The Bible in Small Steps

Hebrews 10 - The Priest Who Sat Down

23 min · 18 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Hebrews 10 - The Priest Who Sat Down

Descripción

We’ve spent nine chapters watching the author of Hebrews build a case: Jesus is superior to the angels, to Moses, to the temple, to the priesthood, to the entire sacrificial system. Chapter 10 finally tells us what that superiority actually does — not in the abstract, but for real people who are tired, who feel guilty, who are wondering whether the cost of following Jesus is too high. The Shadow and the Substance (Hebrews 10:1–4) The law was only a shadow of the good things that are coming. The Greek word skia — shadow — is the key. A shadow has the right shape. It tells you something solid is nearby. But you cannot be forgiven by a shadow. The entire temple system — priests, altar, animals, annual rhythms — was ordained and meaningful, but it was always pointing forward. The proof? If it had worked, it would have stopped. The Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur) was built-in evidence that last year’s sacrifice didn’t finish the job. And Hebrews 10:4 makes the point plainly: it is impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sin. Not difficult. Not rare. Impossible. The Body Prepared: Psalm 40 and the Incarnation (10:5–10) The author reaches back into Psalm 40 and places these words in Jesus’ mouth at the moment of incarnation: “Here I am, I have come to do your will.” He’s quoting the Septuagint, the Greek translation of the Old Testament, where Psalm 40’s “ears you have opened for me” becomes “a body you have prepared for me” — a shift from the part to the whole. The Son enters the world with a body prepared to do what animal sacrifice never could. And verse 10 delivers one of the greatest sentences in the New Testament: We have been made holy through the sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ once and for all. One act. Unrepeatable. Final. Our standing before God is not a work in progress — it’s a status already given. The Priest Who Sat Down (10:11–14) Day after day, the temple priest stood and offered sacrifices. There were no chairs in the sanctuary — not because furniture was forgotten, but because the work was never done. When Christ made His one offering, He sat down at the right hand of God. He sat down. The posture says everything. His work is finished. Verse 14 holds two things together: we are being made holy (present tense, ongoing growth in grace) and we have been made perfect forever (completed, final, irreversible). We are simultaneously a work in progress and a finished work. The growth doesn’t earn our standing. The standing was settled. Three “Let Us” Commands: Drawing Near (10:19–25) Doctrine becomes action. Because the curtain is gone, because we have confidence — parresia in Greek, meaning boldness, the right to approach without fear — the author gives three commands. Draw near to God with full assurance. Hold fast to the hope we profess, not on our own strength, but because God is faithful. And stir one another up to love and good works — don’t neglect meeting together. People were drifting away slowly. The author says: show up, encourage each other, and do it more urgently as the Day approaches. Live as if Christ died yesterday, rose today, and is coming back tomorrow. The Severe Warning (10:26–31) If we deliberately keep on sinning after receiving the knowledge of the truth, no sacrifice remains. The Greek word is willfully — ongoing, with full knowledge. This is not the believer who stumbles, repents, and stumbles again. Every believer does that. This is someone who has seen the truth, believes it is real, and then consciously, deliberately, repeatedly walks away anyway, treating Christ’s sacrifice as worthless. Under Moses, certain offenses brought death. What then does it mean to trample the Son of God underfoot? This corrects cheap grace — the idea that because Christ has done everything, it doesn’t matter how we live. It matters enormously. The Beautiful Encouragement That Follows (10:32–39) Immediately after the warning, the author says: remember. Remember the early days. You endured public shame. You stood alongside people who went to prison. You had property taken from you and you accepted it with joy because you knew you had something better. You already proved you had faith. Don’t throw it away when the finish line is in sight. You need endurance — active, determined perseverance. And the chapter ends with one of the most tender lines in the whole letter: “We are not of those who shrink back and are destroyed, but of those who have faith and are saved.” Not you — we. The author puts himself in this company. And I hope you know you’re in it too. Meditate | Pray | Share Meditate: Sit with the image of the priest who sat down. He offered one sacrifice — His own body — and then He sat. The work is done. Your record is settled. The curtain is gone. You have been standing before God straining to prove you’re enough. You can sit down too. Rest in the finished work of the one who sat down for you. Pray: Lord, I spend so much of my life standing, straining, performing — hoping I did enough, hoping I could do more. In trying to add to what You have done, I’ve been treating Your once-for-all sacrifice as somehow insufficient. Forgive me. Let me draw near with full assurance. Show me someone who needs encouragement to keep going, and give me the words to help them toward You. Share: Think of someone who’s tired. Tired of trying to be good enough. Tired of guilt they can’t seem to put down. Tired of religious effort that never gives them peace. Tell them about the priest who sat down. You don’t need a sermon — just this: there was a sacrifice made once, for all, forever, and it’s enough. Your standing before God doesn’t rest on how well you’re doing this week. It rests on what Christ has already done. 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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episode James 3- The Tongue, the Heart, and the Wisdom from Above artwork

