Galatians 5:1–15 — You Are Not a Better-Managed Slave
Christ didn’t come to give you a lighter set of chains. He came to break the whole system.
Christ didn’t come to give you a lighter set of chains. He came to break the whole system.
The question is fair: how do we know the Bible hasn’t been changed? The answer might surprise you. The evidence isn’t thin — it’s overwhelming.
Romans 8:30 raises a question: how can glorification be past tense when we’re clearly not glorified yet? Paul isn’t giving us a timeline — he’s giving us assurance that God’s saving work will not fail.
The armor of God in Ephesians 6 isn’t a checklist of spiritual gear—it’s a picture of Christ Himself applied to daily life. Because believers are united with Jesus, His truth, righteousness, peace, and victory become their own. The armor isn’t something we manufacture through effort; it’s something we receive through union with Him.
The long night held the trembling world,its grip misunderstood;but dawn broke open like a swordas the Victor stood. The dragon hissed his final threat,sure he never would be subdued;his boasting choked upon the airas the Victor stood. The grave that swallowed saints for agesbraced itself as best it could;its stone door shivered, cracked, and fellas…
Paul’s vision for the church in Colossians 3 is more than togetherness. It’s a community where Christ’s peace acts as referee, gratitude shapes the culture, and the gospel makes unity possible.
Paul calls believers to “walk worthy” of their calling, not by earning God’s love, but by living out the unity the Spirit has already given us through seven unshakeable realities that hold the church together.
Pastoral care is one of the greatest privileges in ministry, but it can quietly drift into dependency. Here’s how to recognize the signs and set loving boundaries that point people back to Christ.
David’s repentance doesn’t end in silence. It ends in singing. When God heals a broken heart, brokenness becomes testimony and mercy becomes music.
David’s confession cuts to the heart of what sin really is. It’s not just breaking a rule. It’s a vertical rebellion against the God who made us and loves us.