Zacchaeus: For the Lord He Wanted to See turns the old adage seeing is believing” around toaccord with the words of Jesus: Believing is seeing. The play tells the story of the wee little man, Zacchaeus, who climbs a sycamore tree to see Jesus (Luke 19-1-10). After the Lord greets him by name and announces that he will dine at his house, Zacchaeus’ life is forever changed. Hemakes a commitment to give half of his possessions to the poor and to pay back four times overanyone whom he may have defrauded. In our play, Zacchaeus escorts jesus from his house to the Jerusalem road where jesus tells the parable in which a noble man divides ten pounds among his servants (Luke 19:11-27). He returns to his house where he tells this parable to his ...
Psalm 118:22, “The stone the builders rejected has become the head of the corner.” Some who saw and ...
Since the late 19th and early 20th centuries, interpretation of the parable of the Rich Man and Laza...
Our English too often comes off sounding like Jesus was something less than God, as if he merely app...
One way to go about shaking ourselves from the interpretive grooves (ruts!) formed by our Western as...
Effects and ethics of the Holy Spirit today can be described in terms of the themes of abundance, ho...
temple at Jerusalem and is sitting on the Mount of Olives when he begins telling about the signs of ...
Effects and ethics of the Holy Spirit today can be described in terms of the themes of abundance, ho...
Jesus often used the powerful tool of story in his teaching and preaching ministry for the purpose o...
Two views dominate the interpretation of the Lukan story of Zacchaeus: either the story illustrates ...
After describing what Jesus will go through, the sermon retells how Peter answers correctly Jesus’s ...
As the trailer points out, the distinctive feature of the eight-episode History Channel series, “Jes...
Jesus\u27 opening address in Nazareth is rich with statements about Jesus\u27 identity and mission, ...
Following on the first two episodes of the History Channel’s “Jesus: His Life,” focusing on perspect...
I was in the presence of the holy God, and that reality obliterated all petty fears and doubts. Pos...
John 4:19-26 is a part of Jesus’ conversation with the Samaritan woman at the well. This portion of ...
Psalm 118:22, “The stone the builders rejected has become the head of the corner.” Some who saw and ...
Since the late 19th and early 20th centuries, interpretation of the parable of the Rich Man and Laza...
Our English too often comes off sounding like Jesus was something less than God, as if he merely app...
One way to go about shaking ourselves from the interpretive grooves (ruts!) formed by our Western as...
Effects and ethics of the Holy Spirit today can be described in terms of the themes of abundance, ho...
temple at Jerusalem and is sitting on the Mount of Olives when he begins telling about the signs of ...
Effects and ethics of the Holy Spirit today can be described in terms of the themes of abundance, ho...
Jesus often used the powerful tool of story in his teaching and preaching ministry for the purpose o...
Two views dominate the interpretation of the Lukan story of Zacchaeus: either the story illustrates ...
After describing what Jesus will go through, the sermon retells how Peter answers correctly Jesus’s ...
As the trailer points out, the distinctive feature of the eight-episode History Channel series, “Jes...
Jesus\u27 opening address in Nazareth is rich with statements about Jesus\u27 identity and mission, ...
Following on the first two episodes of the History Channel’s “Jesus: His Life,” focusing on perspect...
I was in the presence of the holy God, and that reality obliterated all petty fears and doubts. Pos...
John 4:19-26 is a part of Jesus’ conversation with the Samaritan woman at the well. This portion of ...
Psalm 118:22, “The stone the builders rejected has become the head of the corner.” Some who saw and ...
Since the late 19th and early 20th centuries, interpretation of the parable of the Rich Man and Laza...
Our English too often comes off sounding like Jesus was something less than God, as if he merely app...