God’s oneness is integral to his Trinitarian nature; Father, Son, and Spirit are three distinct persons but still wholly united as one.
Because God is Spirit, any attempts to cut the distance would necessitate God initiating the relationship.
In the original Hebrew text, Jesus is instead rendered as Yeshua, a name that is derived from the Hebrew verb, yasha, which means “to save.”
There is one father all of us can look up to who is neither fictional nor flawed. Our Father in Heaven is the ultimate example of a good father.
Christ’s resurrection power rebuilds what was torn down, reforms what was destroyed, and revives what was dead.
God is who he is. Nothing we do can affect that. We cannot change one iota of God’s character or attributes.
As we consider the dark side themes in the Christmas story, two verses link two more themes we may not think about as part of Christmas.
Have you ever thought about Mary’s story? I mean, really thought about it? A teenage girl comes home and tells her parents she’s pregnant,