Series Conclusion (WSC 1-107)
/The Westminster Shorter Catechism addresses mankind as God’s creation, explaining his created purpose and how that was jeopardized by the fall of Adam and restored in Christ.
The Westminster Shorter Catechism addresses mankind as God’s creation, explaining his created purpose and how that was jeopardized by the fall of Adam and restored in Christ.
We conclude our thoughts on the Lord’s Prayer with a statement of praise and confidence in the Lord alone.
God allows temptation, never more than we can handle and always to teach us to depend upon him more, but calls us to pray that we would be able to avoid it all together.
Sins incur a (moral) debt and when Christ pays off our debts, he also acquires the debts owed to us—requiring that we trust him to either forgive or collect on those debts.
Sins incur a (moral) debt and when Christ pays off our debts, he also acquires the debts owed to us—requiring that we trust him to either forgive or collect on those debts.
We are to pray that God would supply all our needs—both in this world and the world to come—knowing that if he cares for our eternal needs, he will most certainly care for our temporary ones.
To pray for our daily bread looks back to God’s supernatural provision of manna in the wilderness and cannot be understood without remembering the two key elements of that story—the daily provision of bread for five days and the double portion on the sixth.
To pray for God’s will to be done is to ask that God would morally transform his people into those who obey his commands.
To pray that God’s kingdom would come is to pray that God’s church would grow to the point of perfect fullness, at which point Satan’s kingdom will be completely destroyed.
To pray that God’s kingdom would come is to pray that God’s church grow to the point of perfect fullness, at which point Satan’s kingdom will be completely destroyed.
The preface to the Lord’s Prayer establishes the character of prayers and being a loving, yet respectful, interaction between the God of heaven and his children.
While the whole Bible teaches us how to pray because it teaches us what is important to God, we also have specific instructions from Jesus that teach us how to pray.
Prayer must flow out of a humble heart which evidences itself in confession of sin and gratitude for all that God freely gives.
Prayer is not about changing or controlling God—prayer is the art of learning to think God’s thoughts after him. the discipline of naming his desires back to him, and the blessing of learning to delight in what delights him.
By faith, when we eat the Lord’s Supper, we receive the benefits of what Christ accomplished in his life, death and resurrection.
By faith, when we eat the Lord’s Supper, we receive the benefits of what Christ accomplished in his life, death and resurrection.
By faith, when we eat the Lord’s Supper, we receive the benefits of what Christ accomplished in his life, death and resurrection.
In the Lord’s Supper, the body and blood of Jesus are pictured for us, but in a way so as to emphasize, not what he looked like, but what he did with that body and blood—namely die for us.
Baptism marks the recipient out as being a part of the church and, therefore, belongs to all who have a right to the title “holy.”
Baptism, as a sign of the new covenant, represents the washing away of sins through the shedding of blood, comforting those who respond in faith and condemning those who respond in disbelief.
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