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Why Does God Allow Bad Things to Happen to the Saved and the Chosen?

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Understanding Divine Sovereignty, Suffering, and the Eternal Purposes of God from the Inerrant Scriptures Beloved brothers and sisters in Christ, this is one of the most pressing and painful questions that has echoed through the hearts of God’s people across every generation: Why does a sovereign, all-powerful, all-loving, and all-wise God permit — even ordain — suffering, trials, loss, sickness, betrayal, and hardship in the lives of those He has saved and chosen? We are not talking here about the judgment that falls upon the rebellious and unrepentant world. We are speaking of the afflictions that come upon the redeemed, the born-again, the blood-bought children of God who walk in the light of His Word and cling to the fundamentals of the faith once delivered to the saints. This question is not new. It is as old as the book of Job and as fresh as the latest diagnosis, the latest pink slip, the latest betrayal by a trusted friend, or the latest wave of cultural hostility against those...

The Inhabited Invisible: Standing Firm in the Biblical Reality of Angelic Protection

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  “The angel of the Lord encamps all around those who fear Him, and delivers them.” — Psalm 34:7 (NKJV) We live in an age characterized by a aggressive, functional materialism. Our culture trains us to believe only what can be seen, measured, weighed, and verified by human faculty. Sadly, this skepticism often creeps through the doors of the church, leading believers to live as practical deists—acknowledging God with their lips but operating as if the physical world is all that exists. Yet, Holy Scripture completely rejects this sterile view of reality. The Bible pulls back the veil to reveal a universe teeming with spiritual activity. Among the most comforting doctrines for the saint is the reality of God’s holy angels: mighty, created beings deployed by a sovereign Creator to execute His will, wage spiritual warfare, and stand guard over the local church and the individual believer. To anchor our hearts in these perilous times, we must bypass modern myths and plant our feet s...

The Godhood of Christ: The Unwavering Testimony of Scripture

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  In an age marked by theological drift and confusion about the person of Jesus, the church must return again and again to the clear, inerrant testimony of Holy Scripture. The doctrine of the **Godhood of Christ**—that Jesus is fully and eternally God, the second Person of the Trinity—is not a peripheral teaching. It is the very foundation upon which the entire Christian faith stands. Deny or diminish the full deity of Jesus, and the gospel itself collapses. Only the infinite, eternal God could bear the infinite wrath our sins deserve and provide a salvation that is truly eternal. The Bible presents this truth from beginning to end with unmistakable clarity. Let us examine the evidence with reverent hearts and minds renewed by the Spirit. I. The Direct Claims of Christ Himself Our Lord Jesus did not leave His identity ambiguous. He repeatedly and deliberately claimed to be God. In **John 8:58**, Jesus declared to the religious leaders, “Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham wa...

Aaronic vs. Melchizedek Priesthood: A Biblical Comparison and Its Fulfillment in Christ

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  Few comparisons in Scripture are as theologically rich and Christ-exalting as the one between the **Aaronic (Levitical) priesthood** and the **priesthood of Melchizedek**. The book of Hebrews devotes significant attention to this contrast (especially chapters 5–7) because it reveals the superiority of Christ’s priesthood and the surpassing glory of the new covenant. God gave the Aaronic priesthood as a temporary shadow. He presented the Melchizedek priesthood as a greater and eternal order. When we understand the differences, we see more clearly why Jesus is our perfect and final High Priest.   Background of the Two Priesthoods The Melchizedek Priesthood  Melchizedek appears suddenly in Genesis 14:18-20 as “king of Salem” and “priest of the most high God.” He meets Abraham returning from battle, brings bread and wine, blesses him, and receives tithes from him. His name means “king of righteousness,” and Salem means “peace.” He is the first priest mentioned in Scripture,...

The Levitical Priesthood as a Type of Christ

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One of the most profound and Spirit-inspired themes in all of Scripture is **typology** — God’s deliberate use of Old Testament people, events, institutions, and rituals as living pictures that point forward to greater New Testament realities, especially the person and work of the Lord Jesus Christ. The Levitical (or Aaronic) priesthood stands as one of the richest and most detailed types in the entire Bible. God did not give Israel this priesthood merely for ceremonial purposes. He designed it from the beginning to be a shadow that would prepare His people to recognize and receive their true and final High Priest. As we explore this typology together, we will see how every aspect of the Levitical system — its calling, its garments, its sacrifices, its mediation, and its limitations — was meant to direct hearts to Jesus Christ.   What Is Biblical Typology? Typology is not allegory or speculation. It is God-ordained foreshadowing. The New Testament itself confirms this pattern again...