@lekan_olayinka1 I love Pastor Dolapo and I'll attribute this to ignorance. But this is a combination of Modalism and Arianism. I pray God gives him more understanding.
@ladyprowess@thebaldrasta @yapperaholicc The bible is true, not just because it says so, there is also historical evidence that supports it. I also recommend the book "The Case for Christ" by Lee Strobel. Its a great resource!
@Preacherrapper What Apostle Arome was saying is that we cannot be saved apart from grace. We must still receive the grace freely given through faith (Eph. 2:8). He is not saying you cannot lose your salvation, which is hyper-grace theology. Let’s not mix the two.
@alpha_league0@RasineIrem We have been saved by grace through faith. God has done His part through His throne of grace that is enabled by Jesus’ sacrifice, where we can obtain mercy (Titus 2:11). Our duty is to believe and have faith.
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This 1992 lecture at MIT from Steve Jobs will teach you more about product and sales than most 2 year MBA programs
Crazy just how ahead of his time this man truly was
Spurgeon understood something we've forgotten: every sermon is a rescue operation, not a TED Talk. If you're not calling people out of rebellion and into Christ, you're just giving a lecture. The gospel isn't information—it's an intervention. A sermon that doesn't confront sin isn't bold; it's negligent. We've sanitized preaching to the point where sinners leave comfortable and saints leave bored. That's not preaching—that's public speaking with a Bible.
@SSGISHERE@SpiricocoNg The term Pharaoh was used to refer to the King of Egypt during the time of Moses as seen on your screenshot. Those that understand the bible know that Moses wrote Genesis and it will be normal for him to use the word "Pharaoh".
@SSGISHERE@SpiricocoNg Not sure how this proves your point. Moses wrote the book of Genesis and referred to the King of Egypt as Pharaoh. Moses was using contemporary language to refer to the King of Egypt. It wouldn't make much sense to do otherwise.