Study in the Chapel

Bible Study Genesis Part 27-And God Formed Man

36 min · Eilen
jakson Bible Study Genesis Part 27-And God Formed Man kansikuva

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Genesis gives us almost no “how-to” on galaxies, nebulae, or black holes, then suddenly slows down for a single, personal act: God forms a man from the dust and breathes life into him. That turn is where we camp out, because Genesis 2:7 isn’t written to satisfy trivia, it’s written to explain who we are, why we’re here, and why the rest of Scripture is about God’s work with mankind. We walk through the details of the verse and the meaning packed into a few words. We talk about God “forming” Adam with the imagery of a potter shaping clay, and we explore the Hebrew connection between Adam (man) and Adama (ground) to show how our bodies are designed to live from the earth. Then we look at the two-step picture of human creation: a body made from dust and the breath of God given directly, making us a compound being that is both earthly and God-breathed. We also tackle a major point of confusion: the phrase “living soul.” By comparing the Hebrew wording used for land animals and sea creatures, we argue that “living creature” often fits better than the loaded English word “soul,” and we explain why that matters for clear Bible interpretation and Christian theology. From there, we connect human uniqueness and purpose to a direct challenge against blending Evolution with the Genesis account. If this study helps you read Genesis with sharper eyes, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find these Bible studies.

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jakson Bible Study Genesis Part 27-And God Formed Man kansikuva

Bible Study Genesis Part 27-And God Formed Man

Genesis gives us almost no “how-to” on galaxies, nebulae, or black holes, then suddenly slows down for a single, personal act: God forms a man from the dust and breathes life into him. That turn is where we camp out, because Genesis 2:7 isn’t written to satisfy trivia, it’s written to explain who we are, why we’re here, and why the rest of Scripture is about God’s work with mankind. We walk through the details of the verse and the meaning packed into a few words. We talk about God “forming” Adam with the imagery of a potter shaping clay, and we explore the Hebrew connection between Adam (man) and Adama (ground) to show how our bodies are designed to live from the earth. Then we look at the two-step picture of human creation: a body made from dust and the breath of God given directly, making us a compound being that is both earthly and God-breathed. We also tackle a major point of confusion: the phrase “living soul.” By comparing the Hebrew wording used for land animals and sea creatures, we argue that “living creature” often fits better than the loaded English word “soul,” and we explain why that matters for clear Bible interpretation and Christian theology. From there, we connect human uniqueness and purpose to a direct challenge against blending Evolution with the Genesis account. If this study helps you read Genesis with sharper eyes, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find these Bible studies.

Eilen36 min
jakson Bible Study Romans Part 27-RnR kansikuva

Bible Study Romans Part 27-RnR

The word “salvation” gets used so often that it can start to sound vague, like a churchy label instead of a real rescue. We slow down our study through Paul’s letter to the Romans to rebuild the basics, because Romans makes no sense if we’re fuzzy on the thing Paul keeps arguing for: the Gospel is the Power of God unto Salvation, not the power of our effort unto self-improvement. We center the conversation on two essential “R” words: redemption and repentance. Redemption is not a religious catchphrase. It means regaining possession by paying a price and clearing a debt, and Scripture applies that to every person on earth. We trace how redemption implies a prior ownership, what humanity lost when sin entered, and why our problem is deeper than “trying harder.” Then we lean into the New Testament’s uncomfortable but clear metaphor: redemption language comes straight out of slave auctions. A slave cannot buy himself, and we cannot purchase our freedom from sin with good behavior. Only a sin-free life can pay that price, which is why Jesus comes, lives without sin, and gives Himself in our place. From there we turn to repentance, the Greek metanoia, literally a change of mind. Jesus leads with “repent,” and John the Baptist delivers the same message to people who thought they could save themselves. If you’ve ever wondered what repentance really means, why the cross is necessary, or why Romans insists Salvation is God’s work, this teaching is for you. Subscribe for more through-the-Bible study, share this with a friend who’s wrestling with the idea of salvation, and leave a review.

