Home » Archives for Brother Woody Brohm » Page 8
Joshua moves Israel from wilderness to inheritance as God keeps His oath to the fathers. The book models Scripture-shaped courage, warns against hidden sin and compromise, and lifts a horizon of lasting rest under the righteous King.
Deuteronomy gathers Israel for covenant renewal, uniting memory and command, promise and hope. It calls for love-fueled obedience, warns of exile, promises heart renewal, and points to a king and a restored people under God’s rule.
Numbers tells the wilderness story between Sinai and Moab, where Israel learns order, trust, and perseverance under God’s presence. It preserves the promise, points to a coming King, and trains believers to walk by faith in hard places.
Leviticus shows how a holy God dwells with a redeemed people through priesthood, sacrifices, and sanctified rhythms. It grounds holiness, neighbor love, and hope in God’s presence and promise.
Exodus reveals the God who redeems from slavery and dwells with His people. From plagues to Passover to Sinai, the Law and tabernacle shape a nation and point to the coming King.
Genesis begins the Bible’s story with creation, fall, flood, and the patriarchs, revealing God’s covenants and unbroken purposes. It traces the promise to Abraham and points ahead to the King whose reign secures blessing for the nations.
Malachi 4 pairs furnace and sunrise, calling Israel to remember Moses and to expect Elijah. Across the “silent years,” God prepared the world for the Gospels. The chapter invites holy fear, family reconciliation, and joyful hope under the sun of righteousness as we treasure God’s word and await the Lord’s day.
Malachi 3 announces a messenger and the Lord’s refining arrival to his temple. Against cynical words and withheld gifts, God’s unchanging love invites return, restores worship and justice, and treasures those who fear his name.
Malachi 2 rebukes partiality and treachery, restoring God’s design for faithful leaders, faithful marriages, and truthful worship.
Malachi 1 begins with love and moves to rebuke, calling God’s people to honor his name with sincere, unblemished worship. Against weary ritual, the Lord promises that his name will be great among the nations, inviting a renewed, mission-shaped devotion.
The Bible explains “thirty pieces of silver” step by step. Zechariah’s temple act, Judas’s payment and remorse, and the potter’s field together reveal a sober warning and a gracious hope. Read the thread plainly from law to prophet to Gospel to church.
A siege gives way to a theophany on Olivet, a world-altering day, and a river that never runs dry. Zechariah 14 ends with worldwide worship and holiness inscribed on ordinary life.
A God-opened fountain cleanses sin and impurity while a refining fire removes dross. Zechariah 13 ends with a remnant calling on the Lord and hearing Him answer.
God pledges to make Jerusalem immovable and to pour out a spirit of grace and supplication. Zechariah 12 climaxes as eyes turn to the pierced One and mourning prepares the way for cleansing and joy.
Forests mourn and a faithful shepherd is priced at thirty silver pieces. Zechariah 11 warns that rejecting God’s care breaks protection and unity and invites a devouring ruler, even as God promises to strike the worthless shepherd and restore His flock.