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. 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.

Ayer28 min
episode James 2 — Can Faith Be Seen on the Outside? artwork

James 2 — Can Faith Be Seen on the Outside?

If James 1 felt direct, chapter 2 turns up the heat. Two of the most contested passages in the New Testament are right here — favoritism and the relationship between faith and works — and James handles both with a bluntness that has unsettled readers for centuries. Martin Luther famously wanted this chapter kept out of the canon. It's in there. And it's worth sitting with. The Favoritism Problem James opens with a scene that's almost painfully recognizable. A man in fine clothes with a gold ring (a visible marker of the Roman equestrian class) walks into the gathering. A poor man in shabby clothing follows. The wealthy man gets the honored seat. The poor man is pointed to the floor or the back of the room. James names what's happening with precision: you're making distinctions. You're acting as judges with evil thoughts. You're sorting people by the world's values and recreating the world's hierarchy inside the community of God. The Royal Law and the Logic of the Whole The command to love your neighbor as yourself is called the royal law — the law of the King. And James makes a sharp move: if you show partiality, you're not partially breaking the law. You're transgressing against the Lawgiver. The law isn't a menu you can pick from. It comes from one source. Violating any part of it is standing against the one who gave it. Mercy Triumphs Over Judgment The people who receive mercy from God are expected to become people who extend mercy. The people who are forgiven are expected to forgive. This isn't a threat — it's a description of what genuine transformation produces. Mercy doesn't erase justice. It flows from people who understand what they've been given. Faith Without Works Is Dead James constructs a concrete scene: someone in your community lacks food and clothing. You say, "Go in peace, be warm and filled." And then do nothing. James asks: what good is that? His answer is devastating. Faith that produces no action isn't weak faith or young faith. The word he uses is nekra — the same word used for a corpse. Something that once had life, or maybe never did. This is not a contradiction of Paul. Paul is fighting the idea that people can earn salvation through religious performance. James is fighting a different error — the idea that you can claim genuine faith while showing zero evidence of transformation. Paul says we're not saved by works. James says real faith does works. They're completing each other, not competing. Even the Demons Believe If intellectual agreement with theological facts were enough, the demons would qualify. They know exactly who God is. They recognized Jesus during his ministry. Their knowledge is accurate. But it produces fear and hostility, not love, surrender, or obedience. That's the point: you can have completely correct theology and be utterly unchanged by it. Two Witnesses: Abraham and Rahab James pairs two examples that couldn't be more different. Abraham — the patriarch, the founding figure of the covenant, male, respected, heir of every promise. And Rahab — a Canaanite woman, a prostitute, a Gentile from an enemy city. Both heard something about God. Both trusted enough to act at genuine personal risk. Abraham climbed the mountain. Rahab put the scarlet cord in the window. Neither knew exactly how it was going to end. Both are counted as examples of living faith. Genuine faith doesn't require the right background, gender, ethnicity, or social standing. It requires movement. 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.

