Jesus In All Of The Bible

We believe the only path to transformative Bible engagement is to see Jesus and his gospel wherever you are in the story. Through this podcast we will do just that. In just a few minutes, each episode will look at what is happening in the text and how it points to Jesus.

Religion & Spirituality
Christianity
151
Song of Songs 5:2-6:3: Where Is God?
This Bible study devotional covers Song of Songs chapters 5:2-6:3. In this passage, we read about the Bride’s defense of her groom when he is, once again, absent. In the midst of her search for him, she clings to the promises of his love and the beauty of his character. As always, we are committed to showing you how to see the good news of the Gospel in every passage of Scripture. In Song of Songs 5:2-6:3, we see that Jesus gives us unbreakable promises to cling to even when God feels far. We can trust the promises of our groom more than we need to trust our feelings of doubt and fear.
4 min
152
Song of Songs 3-5:1: I Looked But Did Not Find
This Bible study devotional covers Song of Songs chapters 3-5:1. In this passage, we read about the Bride’s search for her lost husband along with the beautiful description of their wedding day. As always, we are committed to showing you how to see the good news of the Gospel in every passage of Scripture. In Song of Songs 3-5:1, we see that Jesus is the groom who comes to us in our absence and, through his blood, makes us perfect and spotless like a bride at her wedding.
3 min
153
Song of Songs 1:7-2:17: I Am My Beloved's
This Bible study devotional covers Song of Songs 1:7-2:17. In this passage, we read about the Bride’s warning to the Daughters of Jerusalem not to awaken love until its proper time. As always, we are committed to showing you how to see the good news of the Gospel in every passage of Scripture. In Song of Songs 1:7-2:17, we see that Jesus, at the proper time, will awaken his love on earth, when he returns and makes all of creation a new and perfect Garden of Eden.
1 min
154
Song of Songs 1:1-6: The Bride and Her King
This Bible study devotional covers Song of Songs 1:1-1:6. In this passage, we read about the Bride’s opening confession of love for her groom. Her words conflate the idea of her husband’s presence with that of God’s presence in the temple. As always, we are committed to showing you how to see the good news of the Gospel in every passage of Scripture. In Song of Songs 1:1-1:6, we see that Jesus is the groom who is also our God. He has loved us better than any earthly spouse by laying his life down for us on the cross.
4 min
155
Ecclesiastes 12: Is Everything Meaningless?
This Bible study devotional covers Ecclesiastes 12. In this passage, the Preacher offers his concluding thoughts, and a father figure tells his son how to process what he has read in Ecclesiastes. As always, we are committed to showing you how to see the good news of the Gospel in every passage of Scripture. In Ecclesiastes 12, we see the great hope of Ecclesiastes is God’s coming judgment. One day, God will make low the proud and exalt the humble. This day of hope comes to us in Jesus.
4 min
156
Ecclesiastes 6:10-11:10: The Cursed World
This Bible study devotional covers Ecclesiastes 6:10-11:10. In this passage, the Preacher talks about life after God’s curse. In it, there are only two certainties: death and our inability to know the future. As always, we are committed to showing you how to see the good news of the Gospel in every passage of Scripture. In Ecclesiastes 6:10-11:10, we see that the wise focus on death. As we focus on Jesus’ death, we receive the certainty the Preacher could never achieve - we know with certainty where we will go after we die.
4 min
157
Ecclesiastes 3:16-6:11: To Dust We Will Return
This Bible study devotional covers Ecclesiastes 3:16-6:11. In this passage, the Preacher tells us that the futility and evil of the world is a test and that we all will eventually return to the dust we were made from. As always, we are committed to showing you how to see the good news of the Gospel in every passage of Scripture. In Ecclesiastes 3:16-6:11, we see that Jesus gives us wisdom to pass the test of futility and shows us that trusting in him means we will rise from the dust like he rose from the grave.
4 min
158
Ecclesiastes 2-3:15: Eat, Drink and Find Enjoym...
This Bible study devotional covers Ecclesiastes 2:3-15. In this passage, we read about the Preacher’s experiment with life’s pleasures, God’s control over time, and the Preacher’s wisdom in a world of unmet expectations. As always, we are committed to showing you how to see the good news of the Gospel in every passage of Scripture. In Ecclesiastes 2-3:15, we see the life that escapes futility and experiences joy is a life that begins and ends in God’s eternal Word. And that Word becomes flesh to us in Jesus.
