Christian Doctrine

  • Seven Dispensations or One Gospel Story?

    The seven-dispensation scheme may look orderly, but it can divide what the gospel holds together. Scripture tells one covenant story centered on Jesus Christ, Israel’s Messiah and the world’s true Lord.

    Read more →

  • Some Christians use Matthew 6:6 to argue that the Father is hidden, inaccessible, and therefore should not be addressed in prayer. But the very passage they cite says the opposite. Jesus does not forbid prayer to the Father. He commands it.

    Read more →

  • When Devotion to Jesus Silences the Father

    True devotion to Jesus does not silence the Father or reduce the Spirit. The gospel brings us to the Father, through the Son, in the Spirit. Christ is our High Priest, not to keep us away from God, but to bring us near.

    Read more →

  • Mary Was Not God’s Incubator

    Some teachings try to protect the sinlessness of Jesus by saying his human body was pre-made in heaven and placed inside Mary’s womb. But this does not strengthen the incarnation. It weakens it. The gospel does not say the Son of God avoided our humanity. It says the Word became flesh.

    Read more →

  • The Trinity Is Not a Puzzle but the God We Worship

    The Trinity is not a mathematical puzzle or a competition within God. It is the Christian confession that the one God of Israel has made himself known as Father, Son, and Spirit.

    Read more →

  • Creation, salvation, and prayer aren’t solo acts by different Persons of the Trinity. From beginning to end, the Father, Son, and Spirit work as one. The whole gospel is the work of the whole God.

    Read more →

  • HELL REIMAGINED

    Hell isn’t a cosmic torture chamber built into creation; it’s the tragic end of freedom misused. Jesus’ fiery “Gehenna” language points to a real valley outside Jerusalem—a warning poster, not a travel guide. The gospel’s shock-therapy imagery serves one aim: to steer us from ruin into the wide-open life of new creation.

    Read more →

  • Romans 8 declares the freedom, adoption, and unshakable love believers have through Christ. This essay explores how life in the Spirit transforms our identity, empowers our hope amid suffering, and guarantees that nothing can separate us from God’s love.

    Read more →

  • THE STRUGGLE WITHIN

    Romans 7 reveals the deep struggle of life under the Law: a longing for good, but captivity to sin. Paul shows that human effort cannot save us—only Christ can. This essay explores how the Law exposes, sin enslaves, and Jesus rescues, leading us into the Spirit-empowered life described in Romans 8.

    Read more →

  • What does justification by faith actually do in the life of a believer? Romans 5 answers with bold clarity: it brings peace with God, a secure standing in grace, and a hope that holds up in suffering, history, and even death. This post explores how justification redefines our reality—not just spiritually, but practically—and why grace…

    Read more →