2 Corinthians 5, pt.2
Sin is a disease that defaces the image of God within us, and therefore, God becomes human to cure our disease, so that we may become like God.
2 Corinthians 5, pt.2 Read More »
Sin is a disease that defaces the image of God within us, and therefore, God becomes human to cure our disease, so that we may become like God.
2 Corinthians 5, pt.2 Read More »
Within 2 Corinthians 5, Paul uses the analogy that our present bodies are but temporary tents, whereas our eternal dwelling is a building constructed by God. Think through how this analogy is similar to that employed in John’s Prologue.
2 Corinthians 5, pt.1 Read More »
In verse 18, Paul reiterates that we must look beyond the literal and the sensible which are easily seen and comprehended but which are transient and perishable.
2 Corinthians 4, pt.2 Read More »
Within this chapter, Paul continues his analogy that only those with a veiled mind have rejected the light of Christ.
2 Corinthians 4, pt.1 Read More »
These setbacks in Cornith and Ephesus appear to have sent Paul into a depression, and out of this depression, Paul has a different perspective on the troubles of the Corinthian church, or at least a different tone.
2 Corinthians 1-2, pt.2 Read More »
To read the Old Testament as simply an historical narrative misses its entire purpose which is to point to the coming of Christ and the Church. Further, a rejection of the letter frees us from the dictates of the biblical law.
2 Corinthians 3, pt.2 Read More »
Have some thought about how our own witness to the gospel can be shaped by our particular circumstances, and how we might take some of the treasure of Paul’s letter(s) and apply it in our daily discipleship.
2 Corinthians 3, pt.1 Read More »
Above all, though, we will pay close attention to how and why Paul’s experience of the resurrected Jesus led him to be such an effective evangelist.
2 Corinthians 1-2, pt.1 Read More »
This year we will be reading through 2 Corinthians. The study this summer will be led by Rob Donahue. Rob is a native of Grace Church in Charleston and is a rising third-year seminary student at Sewanee.
2 Corinthians – Introduction Read More »
At the Cross, we see a God who suffers as we suffer and a God who feels as abandoned as we do. We have a God who has assumed our human condition. In looking at the Cross, we know that God is with us because he has become one of us.
Looking Through the Cross – The Cross and Suffering, pt.1 Read More »