5 min
159
Ecclesiastes 1: Vanity of Vanity
This Bible study devotional covers Ecclesiastes 1. In this passage, the Preacher’s conclusion about life is simple: nothing in this life is as solid as we think. Like smoke, the harder we try to grip it, the quicker it slips away. As always, we are committed to showing you how to see the good news of the Gospel in every passage of Scripture. In Ecclesiastes 1, we see that God becomes solid in a world of smoke. Jesus offers us a way out of the meaninglessness we experience.
4 min
160
Job 42: Job Repents
This Bible study devotional covers Job 42. After God’s speech, Job is humbled. He admits that his accusations against God were made without enough knowledge or understanding. Job is ashamed of the way he blamed God and repents. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. Job 42 invites us to lay down our pride and humble ourselves before God’s wisdom and love. It invites us to trust that God takes pride in us, even when we’re foolish. And to trust that God loves to give good gifts to his children, the most precious of which was his son, Jesus.
4 min
161
Job 40:15-41: Behemoth and Leviathan
his Bible study devotional covers Job 40:15-41. God continues to interrogate Job by calling him to study two creatures, Behemoth and Leviathan. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. In Job 40:15-41, we see that no suffering is in God’s blind spot. There are no chaotic monsters more powerful than him. Jesus proves that uncontrolled chaos can’t be the reason why we suffer because God has chaos on a leash.
4 min
162
Job 38-40: God Speaks from the Storm
This Bible study devotional covers Job 38-40:14. God finally speaks to Job in an angry storm. At first, God interrogates Job. He then invites Job to act like God for a moment. Job has accused him of injustice and managing his universe incorrectly, so God tells him to do a better job. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. In Job 38-40:14 we see that when Job builds a world according to his ideas of justice, Jesus’ self-sacrificial love would not be possible. In Job’s world of justice, we would only ever get only what we deserve. But when we trust God and his wise world we will always experience love we don’t deserve.
4 min
163
Job 32-37: Young and Angry Elihu
This Bible study devotional covers Job 32-37. Out of nowhere, Elihu, an angry young man, speaks up. He accuses Job of self-righteousness at the expense of God’s justice. Elihu is the only character in the book of Job who attempts to defend God’s justice in light of Job’s innocent suffering. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. In Job 32-27, we see that when it comes to suffering explanations are insufficient, blaming God is a dead end, and more than anything, innocent sufferers need God to speak to them in their pain. And God does more than speak, he comes. God’s answer to suffering is to become human in the person of Jesus.
4 min
164
Job 29-31: Job's Ultimatum
This Bible study devotional covers Job 29-31. Job is done. He wants God to either affirm his innocence or kill him as a guilty man. So, Job signs his name on an oath of innocence and presents it to God. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. Job 29-31 wants us to trust God more than it tries to satisfy our deep desire for an answer to our suffering. And while that’s frustrating, it’s also our good news because it reveals that our circumstances are not the measure of God’s love for us; Jesus is.
4 min
165
Job 28: The Song of Wisdom
This Bible study devotional covers Job 28. Job and his friends are looking for a coherent way to understand God’s justice, our suffering, and our innocence. In short, they’re looking for wisdom. That quest for wisdom is made explicit with a song about the source of wisdom. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. In Job 28, since a coherent answer to our suffering can’t be found on the earth, God’s wisdom descends to the earth in the person of Jesus. In him, we begin to understand how innocence, suffering, and justice come together.
4 min
166
Job 22-27: Closing Arguments
This Bible study devotional covers Job 22-27. In this passage, Job’s friends give their final argument for Job’s guilt. Job then calls his friends his enemies and pronounces a long curse, predicting they will suffer like him. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. In Job 22-27, we see that Jesus, like Job, refuses to repent in the face of false accusations. When Jesus refuses to recant in his suffering, he breaks the accusations of his enemies.
