The Bible in Small Steps

Hebrews 9 - Serving God from Freedom, Not Guilt

19 min · 15 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Hebrews 9 - Serving God from Freedom, Not Guilt

Descripción

Hebrews 9 is the devotional heart of the letter. Everything the author has argued — the superior priesthood, the new covenant, the heavenly tabernacle — now converges in a single, climactic contrast: the old system required repeated ritual, conducted by mortal priests, in a carefully restricted earthly sanctuary. The new system is a single sacrifice, offered by the eternal Son of God, in the perfect heavenly tabernacle, effective once and for all. The Earthly Tabernacle: A Detailed Picture of Limitation The author opens with a careful layout of the earthly sanctuary — the outer holy place with its lampstand and consecrated bread, and the inner most holy placecontaining the Ark of the Covenant. Only the high priest entered the inner room, once a year, and never without blood. The architecture itself was a confession: full access to God was not yet open. The curtain was not a flaw in the system. It was the system’s honest acknowledgment that the time had not yet come. The Curtain That No Longer Hangs That curtain — the one that divided the outer from the inner sanctuary — was torn in two when Jesus died. There is no more separation between us and God. The most holy place is now open, not to one priest once a year, but to all who come through Christ. Christ’s Blood: Real, Permanent, Interior Cleansing If animal blood could accomplish outward ceremonial cleansing, the blood of Christ — unblemished, sinless, offered through the eternal Spirit — cleanses the conscience itself. Not the legal record. The interior. The place where guilt actually lives. This is not ceremonial action. It is the deepest form of cleansing available, addressing what no ritual could ever reach. One Death, One Covenant, One Sacrifice A covenant requires a death to take effect — and so the new covenant became operative at the cross. Just as humans die once and then face judgment, Christ was offered once to bear the sins of many. His work is not ongoing. It is complete. And the word used for what he did to sin means it was annulled — not covered temporarily or postponed, but done away with. Waiting for the Second Appearing The chapter closes with forward motion. We now live between the first appearing — where sin was dealt with — and the second appearing — where salvation will be brought in its fullness. The Greek word for that eager waiting suggests leaning forward, straining to see. That is the posture of the Christian life: resting in what has been accomplished, and leaning forward toward what is still to come. Download blank templates, schedules here: https://schmern2.notion.site/Downloads-Template-Word-and-Excel-Schedule-67439d14449d4c20bfe00efe069f78b8 [https://schmern2.notion.site/schmern2/The-Bible-in-Small-Steps-b99ab90118b3433bab73c488ef44d4d1] Logos RAMPS Workflow - RAMPS Bible Study - The Bible in Small Steps in Logos Workflows Jill’s Links https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/ [https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/] https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod [https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod] https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod] https://twitter.com/schmern [https://twitter.com/schmern] Email the podcast at [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] jill@startwithsmallsteps.com [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] “Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The ESV text may not be quoted in any publication made available to the public by a Creative Commons license. The ESV may not be translated in whole or in part into any other language.” Scripture quotations marked CSB have been taken from the Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 2017 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Christian Standard Bible® and CSB® are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers. “The Scriptures quoted are from the NET Bible® http://netbible.com [http://netbible.com/] copyright ©1996, 2019 used with permission from Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved”. Bible Maps and images used with permission from https://www.bible.ca/maps/ [https://www.bible.ca/maps/] or https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/ [https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/] Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software. Free for non-commercial use by individuals or organizations. May be presented before live audiences; may be posted on social media; may be re-distributed. May not be used commercially. May not be modified or included in published works without permission; contact permissions@faithlife.com [permissions@faithlife.com]. Attribute as: “Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software ()”. By choosing to watch this video or listen to this podcast, you acknowledge that you are doing so of your own free will. The content shared here reflects personal study, faith perspective, and opinions and is intended for informational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a licensed pastor, seminary-trained theologian, or biblical scholar. Any scriptural interpretation, commentary, or reflections offered should not be considered a substitute for guidance from your own pastor, church body, or faith community. Theological understanding is a lifelong journey — I encourage you to study alongside your own tradition and trusted spiritual leaders. You are solely responsible for any decisions or actions you take based on this content.

