Do you long for heaven, or has the spiritual appetite for your eternal home been dulled? In this lesson, Ken Boa discusses the need to cultivate a spiritual appetite for heaven.
Do you long for heaven, or has the spiritual appetite for your eternal home been dulled? In this lesson, Ken Boa discusses the need to cultivate a spiritual appetite for heaven.
The celebration of Easter is more than a celebration of the past; it is also a pointer to the future resurrected bodies and the glory we will have in Christ.
Living by grace through faith is not natural to us. Even after we have been saved, it is easy for us to slip back into thinking of works righteousness.
We need to think well and realize that the Christian faith is founded on fact. The object of our faith is key. Although the amount of our faith may change, but the object—the person and work of Christ—never will. As a result, Christianity is not a crutch—it’s the cure.
If the resurrection is true, then how we live matters. Every choice we make has an impact on our lives, showing whether we find our identity based on our “earth suit” or on our spiritual life.
Age conspires with God to take away our temporal hope. As disciples of Jesus, we want to have a growing and eager sense of anticipation of what we're going to be like in the new heaven and earth.
"If a man dies, will he live again?" (Job 14:14) How we answer this fundamental question determines whether or not we have hope in the midst of suffering.