Hebrews 12:12-14 Bible Teaching
God's discipline fosters righteousness; believers support each other like Aaron and Hur with Moses. Promote peace, holiness, and unity through faith and the Holy Spirit.
God's discipline fosters righteousness; believers support each other like Aaron and Hur with Moses. Promote peace, holiness, and unity through faith and the Holy Spirit.
Jesus is the sole path to God, emphasizing His role as the way, truth, and life. Human efforts are flawed; only through Jesus can one achieve reconciliation and spiritual fulfillment.
Jesus' journey to the cross, unity with God, promise of the Holy Spirit, and assurance of a heavenly place highlight faith, love, and spiritual understanding. Shawn stresses open-minded scripture interpretation and spiritual introspection.
Teaching emphasizes accepting God's discipline with humility, aligning with His will for spiritual life, fostering sanctification, and producing righteousness through faith.
True Christian love, as taught in John 13:34-35, is the ultimate goal, proving discipleship. It requires spiritual growth, faith, and embodying agape love, as Jesus did.
Shawn's teaching on Hebrews 12:4-8 highlights enduring trials, God's purposeful discipline, and Christ's example, encouraging faith and growth through divine love.
Hebrews urges believers to run with patience, focusing on Jesus, the "author and finisher of faith," as the ultimate model of endurance, humility, and obedience.
Jesus taught selfless service, love, and faith over legalism. He fulfilled the Law, offering redemption and emphasizing love as the mark of true discipleship.
Jesus' foot washing teaches humility, service, and spiritual cleansing. It symbolizes purification through faith, sanctification, and selfless service, fostering unity with God.
The teaching emphasizes patience as essential to true faith, linking it with perseverance, love, and spiritual growth. It highlights biblical examples and the role of the Holy Spirit in guiding believers to overcome trials and align with God's will.
The teaching emphasizes humility, selfless love, and service, using Jesus washing His disciples' feet as a model. It highlights resisting Satan by exposing sins, embracing spiritual growth, and understanding God's humble nature.
CAMPUS MEAT focuses on Scripture engagement via prayer, music, reflection, study. Samuel's story shows spiritual growth, leadership, and faith's power, culminating in Christ.
The teaching highlights Passover's significance, Jesus as the sacrificial Lamb, parallels with Exodus, and emphasizes genuine devotion over rituals, focusing on love and salvation.
David, chosen by God, was a shepherd, musician, and warrior who defeated Goliath with faith. He became king, faced trials, showed mercy, and left a legacy of faith and leadership.
Hebrews 11:32 highlights Gideon, Barak, Samson, Jephthah, David, and Samuel for faith. Shawn discusses Barak's victory with Deborah, Samson's redemption, and Jephthah's vow.
Shawn's teaching on John 12:37-41 examines human rejection of Jesus, divine influence, and the balance of justice and mercy. He highlights belief, confession, and Jesus' unity with God.
Shawn's teaching highlights love for Muslims, contrasts law vs. faith using Isaac/Ishmael allegory, emphasizes faith's power in biblical stories, and Rahab's faith despite flaws.
Shawn's teaching on John 12:32-40 covers Jesus' crucifixion, the importance of questioning beliefs, living as "children of light," and the prophecy of disbelief.
Moses chose faith over privilege, aligning with his Hebrew roots, prioritizing spiritual rewards over earthly pleasures, and leading the Israelites by divine guidance.
Shawn's teaching suggests hell is not eternal but a refining process, emphasizing God's love, justice, and free will, aligning with universal reconciliation themes.
Joseph's faith in burial plans, Moses' faith-driven choices, Israelites' growth under oppression, Moses' dual upbringing, civil disobedience, parallels with Jesus.
Shawn's "total reconciliationism" posits God's plan to reconcile all, differing from Universalism, Calvinism, and Arminianism. It distinguishes hell from the Lake of Fire, critiques eternal punishment translations, and suggests finite posthumous judgment, emphasizing eventual reconciliation through Christ.
Shawn's teaching explores Jesus' statement in John 12:32, balancing God's omniscience, omnipotence, and human free will, critiquing Calvinism, and rejecting Open Theism.
Hebrews 11 highlights faith through biblical figures like Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph. Key themes: faith, blessings, deceit, inheritance, transformation.
Believers should see themselves as temporary residents on Earth, seeking a heavenly homeland, prioritizing faith and God's promises over earthly ties, like Abraham.
Shawn's teaching explores John 12:32-33, questioning salvation's scope, free will, and predestination. He challenges traditional views on heaven, hell, and proposes universal salvation.
Shawn's teaching emphasizes faith as bold action, letting go of the past, and trusting God's guidance, akin to Abraham's journey, prioritizing spiritual growth over worldly ties.
Shawn's teaching focuses on self-denial, daily spiritual growth, and following Jesus' example to glorify God, emphasizing the defeat of Satan and the importance of living a Spirit-filled life.
Shawn's teaching emphasizes personal interpretation of biblical teachings, focusing on Jesus as God in flesh, self-denial for eternal life, and aligning with God's will over self-love.
Shawn's teaching highlights Abraham's faith journey, chosen by God for his heart, not lineage. Emphasizes his nomadic life, challenges, and unwavering trust in God's promises.