1 Corinthians confronts factions, impurity, and disorder with the wisdom of the cross and the power of the Spirit. It forms a church that loves, builds up, and hopes in bodily resurrection.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
1 Corinthians confronts factions, impurity, and disorder with the wisdom of the cross and the power of the Spirit. It forms a church that loves, builds up, and hopes in bodily resurrection.
Romans proclaims God’s righteousness in the gospel, justifies sinners by faith, and forms a Spirit-led people whose love fulfills the Law. It steadies hope in present trials and fixes eyes on glory.
Acts traces the risen Christ’s work by the Spirit through a witnessing Church from Jerusalem to Rome. It models prayer, boldness, unity, and hope while holding a clear Kingdom horizon.
John unveils the eternal Word made flesh, whose signs and words reveal the Father and secure life by the Spirit. Believers abide, love, and witness in hope of His return.
Luke’s Gospel pairs careful history with a pastor’s heart, revealing Jesus the Savior and the Spirit’s promise. It sends a praying, merciful Church into the world in hope.
Mark’s Gospel races through the mighty works and saving cross of Jesus, calling readers to repent, believe, and follow. It anchors present discipleship in the hope of the King’s return.
Matthew’s Gospel reveals Jesus as Israel’s promised King who fulfills the Law and the Prophets. It calls believers to kingdom-shaped discipleship under His authority.
Malachi confronts casual religion and comforts the faithful with God’s unchanging love. From polluted offerings to the promised messenger, it calls God’s people to reverence, generosity, and hope before the coming Day.
Zechariah lifts a weary remnant to Spirit-powered hope. From night visions to a donkey-riding King and living waters, it maps God’s path from a rebuilt temple to a world where holiness fills the earth.
Haggai calls a remnant to reorder life around God’s house and promises greater glory and peace ahead. Under Law yet reaching to Grace and the Kingdom, the book weds obedience now to hope that endures.
Zephaniah confronts complacency with the day of the Lord and comforts the humble with God’s song over Zion. His vision stretches from judgment to restored joy under the King.
Habakkuk records a prophet wrestling with God and learning to rejoice. God answers with a vision: the proud fall, the righteous live by faith, and the earth will be filled with His glory.
Nahum unveils God’s justice against Nineveh and comfort for Judah. Set under the Law yet leaning toward Grace and the Kingdom, it teaches the Church to proclaim peace and trust the Judge who does right.
Micah indicts corrupt power and comforts the faithful with a Bethlehem-born Shepherd-King. His vision spans justice under the Law, grace in Christ, and the Kingdom’s peace to come.
Jonah’s narrative shows God’s sovereign mercy from sea to city. Set under the Law yet reaching toward Grace and the Kingdom, it calls the Church to preach repentance and to share the Lord’s compassion for the nations.