JR. Forasteros - February 13, 2013

Ash Wednesday 2013

Venom

Ash Wednesday is the beginning of Lent. We gather to mourn and confess our Sin, and to repent.

From Series: "Venom"

Everyone knows the world isn't as it should be. There's a sickness deep within us, a rot in the human heart. The Bible calls that rot Sin, and even though no one likes to talk about Sin, we can't escape its reality. A snake once whispered to us that we could be like God. We believed that lie, and the venom of Sin has been killing us ever since. But God will not abandon us. Why do we talk about sin? Because then we get to talk about how God rescues us from Sin. After we tried to become like God, God became like us, to become our Sin, to save us. Join us the six Sundays of Lent (February 17-March 24) as we explore what Sin is and how God saves us!

More From "Venom"

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Listen to each lesson here. Each lesson also includes a downloadable powerpoint and notesheet.

FourHorsemen

The Revelation was never meant to be scary or confusing. It’s a message of hope!

The Revelation to John is the Bible’s scariest, most confusing book.

It’s not meant to be that way. In fact, Jesus himself is giving this revelation to John for the Church. It’s meant to be a message of hope. The problem is that we are strangers to the text. We live 2,000 years away, across a huge culture gap.

But if we are willing to do the hard work to hear Jesus’ revelation through the ears of First Century Christians, the Revelation will come alive for us.

We can hear Jesus’ message of hope to all of us struggling to stay faithful in a faithless culture.

We can learn to hear the Revelation as a beautiful, powerful book, as relevant to day as it was then.

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Additionally, I imagined how John would compose his vision if he were writing to the 21st Century American churches rather than the churches of First Century Asia. Read The Revelation to JR. here.

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