Knowing the Greatest of All Time
01.01.23 | Resources | Adults | by Bergan Conner
What makes Jesus, truly, the "Greatest of All Time"?
What God has said isn't only alive and active! It is sharper than any double-edged sword. His word can cut through our spirits and souls and through our joints and marrow, until it discovers the desires and thoughts of our hearts."
(Hebrews 4:12)
The Bible is the story of God and His interaction with His creation, which He loves. It interprets our world, and helps us understand who we are and what we can become by the grace of God.
The Bible studies on our website have been used in adult Bible classes and study groups to dig into God's word together. Through them the Bible has guided our search for God, a deeper knowledge of Jesus Christ, a continual transformation by the work of the Spirit, and an understanding of God's purposes for us. Use the series and outlines to guide you in personal Bible study and spiritual growth. New studies are constantly added.
What makes Jesus, truly, the "Greatest of All Time"?
The secret to being godly is no secret any longer.
Hebrews is intended to keep Jewish Christians of the 1st Century, and those who read it today, from falling away from Christ.
The Old Testament sacrifices help us understand Jesus Christ fully ... and help us understand ourselves as his disciples.
Where will you find your help through difficult times?
Being a "disciple" gives you identity and purpose.
Jesus invited men and women to "follow me." What did that mean for their lives and ours?
1 John is a book that builds the theology of assurance – confidence that we can have in our salvation! In this study we will hear from the apostle John, who writes as one who was an eyewitness of the historical realities of Jesus Christ...
God recorded some pretty unsavory and despicable characters – some "bad guys" – in His word for a reason, and through this study, you can learn some markedly good lessons from the bad guys.
"I want to know Christ – yes, to know the power of his resurrection and participation in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, and so, somehow, attaining to the resurrection from the dead" (Phil 3:10-11). Those were the words...