1) What roll does the conscience play in the life of a believer?2) Can you discuss the issue of divorce according to Matthew 19:9?3) Who owned the field that once belonged to Naomi’s husband?4) Did Jesus die for the whole world or just the elect?5) W...
This episode was inspired by the number of parents I know who are in crisis. They sense the time is close to the Day of the Lord…and are fearful about choices their children are making and how these choices may impact their eternal wellbeing.If you a...
Do you realize that God has a specific plan for your life? Dr. Stanley explains that God is genuinely interested in whatever concerns us. He has a purpose for your life that will fill your life with joy and meaning if you trust and obey Him....
A shark must continually go forward because if it stops moving, it will sink to the bottom of the sea. We will sink in our spiritual lives if we focus on the past or our present sufferings and circumstances. But we will grow strong if we keep moving ...
To the chief Musician, A Psalm of David. This psalm was written by David, when he lay under the reproach and calumnies of men, who laid false things to his charge; things he was not conscious of either in the time of Saul's persecution of him, or when his son Absalom rebelled against him: and herein he appeals to the heart searching and rein trying God for his innocence; and, when settled on his throne, delivered it to the master of music, to make use of it on proper occasions. According to the Syriac title of the psalm, the occasion of it was Shimei, the son of Gera, reproaching and cursing him as a bloody man, 2 Samuel 16:5. Theodoret takes it to be a prophecy of Josiah, and supposes that he is represented as speaking throughout the psalm. Aben Ezra observes, that this is the most glorious and excellent psalm in all the book: a very excellent one it is: but whether the most excellent, it is hard to say. It treats of some of the most glorious of the divine perfections; omniscience, omnipresence, and omnipotence. Arama says, the argument of it is God's particular knowledge of men, and his providence over their affairs.