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Portada del episodio 1 Peter 1 - When You Feel Like You Don’t Belong

1 Peter 1 - When You Feel Like You Don’t Belong

Have you ever felt like you didn’t quite belong where you were? Like the culture right outside your front door and the values being celebrated there just didn’t line up with who you are or what you believe? Peter had a word for that feeling. He called it exile. And 1 Peter 1 was written for exactly that person. The Letter, the Man, and the Moment Peter writes this letter somewhere around 63–67 AD, just a few years before the Jerusalem temple falls. He’s writing from Rome — where Nero is actively blaming Christians for a fire he almost certainly started himself. The recipients? Scattered believers across five provinces of Asia Minor: Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia Minor, and Bithynia. These are mostly Gentile converts who have left behind their old religious and social world, and paid a real price for it. Peter writes to people who are being socially ostracized, misrepresented, and in some places physically persecuted — people who feel like strangers in their own communities. Chosen and Exiles at the Same Time Right from the opening verse, Peter names his readers two things simultaneously: chosen and exiles. That tension is the whole letter. They are aliens living on the margins of the dominant Greco-Roman culture — and at the same time, they are covenant people, selected by the foreknowledge of God the Father, set apart by the sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit, brought into relationship through the blood of Jesus Christ. Peter wants them to hold both truths at once, from the very first sentence. And tucked inside that greeting: a Trinitarian structure that doesn’t use the word Trinity, but doesn’t need to. The Doxology Before Anything Else Before Peter makes a single demand, he breaks into praise. Borrowed from the Jewish liturgical tradition, this opening doxology is not mere warm-up. It is Peter leading his suffering readers into a posture of gratitude before he calls them to anything. Everything that follows flows from one central fact: Jesus rose from the dead. New birth, living hope, the guarded inheritance — all of it is downstream from the resurrection. Living Hope and the Imperishable Inheritance Peter’s phrase “living hope” is theologically precise. The Stoics of his day treated hope as self-deception — wishful thinking that sets you up for disappointment. Peter doesn’t soften hope. He modifies it with the most important adjective available: living. This hope participates in the same resurrection power that raised Jesus from the dead. It cannot be killed because it is rooted in someone who has already defeated death. And the inheritance he describes is protected by three deliberate negatives: imperishable (cannot decay), undefiled (cannot be corrupted), unfading (never loses its color). Everything the world offers — wealth, reputation, beauty — fails at least one of those tests. This inheritance fails none of them. A Faith Refined by Fire Peter doesn’t pretend that the interval between promise and fulfillment is painless. He acknowledges that these believers are suffering various trials. But the image he reaches for is gold tested in fire. The testing of faith produces something more valuable than refined metal. It produces a proven faith — the kind that prophets longed to see, the kind that angels crane their necks to witness. The readers aren’t on the wrong side of history. They’re standing at the center of something the whole arc of Scripture was pointing toward. Holy Living Grounded in Cost The call to holy conduct in the chapter’s second half is not moralism. Peter doesn’t say “try harder not to be like your old self.” Instead, he names the cost. You were not redeemed with gold or silver. The Passover lamb was examined carefully