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Dr. Os Guinness shares deep insights into the current chaos in the United States in what is a cultural revolution. Guinness observes a crisis of freedom, a shift in the past fifty years toward the radical left, which has more in common with the French Revolution of 1789 than the Hebrew Exodus from Egypt (The Sinai Revolution of faith) in the Old Testament. He inspires believers to be agents of change in America by representing Christ and being champions of justice and true freedom, which leads to peace and order in society. Get your copy of Os Guiness's book The Magna Cart of Humanity for a gift of any amount. Buy your copy of Jim Daly's book, ReFOCUS! He shares how believers can engage others in the culture with the love of Christ and reveal the heart of God. Get the RVL Discipleship Study video series for more fascinating teaching straight from the Bible. Donate Send Jim a voicemail! Click here.
This week Toby and Brooke talk about the 1998 epic animated feature The Prince of Egypt, based on the story of the Hebrew Exodus from Egypt. Join us as we celebrate the beautiful animation, the powerful music, the incredible voice cast. We also take time to compare the movie to its origins in the Bible, as well as the cues it takes from other Exodus films, such as The Ten Commandments.
#1 A @Christadelphians Video: A @Christadelphians Video: Session 1 - Moses began the first Exodus of the Hebrews at Sinai. Many years later, a despondent Elijah was to find himself walking in the very same footsteps as his predecessor, finding himself at the very same mount. Wanting God to start all over again with Israel, Elijah requests that judgments are poured down on the people that had gone so far astray. However, God was to teach him that mercy is what leads an Exodus. A lesson which Elijah is to show in the Hebrew Exodus that is yet to come. #2 A @Christadelphians Video: A @Christadelphians Video: Session 2 - As Elijah took the mantle off Moses to lead an Exodus of the Hebrews, the apostle Paul is to find that he is to take inspiration off Elijah to lead an Exodus of the Gentiles. This all begins as the apostle takes a journey to a sacred mountain where he is to have an unexpected meeting with his Lord. His Lord who leads us all on an Exodus out of sin. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/christadelphians-talk/message
With today's podcast of Real Israel Talk Radio - Episode 87 Program Part 23 - Defining Biblical Love from 1 Corinthians 13, let us continue with the series of statements that Paul makes saying that Biblical Love is "all believable." Here, I want to address an age-old theological question, "Can we lose our salvation?" As I read scripture, the sad truth of the matter is Yes, I believe we can. When Paul makes his very brief statement that Yehovah's Love is "all believing" or put another way, it is "all trusting," he is clearly calling his readers to understand that Yehovah's love requires an action of response and only when this happens then a connection can be made between the Savior and the Saved. However, what happens IF down the track, the one who was once saved decides that he or she no longer cares to walk in trusting faith towards Yehovah nor desires to walk in his covenant of love anymore? What then? Actually, scripture gives an answer to this debacle. Compare the following three declarations as they originate in Hebrew: Exodus 23:20-21. Behold, I send an Angel (a Messenger) before you to guard you in The Way and to bring you into The Place which I have prepared. Beware of him and obey his voice; do not provoke him, for he will not pardon your transgressions; for my name is in him. Habbakuk 2:3-4. For the vision is yet for an appointed time; but at the end he will speak, and he will not lie. Though he tarries, wait for him; because he will surely come, he will not tarry. Behold the proud, his soul is not straight in him; but the just (righteous) shall live in his Faith. Hebrews 10:38-39. Now the just (righteous) shall live in Faith; but if anyone draws back (shrinks back), my soul has no pleasure in him. But we are not of those who draw back (shrink back) to perdition (the second death), but of those who believe (trust) to the saving of the soul. The link that connects these three declarations is when Yehovah said to Moses, "Do not provoke him, for he will not pardon your transgressions; for my name is in him. " We will learn about this on today's podcast as it also relates to Mark 2: 5-11 and John 18:3-6. All of this will give us the packaging for Paul's lesson on biblical love that Yehovah's Love is "all believable" or "all trusting." Join us for this episode of Defining Biblical Love PART 23 in 1 Corinthians 13 as we seek to answer the question, "Can we lose our salvation?"
