The Five Hallmarks: 1. Appealing for Grace 2. A Craving for Total Cleansing 3. Understanding the Seriousness of Sin 4. Desire for Transformation 5. Determination to Praise God
@TAdler-ex8px3 ай бұрын
Finally a reformed pastor who is ministering to my conscience and not just my intellect! 👏
@santeri8884 ай бұрын
Give me back the joy of salvation!!!!
@mokotedimafora7 ай бұрын
Incredible study - Moreover, Walking with an undefiled conscience necessitates a perpetual confession of sin (1 Timothy 1:19-20).
@armandoortizjr84637 ай бұрын
"There's no perfect man..only a perfect Saviour." - quote from Jonny A.
@adishawoch94714 күн бұрын
So good yet again🤝God bless the team!
@MikeAcousticMusic3 ай бұрын
Excellent mini series Praise God Romans 15:13
@matthewg_fm6 ай бұрын
Started my faith journey a few months ago as a young man in his twenties. Please continue to preach. Would love bible study videos of each bible book because that is something lacking my community. Thank you so much! God bless.
@oceanemariefauchez7364Ай бұрын
I praise God that I listened to one of your videos, which made me more attentive. Hallelujah. The Lord bless you and keep you.❤❤❤
@patrickbrowne46067 ай бұрын
Thank you Father, for your forgiveness! It’s only because of Your Son Jesus Christ.
@irenetalley58437 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for for this video. The deep message in David’s story has so many lessons that God wants us to see. Really great discussion/content…I really loved this…and will be sharing it…Have a blessed day!
@santeri8887 ай бұрын
Great message. Thank you and God bless!❤
@inolino-productions7 ай бұрын
Great series! Really a blessing, Thank you!
@vicktrejo7 ай бұрын
Very important subject. A great study, and a great walk through and understanding of scripture.
@TransformedINhim6 ай бұрын
This made me cry thank you so much for breaking this down. Bless you both
@scottearlsmithFTC7 ай бұрын
Great message. Thank you!
@Whatyoutakinbout7 ай бұрын
For Catholics. I don’t need to confess to man. Especially a priest. I only have one mediator and His name is Jesus Christ!
@touchofgrace32176 ай бұрын
Sin often gets held up on a pedestal and becomes the center of focus as though sin is the problem. It’s a modern day “satan made me do it”. Or…”I sin because I’m a sinner.” 12:06 - But sin isn’t the problem, it’s merely the symptom. Jesus didn’t say that if someone wanted to follow Him they would need to confess sin and continue confessing sin. What He said was that we would have to deny ourselves and be willing to suffer to the point of death in order to seek to know Him. The only place confession has is in admitting that we pursued ourself and thus became our own god instead of pursuing the only true God because identifying the problem is the only way to rectify it. We are all born neutral because we do not know good or evil. We have to obtain knowledge of both good and evil just as Adam & Eve did, then we CHOOSE evil (self) rather than good (God). Have all chosen themselves instead of God? Yes. Was it because an evil god who lacks any morsel of righteousness created us to be evil from the womb? No! Because evil isn’t something that is created. Good is God. Evil is the absence of God. The only way for there to be an absence of God is to turn your back on Him and ignore His Presence.
@dialinministries6 ай бұрын
@@touchofgrace3217 we are not born “neutral” as you say, we are “conceived in sin (Psalm 51:5), we are born “dead in sin (Eph. 2:1) and “children of wrath (Eph. 2:3).”
@touchofgrace32176 ай бұрын
@@dialinministries David’s use of hyperbole in his Psalms is well established and was never meant to be taken literally let alone as a proof text for accusing God of creating evil. Evil is the absence of God, not the creation of God. Since God is omnipresent, evil comes down to turning away from and ignoring His presence. The passage you referred to in Ephesians 2 had nothing to do with being born evil. The only way to interpret it that way would be to lift it out of its original context and read it in isolation with some presuppositions thrown in for good measure. Ephesians 2 needs to be read and interpreted in the context of Ephesians 1 in which Paul had just acknowledged the spiritual blessings of accepting the Gospel of Christ, turning away from self to God, through Christ. In Ephesians 2, he was explaining that the consequence of sin (pursuing self) is death and that turning away from ourselves to pursue Christ leads us to life. Ephesians 2 is not meant to be a proof text for total depravity which is why you conveniently omitted verse 2 and ignored Chapter 1.