Biblical Leadership and Community
Biblical leadership and community help us mature in our Christian faith. We need to speak the truth to one another in love, building one another up.
Biblical leadership and community help us mature in our Christian faith. We need to speak the truth to one another in love, building one another up.
What does our salvation include? When Jesus ascended into heaven, He gave us His Holy Spirit, and He also gave us gifts for the edification of His Body.
What is the essence of truth? The answer to this question comes down to the fundamentals of the Christian faith, which Paul lays out in Ephesians 4:4–6.
What we do flows from who we are. God calls us to walk in the unity of the Spirit, embracing the diversity of roles He has given us in humility.
In order to follow Christ, we need to know Him and walk in His ways. Two of Paul’s prayers in Ephesians sum up these truths for believers.
Having explored the clarity of the new covenant, Paul prays that his fellow believers would be enabled to live well out of their enlightenment in Christ.
The work of Jesus Christ changed everything. With His coming, God more fully revealed His plan, including the mystery of the church.
Sin separates, but grace brings things together. If we have been saved by the blood of Christ, then we are part of His Body in all its unity and diversity.
We are God’s workmanship. Out of that identity, we do good works, resting in the assurance we have through the blood of Jesus Christ.
We were all dead in our trespasses—no exceptions. But Ephesians 2:1–7 tells of the glorious transformation from death to life for those who are in Christ.
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