1. Judas, Peter, and you are all betrayers of Jesus, and yet He does the work necessary to forgive your sins.
  2. Craig and Troy come back for another round of discussion on the Lord's Supper: the what and the why and the where, but never the how.
  3. In the Lord's Supper we receive an enormous gift. Why make it more complicated than what Jesus says?
  4. The day of Jesus' death races ever nearer, and we see both a woman who believes upon Him and a man who betrays Him.
  5. In this episode, Dr. Paulson proclaims the defeat of sin, death, and the devil.
  6. One at the right hand, and one on the left . . . but Jesus doesn't think that means what they think it means.
  7. Mary is blessed, because Mary knows the way God works and because she knows His promises, and she knows that in her womb grows her savior.
  8. What is Christmas all about? It's inconceivable, but nevertheless about Christ being conceived. The word of God was promised, and that promise was Jesus.
  9. What does it mean to become a child in order to enter the Kingdom of Heaven? Pride and earthly strength compete with Christlike humility.
  10. We are discussing "I can do all things through Christ" in context of the rest of the passage, and then we discuss the story of Abraham sacrificing Isaac (rather... not sacrificing him) and whether or not Christians are called to sacrifice. Is that what this passage is talking about?