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Matthew 5:1–20 — Fulfillment Before Instruction Matthew tells us that Jesus proclaims the Kingdom throughout the synagogues of Galilee. But when He begins to define what life under that Kingdom looks like, He ascends a mountain and speaks as Israel’s King. That detail matters more than we usually allow. “When Jesus saw the crowds, He went up
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(Matthew 3:13–4:17) Jesus does not begin His ministry with a sermon. He begins it by stepping into Israel’s story at the point where Israel failed—and carrying it to completion. Baptism: Not Repentance, but Identification John’s hesitation is the first signal that Jesus’ baptism is not ordinary. “I have need to be baptized by You…” John’s
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John is often treated like the opening act of Christianity—roughly dressed, yelling about repentance, getting the crowd warmed up for Jesus. That framing is wrong. John the Baptist is not operating ahead of Israel’s story. He is standing inside it, at the breaking point. He is a last-of-the-prophets figure, speaking from within: • covenantal Israel • prophetic
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John the Baptist does not enter the Gospel narrative without identity or divine explanation—Luke provides both. His priestly lineage, his miraculous birth, and his prophetic vocation are clearly established. What is striking, however, is that when John’s public ministry begins, he appears without a narrated rise to prominence. He does not build a following on the
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1 Corinthians 15:3–5 is routinely treated as a standalone assurance formula—detached from its context and pressed into service as a proof-text for later atonement theories. That approach does violence to both Paul’s argument and the letter as a whole. So let’s put the passage back where Paul actually put it. The Text (briefly) “…that Christ
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A biblically accurate re-write of Mary did You Know 😂 Verse 1 Mary knew the angel’s word was true, She heard the throne, the crown, the king in you. “The Son of God, the promise long foretold,” A kingdom rising, not a tale retold. Pre-Chorus She pondered more than lullabies and peace, She knew no
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The Question Everyone Asks—and Rarely Understands Few questions are asked more confidently in modern Christianity than “What is the gospel?” And few answers reveal more confusion. Most people asking the question are not actually asking what the gospel is. They are asking for a citation. Usually Romans 8 or 1 Corinthians 15. Almost always looking for a
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Why So Many Modern Debates Never Get Off the Ground I listened to a live social-media panel this morning debating OSAS, baptism, and a few other familiar online flashpoints. Normally I scroll past those conversations without a second thought, but I recognized one of the panelists and decided to listen in. What struck me wasn’t
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Why the Bridge Between Theologian and Layperson Is Often Untraveled Theologians and scholars tend to argue theology. Laypeople tend to argue identity. And that difference explains why so many conversations about faith collapse into frustration, defensiveness, or quiet resentment. Because when identity feels threatened, facts don’t land — they bounce. The problem in these situations is
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I love exploring the Bible in its original forms—not in search of hidden codes or secret meanings, but for the nuance. For the texture. For the humanity that becomes clearer the closer one listens. What I find there is not a sanitized or flattened book, but something far more honest. Scripture is neither passive nor