1. The irony of guilt and innocence abounds in this passage: Jesus is innocent but condemned; we are guilty but set free.
  2. Judas, Peter, and you are all betrayers of Jesus, and yet He does the work necessary to forgive your sins.
  3. We continue our conversation with Nancy Guthrie and how life changing it can be to find Christ in the Old Testament--and not just in the prophecies. It's transformative, and as she would say, there's nothing more practical.
  4. Craig and Troy come back for another round of discussion on the Lord's Supper: the what and the why and the where, but never the how.
  5. In the Lord's Supper we receive an enormous gift. Why make it more complicated than what Jesus says?
  6. The day of Jesus' death races ever nearer, and we see both a woman who believes upon Him and a man who betrays Him.
  7. Craig and Troy discuss a very familiar parable which is very often interpreted incorrectly. Your works don't count. Oh, and substantival participles.