Exodus 8 sends frogs into beds, gnats from dust, and flies across Egypt—yet spares Goshen. See how these signs humble idols, expose half-measures, and keep worship at the center of God’s rescue.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Exodus 8 sends frogs into beds, gnats from dust, and flies across Egypt—yet spares Goshen. See how these signs humble idols, expose half-measures, and keep worship at the center of God’s rescue.
Paul praises a growing church under pressure and frames its trials inside Christ’s promised revelation. God will give relief to His people and repay evil, and He will be glorified in His saints.
2 Peter 2 unmasks false teachers and reassures believers that God both rescues the godly and reserves the wicked for judgment. Learn how to spot counterfeits and stand firm in the freedom Christ gives.
Babylon in Revelation gathers the Bible’s story of proud empires into a final city that dazzles the world and then falls. The church hears heaven’s call to come out and follow the Lamb with patient endurance.
Babylon’s glitter hid a trade in souls and a hatred for God’s people. Revelation 18 shows her fall in an hour and calls the church to come out and rejoice.
Revelation 16 pours out the seven bowls and moves history to the brink of Babylon’s fall and the King’s appearing. Stay awake, keep your garments, and trust the Holy One whose judgments are true and just.
Revelation 8 opens with half an hour of silence before heaven’s altar, then launches four trumpet judgments in measured thirds. Prayer rises like incense, fire falls to earth, and God warns a rebel world under the Lamb’s rule.
Revelation 6 shows the Lamb opening the seals and the world reeling under His ordered judgments. The chapter ends with a question only His mercy can answer.
Does the Bible teach Christ died only for the elect? This post presents a dispensational argument for unlimited atonement using abundant Scripture, showing that Christ paid for the sins of the whole world, though only believers benefit from it.
The doctrine of rewards and judgment highlights God’s justice, rewarding believers for their faithfulness while condemning the wicked at the Great White Throne. Understanding these truths calls us to live with eternal purpose and urgency.
Eschatology reveals God’s sovereign plan for the future, culminating in Christ’s return and the establishment of His eternal kingdom. Believers are called to live in anticipation of His coming and remain faithful to His mission.
The story of Noah and the flood is one of the most remarkable accounts in the Bible, revealing God’s judgment, mercy, and the preservation of humanity through Noah’s obedience. To grasp the full scope of the events surrounding the flood, it’s essential to explore the timeline provided in Genesis, as well as the differing interpretations of the time it took Noah to build the ark.
Noah’s story is more than animals and a boat. Scripture presents a man who obeyed, a world judged, and an ark that foreshadows the only refuge God offers in Christ.