What is stiff in Hebrew? Why does Moses use the term "stiffnecked people" to describe the common behavior in the golden calf? And how this term is still relevant in the times of coronavirus? Join our daily conversation 🍒 Exodus 32:9 https://www.mechon-mamre.org/p/pt/pt0232.htm ~~~~~ Biblical Hebrew Links & Resources ~~~~~ Blog: https://hebrew.learnoutlive.com Facebook: http://facebook.com/learnhebrewOnline/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/_learn_hebrew You can find our podcast on: Apple Podcasts: http://bit.ly/blueprints_apple Spotify: http://bit.ly/blueprints_spotify Google Podcasts: http://bit.ly/blueprints_google Stitcher: http://bit.ly/blueprints_stitcher Join our live lessons via our Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2599792680052142/ Koltuv & Shalom ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What does the name Pharaoh refer to in Hebrew? What is this name reflect inside of us? And how we can go out of our own Egypt? Join our daily conversation 🍒 ~~~~~ Biblical Hebrew Links & Resources ~~~~~ Blog: https://hebrew.learnoutlive.com Facebook: http://facebook.com/learnhebrewOnline/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/_learn_hebrew You can find our podcast on: Apple Podcasts: http://bit.ly/blueprints_apple Spotify: http://bit.ly/blueprints_spotify Google Podcasts: http://bit.ly/blueprints_google Stitcher: http://bit.ly/blueprints_stitcher Join our live lessons via our Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2599792680052142/ Koltuv & Shalom ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In the stories told of the Hebrew Exodus, teachers have long recounted the tale of Nahshon – the one who took the very first step into the Red Sea before it parted, without whose courage the freedom of the people could not be won. Who takes the first step toward freedom today?
This is our first episode in our new series on the theme of Justice in the Bible. When most of us hear the term "justice" we think of courtrooms, judges and cops. Some of us might think of biblical justice as “God’s Judgement”. What did the Hebrews believe justice looked like? And what was the biblical vision for a “just society?” In the first part of the conversation (0-22:50) Tim outlines where the words “Justice” and “Righteousness” come from in the Bible and what they meant in their original context. The guys speculate about why every person seems to have an ingrained idea of “fairness”. Tim shares three common perspectives of Justice from a Harvard professor (Brian Sandel) book Justice: What’s the Right Thing to Do? Justice is Maximizing Welfare Justice is Respect of Individual Freedom Justice is Promoting Virtue In the second part of the show (22:51-44:45) Tim outlines the famous verse in Micah “do justice, love mercy” and what that verse originally meant to Hebrews. The guys talk about the differences between retributive justice and restorative justice. Tim shares the prophets ideas of the quartet of the vulnerable: widows, orphans, immigrants, the poor. Finally, (44:50-end) the guys discuss the story of the Hebrew Exodus, and how that story framed many images in the Bible about justice. Thank you to all our supporters! You can learn more about the bible project on our website: https://thebibleproject.com/ Resources: Books: Annie Dillard: Pilgrim At Tinker Creek Michael Sandel: Justice: What’s The Right Thing To Do? Show Music: Defender Instrumental: Rosasharn Music Flooded Meadows: Unwritten Stories You Can Save Me: Beautiful Eulogy Exile Dial Tone: Beautiful Eulogy
This is part 4 of our How to Read the Bible series. Jon and Tim discuss the different literary styles used in the Bible. (It's not just a history book!) In the first part of the show (0-28:00), the guys go over an example of both poetry and narrative in the Bible, Exodus 14 and 15. Its the Hebrew Exodus story told in both narrative style and then Hebrew poetry. In the second half of the show (28:00-End), Tim shares an example of prose discourse in one of Paul's epistles. Tim discusses how Paul's writing style was heavily influenced by philosophers like Seneca. This series is designed to accompany our video series on Youtube called "How to Read the Bible. You can view the accompanying video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oUXJ8Owes8E Show Resources: "Introduction to Poetry" by Billy Collins Thomas Long, Preaching the Literary Forms of the Bible. "Jabberwoky" by Lewis Carroll Music Credits: Defender Instrumental by Rosasharn Music Take It Easy by Beautiful Eulogy
