Your closest companions are shaping your life right now. Scripture calls you to friendships that strengthen faith and guard hope, because Christ is risen and your labor in the Lord is not in vain.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Your closest companions are shaping your life right now. Scripture calls you to friendships that strengthen faith and guard hope, because Christ is risen and your labor in the Lord is not in vain.
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.
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.
Two voices call from high places: Wisdom invites to a public feast of life, while Folly offers secrecy that leads to death. Choose the fear of the Lord and the visible table set by grace.
David vows daily praise to God the King and invites every generation to tell his works. The psalm shows God’s open hand, saving nearness, and everlasting rule.
Jericho to Jerusalem becomes a corridor of grace and reckoning. Luke 19 reveals a Savior who enters homes, assigns work for the delay, receives royal praise, weeps over a city’s blindness, and restores the house of prayer.
Luke 13 turns headlines into heart-work and pairs urgent repentance with patient mercy. Jesus frees a long-bent woman, pictures a quiet-growing kingdom, summons us through the narrow door, and laments over Jerusalem with future hope.
Luke 10 sends workers to speak peace and show mercy, redirects joy from power to salvation, and reveals the Son who makes the Father known. The chapter reframes neighbor-love and teaches disciples to choose the one necessary thing as they go.
Luke 9 centers on listening to the Son and carrying the cross. From the feeding to the transfiguration and the road to Jerusalem, the chapter redefines greatness and calls disciples to steady, humble, forward-looking faith.
Luke 8 centers on hearing and holding the word and shows how faith perseveres through storms, bondage, and delay. Jesus forms a new family by his word, brings real foretaste miracles, and sends witnesses home to shine his light.
On the road to Jerusalem, Jesus restores marriage to God’s design, welcomes children, exposes wealth’s grip, and redefines greatness as service. He promises a hundredfold now with persecutions and eternal life to come, then opens Bartimaeus’s eyes to follow.
Mark 8 binds a wilderness meal to a road of crosses. Jesus feeds four thousand, opens eyes in stages, corrects a Messiah expectation, and calls disciples to lose life to save it in light of his coming glory.
Mark 3 moves from a synagogue to a lakeshore to a crowded house, and in each place Jesus frees, calls, and confronts. The chapter summons us to mercy, to honest discernment, and to a life of doing the Father’s will with the King.
Mark 2 moves from a roof opened to a field argued over, and in each scene Jesus heals, welcomes, and rules. The chapter calls us to bring others to him, rejoice in his presence, and rest under his lordship.