowed places of their experience.
God's plan encompasses society comprehensively—threading millennia from earth's earliest dust to the emergence of new heavens and earth.
Men must comprehend when their main business is to apprehend.
Their prejudice—the conviction that miracles *must* conform to established precedent—nearly blinded them to Elohim's work.
The prophet addresses Judah's futile reliance upon Egypt for military aid—a covenant forbidden by Adonai and spiritually ruinous.
This command reveals three principles about Yahweh's covenant with humanity.
Justification means being brought into right relation with Elohim and all law-keeping beings.
His spirit had ascended—climbing Jacob's ladder toward glory and immortality—only to descend again into the melancholy fact of his countrymen's spiritual expatriation.
And when thou prayest—nine things pertain to the knowledge of true prayer: I. To know what prayer is. II. How many sorts of prayer there be. III. The necessity of prayer. Four things provoke us to pray: 1. God's commandment....
The prophet does not merely inform; he interrogates, drawing forth dormant faith that has withered through neglect or fear.
Yet his refusal revealed his true allegiance: he regarded Jehovah not as his covenant God, but merely as Judaea's territorial deity, inferior to Assyria's gods.
The apostle Paul grounds predestination in God's eternal foreknowledge—a decree that turns all things to the good of those called according to Elohim's plan.
Dear Heavenly Father, As I pause to contemplate Conversion in my life today, I am struck by the profound wisdom of Hebrews 11:1, which paints faith as the assurance of things hoped for and the conviction of things not seen....
Christ's command divides into two classes of hearers: those dangerously unconcerned about salvation, whom the deceiver convinces that Elohim is too merciful to judge them; and those awakened by conscience, whom Satan now persuades that grace has expired and sin...
Among all earth's creatures, man alone is the worshipper.
Imagine a small community where everyone knows each other's stories—the joys, the sorrows, and yes, the mistakes. This is not just a quaint notion; it’s a picture of the body of Christ, where we are called to live in deep...
David understood what many Christians experience: the connection between bodily ailment and spiritual distress.
In a small town, there lived an elderly woman named Ruth. Despite her frail hands and silver hair, her spirit was indefatigable. Each Sunday, she would arrive at church with a radiant smile, her weathered Bible clutched tightly. She had...
Though David knew reproach, Jesus Christ experienced mockery incomparably deeper—the common heritage of the godly tested by scorn.