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22 sie 2021 · John 1:12-13 (ESV) But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God, who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God. These verses caught my eye because they talk about Christians being identified as children of God.
19 sie 2016 · Verse 11 sounds like a sad ending to a story, doesn’t it? “The world did not know Him” and “His own did not receive Him.” John’s approach seems to be: “First the bad news, then the good news.” Verse 12 begins with the little word “but”. John Phillips calls this little three-letter word a “hinge”.
In this sermon on walking with God from John 1:12–13, Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones examines the example of Enoch and shows how knowing that God is pleased with His child is of utmost importance to the assurance of salvation.
In this sermon on John 1:12–13 titled “Children of God,” Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones focuses on one of the most astounding truths in the Bible, namely, a believer’s adoption as a son or daughter of God.
2 sie 2019 · In this episode of Pray the Word on John 1:12–13, David Platt shares why we have the right to become God's children.
In this sermon on John 1:12–13, Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones explains how Moses turned his back on his old life as a prince with all its power and glory to be counted amongst the people of God. He was willing to suffer as an Israelite because he knew who he was.
9 lis 2020 · A Bold God and a Bold People Numbers 1:1–46; John 11:1–27; Psalms 1:1–6. Imagine a God so bold that He would say, “Take a census of the entire community of the children of Israel according to their clans and their ancestors’ house … from twenty years old and above, everyone in Israel who is able to go to war.