Acts 23 follows Paul from a fractured Sanhedrin to a night ride toward Caesarea under heavy guard. Scripture-shaped conscience, resurrection hope, and providence carry the witness forward to Rome.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Acts 23 follows Paul from a fractured Sanhedrin to a night ride toward Caesarea under heavy guard. Scripture-shaped conscience, resurrection hope, and providence carry the witness forward to Rome.
Acts 21 traces Paul’s Spirit-led journey into chains and public witness. It models wise peacemaking, courageous obedience, and trust in God’s providence when rumor and rage threaten the church.
Acts 20 traces Paul’s Spirit-led journey to Jerusalem and his moving farewell at Miletus. It models humble service, full-counsel teaching, vigilance, and generous care for the weak.
Acts 19 unfolds the Lord’s work in Ephesus through clear teaching, authentic power, and costly repentance. The gospel confronts idols, reshapes culture, and advances under God’s providence.
Paul weds knowledge to love so that liberty serves the good of the church and the honor of Christ. In 1 Corinthians 8, freedom is real, but love decides how it is used.
Hebrews exalts Christ’s priestly work and calls weary believers to endure. Weigh the authorship proposals and see why Scripture leaves the writer unnamed.
“LXX” points to the Greek Old Testament widely used in the first century and often quoted by the apostles. Seeing how the Septuagint and Hebrew streams meet will deepen confidence in Scripture and clarify tough notes for modern readers.
Paul’s final counsel in 2 Timothy 2 marries endurance with grace and truth. Here are the soldier, athlete, and farmer, and the gentle teacher who trusts God to grant repentance.
Hebrews 2 calls drifting hearts back to Christ. The Son shares our flesh, defeats death, and stands with us as a merciful and faithful High Priest.
James 1 calls believers to joy in trials, prayer for wisdom, and a life that does the word. True religion guards the tongue, helps the vulnerable, and keeps clean in a world that stains.
God has given everything needed for a godly life through knowing Christ. 2 Peter 1 urges steady growth and attention to Scripture’s lamp until the day dawns.
Peter closes his letter by calling elders to eager service, the church to humility and vigilance, and all believers to cast care on the God who cares. This study follows 1 Peter 5 and anchors weary hearts in the promise that the God of all grace will restore and steady His people.
English Bibles print “LORD” in small caps to signal the covenant name YHWH. This guide explains the names of God across Scripture and why translators use that typographical cue.
3 John braids truth, love, and authority into a pastoral masterpiece. This study shows how to welcome faithful workers, resist prideful control, and walk in the truth with peace.
Jude’s brief letter warns with thunder and comforts with promise. This study traces his images, anchors in Scripture, and shows how to contend with mercy and hope.