6/24/26

Acts 19: Real Power, Real Repentance, Real Freedom

 In Acts of the Apostles 19 by Troy Dobbs, we encounter one of the most striking passages in the New Testament. It includes extraordinary miracles, demonic confrontation, public repentance, and a city transformed by the power of the gospel.

At first glance, the chapter feels dramatic and unusual. But beneath the extraordinary events lies a deeply practical message for every believer today.

Acts 19 teaches four enduring truths: spiritual darkness is real, Jesus has unmatched authority, repentance must be genuine, and Christ offers new life rather than better management of the old one.

Spiritual Darkness Is Real, But Do Not Obsess Over It

The early church had no trouble acknowledging spiritual warfare. In Ephesus, demonic activity, occult practices, and magic arts were woven into the culture. Luke records extraordinary miracles through Paul, including healings and deliverance from evil spirits.

Scripture is clear that spiritual darkness exists.

As Ephesians 6:12 reminds us:

“Our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against rulers, authorities, and spiritual forces of evil.”

But Christians must avoid two extremes.

First, we should not ignore spiritual reality. Evil exists. Satan is real. Spiritual deception happens.

Second, we should not become obsessed with darkness. Not every hardship, mistake, or inconvenience is demonic. Sometimes a problem is spiritual. Sometimes it is simply human weakness, poor judgment, or lack of competence.

Biblical maturity means balance.

Do not ignore darkness.
Do not glorify darkness.

Instead, fix your attention on Christ.

1 John 4:4 gives us confidence:

“Greater is He who is in you than he who is in the world.”

The Christian posture is awareness without fear.

The Name of Jesus Carries Real Authority

One of the most memorable scenes in Acts 19 involves the seven sons of Sceva.

These men were itinerant exorcists who observed Paul’s ministry and decided to imitate his methods. They attempted to cast out demons using the phrase:

“In the name of Jesus, whom Paul proclaims…”

But something went terribly wrong.

The demon answered:

“Jesus I know, and Paul I recognize, but who are you?”

The possessed man then overpowered them, and they fled wounded and humiliated.

The lesson is profound.

Spiritual authority does not come from memorized words, religious performance, or borrowed faith. It comes from genuine relationship with Jesus Christ.

You cannot outsource intimacy with God.

This story also warns against using Jesus for selfish gain.

Many still approach Jesus transactionally. They want blessing, influence, protection, status, or success. They want what Jesus gives more than Jesus Himself.

But Jesus is not:

  • a lucky charm
  • a religious formula
  • a self-help strategy
  • a brand-building tool

He is Lord.

Philippians 2:9–11 declares that God gave Jesus the name above every name, before whom every knee will bow.

The key question is simple:

Do we love Jesus for who He is, or mostly for what we hope to get from Him?

Genuine Repentance Produces Visible Change

After witnessing the power of Jesus, many in Ephesus came forward to confess their sins.

They did not merely feel emotional conviction. They acted.

Luke tells us they brought their expensive books of magic and publicly burned them. The total value was 50,000 pieces of silver, roughly 50,000 days of wages.

Repentance cost them something.

That is the nature of biblical repentance.

Repentance is more than guilt.
It is more than regret.
It is more than getting caught.

True repentance begins with godly sorrow.

2 Corinthians 7:10 says:

“Godly sorrow produces repentance leading to salvation.”

There is an important difference between regret and repentance.

Regret says:
“I hate the consequences.”

Repentance says:
“I hate the sin because it offends God.”

A genuine Christian may struggle with sin.

But a genuine Christian cannot comfortably make peace with sin.

Real repentance produces fruit:

  • confession
  • surrender
  • changed behavior
  • costly obedience

As Luke 3:8 says:

“Bear fruit in keeping with repentance.”

Repentance is not proven by words alone. It becomes visible in transformed priorities and actions.

Our Culture Prefers Tolerance Over Repentance

One of the greatest spiritual tensions today is the cultural elevation of tolerance.

Modern culture often says:

  • Accept yourself
  • Validate yourself
  • Never challenge identity or behavior

But the gospel offers something deeper.

The Bible does not call us to redefine sin. It calls us to confess sin and bring it into the light.

Tolerance can sometimes preserve comfort while leaving bondage untouched.

Repentance, though painful, leads to freedom.

This does not mean Christians should lack compassion. Jesus embodied both grace and truth.

But grace without truth becomes permission. Truth without grace becomes condemnation.

The gospel gives both.

1 John 1:9 promises:

“If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us.”

Freedom comes not through self-affirmation, but through surrender to Christ.

Jesus Offers New Life, Not Better Management of the Old

This may be the most important truth in Acts 19.

Jesus did not come merely to help people manage sin better.

