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Galatians 5:1
1Stand firm therefore in the liberty by which Christ has made us free, and don`t be entangled again with a yoke of bondage.
88 results found
If Galatians 5:1, 13-25 feels unrealistic, it may be because we’ve normalized what Christ calls sin.
In Galatians 5:1, 13-25, the kingdom is practiced: enemy-love, simplicity, and truth-telling in public—today, not someday.
If Galatians 5:1, 13-25 makes you uncomfortable, good; the gospel never made peace with Pharaoh.
In Galatians 5:1, 13-25, salvation is medicine: God restoring the image through prayer and repentance.
Galatians 5:1, 13-25 invites ordered love—right worship that spills into right living—today, not someday.
Galatians 5:1, 13-25 exposes vague spirituality; only Christ saves—today, not someday.
Galatians 5:1, 13-25 traces the red thread to Jesus—He is the meaning beneath the words.
Picture the scene: Selma, Alabama, 1965. The sun hangs low in the sky, casting long shadows on the pavement where weary feet have marched for days. The air is thick with tension, but also a palpable sense of hope. Martin...
Imagine a small, dimly lit room where a five-year-old boy named Jack lives with his mother, Ma. For Jack, this cramped space is everything—a universe unto itself filled with the warmth of Ma's love, the familiar creak of the bed,...
In the heart of El Salvador, during the turbulent days of the late 20th century, Archbishop Oscar Romero stood as a beacon of hope amidst despair. Picture a dimly lit church filled with the weary faces of the marginalized—farmers who...
In the quiet town of Nickel Mines, Pennsylvania, a tragedy unfolded that shook the very foundations of a close-knit Amish community. When a gunman entered a schoolhouse and committed an unthinkable act of violence, the world braced for outrage, for...
In Galatians 5:13, Paul writes that we were "called to freedom" — but then, in a move that should stop us in our tracks, he...
In the heart of a small Danish village, Babette, a French refugee with a past shrouded in both pain and beauty, inherits a fortune from a long-lost relative. Instead of retreating into her newfound wealth, she decides to host a...
In a Trappist monastery in Kentucky, a brother spent twenty years in the silence. Each morning before dawn, he sat in centering prayer, releasing every...
When the storm stripped the roofs off half the trailer park, nobody from city hall showed up for three days. But by the second morning,...
In Galatians 5:13, the Apostle Paul declares that we are called to liberty — not liberty to serve ourselves, but liberty to serve one another...
When a small affirming church in Atlanta lost its building lease, they didn't retreat. They partnered with a local drag brunch venue to host a...
In Galatians 5:13, Paul writes with surgical precision: "For you were called to freedom, brothers. Only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for...
On August 1, 1834, church bells rang across the British Caribbean as the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 took effect. In Jamaica, Barbados, Trinidad, and...
In 1998, a young seminary student sat in John MacArthur's expository preaching class at The Master's Seminary, struggling with a passage. He had been assigned...
In 2019, a small progressive congregation in Detroit purchased a vacant lot that the city had condemned. The soil was contaminated from decades of industrial...
In 1799, an enslaved man named Denmark Vesey won $1,500 in a Charleston, South Carolina lottery and purchased his freedom for $600. He built a...
When B.B. Warfield defended the doctrine of biblical inerrancy, he insisted that every word of Scripture carries divine authority down to its verb tenses and...
In September 1849, Harriet Tubman fled Dorchester County, Maryland, traveling nearly ninety miles on foot through swamps and forests to reach Pennsylvania. She was free...