Award-winning documentary Patterns of Evidence showed stunning proof of how science proves the biblical accounts of the Exodus. Now, the documentary series continues with the next chapter, titled Young Explorers.Patterns of Evidence: The Exodus won 13 awards. The sequel, Patterns of Evidence: Young Explorers, follows up the 2015 film by chronicling how 10 young people met the filmmaker, Timothy Mahoney, on a wilderness camping trip and learned about his investigation of Moses and the Hebrew Exodus out of Egypt.By the end of the weekend, the campers want to join Mahoney on his quest. The campers are invited to read their Bibles before each adventure and look for clues in the text. Mahoney takes the campers into a virtual reality chamber to "explore" places and events mentioned in the Bible. They find a pattern of evidence that corresponds with the Exodus and the fall of Jericho.I interviewed Mahoney (of Thinking Man Films) during the International Christian Retail Show in Cincinnati in June 2016 as he prepared to launch Young Explorers in the fall. He said his documentaries can dispell the teachings at universities that Exodus did not happen.When he grew up people told him the stories of Exodus and other Old Testament accounts were not true. In 2001 he took a film crew to Egypt to find places where the Jews were supposed to have lived. People told him there was no evidence. That set off a crisis of faith.That set Mahoney on a 12 year journey to study the Bible and find evidence, not necessarily in places where people said to look.The Bible is being challenged more than ever. "The historical credibility of the Bible is, I think, the big question. ... There is evidence for the Bible. There is evidence for the Exodus. And there's a huge, powerful pattern of evidence."Christianity is based upon a God who has intervened in the world throughout history, he said.Apologetics film takes youths on faith quest. A still from the documentary film Patterns of Evidence: Young Explorers.One piece of archeological evidence Mahoney mentioned is the biblical account of Rahab, a prostitute who lived in Jericho. Her house was built into the city's wall, the wall which fell during the city's conquest — except for Rahab's home. A portion of that city's walls stands to this day.For more information about archeology and evidence that matches the Bible, go to patternsofevidence.com and sign up for "Thinker Updates."If you are interested in viewing Patterns of Evidence: The Exodus, it is available on DVD and Blu-ray at patternsofevidence.com. It features stunning animations and a cast including narrator Kevin Sorbo (God’s Not Dead, Hercules: The Legendary Journeys), interviews with leading archaeologists including Israel Finkelstein, Kent Weeks, and David Rohl, and guest appearances by Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu and Shimon Peres.On Facebook, search for Patterns of Evidence: The Exodus.--Jason Reynolds
Award-winning documentary Patterns of Evidence showed stunning proof of how science proves the biblical accounts of the Exodus. Now, the documentary series continues with the next chapter, titled Young Explorers. Patterns of Evidence: The Exodus won 13 awards. The sequel, Patterns of Evidence: Young Explorers, follows up the 2015 film by chronicling how 10 young people met the filmmaker, Timothy Mahoney, on a wilderness camping trip and learned about his investigation of Moses and the Hebrew Exodus out of Egypt. By the end of the weekend, the campers want to join Mahoney on his quest. The campers are invited to read their Bibles before each adventure and look for clues in the text. Mahoney takes the campers into a virtual reality chamber to "explore" places and events mentioned in the Bible. They find a pattern of evidence that corresponds with the Exodus and the fall of Jericho. I interviewed Mahoney (of Thinking Man Films) during the International Christian Retail Show in Cincinnati in June 2016 as he prepared to launch Young Explorers in the fall. He said his documentaries can dispell the teachings at universities that Exodus did not happen. When he grew up people told him the stories of Exodus and other Old Testament accounts were not true. In 2001 he took a film crew to Egypt to find places where the Jews were supposed to have lived. People told him there was no evidence. That set off a crisis of faith. That set Mahoney on a 12 year journey to study the Bible and find evidence, not necessarily in places where people said to look. The Bible is being challenged more than ever. "The historical credibility of the Bible is, I think, the big question. ... There is evidence for the Bible. There is evidence for the Exodus. And there's a huge, powerful pattern of evidence." Christianity is based upon a God who has intervened in the world throughout history, he said. Apologetics film takes youths on faith quest. A still from the documentary film Patterns of Evidence: Young Explorers. One piece of archeological evidence Mahoney mentioned is the biblical account of Rahab, a prostitute who lived in Jericho. Her house was built into the city's wall, the wall which fell during the city's conquest — except for Rahab's home. A portion of that city's walls stands to this day. For more information about archeology and evidence that matches the Bible, go to patternsofevidence.com and sign up for "Thinker Updates." If you are interested in viewing Patterns of Evidence: The Exodus, it is available on DVD and Blu-ray at patternsofevidence.com. It features stunning animations and a cast including narrator Kevin Sorbo (God’s Not Dead, Hercules: The Legendary Journeys), interviews with leading archaeologists including Israel Finkelstein, Kent Weeks, and David Rohl, and guest appearances by Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu and Shimon Peres. On Facebook, search for Patterns of Evidence: The Exodus. --Jason Reynolds
On June 21, Dr. Bell spoke about the Hebrew Exodus from Egypt, suggesting that freeing and saving are Gods primary business.