before sacrifice — spotless, set apart, without defect. Christ is that lamb, known from the foundation of the world. To treat that lightly is not just unwise. Peter names it plainly: it is ingratitude. The motivation for holy living is not fear of punishment. It’s the weight of what was paid. Love That Doesn’t Retract Peter closes with the community that new birth creates. The obedience to truth is not the ground of salvation — it is the fruit of it. And the evidence of genuine transformation is not private piety in isolation. It is a love that is earnest — the Greek word Peter uses means stretched to full extension, the same word Jesus used at Gethsemane. It’s a love that costs something, that does not retract under pressure, from a pure heart, not for performance. The ground of this love is shared: they have all been born again from the same imperishable seed — the word of God that endures forever. Download blank templates, schedules here: https://schmern2.notion.site/Downloads-Template-Word-and-Excel-Schedule-67439d14449d4c20bfe00efe069f78b8 [https://schmern2.notion.site/schmern2/The-Bible-in-Small-Steps-b99ab90118b3433bab73c488ef44d4d1] Logos RAMPS Workflow - RAMPS Bible Study - The Bible in Small Steps in Logos Workflows Jill’s Links https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/ [https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/] https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod [https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod] https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod] https://twitter.com/schmern [https://twitter.com/schmern] Email the podcast at [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] jill@startwithsmallsteps.com [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] “Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The ESV text may not be quoted in any publication made available to the public by a Creative Commons license. The ESV may not be translated in whole or in part into any other language.” Scripture quotations marked CSB have been taken from the Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 2017 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Christian Standard Bible® and CSB® are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers. “The Scriptures quoted are from the NET Bible® http://netbible.com [http://netbible.com/] copyright ©1996, 2019 used with permission from Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved”. Bible Maps and images used with permission from https://www.bible.ca/maps/ [https://www.bible.ca/maps/] or https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/ [https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/] Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software. Free for non-commercial use by individuals or organizations. May be presented before live audiences; may be posted on social media; may be re-distributed. May not be used commercially. May not be modified or included in published works without permission; contact permissions@faithlife.com [permissions@faithlife.com]. Attribute as: “Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software ()”. By choosing to watch this video or listen to this podcast, you acknowledge that you are doing so of your own free will. The content shared here reflects personal study, faith perspective, and opinions and is intended for informational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a licensed pastor, seminary-trained theologian, or biblical scholar. Any scriptural interpretation, commentary, or reflections offered should not be considered a substitute for guidance from your own pastor, church body, or faith community. Theological understanding is a lifelong journey — I encourage you to study alongside your own tradition and trusted spiritual leaders. You are solely responsible for any decisions or actions you take based on this content.

