Jesus Christ in Podcasts
personA biblical figure and central character in Christianity, believed to be the Son of God and the Messiah.
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Mentions in Podcasts
I had Jesus appear to me three years ago.
The Baptism of Jesus In those days, Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. And when he came up out of the water, immediately he saw the heavens opened and the spirit descending upon him like a dove. And a voice came from heaven. You are my beloved son. With you, I am well pleased. The temptation of Jesus.
And man, I'm just so grateful, so grateful that Jesus was sent to us from the Father, that he came forth from the Father to be our redemption, to be our salvation, and to make us into adopted sons and daughters of the Father. As we continue our journey, a couple more days in Messianic Checkpoint, we got, you know, a few more, which is great. We have finished chapters three and four.
And that's the question that Jesus ultimately answers with every miracle, that question Jesus ultimately answers with the resurrection, that he is the Lord God, the maker of heaven and earth. And he is the word of the father, the eternal son of the father. And he truly is God. He truly is God.
It's to establish the identity of Jesus. And what they're going to discover is what the demons already know. You are the Holy One. You are the Son of God. They already know this in some way. And here are the apostles, and they are filled with fear and awe and are asking the question, who then, who then possibly could he be?
I said that was the second to last. This is the last. And it's actually the last thing we heard basically in chapter four. After Jesus calms the storm, it says that they were filled with awe and said to one another, who then is this that even wind and sea obey him? And this is so important because the whole point of the gospel in so many ways is to establish the identity of Jesus.
It would be absolutely, absolutely unthinkable if Mary had other sons that could care for her. So the unanimous, unanimous tradition of the church is that Adelphoi refers to Jesus's cousins, his relatives, his kinsmen, and not to his siblings. because Jesus didn't have siblings because Mary was always perpetually a virgin. Now, okay, there's a point there. Made the point. Last thing.
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