What All Will Happen on the Day of Judgment?
Drawing from Hebrews 9:27; 2 Peter 3:10; John 5:28–29; Acts 17:31, Ed Rangel explores the Christian’s eternal hope, examining themes of Eschatology and what awaits believers at the end of time.
Drawing from Hebrews 9:27; 2 Peter 3:10; John 5:28–29; Acts 17:31, Ed Rangel explores the Christian’s eternal hope, examining themes of Eschatology and what awaits believers at the end of time.
Drawing from Matthew 7:13–14, Ed Rangel explores the Christian’s eternal hope, examining themes of Eschatology and what awaits believers at the end of time.
Jesus has been misunderstood by enemies, crowds, and even His own disciples; but His claims allow only two honest verdicts — base impostor or Son of God — and to understand Him rightly we must receive both Himself and His kingdom. On the Emmaus road two…
We hold in our hands the most familiar and the most neglected book on earth. Familiar, because it sits in every home; neglected, because we rarely stop to consider what it actually is. Boles asks us to look at the Book itself — its impossible unity…
To enter the kingdom a man must be born again — begotten by the Spirit through the word and delivered through the water of baptism; “born of water and the Spirit” is not natural birth and not a direct, wordless work of the Spirit, but the…
The sin that struck Ananias and Sapphira dead was not stinginess and not even mere lying to men; it was hypocrisy before God — the loss of the sense that God inspects the heart — and that sin is as deadly to a congregation now as…
All authority in religion belongs to Jesus Christ; therefore His word, and His word alone, settles every religious question, and to refuse to hear Him is to be cut off from the people of God. Every religious dispute, when traced to its root, is a dispute…
The New Testament speaks of five different baptisms, but only one is the commanded baptism in force for sinners today; rightly dividing the five guards us from both neglect and counterfeit. A single word can carry several meanings, and nowhere does that cause more mischief than…
Hebrews 11 reminds us that God’s people endure hardship because they are looking for something better that lasts forever. This lesson calls Christians to live by faith, to see themselves as strangers in this world, and to set their hope fully on the eternal home God has prepared.