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2 Chronicles Explained: From Solomon's Glory to Exile and the Promise of Return

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2 Chronicles traces Judah's monarchy from Solomon's dazzling temple dedication to the fires of Babylonian conquest — and ends with a decree of return. It is a book about what happens when God's people forsake worship, and what grace looks like on the other side of judgment. Where 2 Chronicles Begins — and Why It Cannot Be Read Alone 2 Chronicles does not stand alone. It is the second half of a single literary and theological work that begins with Adam's genealogy in 1 Chronicles 1 and ends with Cyrus of Persia issuing a decree that the exiles may return home. To read 2 Chronicles without 1 Chronicles is to enter a story midstream — you will understand what is happening, but you will miss why it matters so deeply to the people for whom it was written. 1 Chronicles ended with David's death and Solomon's coronation, having spent its final chapters cataloguing David's extraordinary preparations for the temple he was not permitted to build. Everything in those ch...

Samson: When God Uses a Broken Man

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Samson is one of Scripture's most contradictory figures — a Nazirite who touched corpses, a judge who chased foreign women, a man of God who lived like anything but. Yet Hebrews 11 names him among the faithful. Here's what his broken life reveals about grace. The Most Uncomfortable Hero in the Bible If you were designing a hero for the people of God, Samson would not make the shortlist. He is impulsive and vindictive. He breaks nearly every covenant he was consecrated to keep. He pursues foreign women against his parents' counsel and against the explicit commands of the Mosaic law. He uses his supernatural gift for personal vendettas at least as often as for national deliverance. He is manipulated by the same weakness — a woman, a question, and his own stubborn pride — not once, not twice, but three times in the book of Judges before Delilah finally succeeds where the others had come close. And yet. Hebrews 11:32 names Samson in a list of those whose faith God honored. The ...

1 Chronicles Explained: Why the Lists Matter and What the Book Is Really About

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1 Chronicles is one of the Bible's most misunderstood books — dismissed as a dry repetition of Samuel and Kings. But it was written for exiles who needed to know who they were, and it still speaks to anyone rebuilding after loss. The Book Most Readers Skip — and Why That Is a Mistake Be honest. When you encounter the opening of 1 Chronicles, something in you deflates. "Adam, Seth, Enosh; Kenan, Mahalalel, Jared; Enoch, Methuselah, Lamech; Noah, Shem, Ham, and Japheth." Nine chapters of genealogies before the narrative even begins. Names upon names upon names, most of them unfamiliar, many of them unpronounceable, organized in lists whose internal logic is not always immediately obvious. It is the kind of passage that sends Bible readers reaching for their bookmarks and their excuses. That reaction is understandable. It is also, theologically speaking, a significant loss — because 1 Chronicles is one of the most carefully constructed, purposefully arranged, and pastorally ...

Lessons For Fathers From The Book Of Proverbs

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The book of Proverbs opens with a father's voice calling out to his son. Here are ten timeless lessons for fathers drawn straight from its pages — practical, honest, and grounded in the fear of the Lord. He sat down — somewhere in Jerusalem, sometime in the tenth century before Christ — and he began to write to his son. Not a letter, exactly. More like a long conversation he was afraid he would not get to finish. The kind a father has when he realizes, with a sharpness that surprises him, that his boy is growing up faster than expected and that the world waiting for him is more dangerous than it looks. We do not know everything about the man who wrote the opening chapters of Proverbs. Tradition identifies him with Solomon. The text calls him a father speaking to his son. What we do know is that he wrote with the urgency of a man who understood that words spoken into a young life can echo for decades — and that silence where wisdom should have been can leave a child exposed to thing...