4 min
167
Job 18-21: I Know My Redeemer Lives
This Bible study devotional covers Job 18-21. In this passage, Job’s friends are growing increasingly frustrated with Job. And Job intensifies his language against God and his cries for someone to represent him before God. Job wants someone to prove that it’s possible to be both innocent and still suffer. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. In Job 18-21, we see that when our minds, our world, and our friends blame us for our innocent suffering, we need an advocate to remind us of our innocence. We need a redeemer to salvage our reputation, even if it’s just from a voice in our head. And that Redeemer is Jesus.
4 min
168
Job 15-17: Job's Reputation
This Bible study devotional covers Job 15-17. While Job’s friends continue to talk about getting back God’s rewards, Job insists that all he wants is a cleared name and a restored reputation. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. In Job 15-17, we see that unlike Job’s friends, and unlike the Accuser, Jesus did not come to blame and accuse us but to nullify every condemnation, disarm the Accuser’s power and triumph over every false judgment on the cross.
3 min
169
Job 10-14: Job and Zophar
This Bible study devotional covers Job 10-14. In this passage all of Job’s friends have now argued that Job is guilty and that his suffering is deserved. But Job knows he’s innocent. So instead of blaming himself, Job begins to question God’s fairness even while he hopes for their relationship to be restored. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. In Job 10-14 we see that in Jesus, Job’s hopes for relationship come true. Not only does Jesus restore our relationship with God and call us innocent, we become intimately one with God as his Holy Spirit lives in us (John 17:21). Just as Job insisted against the accusations of Zophar, the Holy Spirit insists that our suffering can’t be a punishment for our sin because that punishment has been nailed to the cross.
4 min
170
Job 7-9: Job and Bildad
This Bible study devotional covers Job 7-9. In this passage Bildad implies that Job is guilty of rejecting God and that explains why he’s suffering. But Job maintains his innocence even while he despairs that God would listen to him. So Job hopes for an arbiter, an attorney to take his case to God. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. In Job 7-9 we see that Jesus is the attorney who can give both innocent Job his day in court, but guilty people like us too!
3 min
171
Job 3-6: Job and Eliphaz
This Bible study devotional covers Job 3-6. In this passage Job wishes he had never been born. And Eliphaz, his friend, tries to explain that Job’s suffering is his fault. Suffering doesn’t happen to innocent people. He must have done something wrong. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. Job 3-6 puts our ideas about good and bad, reward and suffering on trial. God rules the universe and in Jesus he disarms philosophies that blame the victim, and shames them for the shame they cause.
4 min
172
Job 1-2: God On Trial
This Bible study devotional covers Job 1-2. In this passage we’re introduced to an innocent man named Job and a character called “the Accuser.” He accuses Job of only serving God to get his blessings, and he accuses God of mismanaging his universe. So God allows the Accuser to put himself on trial in the suffering of Job. As always, we are committed to showing you how Jesus fulfills these specific passages. In Job 1-3 we see that God is not transactional. And Jesus proves that true. He died while we were still sinners. Our good news is that God does not rule his universe according to strict transactions. He rules with lavish, loving, and self-giving wisdom.
4 min
173
Proverbs 31: The Worthy Woman
This Bible study devotional covers Proverbs 31. In this passage we read wisdom from King Lemuel’s mother about noble kings and worthy women. As always, we are committed to showing you how to see the good news of the Gospel in every passage of Scripture. In Proverbs 31 we see a picture of Jesus’ love for his church. Jesus, our noble king loves and pursues his valiant wife, the church.
4 min
174
Proverbs 30: Agur's Wisdom
This Bible study devotional covers Proverbs chapter 30. In this passage we read the humble wisdom of Agur. As always, we are committed to showing you how to see the good news of the Gospel in every passage of Scripture. In Proverbs 30 we see that the weakness of humility is God’s greatest strength. Jesus crucifixion is humble and weak but it is more powerful than all man’s philosophies and power.
4 min
175
Proverbs 26-29: The Power of Words
This Bible study devotional covers Proverbs chapters 26-29. In this passage, we will discuss the common theme: the power of words. As always, we are committed to showing you how to see the good news of the Gospel in every passage of Scripture. In Proverbs 26-29 we see that Jesus’ words carry power because he is the very Word of God come. When he speaks he gives us life.
4 min