The Wedding: Called or Chosen?
Lord Jesus, I do not want to be a hearer only. I respond to Your call. I turn from sin and trust You. Clothe me in Your righteousness. Give me a new heart. Fill me with The Holy Spirit.
Lord Jesus, I do not want to be a hearer only. I respond to Your call. I turn from sin and trust You. Clothe me in Your righteousness. Give me a new heart. Fill me with The Holy Spirit.
When Scripture speaks of sin, it does not treat it as a small mistake or a harmless weakness. Sin is not merely “bad behavior.” We can describe sin from several angles — “missing the mark,” “lawlessness,” “rebellion,” “broken relationship,”
Esau’s story is one of the most tragic “moments” in Scripture, which changes the course of God’s lineage and election from one person to another. Genesis tells us that Esau came in from the field exhausted and hungry, and Jacob had stew.
One of the clearest — and most misunderstood — biblical patterns is the order of headship that God established and then reaffirmed in the New Covenant.
When the Spirit inspired Paul to write 1 Corinthians, He was not merely correcting Corinth’s chaos — He was shaping the church’s worship so that the gathered people of God would reflect heaven’s beauty on earth.
In a generation that often treats marriage as either a power struggle or a temporary contract, the New Covenant calls us back to something holier: a living picture of Christ and His church. Marriage is not merely a social arrangement.
In the Kingdom of God, fruitfulness is never accidental. It is the outcome of a life joined to Christ, nourished by His life, and shaped by the loving hand of the Father.
Jesus did not feed the five thousand by giving them a lesson in budgeting. He fed them by taking what was small, placing it in the Father’s hands, and allowing it to be broken.
Under the New Covenant, Christianity is not a religious group or church or organization or club we join — it is a relationship we enter. The Bible dares to describe that relationship with the most intimate covenant picture we know: marriage.
God designed Israel’s temple with three concentric spaces — outer court, holy place, and holy of holies — not as mere architecture but as a living catechism.
To “worship in the Spirit and in truth” means offering your whole self to the Father — empowered by the Holy Spirit and aligned with the reality revealed in Jesus and His Word.
In Christ, the New Covenant reshapes our approach to God. Through Jesus’ finished work, we have bold access to the Father, and by the Holy Spirit we become a royal priesthood offering spiritual sacrifices.
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