Eilen34 min
jakson Bible Study Romans Part 26-Power of God kansikuva

Bible Study Romans Part 26-Power of God

Safe religion is easy to sell. A baby in a manger draws smiles, holiday nostalgia, and polite conversation. But say the next part out loud, the cross, the blood, the atoning sacrifice, and suddenly people get tense. We sit with Romans 1:16 and ask the question most Christians avoid: are we actually ashamed of the Gospel when it stops sounding cute and starts sounding costly? We walk through why the Gospel can feel offensive before it feels like freedom. The message doesn’t flatter us. It calls us sinners and, worse, helpless sinners who cannot rescue ourselves. That truth exposes why so many churches drift toward motivational talks and religious self-improvement instead of preaching Christ crucified. We also challenge the common habit of ranking sin into “minor” and “major” categories that quietly teaches God has wiggle room, and we explain why the good news only makes sense when the bad news is faced honestly. From there we lean into the heart of Romans: Salvation by faith in Jesus Christ, not mere agreement that Jesus existed, not a sentimental Christmas story, and certainly not universal Salvation. We also begin a pointed look at how different traditions define Salvation and authority, and why we insist on letting Scripture set the terms rather than church systems or popular expectations. If you care about clear Bible teaching, the meaning of Salvation, and the courage to speak about the cross without apology, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review.

3. kesä 202635 min
jakson Bible Study Genesis Part 26-A Mist Watered the Earth kansikuva

Bible Study Genesis Part 26-A Mist Watered the Earth

Genesis 2 sounds simple until you actually slow down and let the words land. We read the passage straight, then wrestle with what it implies: the repeated name “Lord God” (Jehovah Elohim), a garden called Eden, and a Creator who prepares a home for humanity before we ever take our first breath. If the word "Eden" really carries the sense of pleasure and “jubilant living,” it reframes the ache so many of us feel. Life in the wilderness is not what we were made for, and that tension becomes a signpost pointing back to God’s design and God’s rescue.  We also talk plainly about the modern reflex to treat Genesis like a fairy tale. Cultural groupthink does not usually argue with Scripture line by line, it just trains us to feel embarrassed for believing it. I share why I still say, without qualification, that I believe Genesis and I believe the Bible, even when I do not understand every detail and even when doubt tries to grind me down. Faith is not the absence of questions; it is choosing to trust God’s character and keep walking.  Then we zoom in on a single controversial detail: “mist.” Some interpreters want to change it to “streams” to make the text sound more acceptable to scientific sensibilities. We push back hard on that and make a case for careful study followed by honest submission to what the text actually says. Subscribe for the rest of this Genesis series, share this with a friend who struggles with doubt, and leave a review.

2. kesä 202633 min
jakson Bible Study Romans Part 25-I Am Not Ashamed kansikuva

Bible Study Romans Part 25-I Am Not Ashamed

Feeling pressured to keep your faith quiet? Romans 1 refuses to let the Gospel shrink into a private opinion. We walk through Paul’s words to the church in Rome and slow down on two phrases that hit hard: “I am debtor” and “I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ.” Instead of treating Christian responsibility as dark, unpleasant toil, we argue that Paul’s urgency flows from grace and love, echoing the line, “the love of Christ constraineth us.”  Along the way, we unpack striking Biblical imagery like the goad and “kicking against the pricks” to show what spiritual resistance does to the soul. Then we move into Romans 1:16-17, where the Gospel is described as the power of God unto Salvation and where core Christian doctrine begins to sharpen. We also address why Romans has shaped church history, fueling the conviction that the authority of Scripture outranks church preference when it comes to Salvation, righteousness by faith, and truth.  Finally, we look at why Paul chose the word "ashamed" at all, including the literary device of litotes and the real social risk of following Christ in the first century. The same dynamics show up today whenever the Gospel collides with culture, pride, and “fluid” ideas of truth. Listen, share this with someone who feels isolated for what they believe, and if this study helps you, subscribe and leave a review so more people can find it.

1. kesä 202636 min