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Romans 10:9-10
9that if you will confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus, and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.
10For with the heart, one believes unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.
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In The Kings Speech, King George VI cannot speak without stammering. His private belief in himself means nothing until he can speak publicly. The entire nation needs to hear his voice at war's outbreak. His Christmas broadcast is both confession...
In Shrek, the ogre lives behind walls of cynicism and solitude. Donkey keeps talking until the walls crack. Fiona hides her true self until Shrek sees and accepts her anyway. Both must confess what they really are to find love.
We read Romans 10:9-10 within the framework of God's sovereign grace and the covenant of grace that encompasses all of redemptive history. This passage emphasizes the role of faith and confession as responses to God's effectual calling, not as human decisions that initiate salvation. It highlights t
We read this passage as a profound statement of the Gospel, declaring that faith and confession are not works of the Law but gifts of God's grace. Romans 10:9-10 speaks to the heart of justification by faith alone, emphasizing that belief in the heart and confession with the mouth are the Spirit's w
We read Romans 10:9-10 as a declaration of liberation and commitment to the transformative power of the gospel. Confessing 'Jesus is Lord' is a revolutionary act that defies all earthly powers, affirming our allegiance to a liberating Savior who stands with the oppressed. Believing in the heart is n
We read Romans 10:9-10 as a clear articulation of the necessity of both confession and belief for salvation. The apostle Paul, under divine inspiration, is emphasizing that salvation is by grace through faith in Christ alone. Confession with the mouth and belief in the heart work together to evidenc
In the Roman Catholic Lens, we read Romans 10:9-10 as a profound affirmation of the necessary synergy between faith and confession, which are both gifts of grace and acts of human cooperation. This passage underscores the importance of both internal belief and external profession in the economy of s