Articles
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Epistle: Romans 10:8b-13 (Lent 1: Series C)
Nearly two thousand years after Paul scribbled out these lines, the only reason “we” are here, reading Paul’s magnum opus together, is that we are inheritors of the promise Paul sees in the paradox. -
Epistle: Romans 5:1-11 (Lent 2: Series B)
We were enemies, but because of the self-sacrificing love of Christ, we are made friends, indeed, even the adopted children of our Heavenly Father. -
Epistle: Romans 8:1-11 (Lent 5: Series A)
There has been a blood atonement for sin. Jesus is our propitiation. Jesus has expiated sin. Lent climaxes with this expectation. -
Epistle: Romans 5:1-8 (Lent 3: Series A)
We were enemies, but because of the self-sacrificing love of Christ, we are made friends, indeed, even the adopted children of our Heavenly Father. -
Epistle: Romans 4:1-8, 13-17 (Lent 2: Series A)
Paul says he would inherit the entire world, not merely a little plot of land between Egypt and Syria. This is what God is after in the Messiah: All people and the entire Earth. -
Epistle: Romans 5:12-19 (Lent 1: Series A)
The main point Paul has been getting at in Romans is what God has done in the One man Jesus the Messiah—the rightful heir of God’s earthly kingdom—is far, far more than simply putting the human race back where it was before the intrusion of sin.
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