PSALM 2: WHY ARE THE NATIONS RAGING?
Why are the nations so angry? Why do they plot in vain against one another and against God? They all think they are on the “right” side, but God laughs.
Why are the nations so angry? Why do they plot in vain against one another and against God? They all think they are on the “right” side, but God laughs.
So we start Psalms today. We’ll be here for many weeks and go through them and learn about them, but more we’ll experience them. For example, we’ll learn how important it is to read Psalms aloud.
What is God willing to do to rescue his people? In today’s Journey Bible Project Blog, we begin with what may be the most important theme of the Old Testament: God’s rescue of His people, the Exodus.
Watch this helpful video from The Bible Project folks on Psalms. Our goal for The Journey Bible Project for the Psalms is straightforward and important: experience worship of Yahweh in Psalms by writing blogs on each Psalm, reading them in worship and in homes and Bible studies, and preaching from them.
What is God willing to do to rescue his people? In today’s Journey Bible Project Blog, we begin with what may be the most important theme of the Old Testament: God’s rescue of His people, the Exodus.
Palmer Chinchen points out that Jesus’s funeral speeches were really short. Two words: Get up. What did the Father say to the Son when crucifixion and sabbath in a tomb was passed and Sunday morning came?
One of the often missed details of the crucifixion is the impact on the earth itself and the dead people living inside.
In today’s Bible Project devotional, Chris Altrock explores dying well from Genesis 27.
The tragic events of Matthew 26–including the actions of a man about which it is said, “better if he had not been born–are precisely the same events that give us hope that God would rather die for us than live without us.
One of the most remarkable stories of Jesus is found in today’s Journey Bible Project Blog, “The Sheep and the Goats,” from Matthew 25. What did Jesus mean for his first hearers to do? What are we to do with this tragic, hopeful story?
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