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Three (or Four) ways the Father loves Elijah (and you)

Elijah is running for his life. (It’s a story found in 1 Kings 19. If you haven’t or it’s been a minute, you should read it.) The prophet is so weary and fearful that he sits under a tree and asks God to take his life. But instead, the Heavenly Father shows him love.

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Upward, outward, and inward fruit

To demonstrate how Jesus has transformed their lives, Paul points out three ways the truth has produced fruit in the lives of his Colossian readers.

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Hope in Fear, Sorrow, and in the flesh

Fear is all around us. Some of us are afraid of the impending presidential election. Others are anxious about our next meal––namely, residents of Palestine and migrants in Chicago. Others still are worried about naming the internal wounds caused by a family member. We're a profoundly anxious people. W.H. Auden won the Pulitzer Prize in 1947 for his poem The Age of Anxiety. Many find his title and words just as true in our age.

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A New World, Breaking in

Throughout the first Easter week, Jesus talked about something he called the kingdom. It was a new world he came to build on earth. And by the end of the week, he found himself in the headquarters of Pontus Pilate, who essentially held Jesus' fate in his hands. Pilate was the Roman-appointed governor of the district. The conversation John records centers on the nature of this kingdom.

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Women: Heralds of the good news

The Ephesians 4 Team looked through the Scriptures and saw women like Esther (a queen, Esther 2:17), Deborah (a prophet, Judges 4:4), Mary of Nazareth (Jesus’ mother, Luke 1:27), Pricilla (an early church leader, Acts 18:24-26), and Junia (another church leader, Romans 16:7). God commissions all of these women as co-laborers in gospel ministry. And they all have the gift of teaching.

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The Difference between gifts and offices in the local church

Paul wrote Ephesians from a prison in Rome. He loves the people of Ephesus. He encourages them, "I have heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love toward all the saints" (Ephesians 1:15). They're a really loving church family that’s learning to trust Jesus and emulate his character more and more. Paul wants them to continue to grow and mature. So, through this letter, he reaffirms what they already know and challenges them to take the next step. That's what he does in chapter 4.

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Four Realities of Covenant

In the Song of Songs 8:6, the bride defines her love and marriage through four similes. Each simile points us to the ultimate design of God’s covenant love.

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Generosity Breaks Barriers

Gospel generosity breaks three barriers. First, it breaks the barrier of consumerism. Consumerism is the belief that we become by taking, collecting, and accumulating. It's not really about the stuff (that's materialism), it's about the ceaseless appetite to consume more things. We see this barrier broken down in the life of Christ. Instead of remaining in the hallowed halls of heaven, the book of Philippians tells us that Jesus, "did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself" (Philippians 2:6b-7a). Jesus forgoes eternally grasping or holding on to divine commodities, powers, and luxuries, and he empties himself by generously giving himself. Jesus could do this because he knows that he is more than what he consumes. He could empty himself and still be himself.

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Three Challenges to Harmony, and one remedy

God has called us to live in harmony with one another. But what does that mean? And what threatens the unity of Jesus' Church? In Romans, Paul writes, "May the God of endurance and encouragement grant you to live in such harmony with one another, in accord with Christ Jesus" (Romans 15:5). Why is divine endurance and encouragement necessary for harmony? 

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