8 de jun de 202632 min
Portada del episodio Letters of Peter - Do We Hear the Real Peter in His Letters?

Letters of Peter - Do We Hear the Real Peter in His Letters?

I’ve been spending a lot of time in 1 Peter lately, and before we dive into the chapters, I wanted to take a step back and ask a question that kept nagging at me: can you actually hear Peter’s voice in these letters? Not just a theological voice, but the Peter — the impulsive, passionate, foot-in-mouth fisherman who denied Jesus three times and then preached at Pentecost. That’s what this episode is about. We’re doing a full overview of both letters before we move into the text itself. Who Was Peter by the Time He Wrote This? By the time Peter picks up his pen — or more likely, dictates to his companion Silvanus — he has lived an entire life inside the story of Jesus. He was there for the transfiguration, Gethsemane, the denial, the restoration on the beach at Galilee. He preached at Pentecost, was imprisoned and released, and now he is aging and writing from Rome while Nero is actively targeting Christians. He knows his end is coming. The weight of all of that is underneath every sentence. The Historical Setting: Nero’s Rome and the Churches of Asia Minor Peter writes sometime between 63–67 AD, just years before the Jerusalem temple falls. The church in Rome had survived Nero’s brutal scapegoating after the great fire of 64 AD — and the believers scattered across modern-day Turkey (Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia Minor, Bithynia) were facing their own version of social hostility and persecution. These were largely Gentile converts who had walked away from the religious and social world of Rome — and paid a steep price for it. The exile language Peter uses throughout the letters is not a metaphor for them. It is their daily reality. Why the Greek Is So Polished (and What That Tells Us) One of the things that has puzzled readers is the elegantly polished Greek of 1 Peter — high literary quality that doesn’t quite match what you’d expect from a Galilean fisherman. The most straightforward explanation is Silvanus (also known as Silas), the same traveling companion who served Paul, likely took down Peter’s dictation and gave it its refined form. 2 Peter reads noticeably rougher, which may suggest a different secretary — or Peter writing more directly himself near the end of his life. Chosen and Exiled: The Letter’s Central Tension Peter calls his readers two things at once: chosen and exiles. That paradox is the heartbeat of both letters. They have been selected by God, brought into covenant relationship through the blood of Jesus — and yet they are strangers in the world they live in. Peter’s whole purpose is to help them hold both truths at the same time without collapsing into despair on one side or triumphalism on the other. Do We Hear the Real Peter? This was the question that got me most. And yes — I think we do, if you know what to look for. The pastoral depth of his comfort to suffering believers doesn’t read like academic theology. It reads like someone who has been to the bottom and knows the way back. The repeated emphasis on the resurrection, the stone imagery, the focus on suffering as a refining rather than a destroying force — all of it sounds like a man who failed catastrophically, was restored, and now writes with the authority of someone who has lived through what he’s teaching. When you’re reading 1 Peter, you’re not reading a theological treatise. You’re reading a letter from a shepherd who knows exactly what the wolves look like — because he’s faced them himself. Download blank templates, schedules here: https://schmern2.notion.site/Downloads-Template-Word-and-Excel-Schedule-67439d14449d4c20bfe00efe069f78b8 [https://schmern2.notion.site/schmern2/The-Bible-in-Small-Steps-b99ab90118b3433bab73c488ef44d4d1] Logos RAMPS Workflow - RAMPS Bible Study - The Bible in Small Steps in Logos Workflows Jill’s Links https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/ [https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/] https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod [https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod] https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod] https://twitter.com/schmern [https://twitter.com/schmern] Email the podcast at [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] jill@startwithsmallsteps.com [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] “Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The ESV text may not be quoted in any publication made available to the public by a Creative Commons license. The ESV may not be translated in whole or in part into any other language.” Scripture quotations marked CSB have been taken from the Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 2017 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Christian Standard Bible® and CSB® are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers. “The Scriptures quoted are from the NET Bible® http://netbible.com [http://netbible.com/] copyright ©1996, 2019 used with permission from Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved”. Bible Maps and images used with permission from https://www.bible.ca/maps/ [https://www.bible.ca/maps/] or https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/ [https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/] Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software. Free for non-commercial use by individuals or organizations. May be presented before live audiences; may be posted on social media; may be re-distributed. May not be used commercially. May not be modified or included in published works without permission; contact permissions@faithlife.com [permissions@faithlife.com]. Attribute as: “Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software ()”. By choosing to watch this video or listen to this podcast, you acknowledge that you are doing so of your own free will. The content shared here reflects personal study, faith perspective, and opinions and is intended for informational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a licensed pastor, seminary-trained theologian, or biblical scholar. Any scriptural interpretation, commentary, or reflections offered should not be considered a substitute for guidance from your own pastor, church body, or faith community. Theological understanding is a lifelong journey — I encourage you to study alongside your own tradition and trusted spiritual leaders. You are solely responsible for any decisions or actions you take based on this content.

Ayer23 min
Portada del episodio James 5 — Injustice, Endurance, and the God Who Hears

