Iniquity Shall Abound
“And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many wax shall cold.” Mathew 24:12. This seems like a simple passage, but when it is dissected it takes on a deeper meaning.
“And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many wax shall cold.” Mathew 24:12. This seems like a simple passage, but when it is dissected it takes on a deeper meaning.
I would like to, in this message, explore when a nation rejects God as their ruler and asks for a king to protect them. This is a story of three kings.
How can you know for sure if you are saved? This is a question that has plagued mankind down through the ages and has caused much anguish. But, it is a question that is answered many times in the Bible.
The city of Damascus is mentioned 60 times in the Bible from Genesis 14:15 to Acts 22:10. Abraham’s chief servant, Eliazer, was from Damascus and Paul spent his first days as a Christian there.
How long will it be until the Rapture? That is the question we all have been asking ourselves for a very long time now.
War is brewing in the Middle East. The contention between Israel and Syria is a volcanic eruption waiting to happen.
Layman who point to a proof text that they feel proves their stance is a correct one, reveal that they take the latest bible teacher, or what their denomination teaches and do not study the Word of God to prove the point by scripture in context.
God doesn’t think in straight lines, He thinks in circles. He’s doing many things simultaneously, He’s at the beginning and the middle and the end of many things – all at the same time.
The Greek word for persecute is “diōkō” and in the context of the verse above it means: to pursue in a hostile manner; in any way whatever to harass, trouble, molest one, to persecute; to be mistreated, suffer persecution on account of something.