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.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
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.
Ezekiel 47 turns a temple trickle into a river that heals the Dead Sea, renews borders, and welcomes outsiders into the inheritance. Where the river flows, life abounds.
Jeremiah 17 diagnoses sin carved on the heart and points to the Lord as living water and sanctuary. It calls for rooted trust and public Sabbath obedience that turns cities toward enduring joy.
Jeremiah 2 brings God’s covenant lawsuit against Judah, exposing the folly of exchanging glory for emptiness. The indictment aims at repentance, calling thirsty hearts back to the only fountain that satisfies.
Psalm 114 compresses the exodus into vivid scenes where creation responds to God’s presence. It teaches that the Lord saves in power, dwells in love, and supplies water in the desert.
Psalm 87 celebrates God’s love for Zion and the promise that people from many nations will be counted as native-born by his grace. It ends with a song of living fountains, calling believers to find their joy in the Lord’s presence.
John 7 unfolds at Tabernacles as Jesus moves on the Father’s clock, divides the city with his teaching, and invites the thirsty to drink. See how the living-water promise reframes worship and how right judgment flows from a will set to do God’s will.
John 4 moves from a well to a village to a royal household, revealing living water within, worship in Spirit and truth, and a word that heals at any distance. Learn how Christ crosses barriers to quench thirst, gather worshipers, and send witnesses into a ripe harvest.
Revelation 7 answers the question, “Who can stand?” God seals servants from Israel and gathers a countless multitude from the nations. The Lamb shepherds them into shelter, living water, and tearless joy.
The themes of blood and water symbolize the fullness of salvation—atonement through Christ’s blood and ongoing purification through His Spirit and Word. These elements call believers to embrace both justification and sanctification, walking in holiness and reflecting God’s glory.
The Samaritan woman’s encounter with Jesus at the well demonstrates His power to redeem and transform, breaking through cultural and social barriers to offer eternal life. Her story reminds us of the universal reach of the gospel and the call to worship God in spirit and truth.