James 5 — Injustice, Endurance, and the God Who Hears

What do you do when the world feels profoundly unfair? When you've worked hard, been cheated, waited a long time for something to change — and the people responsible seem to be doing just fine? These aren't abstract questions. They're the ones you ask at three in the morning. James 5 is the closing chapter of this letter, and it ends where life often ends up: with suffering believers asking hard questions about justice, waiting, and the faithfulness of God. A PROPHETIC WOE AGAINST THE WEALTHY James opens this chapter with scorching language drawn straight from the Old Testament prophets — think Amos, Isaiah, Jeremiah. He's pronouncing a woe against wealthy landowners who have withheld wages from day laborers: men who depended on being paid at the end of each day, for whom that wage wasn't a convenience but survival. James says the cries of those unpaid workers have reached the ears of the Lord of armies. Injustice has a voice before God. He hears it. This is not an indictment on wealth itself — Abraham was wealthy, as were Mary, Martha, and Lazarus — but on the self-indulgent misuse of wealth to exploit the people beneath you. PATIENT ENDURANCE — THE FARMER AND THE TWO RAINS James then turns to the suffering believers who are his primary audience and calls them to patient endurance — but not the gritted-teeth, resigned kind. The Greek word he uses carries the sense of long-temperedness: the capacity to hold the long view when circumstances press you toward a short one. He illustrates it with the farmer who plants in autumn and waits for two rounds of rain — early rains to soften the ground and begin germination, later rains in spring to bring the grain to fullness. The farmer doesn't dig up the seeds to check. He works, he tends, he trusts the pattern. DO NOT GRUMBLE AGAINST ONE ANOTHER A pastoral word that might seem out of place: don't grumble against each other. James knows what prolonged suffering does to communities — it turns people inward and against each other. People under pressure start competing over whose suffering is worse, and the community fractures from the inside. James reminds his readers that the judge is near. And not only is he watching the wealthy oppressors — he's also watching how the suffering community treats each other in the waiting. JOB AND THE PROPHETS — BLESSED ENDURANCE James brings two examples from Israel's story: the prophets who endured long seasons of rejection and futility while remaining faithful to God's word, and Job. James does not romanticize Job. Job was not a quiet, untroubled sufferer. He cried out. He argued with God. He wrestled. And he endured. The resolution that God brought about revealed something about his character: he is compassionate and merciful — deeply tendered, full of pity, moved from the inside by the suffering of those he loves. The God of the waiting believer is a tender God worth waiting for. LET YOUR YES BE YES — PRAYER, COMMUNITY, AND THE WANDERING SHEEP The chapter closes with a series of practical community instructions: let your word be your bond without oath-swearing; if you're suffering, pray; if you're cheerful, sing; if you're sick, call the elders for prayer and anointing. James uses Elijah — a towering figure who called down fire from heaven — to argue that powerful prayer is available to ordinary people, because Elijah had the same weaknesses and passions as any of us. And the final image is a community that watches out for its own: when someone wanders from the truth, go after them. Bring them back. That's what faithful community looks like. James never lets his readers off the hook — but he also never leaves them without hope. The letter that began with trials producing endurance ends here: God is the Lord of armies who hears every cry that reaches his ear, and his compassion is for us. Download blank templates, schedules here: https://schmern2.notion.site/Downloads-Template-Word-and-Excel-Schedule-67439d14449d4c20bfe00efe069f78b8 [https://schmern2.notion.site/schmern2/The-Bible-in-Small-Steps-b99ab90118b3433bab73c488ef44d4d1] Logos RAMPS Workflow - RAMPS Bible Study - The Bible in Small Steps in Logos Workflows Jill’s Links https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/ [https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/] https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod [https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod] https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod] https://twitter.com/schmern [https://twitter.com/schmern] Email the podcast at [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] jill@startwithsmallsteps.com [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] “Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The ESV text may not be quoted in any publication made available to the public by a Creative Commons license. The ESV may not be translated in whole or in part into any other language.” Scripture quotations marked CSB have been taken from the Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 2017 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Christian Standard Bible® and CSB® are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers. “The Scriptures quoted are from the NET Bible® http://netbible.com [http://netbible.com/] copyright ©1996, 2019 used with permission from Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved”. Bible Maps and images used with permission from https://www.bible.ca/maps/ [https://www.bible.ca/maps/] or https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/ [https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/] Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software. Free for non-commercial use by individuals or organizations. May be presented before live audiences; may be posted on social media; may be re-distributed. May not be used commercially. May not be modified or included in published works without permission; contact permissions@faithlife.com [permissions@faithlife.com]. Attribute as: “Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software ()”. By choosing to watch this video or listen to this podcast, you acknowledge that you are doing so of your own free will. The content shared here reflects personal study, faith perspective, and opinions and is intended for informational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a licensed pastor, seminary-trained theologian, or biblical scholar. Any scriptural interpretation, commentary, or reflections offered should not be considered a substitute for guidance from your own pastor, church body, or faith community. Theological understanding is a lifelong journey — I encourage you to study alongside your own tradition and trusted spiritual leaders. You are solely responsible for any decisions or actions you take based on this content.