29 de may de 202629 min
episode James 1 - What Faith Looks Like When Things Get Hard artwork

James 1 - What Faith Looks Like When Things Get Hard

James doesn't ease in. By the second verse of chapter one, he's already telling a community under real pressure to count their trials as joy. Not ignore them. Not pretend they're fine. Count them as joy. It's a jarring opening — and a carefully constructed one. Trials, Steadfastness, and the Word James Uses James opens by addressing scattered, pressured believers with a word that sounds almost impossible: joy. But he's specific about what he means. Hardship isn't wasted. It produces steadfastness — the Greek is hupomone, the ability to remain stable under weight without collapsing. Not white-knuckled endurance, but holding your ground with purpose. The goal is maturity, wholeness, a faith that has been allowed to ripen all the way through. Asking for Wisdom Without Being Double-Minded James pivots immediately to wisdom — and he's not talking about intellectual knowledge or theological expertise. He means practical ability to live rightly. Ask God for it, he says. God gives generously without making you feel foolish for not having it. The warning is about the double-minded person: the Greek is dipsuchos — literally "two souls." Someone holding onto God with one hand and gripping the world with the other. That person is like a wave driven by the wind — moved by whatever is loudest in the moment, with no stable orientation. Rich and Poor: Two Kinds of Pressure James addresses both the person of low social standing and the person of wealth. The poor believer is told to find dignity in who they are before God. The wealthy person is told to recognize their own smallness — not because wealth is evil, but because it's temporary. Like a flower in a heat wave. This early warning about wealth sets the tone for the entire letter. Temptation: Who's Responsible When you're tempted, don't say God is testing you. God does not tempt with evil. Temptation comes from inside — from desires that are entertained, then acted on, then habituated, then destructive. The sequence James describes is like watching a seed grow into something lethal. The contrast is deliberate: temptation comes from us. Good gifts come from God, the Father of lights, who does not vary or cast shadows. Slow to Speak, Slow to Anger One of the most quotable and hardest-to-practice verses in the whole letter. Human anger, even when directed at genuine injustice, does not produce God's righteousness. James is speaking directly into a culture that rewarded outrage and interruption — and into ours. The Mirror The heart of the first chapter: be a doer of the word, not just a hearer. James uses the image of a person who looks in a mirror, sees themselves clearly, and immediately walks away and forgets what they saw. The word of God works like that mirror. It shows you exactly where you are. The question is whether you linger long enough for it to change anything. The "perfect law of liberty" — James's name for it — doesn't bind. When received honestly, it frees. What Genuine Religion Actually Looks Like James names three marks: a tongue that is governed, care for orphans and widows, and keeping oneself unstained by the world's values. Not dramatic, not impressive. Practical, visible, and costly. 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.

27 de may de 202640 min
episode Letter of James - Faith That Has to Show Up artwork

