Hebrews 11:14-19 Bible Teaching
Hebrews 11 highlights faith through biblical figures like Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph. Key themes: faith, blessings, deceit, inheritance, transformation.
Hebrews 11 highlights faith through biblical figures like Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph. Key themes: faith, blessings, deceit, inheritance, transformation.
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.
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 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 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 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.
Shawn's teaching highlights individual faith responsibility, communal worship, Jesus' triumphal entry, prophecy fulfillment, Hebraic exaggeration caution, and spiritual growth through sacrifice.
Shawn's teaching highlights faith as action on God's promises, critiques global flood views, supports a local flood in Mesopotamia, and warns against rigid dogmatism.