What is the New Nature and Old Nature?

How do we understand what happens when a person goes from the old man to the new man in Christ?
Planting a Graveyard: Seven Reasons Churches Should Recover an Ancient Practice

Graveyards remind, inform, testify, illustrate, demonstrate, and practically help the church to live so that we might one day be raised with Christ out of the ground.
Christ is Lord Over Death: A Case for Burial Over Cremation

Does God care if we burn or bury the dead?
The Land Promise in Hebrews

The book of Hebrews stirs up our longing for the Promised Land. This is no earthly city, however, but rather the heavenly city where we will dwell with our God.
The Light Shines in the Darkness and is Not Apprehended (Part Two)

In typical Johannine fashion, the motif of light and darkness carries an important double meaning. Jesus is neither overcome by the darkness, nor is he understood by it. Yet, as the true light, he illuminates the darkness and gives sight to those with eyes of faith.
The Light Shines in the Darkness and is Not Apprehended (Part One)

Just as the first light shone into the darkness at the dawn of creation, so did the true light which ushered in the new creation.
Rejoicing in Singleness

Singleness is not just a waiting room for those who want to be married. Christian singles can joyfully pursue godliness, contentment, and fellowship within the church.
Singleness in the New Covenant

The New Testament teaches that marriage is but a shadow of the relationship between Christ and his Church. So what does this mean for single Christians?
Signs Foreshadowing the Cross in John’s Gospel

Like a good mystery novel, John’s gospel weaves in subtle clues along the way as to who Jesus really is. How do Jesus’s signs at the beginning of his ministry foreshadow his coming death and resurrection?
The Word Became Flesh: An Advent Meditation from John’s Prologue

Like a parent with a child, God stoops and uses our toddler-like language to allow us to understand who He is by way of analogies: He is Father, Shepherd, and Word. See how Dr. Ardel Caneday fleshes out a concept with awe-filled ramifications.
1.14 Ardel Caneday • Reading • The Word Became Flesh: An Advent Meditation from John’s Prologue

Like a parent with a child, God stoops and uses our toddler-like language to allow us to understand who He is by way of analogies: He is Father, Shepherd, and Word. Listen to how Dr. Ardel Caneday fleshes out a concept with awe-filled ramifications.