Letter of James - Faith That Has to Show Up

What if the most spiritual thing you could do today isn't a ritual, a reading plan, or a theological position — but something as ordinary as how you treat the person standing in front of you? That's the provocation that opens the letter of James, and it's what we're starting today. Who Was James? The letter opens simply: "James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ." No title, no credentials — just a name and a posture. Most conservative scholars identify him as Jesus' brother: the same James who didn't believe in Jesus during his earthly ministry, who appears in the Gospels with his brothers trying to pull Jesus away from the crowds, and who Paul tells us was visited personally by the risen Christ (1 Corinthians 15:7). That encounter changed everything. James became the leading figure of the Jerusalem church, known in early tradition as "James the Just" — a man whose knees were calloused from prayer. Who Was He Writing To? James addresses "the twelve tribes in the dispersion" — Jewish Christians scattered across the Greco-Roman world, most of them forced out of Jerusalem by the persecution that followed the stoning of Stephen. These were not comfortable, settled believers. They were poor, pressured, displaced, and uncertain. That context explains everything about why this letter sounds the way it does. Why James Sounds the Way It Does James has edges. It uses language that sometimes feels confrontational. That's not accident — it reflects the Jewish wisdom tradition James was steeped in, and the fact that he had watched what happened when faith stayed in people's heads and never reached their hands or their wallets. He had seen wealth distort the church. He had watched speech tear communities apart. He loved these people too much to leave them comfortable. The Major Themes James covers ground that will feel immediately relevant: how to endure trials without losing faith, how to ask God for wisdom without being double-minded, the danger of showing favoritism toward the wealthy, the destructive power of uncontrolled speech, and the relationship between faith and works. Each theme connects to real life — not theology for its own sake, but formation that shows up in actual behavior. Faith and Works: The Most Debated Passage Paul says we're saved by faith, not works. James says faith without works is dead. These aren't contradictions — they're two sides of the same truth. Paul is fighting the idea that people can earn salvation through religious performance. James is fighting the idea that someone can claim faith while showing zero evidence of transformation. Real faith produces movement. This letter is a mirror. It's most useful when you stand in front of it long enough to see what it's actually showing you — and what James is asking you to do about it. 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.

26 de may de 202623 min
episode Hebrews 13 - How to Live What You Believe artwork

Hebrews 13 - How to Live What You Believe

Twelve chapters of careful argument about who Jesus is — and then this. The final chapter of Hebrews pivots from theology to practice with a directness that feels almost startling: now that you know who Christ is, here's what that should look like in your actual life. This is one of my favorite moments in any letter. Keep Loving Each Other The writer opens simply: let brotherly love continue. The Greek word is philadelphia — warm, family-like, genuine care for people who belong together. He's not introducing something new. He's saying don't let what you already have erode under pressure. And given what we've seen in earlier chapters — persecution, loss of social standing, financial strain — that's a real and practical concern. Hospitality to Strangers Loving the stranger was not casual in the ancient world. Travel was dangerous, inns were unreliable or unsafe, and offering someone shelter meant genuine risk and generosity. The reference to welcoming angels unaware points back to Genesis 18 and Abraham at the Oaks of Mamre — where he welcomed three visitors who turned out to be divine messengers. Every stranger has value that isn't always visible. Remembering Those in Prison Many early believers had been imprisoned for their faith. The writer asks the community to remember them — not as a distant charitable impulse, but with genuine empathy, because they likely knew these people personally. Some may have been imprisoned themselves. Marriage, Money, and What You're Trusting The chapter addresses sexual faithfulness in marriage and the danger of loving money — and connects them in a way I find striking. Fear and money are linked. When the furnace breaks or a financial threat appears, we feel secure if we have the resources to handle it. That's not wrong on its face, but if a paycheck is where our security actually lives, the heart is divided. The writer quotes Psalm 118:6 — "The Lord is my helper; I will not fear what man can do to me" — as the alternative anchor. Jesus Christ: The Same Yesterday, Today, and Forever This verse arrives after a call to remember faithful leaders who have died. The writer draws a careful distinction: honor those leaders, imitate their faith — but they're not the foundation. Christ is. And unlike everything else, he does not drift. Not more gracious on good days, not harsher on hard ones. The same in the wilderness of Israel. The same at the right hand of the Father. The same when you bring your prayers to him right now. Going Outside the Camp One of the most striking invitations in this entire letter: go outside the camp and bear the reproach he endured. Jesus was executed outside the city gates — cast out, shamed, treated as a criminal. The writer says: go identify with him there. Give up the safety of social approval. Choose faithfulness over the comfort of belonging to what's respectable. It may cost something temporary. What it points toward is permanent. The New Sacrifice Under this new covenant, the sacrifice is no longer bulls and blood. It's a life of worship, generosity, and faithfulness — not to earn salvation, but because we want to be pleasing to God, and because he is actively at work in us to produce exactly that. This is what it looks like to live what you believe. And that, really, is what the entire book of Hebrews has been building toward. 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.

25 de may de 202650 min