Co-hosts Joe Durso and Greg Treat converse about the most controversial and unique person in all of human history - Jesus Christ. The goal of their discussions is to understand Jesus as the perfect representation of God and the only means by which men can be like Him. Furthermore, they look at problems facing the church both past and present.
Consider Your Calling, Brethren is a look at the New Testament teaching of God using ordinary but regenerate believers to build His Church, shame the wise, and give Him all the glory. Selected texts include 1 Corinthians 1 and Acts 6 and 7.
In this episode our teacher exposits the text from Luke chapter 9. He considers what Jesus taught His disciples and the implications for the gathering of God's people in all ages.
The Lord's brother James, the first shepherd of the church Ekklesia (Gathering) in Jerusalem, like the Apostles, spoke passionately about the Christian believer's behavior in this present world of wickedness. I examine his letter.
An analysis of The Sermon on the Mount
The New Testament does not refer to calling as belonging only to ministers and pastors of the word of God but to all God's children who enter the kingdom of God through the same blood sacrifice of God's Son. So why the distinction in today's Church and for the last five hundred years?
In this episode, we consider from the letter to the Romans, what is means to be a family in the body of Christ.
In this episode, we briefly consider the theology of the Bible as contained in the Letter to the Romans and how it should translate into Christian living.
In this episode, we examine the nature of salvation and how it always opens the hearts and minds of those who believe in Jesus Christ.
In this episode, we consider who has eternal life, who's going to heaven, and how they get there.
In this episode, I examine the value of faith and what it is and is not, as recorded in the first chapter of Paul's letter to the Romans.
Taking up from where we left off last time, we consider why it is necessary to understand the origin and maintenance of our saving faith.