Lent (287)
  1. She is the woman who, having received His Word, pointed others to Christ. And by her encouragement, they too have an experience of faith.
  2. The right sermon will connect our present suffering with Christ’s historic suffering as the perfect entree for delivering His work on our behalf.
  3. Grace is God’s attitude towards sinners. This is what God’s people had mistaken in the desert.
  4. Every attempt to gain Heaven by some sort of sin-management system is called to task in this text.
  5. Faith is never something we have on our own, but it is something God’s Word of promise creates out of nothing.
  6. Faith, the reliance of your hearers in utter dependence on the promise delivered to them by the promise of Christ, is, indeed, a worthy goal of your preaching. But faith is never created by talking about faith!
  7. Lent in Middle-earth. In this episode, we discuss the Lenten subtext, language, and images in J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Return of the King.” What can Christians learn from fiction authors about the faith, devotional reading, understanding the world outside the churches through the view of the cross, and how all of reality is bent towards Easter at all times, in all places, by all people? This and much, much more on today’s show.
  8. Matthew encourages us to return to the Word of God, to listen to the promises of God, to hear the ways of His Kingdom, and to let God’s voice guide our work in His world.
  9. Where Sin’s presence corrodes, Christ’s heals. Where Sin multiplies death, Christ overflows with life.
  10. In Genesis 3, we see at the beginning of biblical history that all our problems started at a tree. Is it any wonder that in God’s infinite beauty He would poetically solve all our problems on another tree?
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