Themes highlight the central messages woven throughout Scripture—such as faith, love, justice, and redemption—revealing God’s purpose in every story.
The Deity of Christ is the scriptural truth that Jesus is the eternal, uncreated Son of God, possessing all divine attributes and authority, equal with the Father in essence while distinct in person.
The Justice of God is His unswerving commitment to always do what is right, necessitating the punishment of sin and the defense of the oppressed, while finding its ultimate resolution in the atoning work of Jesus Christ.
The Love of God is the unconditional, self-sacrificing commitment of the Creator to redeem and restore His broken creation, demonstrated definitively in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
The holiness of God is His perfect purity and moral excellence that sets Him apart from all creation and calls His people to be holy as He is holy.
John Mark was a young disciple who overcame early failure to become a trusted companion of Paul and Peter, ultimately authoring the dynamic Gospel that bears his name.
Matthew was a despised tax collector transformed by grace into a devoted apostle, whose Gospel bridges the Old and New Testaments by proclaiming Jesus as the promised Messiah and King.
Nabal was a wealthy but foolish landowner whose arrogance and refusal to show hospitality to David led to divine judgment and his sudden death.
John Mark was a young disciple who overcame early failure to become a trusted companion of Paul and Peter, ultimately authoring the dynamic Gospel that bears his name.
Matthew was a despised tax collector transformed by grace into a devoted apostle, whose Gospel bridges the Old and New Testaments by proclaiming Jesus as the promised Messiah and King.
Nabal was a wealthy but foolish landowner whose arrogance and refusal to show hospitality to David led to divine judgment and his sudden death.
Jezreel was the fertile royal seat of King Ahab and Queen Jezebel, famous for the murder of Naboth and the site where divine judgment eventually wiped out their entire dynasty.
Aphek was a strategic military stronghold and staging ground on the Sharon Plain where the Philistines gathered to capture the Ark and where David was providentially released from the Philistine army.
Lachish was the second most powerful city in ancient Judah, a mighty fortress whose dramatic fall to Assyria and Babylon serves as a pivotal moment in biblical history and archaeology.