MATTHEW 28: JESUS APPEARS TO WOMAN
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?
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.
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.
Will Jesus Christ return to the earth? When? The disciples wanted to know. In Matthew 24, one of this week’s readings in The Journey Bible Project, Jesus answers the questions the disciples ask, and Greg Taylor addresses some of the questions we ask today about the rapture and AD 70 and provides videos of other biblical scholars on this important topic.
Today’s Journey Project Blog is horror reading for church leaders. Today’s photo does not represent the person delivering the horrible words, but this photo represents church leaders who receive the horrible words. The deliverer of the horrible words is Jesus.
In today’s Journey Bible Project Blog, we find the religious leaders hammering Jesus with trick questions. How well did their trick questions work on Jesus?
Matthew the Evangelist points back to the prophet Zechariah’s poignant words about what’s about to happen when Jesus enters Jerusalem. He rides into Jerusalem on a young donkey. Listen, the prophet says, “Your King is coming to you. He is gentle; he is riding on a donkey.” His first actions were not so gentle, as Greg Taylor discusses in today’s Journey Bible Project Blog.
This post by Greg R. Taylor is about how Ezra, a man that his own book says had “the hand of God upon him,” did three basic things. He devoted himself to study, he observed what he studied, and he taught what he studied and lived.
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