Study in the Chapel

Bible Study Romans Part 19-Grace and Peace

26 min · 15 de may de 2026
portada del episodio Bible Study Romans Part 19-Grace and Peace

Descripción

“Grace to you and peace” can sound like just a polite greeting until you realize Paul treats it like a loaded prayer. We take Romans 1:7 slowly and ask what Paul is really wishing over ordinary Christians in Rome and what that reveals about God’s heart toward people who cannot earn their way into His favor. We dig into one of the Bible’s clearest definitions: Grace as unmerited favor. Not “God likes you because you did well,” but God’s kindness given freely, rooted in Jesus Christ. From there, we contrast Grace with the way the world runs on earned approval. If your sense of safety depends on performance, you live on a tightrope, and that pressure bleeds into how many people view Faith. To make it painfully modern, we connect the idea of earned favor to influencer culture: the constant work to stay liked, the fear of one mistake, and the exhaustion of keeping momentum when popularity is fickle. Then we return to Paul’s second word, peace, including the Jewish background of shalom, and why peace from God is categorically different than peace offered by any human being, leader, celebrity, or institution. We close with Paul’s phrase “God our Father,” exploring sonship as a privileged relationship given to those who receive Christ, and why that identity steadies us when the world mocks Christianity as limiting. If you want a deeper Bible study on Romans, Christian theology, Salvation, and what it means to live without performance pressure, this is a strong place to start. Subscribe, share this with someone who feels spiritually tired, and leave a review with the line that challenged you most.

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46 episodios

episode Bible Study Genesis Part 24-He Is A God For You artwork

Bible Study Genesis Part 24-He Is A God For You

God’s name “Jehovah” can sound like a label from a distant past, until you slow down and ask what it actually means and why Scripture repeats it thousands of times. We start in Genesis 2:4, where “Lord God” translates Jehovah Elohim, and we follow the thread the way the Bible Study was designed to be followed: word by word, name by name, meaning by meaning. We revisit Elohim first, because it frames everything. Elohim speaks to God’s strength as Creator and Sustainer, and it’s meant to steady us when life feels bigger than we are. From there we step into the sacred, debated territory of Jehovah and the tetragrammaton JHVH, why vowels were supplied later, and why so many readers treat this name with special reverence. We also explain how we handle controversial Bible topics without drifting into speculation: careful scholarship, clear claims, and room for you to do your own research. Then comes the surprising translation: Jehovah means “I Am.” The power is in how God uses it. Jehovah is paired with other words to show what God will be for His people, not just what He is in the abstract. We walk through Jehovah Jireh in the Abraham and Isaac story as the God who sees to it and provides, and we connect it to Jehovah Rophi in Exodus as the Lord who heals you personally. The takeaway is simple and demanding: this is not a distant deity. This is a personal God who relates, provides, protects, directs, and calls us to love and obey in return. If you’ve ever wondered why God’s names matter for prayer, trust, and daily life, hit play and stay with the text. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves deep Bible study, and leave a review.

Ayer31 min
episode Bible Study Romans Part 23-Fellowship artwork

Bible Study Romans Part 23-Fellowship

“Some spiritual gift” can sound mysterious, even dramatic, and people love to fill the gap with speculation. We take the opposite approach and let Romans 1:8–13 interpret itself. Walking slowly through Paul’s opening lines, we trace his gratitude, his constant prayers through Jesus Christ, and his intense desire to visit the believers in Rome. Then we tackle the big question head-on: what does Paul mean by a “spiritual gift,” and why does he connect it to the church being established or strengthened? We talk about the early church context where signs and wonders were real, while also showing why the immediate context points to something steadier and more enduring: the gift of Gospel teaching that builds durable faith. If you’ve ever felt like your faith is strong in the moment but fragile under pressure, we explain why sparse knowledge of Scripture leaves Christians vulnerable, and why clear Bible teaching is not optional for spiritual growth, Christian discipleship, or church health. We also lean into Paul’s humility and realism. He wants to strengthen the Romans, but he also expects to be encouraged by them through mutual faith. That opens up a practical conversation about fellowship, spiritual encouragement, and why believers should “feed off” one another in the best sense. Finally, we look at Paul’s hindered travel plans, how roadblocks can reflect hardship, competing obligations, or God’s timing, and why Paul’s persistence makes him a lasting model of consecrated Christian service. If this helped you read Romans 1 with clearer eyes, subscribe, share the episode with a friend who loves Bible study, and leave a review so more people can find it.

