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The Case Of The Empty Barrel

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In the days of King Ahab, when drought and famine gripped the land as judgment for Israel’s idolatry, the Lord sent His prophet Elijah to a most unlikely place: Zarephath of Sidon, territory of the enemy. There, at the gate of the city, he found a destitute widow gathering sticks to prepare what she believed would be her last meal. In her house was only “a handful of meal in a barrel, and a little oil in a cruse” (1 Kings 17:12). She and her son were preparing to eat it and die. Yet the God who sees every empty barrel and every desperate heart had already commanded Elijah to go to her. The prophet asked first for a drink of water, then for “a morsel of bread.” The widow explained her hopeless situation. Elijah’s response was bold and full of promise: “Fear not; go and do as thou hast said: but make me thereof a little cake first, and bring it unto me, and after make for thee and for thy son. For thus saith the LORD God of Israel, The barrel of meal shall not waste, neither shall the cr...

Understanding the Book of Obadiah: God’s Righteous Judgment on Pride and His Faithful Promise to Israel

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As Bible-believing Christians who hold fast to the inerrant, infallible, and literal Word of God, we turn today to one of the most overlooked yet powerful books in Scripture—the Book of Obadiah. This shortest book in the Old Testament, with only 21 verses, packs a profound message about God’s sovereignty over the nations, His hatred of pride, and His unbreakable covenant with His people Israel. In an age when compromise and cultural pressure tempt even the faithful to soften the hard truths of Scripture, Obadiah stands as a clarion call to humility, repentance, and unwavering trust in the Lord’s promises. Authorship and Historical Setting The book is attributed to the prophet Obadiah, whose name means “servant of the Lord.” While little is known about the man himself, his message is crystal clear and divinely inspired. Conservative scholars date the prophecy sometime after the fall of Jerusalem in 586 B.C., though some place it earlier. What matters most to us as fundamentalists is tha...

The Gifts of the Holy Spirit: What Scripture Clearly Teaches—and What Endures Today

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In a world full of confusion about the Holy Spirit’s work, conservative Christians rightly turn to the sufficient, unchanging Word of God. The Bible does not leave us guessing about the gifts of the Holy Spirit. They are not mysterious feelings or self-improvement tools; they are sovereignly distributed abilities given by the third Person of the Trinity for one clear purpose: “the common good” of Christ’s church (1 Corinthians 12:7, ESV). Let’s examine what Scripture actually says, which gifts appear to be for every age of the church, and which were temporary signs tied to the apostolic foundation.   The Biblical Lists of Spiritual Gifts The New Testament gives us several complementary passages—never an exhaustive checklist, but clear categories of how the Spirit equips His people. 1. The Manifestation Gifts (1 Corinthians 12:4–11)   These are the most frequently discussed. Paul writes:   “For to one is given through the Spirit the utterance of wisdom, and to an...

Speaking in Tongues Today: A Biblical Examination from a Conservative Christian Viewpoint

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  The outpouring of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost (Acts 2) is where the modern conversation about tongues begins—and where a faithful, Bible-believing Christian must stay anchored. From a fundamentalist, conservative perspective that holds Scripture as the final, sufficient authority (2 Timothy 3:16-17), speaking in tongues is not a vague spiritual feeling or a required “second blessing.” It is a specific, miraculous gift given by the Holy Spirit for a clear purpose in the early Church. Let us examine what the Bible actually teaches and what that means for believers today.   What the Bible Says About Tongues The Greek word *glōssa* (tongue) in the New Testament refers to a real, intelligible language—never unintelligible ecstatic utterance disconnected from meaning. - **Acts 2:4-11** — On the Day of Pentecost, the 120 disciples “began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance.” Devout Jews from every nation heard them declaring “the wonderful works of God” ...

Pentecost: The Power of the Holy Spirit Then and Now – A Conservative Christian Perspective

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  Pentecost was never a vague “spiritual experience” or the start of some new era detached from Scripture. It was the dramatic, prophesied fulfillment of God’s promise, exactly as a first-century Jew would have understood it—and it remains the same empowering reality for us today. What Pentecost Meant for the People of That Time For the Jews gathered in Jerusalem, Pentecost (Greek for “fiftieth”) was the ancient Feast of Weeks—Shavuot. Fifty days after Passover, they celebrated the firstfruits of the wheat harvest and remembered the giving of the Law at Mount Sinai. It was a time of thanksgiving, covenant renewal, and expectation. Then everything changed. In the upper room, 120 disciples were suddenly filled with the Holy Spirit. “Cloven tongues like as of fire” sat upon each of them (Acts 2:3). They spoke in real, intelligible languages—reversing the confusion of Babel—so that devout Jews from every nation under heaven heard the mighty works of God in their own tongue (Acts 2:5-11...