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The Art of Provocation: Communion and Mutual Encouragement in Hebrews 10:24
An exegetical and theological exploration of Hebrews 10:24, examining the divine command for believers to intentionally provoke one another toward love and good works within the context of covenantal community.
God’s Radar: Integrity and the Gaze of God (2 Chr 16:9)
Imagine the scene. The year is approximately 890 B.C. The Kingdom of Judah breathes a tense sigh of relief after decades of spiritual reform.
The Table in the Wilderness: The Valley of the Shadow (Psalm 23).
Psalm 23 stands as one of the most cherished, memorized, and theologically potent passages in all of Scripture.
The Place of the Sinner: The Alabaster Jar (Luke 7).
The Gospel of Luke is distinguished by its profound attention to the marginalized, the outcast, and the transformative power of grace.
The Emmaus Bread: Eyes Opened in Communion (Luke 24).
The Gospel of Luke concludes with one of the most poignant and theologically rich narratives in all of Scripture: the encounter of the risen Christ with two disciples on the road to Emmaus (Luke 24:13-35).
From Failure to Rock: The Denial and Restoration of Peter.
The story of Peter’s denial of Christ stands as one of the most poignant and human episodes in the Gospel narratives. It is a stark portrait of catastrophic failure from the man who, mere hours before, had boldly proclaimed his unwavering loyalty (Matthew 26:33-35).
The Abyss of Glory: The Depth of the Riches (Romans 11:33).
The human intellect, in its quest for understanding, inevitably encounters boundaries. In philosophy, science, and even ordinary experience, we meet mysteries that resist our full comprehension.
The Art of Provocation: Communion and Mutual Encouragement in Hebrews 10:24
An exegetical and theological exploration of Hebrews 10:24, examining the divine command for believers to intentionally provoke one another toward love and good works within the context of covenantal community.
Grace in Lo-debar: The King’s Call (Mephibosheth / 2 Samuel 9)
The narrative of 2 Samuel 9 stands as one of the most poignant and theologically rich portraits of divine grace in the Hebrew Scriptures. At first glance, it is a simple historical account: King David, secure in his throne, seeks to show kindness to any remaining house of Saul for the sake of his covenant with Jonathan.








