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The Promises of God Series

THE PROMISES OF GOD SERIES Series Introduction The promises of God are not isolated statements scattered through Scripture. They are the unfolding expressions of one eternal purpose, conceived in God before the foundation of the world, revealed through covenant, and fulfilled in Jesus Christ. Why The Promises of God Matter explains why they are important to believers. This series functions as a theological hub—a unified framework that weaves together distinct promises without collapsing them into a single category. Each promise stands on its own, yet each flows from the same eternal source and prepares the way for the next. Together they testify to the faithfulness of God across redemptive history. The Coherence of God’s Promises One eternal purpose, planned in God Revealed through covenant Fulfilled in Christ Applied by the Spirit of truth Consummated in glory Each article in this series may b...
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The Promise to Remember Sin No More: Grace, Justification, and the Freedom from Condemnation

The Promise to not Remember Sin No More: Grace, Justification, and the Freedom from Condemnation A Featured Installment for The Promises of God Series This study aligns with The Promises of Forgiveness and Justification , and focuses on anchoring our minds in the promise of definitive legal and relational reality of the New Covenant. This article goes deeper into the promise that God has chosen to remember our sins no more and  how important it is to focus our mind in this reality, shifting our standing from a place of condemnation to absolute freedom in His presence. In the landscape of biblical theology, one of the most profound and revolutionary promises God makes to humanity is the total obliteration of our recorded sins. Through the prophet Jeremiah, God declared of the New Covenant: “For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more” (Jeremiah 31:34; Hebrews 8:12). This promise finds its ultimate fulfillment in justification, where believers receive wh...

The New Creation: A Theological Distinction Between Soul and Spirit

  The New Creation: A Theological Distinction Between Soul and Spirit The distinction between a "living soul" and a "living spirit" represents the bridge between two covenants and two distinct orders of humanity ( Hebrews 8:6 ). While the Old Testament establishes the soul as the seat of human life ( Leviticus 17:11 ), the New Testament introduces the spirit as the domain of the New Creation in Christ ( 2 Corinthians 5:17 ). The First Adam and the Last Adam: Soul vs. Spirit  The foundation of this distinction is found in 1 Corinthians 15:45 : "The first man Adam became a living soul; the last Adam became a life-giving spirit." The Living Soul (Psyche): In the Genesis account, Genesis 2:7 , God breathed man to create him from dust, and man became a nephesh chayah (living soul). This soul is the seat of personality, intellect, and emotion ( Matthew 22:37 ), yet it is tied to the "natural" or "soul" ( psuchikos ) realm ( 1 Corinthians 2:...

You Belong

Romans 5:1-2 is one of the clearest declarations of what it means to live before God without fear, condemnation, or striving. Paul is not merely presenting doctrine in abstract theological categories. He is describing a present standing, a living reality, a place where the believer now exists because of Jesus Christ, a place they belong. Justified therefore from faith, peace having with the God through the Lord my Jesus Christ. Through whom also the one having access through faith into the grace, he in whom stand and boast to the extent of hope, the Glory of God (Romans 5:1-2). The precision of the Greek rendering is important because it exposes the relational structure of salvation. Everything flows through Christ Himself. Faith is not detached from Him. Grace is not detached from Him. Peace is not detached from Him. Justification is not detached from Him. These are not independent spiritual substances floating in abstraction. They are realities mediated through union with Christ. Pau...

Armed with Sufficiency: The Cessation of Sin

Armed with Sufficiency: The Cessation of Sin “Christ therefore having suffered [in] flesh you [of the] same mindset [be] armed, because the one having suffered [in] flesh has ceased sin” (1 Peter 4:1). The structure is deliberate. The command is not first behavioral but cognitive: the same mindset armed . The participial logic grounds the result—“has ceased sin”—not as aspiration but as consequence. The phrase “having suffered flesh” defines the condition under which sin ceases to function. This is not partial restraint; the clause stands without mitigation. The one who has entered into this pattern has, in that frame, brought sin to cessation as an operating principle in the body. Arming, is not behavioral but cognitive as it centers on mindset (φρόνημα / ἔννοια conceptually), not on a list of behaviors. “Armed” implies preparation for conflict—but what you take up is not rules, it is a way of reasoning shaped by Christ’s suffering . Peter locates the cessation of sin in a t...