Faith without religion.
Romans 8:23 Bible Teaching
In a recent teaching on Romans 8, we explored living in the Spirit vs. the flesh, the hope in Christ, and creation's longing for redemption, urging faith, hope, and love.
In a recent teaching on Romans 8, we explored living in the Spirit vs. the flesh, the hope in Christ, and creation's longing for redemption, urging faith, hope, and love.
A recent teaching on Romans 8:18 emphasized faith and suffering as paths to glory. Believers are urged to mature, embrace suffering, and strive for "out-resurrection."
In a recent teaching on Romans 8:14-16, we explored being led by the Spirit as God's children, emphasizing transformation, adoption, and yielding to the Spirit's influence.
In Romans 8:7-14, Paul emphasizes maturity and growth in faith, urging believers to transition from childhood to adulthood, relying on God's strength and grace.
A recent teaching on Romans 8 contrasts being carnally minded with spiritually minded, emphasizing life and peace through the Spirit and love as God's core law.
In a recent teaching on Romans 8, we explored living by the Spirit, not the flesh. Embrace the Spirit's law for true freedom, peace, and eternal significance.
In a recent teaching on Romans 7:14-25, Paul discusses the struggle between flesh and spirit, urging believers to embrace their identity in Christ and find strength in the Spirit.
In Romans 7:14-25, Paul discusses the struggle between spiritual law and carnal nature, emphasizing that our true identity in Christ is distinct from our fleshly nature.
In a recent teaching on Romans 7, Paul uses marriage to show how believers are freed from the Law to embrace life in Christ, revealing sin but offering true freedom.
In Romans 7:1-6, Paul uses marriage to show believers are freed from the Law through Christ's death, uniting with Him to produce love, joy, and peace through grace.
A recent teaching on Romans 6:14-23 highlights our shift from sin to righteousness through grace. We choose to serve God, leading to holiness and eternal life.
In a teaching on Romans 6:6-11, we learned that believers' "old man" is crucified with Christ, freeing us from sin. Embrace your new identity in Christ.
Believers undergo a spiritual transformation, like a caterpillar to a butterfly, embracing a new identity in Christ, symbolized by baptism, leading to eternal life.
We explored Romans 6:1-5, emphasizing Christ's transformative power. Believers are called to reject sin, embrace new life in Christ, and live by faith and love.
Today, we wish children joy, candy, and family moments. For adults, peace and love. Salvation requires faith, and grace leads to eternal life through Christ.
Exploring Romans 5:12-14, we see sin and death entering through Adam, contrasted by grace through Christ. Adam's sin led to death; Christ offers life and grace.
In a teaching session on Romans 5:12, we explored sin's nature and justification by faith through Christ, highlighting peace, joy, and salvation's assurance.
In Romans 5:6-11, Paul highlights God's love and salvation through Christ, who died for us while we were sinners. Reconciled, we find joy and trust in God.
We explored Romans 5:6-8, focusing on Total Depravity in Reformed Theology. The teaching questioned free will, suggesting the Holy Spirit influences faith.
In Romans 5:1-5, Paul highlights faith's transformative power, granting peace with God through Jesus. Believers find peace, rejoice in trials, and gain hope.