5 de jun de 202624 min
Portada del episodio James 4 — The Root of Every Fight (And the Way Back)

James 4 — The Root of Every Fight (And the Way Back)

Why is it that the people closest to us are often the ones we fight the most? Why does conflict find us even when we're genuinely trying to follow God — inside the church, inside our own homes? James 4 is one of the most searching chapters in the New Testament. James doesn't start with conflict resolution techniques. He starts by asking: where does the fighting actually come from? And he traces it all the way down to its root. THE SOURCE OF WAR — DESIRE TURNED INWARD James opens with blunt language: wars and battles among his readers. These aren't metaphors for mild disagreements — the Greek words he uses mean literal warfare. And he traces them to a single source: desire that has turned inward rather than toward God. The cycle is painful and familiar. A longing goes unmet. Instead of bringing it to God, a person fights for it, schemes for it, and in the worst cases is willing to destroy a relationship to get it. Prayer, where it exists, has become a vending machine rather than a conversation with a Father who knows what we actually need. FRIENDSHIP WITH THE WORLD — SPIRITUAL ADULTERY James uses startling language: he calls his readers adulterous. This isn't accidental — it reaches back to the Old Testament prophets, where Israel's unfaithfulness to God was consistently described in terms of adultery. The covenant between God and his people was like a marriage: tender, exclusive, full of commitment. Friendship with the world, James argues, means adopting the world's value system — self-advancement, comfort, ignoring sin — and when you do that, you place yourself in opposition to the God who loves you with a jealousy that refuses to share you with a rival. GOD RESISTS THE PROUD, GIVES GRACE TO THE HUMBLE In the middle of the chapter's most severe language comes one of its most stunning contrasts: God resists the proud — the word for resist is a military term, meaning to line up forces against an opponent — but to the humble he gives grace. Not just grace, but greater grace that extends beyond the demand. This is the pattern of the kingdom: the last are first, the greatest servant is the one who serves, the one who loses his life finds it. James isn't describing a technique for getting ahead. He's describing the logic of the kingdom, which runs on grace rather than merit. SUBMIT, RESIST, DRAW NEAR What follows is one of the most powerful passages in the entire New Testament. James gives a series of imperatives: submit to God, resist the devil, draw near to God and he will draw near to you. Submit here is not reluctant compliance — it's a voluntary ordering of your life under God's authority. And from that posture, resistance to evil becomes possible. Not through your own strength, but through alignment with God. The invitation to draw near is the heart of the gospel: God is not distant or cold. He is responsive, relational, warm. He is already moving toward you. JUDGING OTHERS AND THE ARROGANCE OF SELF-SUFFICIENCY James closes with two more targets: speaking evil of fellow believers (which he connects directly to placing yourself above the law of love that governs you both), and planning your life with zero acknowledgement of God. That second one is important — James is not criticizing planning or productivity. He's diagnosing a posture of self-sufficiency that treats your life as entirely within your own control, as if God is not part of the picture. And he closes with a statement that quietly devastates: it is sin to know the good you ought to do and not do it. The sin of omission is still a sin. James 4 starts with fighting and ends with humility. The journey between those two points goes right through the human heart — and it has since the beginning of time. The same grace keeps breaking through: God gives greater grace to those who come to him empty-handed. Download blank templates, schedules here: https://schmern2.notion.site/Downloads-Template-Word-and-Excel-Schedule-67439d14449d4c20bfe00efe069f78b8 [https://schmern2.notion.site/schmern2/The-Bible-in-Small-Steps-b99ab90118b3433bab73c488ef44d4d1] Logos RAMPS Workflow - RAMPS Bible Study - The Bible in Small Steps in Logos Workflows Jill’s Links https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/ [https://jillfromthenorthwoods.com/] https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod [https://www.youtube.com/@smallstepswithgod] https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/smallstepspod] https://twitter.com/schmern [https://twitter.com/schmern] Email the podcast at [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] jill@startwithsmallsteps.com [jill@startwithsmallsteps.com] “Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The ESV text may not be quoted in any publication made available to the public by a Creative Commons license. The ESV may not be translated in whole or in part into any other language.” Scripture quotations marked CSB have been taken from the Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 2017 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Christian Standard Bible® and CSB® are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers. “The Scriptures quoted are from the NET Bible® http://netbible.com [http://netbible.com/] copyright ©1996, 2019 used with permission from Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved”. Bible Maps and images used with permission from https://www.bible.ca/maps/ [https://www.bible.ca/maps/] or https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/ [https://www.freebibleimages.org/illustrations/bj-ot-world/] Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software. Free for non-commercial use by individuals or organizations. May be presented before live audiences; may be posted on social media; may be re-distributed. May not be used commercially. May not be modified or included in published works without permission; contact permissions@faithlife.com [permissions@faithlife.com]. Attribute as: “Copyright 2014 Faithlife / Logos Bible Software ()”. By choosing to watch this video or listen to this podcast, you acknowledge that you are doing so of your own free will. The content shared here reflects personal study, faith perspective, and opinions and is intended for informational and inspirational purposes only. I am not a licensed pastor, seminary-trained theologian, or biblical scholar. Any scriptural interpretation, commentary, or reflections offered should not be considered a substitute for guidance from your own pastor, church body, or faith community. Theological understanding is a lifelong journey — I encourage you to study alongside your own tradition and trusted spiritual leaders. You are solely responsible for any decisions or actions you take based on this content.

