Israel stumbles into idolatry at Peor, yet God halts the plague through priestly zeal and grants a covenant of peace. Numbers 25 warns against drift and invites hopeful return under God’s faithful love.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Israel stumbles into idolatry at Peor, yet God halts the plague through priestly zeal and grants a covenant of peace. Numbers 25 warns against drift and invites hopeful return under God’s faithful love.
Balaam lays aside omens and, by the Spirit, blesses Israel with images of water, trees, and a rising ruler. Numbers 24 lifts our eyes to God’s planted people and the promised King whose rule secures their future.
Balak hires Balaam to curse Israel, but God turns every attempt into blessing and reaffirms his unchanging promise in Numbers 23. From the heights we learn to trust the Lord’s faithful word, not human techniques or omens.
Exodus 2 moves from a fragile basket to a faithful God who hears Israel’s cry. See how He preserves Moses, forms him in Midian, and remembers His covenant.
John 1 unveils Jesus as the eternal Word who became flesh, full of grace and truth, and invites all who believe to become God’s children. This study walks through the chapter’s background, story, theology, and applications to help readers receive, remain, and witness.
Scripture names where and how Jesus returns: the same Jesus, the same way, to the Mount of Olives—split by His feet as He comes to reign. It also promises a prior gathering to meet Him. This study clarifies both movements and why they steady hope and shape holy living.
Luke 23 shows the innocent King condemned, a rebel freed, and a dying thief welcomed to paradise. The veil tears, access opens, and hope waits through the Sabbath for the dawn of resurrection.
Luke 22 moves from Passover’s memory to the Lord’s Supper, from the garden’s anguish to the council’s verdict. It reveals the King who serves and the hope He secures.
Luke 21 moves from a widow’s hidden gift to global upheaval and the Son of Man’s appearing. Jesus anchors disciples with His unfailing words and a call to watch and pray.
Luke 6 gathers Sabbath mercy, blessings and woes, and enemy love into a charter for kingdom life. See how hearing and doing builds on the rock when floods rise.
Luke 4 moves from wilderness testing to the Nazareth manifesto and Capernaum authority. See how the Spirit-anointed Son resists evil, proclaims release, and insists on the mission.
Luke addresses “most excellent Theophilus” to stabilize a disciple with an orderly, eyewitness-based account. See how that dedication frames Luke–Acts and why it still forms confident, public-facing faith today.
Mark 16 ends with an empty tomb and a forward promise to Galilee. Explore the historical and theological weight of 16:1–8 and why the later ending does not change Christian doctrine.
Mark 13 maps the path between a fallen temple and a returning King. Learn how Jesus forms watchful, enduring disciples who speak by the Spirit and rest in his promises.
Matthew 13 gathers Jesus’ parables to reveal how the kingdom works now and where it is headed. Learn to hear well, sow patiently, and prize Christ above all.