Ayer31 min
episode Bible Study Genesis Part 23-Tetragrammation artwork

Bible Study Genesis Part 23-Tetragrammation

One small detail in Genesis changes the whole tone of the Bible: the moment God is first called “the LORD God” in Genesis 2:4. We’re still early in our Genesis Bible study, but this is where the picture starts sharpening, because God isn’t only telling us what He does. He’s telling us who He is, and He does it, in part, through names. We start with a question most people overlook: why do Biblical names matter so much? From ancient naming traditions to the way Scripture uses meaning-packed names, we walk through how a name can function like a summary of a story. Moses carries an Egyptian name tied to being “drawn out” of the water. Jacob literally means “heel catcher,” and the narrative shows how that label fits his birth, his choices, and even why God eventually renames him Israel. Then we slow down at the tetragrammaton, the four-letter divine name written without vowels in Hebrew. We explain why you’ll hear both “Jehovah” and “Yahweh,” why many Jewish readers treat the name as too holy to pronounce, and why many English language Bibles signal it with LORD in all caps. If you’ve ever wondered what your Bible translation is doing behind the scenes, this will make those pages feel newly alive. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves Scripture, and leave a review so more people can find the study.

26 de may de 202628 min
episode Bible Study Romans Part 22-Prosperous Journey artwork

Bible Study Romans Part 22-Prosperous Journey

“Prosperous journey” sounds like money talk until you slow down and read Romans 1 the way Paul meant it. We’re working through Romans 1:8-11, where Paul thanks God for the believers in Rome, prays for them without ceasing, and then pleads for a clear path to finally visit them, not for sightseeing or status, but to serve and strengthen the church. Along the way, we take a hard look at how “prosperity” language gets hijacked by prosperity gospel preaching, and why that distortion turns Christian faith into a sales pitch. Then we dig into the Greek behind Paul’s request often translated “prosperous journey” (euodoo), showing how the sense is closer to a “good road,” a smoothed way, an unobstructed path for ministry. The point is practical: God is not a vending machine, and real Christian prayer is not bargaining, boasting, or demanding. We also wrestle with the phrase that some people hate to hear in a prayer: “the will of God.” Paul includes it without hesitation, reminding us that submitting our plans to God’s will is not doubt, it’s reverence and humility. If you want your prayer life and your sense of calling to be shaped by Scripture rather than hype, this study will challenge you in the best way. Subscribe for the next teaching, share this with a friend who needs clarity on “prosperity,” and leave a review.

26 de may de 202625 min
episode Bible Study Genesis Part 22-Elohim artwork

Bible Study Genesis Part 22-Elohim

Genesis has a way of surprising people who were told the Old Testament is dull. We take one “small” verse, Genesis 2:4, and treat it like it matters...because it does. When the text says “These are the generations of the heavens and the earth,” we talk through why that wording feels strange, why we shouldn’t skip it DESPITE that it feels strange, and how a simple, face-value reading can be the most faithful starting point for Bible interpretation. From there we tackle the kinds of details skeptics love to seize on, like the phrase “in the day.” We explain why that wording doesn’t contradict the six-day creation account, and why ancient idioms often carry the meaning critics pretend they don’t. Along the way, we keep setting a standard for serious Bible study: ask the hard questions, admit what you don’t know, and trust that God isn’t playing games with His Word. Then the conversation turns to the heart of the passage: for the first time Scripture uses “LORD God,” Jehovah Elohim. We unpack why God’s names matter, how God communicates with people who can’t see or hear Him in normal ways, and why Elohim is both a powerful name for the Creator and a fascinating plural form. That leads to an essential rule for Christian doctrine: Scripture interprets Scripture. When the Bible is clear there is only one God, we reject interpretations that create contradictions and consider what Elohim may reveal about God’s triune nature. If you care about Genesis, Creation, the names of God, and a practical method for reading hard passages without fear, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who avoids Genesis, and leave a review.

24 de may de 202633 min