O, That You Knew the Terms of Peace! …
Palm Sunday
Jesus Christ is always eager and willing to make peace with anyone who will accept the terms of peace he offers.
Jesus Christ is always eager and willing to make peace with anyone who will accept the terms of peace he offers.
Jesus was not accidentally entangled in a web of injustice. The saving benefits of his death for sinners were not an afterthought. Jesus saw that the time had come and set his face to fulfill his mission: to die in Jerusalem for our sake.
Though arrogance and rage assail, conspiracy will not prevail.
Our English word "hosanna" comes from a Greek word "hosanna" which comes from a Hebrew phrase hoshiya na.
Jesus did not come to snuff out your struggling flicker but to fan it carefully into a torch for his glory.
God's joy, his desire, his want and wish and hope and pleasure and gladness and delight is to give the kingdom to his flock.
An allegory of a man in a prison called "conviction" and how he got out.
Jesus has laid down his life so that he might make you a genuine offer of reconciliation.
Deep down we know so much truth that we fear and therefore deny.
How did Jesus destroy the temple? Why did saying so cost Stephen his life?
Assurance does not come from making holiness optional. It comes from knowing God is faithful.
It was the will of the Lord to crush him, NOT because of his own sins, but because of our sins.
How do we get what we need to forgive those who sin against us?
God might have rescued us, sacrificed for us, forgiven us, and not gone any further. But instead he took us into his family.
Do you want to hear God speak? God has now spoken not just by prophets, but by his Son.
Drawing near to God is the heart of the gospel, and we are called to embrace it with informed zeal.
Christianity is not a narrow, provincial, or tribal religion. It declares things that have to do with the whole world.
Consider how Jesus has been merciful to you, and then be like him.
The glory of God is unique because of the lowly ways he chooses to show it.
What does Jesus mean by comparing himself to the bronze snake Moses raised in Numbers 21?
The death of Christ was planned by the Father and approved by the Son to ransom many people from their sins.