3 de jun de 202629 min
Portada del episodio James 3- The Tongue, the Heart, and the Wisdom from Above

James 3- The Tongue, the Heart, and the Wisdom from Above

Have you ever said something in a heated moment and immediately wished you could take it back? James 3 is exactly about that — and it goes much deeper than communication skills. James is writing to believers about the connection between the tongue and the soul. How we speak, he argues, reveals what we actually are. This chapter is one of the most personally uncomfortable passages in the entire Bible, and it's worth sitting with carefully. THE WARNING TO TEACHERS James opens with a pointed warning: not many of you should become teachers, because teachers will be judged more strictly. In the early church, teachers carried enormous responsibility — they were the ones who opened the word and applied it in communities that had no buildings, often no legal protection, and heavy dependence on those who could rightly handle Scripture. A teacher who says one thing and does another isn't just inconsistent; they've seen clearly what is true and chosen otherwise. SMALL THINGS, GREAT POWER — THE BIT AND THE RUDDER James illustrates the tongue's power through two images his audience would immediately recognize: a horse's bit and a ship's rudder. Both are small. Both control something enormous. The tongue, James says, is the same — physically tiny, capable of setting enormous forces in motion with no friction at all. A single sentence can change a life. A single rumor can ruin a reputation built over years. A single word of encouragement at the right moment can pull a person back from despair. FIRE FROM HELL — THE TONGUE AS A WORLD OF UNRIGHTEOUSNESS The language here intensifies sharply. James calls the tongue a 'world of unrighteousness' — not just a small problem, but an entire system of evil packed into a single organ. An unbridled tongue doesn't isolate its damage; it can warp the entire trajectory of a person's life. And it is, James says chillingly, set on fire by Gehenna — the same word Jesus used for final judgment. No one, James concludes, can tame the tongue on their own. This is not a communication problem. It is a diagnosis. BLESSING AND CURSING FROM THE SAME SPRING The deepest indictment in the chapter is this: the same tongue that blesses God on Sunday morning can be devastating to another person by Sunday afternoon. James finds this not just inconsistent — he finds it cosmically wrong. Every person, however difficult, bears the image of God. When we degrade or dismiss someone with our words, we are, in a sense, attacking the image of the one we claim to worship. The mouth reveals the heart. A spring cannot produce both fresh water and salt. TWO KINDS OF WISDOM James closes the chapter by lifting the conversation from symptom to source. True wisdom, he argues, is not proven by impressive speech or sharp argumentation — it's proved by conduct marked by what he calls gentleness, a Greek word that means strength under control. Against that, he sets selfish ambition: factional scheming, self-promotion at any cost, wisdom that is earthly, unspiritual, and demonic. The fruit of righteousness, he ends, is sown by those who cultivate peace. James doesn't end in condemnation. He ends with an invitation: there is wisdom that comes from above. But it doesn't start with trying harder to control your words. It starts with returning to the source. Get closer to God, and that will change what flows from you. 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1 de jun de 202628 min