Salvation (839)
  1. Like Isaiah and John, we look forward to that great and glorious day, trusting the resurrected One will return as He promised.
  2. The oddness of this moment, at the beginning of Advent, is God’s way of saying, “The reason I’m here...”
  3. Trust in the midst of trouble. That is what our Lord calls us to experience today.
  4. Fourteen years ago, drowning in the muck of dark despair, in the middle of a life gone terribly wrong, I wrote in my journal, "I wonder how, once this is all over, how I’ll be, how I’ll turn out…” Now I know.
  5. Everywhere we look, there is suffering. But Jesus is not calling us to look. He is calling us to listen.
  6. Grace and mercy are a powerful act of the Almighty God. God alone can grant forgiveness and restoration, salvation from the sorrow of this world.
  7. In his death, Jesus has done the ultimate act of charity. He has given his life for all.
  8. The tragedy of the incidental Christ I was raised with is that he was really no Savior at all.
  9. One could reason that God might, at least, give the church a little worldly power.
  10. While the insights in each chapter are uniquely personal to the individual writers, the overarching theme is one of the sufficiency of Christ.
  11. Grace is God’s caring disposition toward His human creatures. And it is shown fully and purely in the work of Jesus for us.
  12. Jim Nestingen and Steve Paulson join Caleb and Scott to discuss the Smalcald Articles.
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