Luke 2:1-20
Reflecting on Jesus’ birth can help us to understand the ways of God’s kingdom.
Podcast
Reflecting on Jesus’ birth can help us to understand the ways of God’s kingdom.
God is faithful to save His people. He raises us up from sitting in the shadow of death and into His light. He then sends us out with life-giving purpose, to serve Him without fear, in holiness and righteousness. What does that mean and what might all that look like for us today?
Morag continues our series in Luke, exploring through the story of Elizabeth and Zechariah, how God meets our everyday ordinary, with His everyday extraordinary.
Mary’s song is a combinataion of personal praise and hope for the coming Kingdom. It gives us a beautiful example of worshipping in all circumstances and holding to God’s promises with confidence that they will come to pass.
Luke 1:39-45
After having visited the Temple, the angel Gabriel goes to a nobody in nowheresville who will become the mother of the Saviour.
Looking at God's faithfulness to us and the faith-filled response to His call of Zechariah, Elizabeth and of our late Queen, Elizabeth ll.
Luke himself wrote only four lines of introduction to his Gospel: the longest book in the Bible. What do they tell us, and what else do we need to know before we read on?
In John's parting words he sums up his whole letter by encouraging hearers to guard themselves from idols. What are idols, and how do we recognise them?
1 John 5:1-12 reminds us that our love, obedience, and adoption are meant to be held tightly together and are possible because God first loved us.