The article discusses the call for the church to become a Generation of Radical Obedience, ready to witness God do amazing things. The author compares this call to Joshua's call to consecrate themselves before crossing the Jordan River to reach the Promised Land.
Only a people willing to pay the price to become a Generation of Radical Obedience will ever plumb the world-transforming depths of God’s Amazing Mercy and Love. This is the most “Amazing Thing” about our God. told the people, “ Consecrate yourselves, for tomorrow the LORD will do amazing things among you. ” Joshua 3:5 AMAZING THINGS AHEAD - BUT ARE WE READY?
From the very beginning, God's active and vocal sovereignty established His universal claim, revealing that our mission is a continuation of His eternal purpose. This journey begins with a call for internal integrity and genuine worship before we can effectively participate in outward proclamation.
From the very beginning, the biblical narrative reveals a God who is active and vocal, shaping creation and calling humanity. This divine speech establishes the ultimate scope and authority of God's redemptive work, tran This means that every believer, in their unique sphere of influence, becomes an instrument of God's active voice, breaking the silence of human indifference and announcing the victory of Christ. A particularly edifying i
God's grand redemptive work moves us from a heartfelt plea for restoration to His definitive act of making all things new. While the faithful of old cried out for revival—a return to a former state of favor—in Christ, we experience a radical transformation, becoming entirely new creations, not merely restored to an imperfect past.
From Longing to Life: God's Journey of Renewal and New Creation Psalms 85:6 • 2 Corinthians 5:17
We discover a profound truth throughout God's interaction with humanity: divine protection is a constant reality, yet it often manifests paradoxically within hostility itself. God preserves us not by removing us from the world's challenges, but by strengthening us to thrive spiritually and missionally within it.
The Unbreakable Keeping: Empowered to Stand in a Hostile World Jeremiah 15:21 • John 17:15
Our spiritual journey is fundamentally understood through the contrast of light and darkness. Light symbolizes divine revelation, moral purity, and abundant life, while darkness represents ignorance and alienation.
The biblical understanding of light and darkness provides a foundational framework for our spiritual journey. Light consistently symbolizes divine revelation, moral purity, and abundant spiritual life, contrasting sharpl The progressive brightening of our path is not achieved through human willpower or moral grit; it is fueled by nothing less than the kinetic energy of resurrection power. This power equips us to navigate a fallen world f
In Acts 2:1-4, the Holy Spirit comes down upon the disciples, igniting their potential power and initiating the foundation of the church. The difference between the ministry of John the Baptist and Jesus was that Jesus had the authority to manage the creative power of God and ignite the potential in others through the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
We’re going to go straight to the Book of Acts, chapter 2, a passage that is very well known, the word says: “… when the day of Pentecost came they were all together in one place and suddenly a sound like the blowing of All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues that the spirit enabled them…” Where do you start? I’ve been wrestling because this passage is so great with significance and importance.
The scriptural narrative reveals a consistent and deepening call to care for the vulnerable, culminating in a profound redefinition of our relationship with the Divine. From ancient laws commanding empathy due to shared experience, the journey progresses to Jesus' radical ethics where God Himself is encountered in the suffering stranger.
The Unveiling of God: From Empathy's Memory to Christ's Embodied Presence Deuteronomy 10:18-19 • Matthew 25:34-36
The biblical metanarrative is fundamentally shaped by divine speech, with Psalm 50:1 and Mark 16:15 standing as monumental pillars defining the scope and authority of the *Missio Dei*. This report posits that these two texts, though separated by centuries and literary genres, are not merely parallel statements of God's universal reign but represent the theological systole and diastole of redemptive history—the gathering in of authority and the sending out of grace.
1. Introduction: The Architecture of Divine Address The biblical metanarrative is fundamentally architected by the phenomenon of divine speech. 1.1 The Hermeneutical Framework of Continuity and Discontinuity To fully comprehend the interplay of these texts requires a hermeneutic that appreciates the tension between continuity and discontinuity. The continuity li