The Day of Atonement was taught in the Old Testament. Is it relevant for Christians? If so, when is it? Did any of the goats involved with the High Priest of Israel represent Jesus? If Jesus is the Passover lamb, why might God have had a sacrifice at the Day of Atonement? What does afflicting of the soul have to do with fasting?
Gap Theory: Doctrine or Modern Heresy?
Must the Earth be less than 6000 years old? Was there a gap of time between Genesis 1:1 and Genesis 1:2? Was the Earth created without form and void? What are tohu and bohu? What about dinosaurs and hominids? Does the second chapter of Genesis support the idea that the Earth was completed, hence indicating that there was a time it was not? Was the 'gap theory' produced to deal with Darwinism? Does the Masoretic Old Testament provide direct support for some type of a gap? Did any ancient Jewish writers support a re-creation? Did any second century Church of God leaders teach any part of the gap theory? Did any Greco-Roman-Catholic saints teach the idea of a re-creation?
Trumpets and Being Born Again
The Feast of Trumpets is considered to be the fourth out of seven annual Holy Days. It is discussed as a memorial for the blowing of trumpets in the Book of Leviticus. Does this have anything to do with Christians today? Are Christians begotten or born again after conversion? What does the Bible teach? If Christians are not born again upon conversion, are they to be born again at the seventh trumpet? What happens with the other trumpets?
Christians ... Strangers and Pilgrims?
Acts 26-28: Shipwreck, the Kingdom of God, & Amen
This is the ninth and final part of a nine-part sermon series covering the entire Book of Acts. In this sermon, Paul begins by addressing King Agrippa and almost persuades him to become a Christian. Paul and his companions are put on a ship to ultimately take him to Rome. Paul warns correctly that the ship would face losses, but incorrectly that there would be a loss of life. After weeks at sea, the ship runs ground near Malta. The natives are nice to Paul, but expect him to die when a viper bites him.
Acts 23-25: Vows, Secrets, Cults, & Criticisms
This is the eighth part of a nine-part sermon series covering the entire Book of Acts. In this sermon, Paul begins by defending himself against accusations in Jerusalem. He travels under a massive armed guard to Caesarea as over forty Jews vowed not to eat nor drink until they killed him. Though not guilty of any Roman crime, Paul is locked up for years. The Jews finally hire a smooth talking legal advocate against Paul and says Paul is part of a sect (cult in the NLT) called the Nazarenes. Dr. Thiel explains what the Nazarenes taught and explained that on the nature of the Godhead, this does not agree with what is called Messianic Judaism.
Acts 20-22: James, Sunday, and Prejudice
This is the seventh part of a nine-part sermon series covering the entire Book of Acts. In this sermon, Paul's travels, not listening to God's Holy Spirit, seeing James, and his arrest in Jerusalem are covered. A discussion of the Holy Days, Sabbath, and Sunday is included. Also, Jewish and anti-Jewish prejudice is covered. The topics of circumcision and Paul's legal use of his dual citizenship are also discussed.
Acts 17-19: Travels, Anointed Cloths, & the Gospel of the Kingdom
This is the sixth part of a multi-part sermon series intended to cover the entire Book of Acts. In this sermon missions involving travels, proclamation success, and the persecution are covered. Also, the topic of anointed cloths is discussed. Aspects of the gospel of the Kingdom of God were covered. Techniques Paul and Apollos used to prove Jesus was the Messiah were mentioned as was the faithfulness of the Bereans to use scripture.
Acts 13-16: Prophets, Poisoning, and Proclamation
This is the fifth part of a multi-part sermon series intended to cover the entire Book of Acts. In this sermon missions involving prophets (including Silas and Judas), travels, proclamation success, and the meeting on circumcision in Acts are discussed. Miracles, difficulties, persecutions, Paul's stoning, poisoning, oppositions, and Gentiles are also covered.
Acts 10-12: Visions, Dreams, and Gentiles
This is the fourth part of a multi-part sermon series intended to cover the entire Book of Acts. In this sermon Peter's vision, Cornelius' message from an angel, clean and unclean meats, the martyrdom of James, the jailing and release of Peter, Herod's death, the famine in Judea, dreams, past and coming persecution. Many did not want to accept Peter's vision in the trance or the Gentile's angels.