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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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Armed with Sufficiency: The Cessation of Sin

Armed with Sufficiency: The Cessation of Sin “Christ therefore having suffered [in] flesh you [of the] same mindset [be] armed, because the one having suffered [in] flesh has ceased sin” (1 Peter 4:1). The structure is deliberate. The command is not first behavioral but cognitive: the same mindset armed . The participial logic grounds the result—“has ceased sin”—not as aspiration but as consequence. The phrase “having suffered flesh” defines the condition under which sin ceases to function. This is not partial restraint; the clause stands without mitigation. The one who has entered into this pattern has, in that frame, brought sin to cessation as an operating principle in the body. Arming, is not behavioral but cognitive as it centers on mindset (φρόνημα / ἔννοια conceptually), not on a list of behaviors. “Armed” implies preparation for conflict—but what you take up is not rules, it is a way of reasoning shaped by Christ’s suffering . Peter locates the cessation of sin in a t...

Boldness To Approach God : Navigating the Tension Between Grace and Works

The human instinct, when confronted with personal failure, is to hide. This "Edenic reflex"—the desire to cover one's shame and retreat from the divine—is the foundational mindset of fallen mankind. This is exactly what Adam and Eve did after disobeying God, they hid. This is also the logic of a w orks justification mindset in religion. In this framework, access to God is a transaction: righteousness or works are the currency, like a wage that is earned, and sin is a chapter 11 bankruptcy that bars the door. However, the New Testament presents a radical alternative, often termed in scripture the Gospel of Grace , which suggests that the very knowledge of the presence of sin is not a barrier to God, but a very good reason to approach Him. The Barrier of Performance-Based Identity Performance based identity is clearly seen in legalism but many operate under a religious system where "knowing God" is synonymous with "performing for God." This is the trage...