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The Promises of God Series

THE PROMISES OF GOD SERIES Series Introduction The promises of God are not isolated statements scattered through Scripture. They are the unfolding expressions of one eternal purpose, conceived in God before the foundation of the world, revealed through covenant, and fulfilled in Jesus Christ. Why The Promises of God Matter explains why they are important to believers. This series functions as a theological hub—a unified framework that weaves together distinct promises without collapsing them into a single category. Each promise stands on its own, yet each flows from the same eternal source and prepares the way for the next. Together they testify to the faithfulness of God across redemptive history. The Coherence of God’s Promises One eternal purpose, planned in God Revealed through covenant Fulfilled in Christ Applied by the Spirit of truth Consummated in glory Each article in this series may b...
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Lead Me in the Way Everlasting

Lead Me in the Way Everlasting The Eternal Covenant way fulfilled in Christ and walked in the New Living Way of the Spirit The “way everlasting” is the Eternal Covenant way: the path God purposed before time and enacted in Christ, by which He leads His people through the indwelling Spirit into a Christ-formed life that endures—where the heart is searched, the flesh is denied, and the evil one is overcome by abiding in the word of God. See “The Promises of God — The Promised Eternal Covenant” . The “Way Everlasting” as a Biblical Category Scripture speaks of a “way” not merely as a direction but as a manner of life —a path a person walks, a pattern that governs what they become. When David prays, “Lead me in the way everlasting” (Psalm 139:24), he is asking for more than guidance on a decision. He is asking to be brought into a God-led way of being that does not collapse under pressure, time, or deception. This is why the phrase “everlasting” matters. David is longing for a way that en...

The Gospel Without Hindrance

The Gospel Without Hindrance Apostolic Tradition, Ministerial Example, and the Proof Standard for Money Texts Introduction: a stricter proof standard Scripture warns that apostolic teaching can be distorted (2 Peter 3:16), and that spiritual language can be weaponized for self interest (1 Timothy 6:5; Titus 1:11; 2 Peter 2:3). Especially is this true when money enters the frame, the interpreter is no longer a neutral reader: the teacher may materially benefit from the conclusion he is urging. That is a conflict of interest condition, and it requires a higher standard of proof, not cynicism, but sobriety. Because the gospel aims at faith in Christ, Paul refuses anything that becomes a hindrance to belief. In 1 Corinthians 9:12 he names that danger directly as ἐγκοπή (enkopē), a hindrance, impediment, obstruction. The question is not merely what is permitted, but what preserves the gospel’s integrity, keeps doctrine from being shaped by gain, and trains the church into ordered life ...

Christ: The Wonder of It All

  Christ: The Wonder of It All  A theological meditation on 2 Thessalonians 1:10 There is a kind of glory that can be discussed, defended, even defined—yet still not truly seen . Scripture does not leave the hope of believers as an abstract doctrine, but presses it toward a final horizon: the Day when Christ is no longer merely confessed by faith, nor only known by the present experience of spiritual life in a mortal body, but entered as the wonder of immortality—the consummation of eternal life, which God purposed before time and has already set within our hearts, beheld in unveiled reality. Paul gathers this horizon into a single sentence that feels like it is too much to imagine: “...when He comes on that day to be glorified in His saints , and to be marveled at among all who have believed ...” — 2 Thessalonians 1:10 But let out limited minds pray for a spirit of wisdom and revelation into this wonder. The promise is not only that Christ will be glorified, but that His glor...

The Church as Glory and Joy: Paul's Vision of Ministry Reward

The Church as Glory and Joy: Paul’s Vision of Ministry Reward A Theological Essay on Ministry, Servant Leadership, and the True Reward of Equipping the Saints Introduction Distortion of scripture is nothing new, Peter himself warned that Paul’s letters were being twisted even in the first century—some “distort” them, as they do “the other Scriptures” (2 Peter 3:16). Paul likewise warned that distortions would arise from within the church, with people speaking “twisted things” to draw disciples after themselves (Acts 20:29–30). And when the subject turns to money, the New Testament is especially direct. Paul cautions against those who imagine “godliness” as a means of gain (1 Timothy 6:5) and insists that gospel ministry must not be peddled for profit (2 Corinthians 2:17). Peter adds that false teachers exploit others “in their greed” (2 Peter 2:3), and Jude warns of those who “abandoned themselves for the sake of gain” (Jude 11). Paul also wrote some “teach… for shameful gain” ...

The Promises of God — The Promised Eternal Covenant

God’s Eternal Purpose Enacted: The Promised Eternal Covenant When Scripture speaks of the New Covenant, it does not describe God improvising after human failure, as though redemption were a divine contingency plan B. The New Covenant is the historical unveiling of something older than history: God’s eternal purpose in Christ. Before there was a world to break, God purposed a world to redeem. Before there was a law to expose sin, there was a promise to overcome sin. And before there was a people formed in time, there was a people chosen “in Him” before time. This is why the Bible can speak in two registers at once. In one register, God promises a covenant in the prophets—an “everlasting covenant,” a “new covenant,” a covenant of peace, forgiveness, and Spirit-wrought obedience. In the other register, the apostles speak of grace “given… in Christ Jesus before times eternal,” and of an “eternal purpose” accomplished in Christ. The Eternal Covenant is the meeting of those two registers: th...

The Jerusalem Council : Grace or Law (And The Question of Tithing)

Introduction: A Gospel-Defining Moment The Jerusalem Council in Acts 15 represents one of the most decisive moments in church history. At stake was nothing less than the nature of the gospel itself. The controversy began with a stark claim: "Unless you are circumcised according to the custom of Moses, you cannot be saved" (Acts 15:1). This wasn't a debate about cultural preferences or minor rituals. It was a fundamental question: What constitutes salvation? What governs belonging among God's people? Is the gospel administered through the Mosaic Law, or through grace in Christ? The council's purpose was clear: to preserve the gospel as God's action in Christ—received by faith—rather than restructuring it into a Law-based entry system governed by the old written code. Peter's Argument: The Center Holds Peter established the theological foundation. God gave the Holy Spirit to the Gentiles "just as he did to us," he testified, "making no distinc...