Is all anger a sin? Is there a place for Godly anger in the life of a Christian? Are there things about which we should be angry?
Is all anger a sin? Is there a place for Godly anger in the life of a Christian? Are there things about which we should be angry?
The world of the Ephesian Christians was filled with racial, social, financial, and religious barriers. Christ came with good news to break all barriers down so all could be one in Christ.
We wake up every day, thinking this day is like every other day we have lived, and walk through it without much thought about where we are walking. Paul reminds us that it truly is a life and death matter.
It seems that everyone wants to be rich. God gives everyone who truly believes in Him and obeys Him unthinkable riches.
What can we do when a friend or loved one turns their back on the Lord who died to save them?
As Christians, we strive daily to “walk in a manner worthy of the calling to which we have been called,” as Paul urged the church at Ephesus to do 2,000 years ago. Satan works hard every day to prevent man from accepting salvation through Jesus, showing God’s love in our actions, or spreading God’s love…
The church was in the mind and heart of God from before creation and was spoken about clearly by Moses and the prophets.
The context of Ephesians 2 is Paul’s contrast between what the Ephesians were before their conversion to Christ and what they have now become. At the close of the chapter, the apostle draws from three familiar metaphors to portray not only the church in Ephesus, but also in Henderson.
We have a beautiful new building in which to worship, but to fulfill our obligation to the Lord, we must be willing to leave the building and take the message of salvation to the world.