new covenant

  • Paul doesn’t begin Romans 8 with a demand—but with a declaration: “No condemnation.” The final verdict has already been spoken for those in Christ. The Spirit now leads a new kind of obedience—born not from fear, but from freedom.

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  • The church was never meant to be a religious service provider. But in today’s culture, that’s what it’s become — a vendor of spiritual goods for individual consumers. This post explores how we got here, why it distorts the gospel, and what it means to recover the church as a Spirit-shaped covenant community.

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  • Was Judaism Legalistic?

    Many Christians have misunderstood Paul as opposing “legalism” in Judaism, when in fact his writings reveal a deeper concern: who truly belongs to God’s people now that the Messiah has come? This essay unpacks Paul’s vision of faith—not as a ticket to heaven, but as the boundary marker of a new covenant family rooted in…

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  • This article challenges the popular Pre-Tribulation Rapture view, not as heresy, but as a modern and misguided teaching that distorts the gospel’s bigger story. By recovering a historic and biblical vision of Christ’s return, it calls the Church to endurance, witness, and resurrection hope—not escapism.

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  • Jeremiah wept for a faithless nation, bore their guilt, and was hated for telling the truth. Sound familiar? His life points forward to Jesus—the ultimate Prophet who didn’t just warn, but saved. This essay explores how Jeremiah’s sorrow, rejection, and burden foreshadow the mission of Christ.

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