by John Mark
Mark is the action movie of the gospels — fast-paced, raw, and straight to the point. Jesus is constantly on the move, performing Miracles and heading toward the cross. It's the shortest gospel but hits the hardest.
When your faith feels shaky and the questions won't stop
by John Mark
Mark is the action movie of the gospels — fast-paced, raw, and straight to the point. Jesus is constantly on the move, performing Miracles and heading toward the cross. It's the shortest gospel but hits the hardest.
by John
Where the other three gospels tell you what Jesus did, John tells you who Jesus IS. It opens with a statement so big it breaks your brain — 'In the beginning was the Word' — and builds from there. Seven signs. Seven 'I am' declarations. And some of the most quoted verses in the Bible, including John 3:16.
by Unknown
Hebrews is a sermon in letter form, written to Jewish believers who were thinking about going back to Judaism under pressure. The author's argument: why go back to the shadow when you have the real thing? Jesus is greater than Angels, Moses, the priesthood, the Temple, and every sacrifice ever made. Chapter 11's Faith hall of fame is legendary.
by Peter
Second Peter is an urgent warning letter. Peter (or someone writing in his name) knows his death is coming and has two things to say: watch out for false teachers who twist the truth for profit, and don't lose Faith just because Jesus hasn't returned yet. 'With the Lord a day is like a thousand years.' Patience isn't weakness — it's mercy.
by John
First John is written by an old man who's seen it all and has one message: God is love, and if you know God, you'll love others. Contains one of the most quoted verses in the Bible — 'God is love' (4:8). Some people had left the church claiming special knowledge and denying that Jesus came in the flesh. John draws clear lines: real Faith shows up in love, obedience, and believing that Jesus is fully God and fully human. No middle ground.
by Jude
Jude is short, intense, and pulls no punches. False teachers have crept into the church, twisting God's Grace into a license to do whatever they want. Jude fires off Old Testament examples of God's judgment — fallen Angels, Sodom and Gomorrah, Cain, Balaam, Korah — to show these people are playing a dangerous game. Then he ends with one of the most beautiful Benedictions in the Bible.