Doug Maxwell
43.5K posts

Doug Maxwell
@DougMaxwell1
Schooling: Bachelor’s University of Arizona, Emmanuel Christian Seminary, MS Grand Canyon University Ed: Ps 25:4-5, Ps 20, 27, 34 Rom 16:20 🐻⬇️ Arizona
Katılım Ağustos 2011
107 Takip Edilen995 Takipçiler

Woke up feeling ELITE ‼️😼
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@BillyHeym Charlie’s GOD is on the national seal, which is marked on rhe Dollar.
Can’t buy or sell without the world currency standard Dallar with the seal of approval of GOD.
27thpsalm.wordpress.com/2026/05/07/arm…

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Thankful to read Scripture without theology speak. (Words) are Strong’s Dictionary. These [words] are from original language.
Koine Greek, John 15:1-2 ~
“[I AM] the truthful (not concealing) vine (as wrap about support). My Father is the husbandman (acts as Farmer).
[Whosoever] branch that is [against] Me, [brought forth] with no fruit (not preferred), Father [removes, puts away].
[Whosoever] branch [brought forth] with fruit (preferred). He [prunes]. This (pruned) branch [brought forth] endures and is [more excellent, quality] fruit.”
Prune (καθαίρω); to cleanse. Figuratively to expiate: make atonement for sin (transgression, trespass; rebellion).
Branch (κλῆμα); a limb or shoot as if broken off. From κλάω; break, specifically bread (showbread).
Endure (ὑπομένω); stay, remain. Figuratively bear trials, persevere: take patiently, suffer, tarry behind. From μένω; to stay in relation.
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We became a child of the living God not because of our goodness, but because of His, and nothing can change that.
Watch "Grace: God’s New Lifestyle" now: intouch.org/watch
Check local listings: intouch.org/station-finder
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Children (בֵּן); relationship; anointed (declared sacred), appointed (marked to take), arrow (of Father, thunderbolt distributed into ranks), branch (a sprout, fruitful), spark (sparkle, particle of Light). From בָּנָה; (stone), builder, to obtain children, to make, to repair, to setup (establish, edify).
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Revelation 15 is best understood when read alongside Exodus. John is teaching us that what God once did in and to Egypt, he is now doing on a worldwide scale throughout history in Christ. Far from being merely a singular event in the past, the Exodus remains a pattern, a preview of how God delivers his people while simultaneously judging those who persecute them.
Revelation 15 describes a sea of glass mingled with fire, which is the heavenly counterpart of the Red Sea. When God delivered Israel from Egypt and defeated Pharaoh, his people stood by the waters and sang the song of the sea, the song of Moses. In Revelation, the saints see that God has overcome the beast. Their enemy has been judged, and so God’s people sing of his righteous ways.
They sing both the song of Moses and the song of the Lamb. The old song is now joined by a new one, for the former exodus is surpassed by the exodus accomplished by the true Passover Lamb, Jesus Christ, who brought about our final rescue by shedding his blood on our behalf.
When Revelation 15 turns to the plagues, these recall the ten plagues God leveled against Egypt. God now sends these divine judgments against a world system that persecutes his people. What he did once to the nation of Egypt, he now does in all the nations.
The tabernacle imagery in Revelation 15 also mirrors Exodus. Exodus describes the construction of the tabernacle and its being filled with the glory of God in Exodus 40. What John now sees in his vision is the heavenly tabernacle filled with the smoke of God’s glory, from which God sends forth his judgments by means of his heavenly messengers.
The fabric of Revelation 15 is woven through and through with threads from Exodus. What God did for his people in Egypt becomes the enduring pattern for understanding his works of both deliverance and judgment throughout history.
What he did locally in Egypt, he now does universally: he judges the oppressor, delivers his people, and leads them into a song of victory as we await the final revelation of his glory in the resurrection of the dead and the coming of the new creation.
____
We read Revelation 15 today in Bible in One Year.

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“Its rising is from one end of the heavens, and its circuit to the other end of them; And there is nothing hidden from its heat…. Moreover, by them Your servant is warned; in keeping them there is great reward. Who can discern his errors? Acquit me of hidden faults” (Psa 19:6, 11-12).
In one of the most celebrated psalms in the Psalter, King David looks up and listens to the unspoken words of creation, and then looks down at the scroll to hear the commandments of God’s revelation. By repeating the word “hidden,” David draws a comparison between the inescapable heat of the sun and the inescapable light of the Torah (vv. 6, 12). As he looks up at the sun and feels its heat, David begins praising God for His power. As he looks down at the scroll and sees the LORD’s perfections, he begins repenting of his imperfections and sins.
Within this extraordinary comparison between two kinds of revelation, it is important to notice the surpassing greatness of God’s spoken words over creation’s unspoken words. In the first half of this psalm, only the general name for God, “El,” is used, and that only once. In the second half, God’s personal name, YHWH, is used seven times. David also adds two more names for God at the end of the psalm: my Rock and my Redeemer.
If we long to worship God as our all powerful Creator, we must look up. If we long to know God personally as our Savior and Redeemer, we must spend time looking down, reading and meditating on the Holy Scriptures.
“For the word of God is living and active and sharper than any two-edged sword, and piercing as far as the division of soul and spirit, of both joints and marrow, and able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart. And there is no creature hidden from His sight, but all things are open and laid bare to the eyes of Him with whom we have to do” (Heb 4:12-13).

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@joshaibsabir Keep studying with Koine Greek & Hebrew word definitions of Devine expression not simple English words.
What’s in your Bible?




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Seems like the Koa Peat tides may be turning towards Tucson?!
Ezra Amacher@EzraAmacher
ESPN's mock draft notes that NBA teams have viewed Koa Peat as an "excellent candidate to return to school and improve his stock, an option that remains available to him."
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