7 | The Book Hebrews
Hebrews 10 gathers the major themes of the book into one concentrated appeal: since Jesus’ sacrifice truly cleanses and grants access to God, His people are urged to draw near, hold fast and remain faithful. Strong warnings sit beside heartfelt encouragement, capturing both the gravity of falling away and the hope available through perseverance in Christ.
8 | The Book Hebrews
Hebrews 11 explores faith through the lives of those who trusted God across generations. Their stories illustrate spiritual sight, endurance, obedience and hope, even when promises remained unfulfilled in their lifetime. Together, they form a witness that grounds Christian perseverance in God’s long, reliable faithfulness.
9 | The Book Hebrews
Hebrews 12 calls believers to run their race in light of the cloud of witnesses already described. The teaching ties endurance to God’s loving discipline, warns against bitterness and drifting and lifts the vision of the community toward the unshakable kingdom they belong to.
10 | The Book Hebrews
Hebrews 13 gathers the book’s major themes into practical direction: love, hospitality, sexual integrity, contentment, honouring leaders, sacrificial praise, and life together under the New Covenant. The closing benediction roots all of it in the God of peace, who equips His people for every good work.
1 | The Book Romans
Romans is Paul’s fullest explanation of the gospel and its power to transform both individuals and communities. The teaching in this series explore Paul’s background, the purpose of the letter, and the tension-filled world of the Roman church — a divided, multi-ethnic congregation learning to live out the gospel together. With warmth and clarity, the session highlights Paul’s passion to preach Christ, his conviction that the gospel reveals God’s righteousness, and his confidence that this message is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes. It invites listeners to approach Romans not as a textbook, but as a life-shaping proclamation of God’s rescue plan for the world.
2 | The Book Romans
This session walks through Paul’s argument in Romans 1:18–3:20, showing that all people—pagan, moral, and religious—fall short of God’s standard. The teaching traces themes like suppressing truth, the limits of moral effort, and the failure of the law to save. Paul’s conclusion is clear: humanity cannot fix its condition and needs a righteousness that comes from God.
3 | The Book Romans
Paul shifts from humanity’s problem to God’s solution in Romans 3:21–26. This session explains how God provides righteousness through faith in Jesus, rooted in the story of Scripture. The teaching explores redemption, propitiation, and how God remains just while declaring sinners righteous through Christ.
4 | The Book Romans
This session outlines what salvation includes: justification, sanctification, and glorification. The teaching explains how justification gives peace with God, access to grace, and hope in suffering. Paul’s repeated use of “therefore” shows how these truths shape the Christian life and confidence in God’s future work.
5 | The Book Romans
Paul turns to sanctification in Romans 6, describing how believers learn to walk in the new life God provides. This session explains the contrast between old habits and new identity, the call to present ourselves to God, and how the Spirit enables obedience.
6 | The Book Romans
Romans 7 highlights the struggle between desire and ability. This session explains why the law cannot produce righteousness and why human effort falls short. Paul’s description of inner conflict prepares the way for the hope found in Romans 8.
7 | The Book Romans
Romans 8 presents life in the Spirit. This session explains the difference between flesh and Spirit, the removal of condemnation, and the Spirit’s role in transformation and hope. It shows how God accomplishes in believers what the law could not.
8 | The Book Romans
This session examines Romans 9–11 and Paul’s teaching on Israel and the Gentiles. It explores election, mercy, Israel’s calling, and God’s ongoing faithfulness to His promises. The teaching shows how God’s plan includes all nations without abandoning Israel’s role in His story.
9 | The Book Romans
Romans 9 highlights God’s sovereignty and compassion. This session explains how God’s purposes stand even when people resist Him and how His mercy extends beyond Israel to the Gentiles.
10 | The Book Romans
Romans 12–13 describe the practical outworking of the gospel. This session explains presenting ourselves to God, using gifts within the church, living with Christian character, and relating to governing authorities. Love becomes the fulfillment of the law.
11 | The Book Romans
Romans 14–16 address tensions over personal convictions. This session explains how believers can welcome one another, avoid judging or pressuring others, and prioritize unity. Paul closes the letter with praise to God, tying together the themes of grace, mission, and faithfulness.
1 | The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah | The 400 Years of Silence
An overview of the world between Malachi and Matthew, tracing how empires rose and fell, cultures collided, and Israel lived through centuries of upheaval and longing. This session shows how Persian policy, Greek influence, Maccabean revolt, and Roman rule shaped the world Jesus would enter, revealing why the Gospels unfold the way they do and why Israel’s anticipation for a Messiah burned so intensely.
2 | The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah
Walking through the opening movements of Jesus’ story — the formation of the Gospels, the significance of His genealogies, the miracle of His birth, and the deep messianic hunger that shaped Israel in the first century. From the announcement to Mary, to Simeon and Anna’s prophetic recognition, to the visit of the magi and Herod’s violent response, these readings reveal a world longing for deliverance and a Messiah arriving in ways no one expected. The session also traces the early ministry of John the Baptist, the baptism and temptation of Jesus, the calling of His first disciples, the wedding at Cana, the cleansing of the temple, and Jesus’ profound encounters with Nicodemus and the Samaritan woman. Across every scene, the authority of Jesus rises, the activity of the Spirit is unmistakable, and the expectation of the Kingdom grows clearer.
3 | The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah
The early days of Jesus’ public ministry move to center stage: His announcement of the Kingdom, His rejection in Nazareth, the calling of His first disciples, His confrontations with the demonic, and the explosion of healings that follow Him everywhere. This session highlights the authority Jesus carries, the tension it creates, and the growing recognition that Israel’s long-awaited Messiah may finally have arrived.
4 | The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah
Growing crowds, growing opposition, and growing revelation shape this portion of the story. Jesus heals the blind and mute, teaches in parables, exposes the emptiness of religious posturing, and describes a Kingdom that upends expectations. This session shows both rising belief and rising hostility as Jesus’ identity becomes harder for the religious elite to dismiss.
5 | The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah
From the feeding of the five thousand to the Bread of Life teaching, this section reveals a turning point in Jesus’ ministry. Enthusiasm shifts to offense as Jesus presses past curiosity into the deeper call of true discipleship. His miracles intensify, His authority becomes clearer, and His words divide the crowds while deepening the faith of those who remain.