He came to make people new.

2 Corinthians 5:17 declares:

“If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation.”

Christianity is not behavior optimization.

It is transformation.

Jesus offers:

  • forgiveness for the past
  • power for the present
  • hope for the future

He replaces shame with grace.
He replaces bondage with freedom.
He replaces death with life.

The old life loses its grip when Christ becomes greater.

That is exactly what happened in Ephesus.

People willingly abandoned magic, power, money, and control because they had found Someone better.

They found Jesus.

Final Reflection

Acts 19 gives us a clear progression:

Spiritual reality leads us to recognize Jesus’ authority.
Jesus’ authority leads to real faith.
Real faith leads to repentance.
Repentance leads to transformation.
Transformation leads to gospel breakthrough.

Luke concludes with this powerful statement:

“So the word of the Lord continued to increase and prevail mightily.”
— Acts 19:20

That same gospel still transforms lives today.

The invitation remains.

Ask yourself:

  • Am I worshiping Jesus or using Him?
  • Am I more fascinated by darkness than by Christ?
  • Am I managing sin instead of repenting?
  • Is my faith producing visible transformation?

Jesus offers more than improved coping mechanisms.

He offers a brand new life.

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6/22/26

The battle is worth fighting (Exodus 1:8-22)

 A friend brought this to my mind this week: Misery and murder by Troy Dobbs. I ran my notes through Claude to get additional insight and scripture ties to it. 

1. Misery and murder (the setting: Exodus 1:8-22)

A new king forgot Joseph, feared the Hebrews, enslaved them, then ordered the baby boys killed. This is oppression escalating into state-sponsored murder.

Supporting scripture:

  • Acts 7:18-19. Stephen retells this exact king and the forced abandoning of infants.
  • Psalm 105:24-25. God multiplied his people, and Egypt's heart turned to hatred.
  • Genesis 15:13. God told Abraham this affliction was coming, 400 years ahead.
  • John 8:44. Jesus names the source: the devil was a murderer from the start.
  • Matthew 2:16. Herod repeats the pattern, killing the baby boys of Bethlehem.

2. Root out prejudice (self first, then culture; God sees the heart)

Pharaoh's fear of "too many" Israelites drove his policy. Prejudice starts inside before it shapes a culture.

Supporting scripture:

  • 1 Samuel 16:7. People judge appearances. God looks at the heart.
  • Psalm 139:23-24. Search me first. Self-examination before culture critique.
  • Matthew 7:3-5. Remove your own plank before the speck in another's eye.
  • James 2:1, 2:9. Favoritism is named as sin.
  • Acts 10:34-35. God shows no partiality between peoples.
  • Galatians 3:28. In Christ the dividing lines fall.

3. Remember those persecuted (believers stand against authorities worldwide)

This is the direct application of the midwives' courage to the global church today.

Supporting scripture:

  • Hebrews 13:3. Remember prisoners and the mistreated as if you were with them.
  • Matthew 5:10-12. Blessing on the persecuted.
  • 2 Timothy 3:12. Everyone who lives godly will face persecution.
  • John 15:18-20. The world hated Christ first.
  • 1 Corinthians 12:26. When one part of the body suffers, all suffer.
  • Revelation 6:9-11. The martyrs cry out and are told to wait a little longer.

4. Rest in God's promises (cry out, he remembers, hard times don't erase them)

Even under the whip, the people kept multiplying. The promise outran the oppression.

Supporting scripture:

  • Exodus 1:12. The more they were oppressed, the more they grew.
  • Exodus 2:23-25. God heard their groaning and remembered his covenant. (This is the payoff a chapter later.)
  • Numbers 23:19. God is not a man, that he should lie.
  • Joshua 23:14. Not one of God's good promises failed.
  • 2 Corinthians 1:20. Every promise is "yes" in Christ.
  • Lamentations 3:22-23. His mercies are new every morning, even in ruin.
  • Psalm 34:17-18. The righteous cry out, and the Lord hears.

5. Recognize when to resist (submission has limits; obey God rather than men)

The midwives Shiphrah and Puah feared God more than Pharaoh and refused the order. This is your Reformation anchor too. (Side note: the 500th anniversary of Luther's 95 theses was October 31, 1517 to 2017.)

Supporting scripture:

  • Exodus 1:17, 1:21. They feared God, disobeyed the king, and God gave them families.
  • Hebrews 11:23. Moses' own parents hid him, unafraid of the king's command. Faith, not fear.
  • Acts 5:29. We must obey God rather than men. The clearest statement of the limit.
  • Daniel 3:16-18 and 6:10. Refusing to bow, refusing to stop praying.
  • Romans 13:1-7 and 1 Peter 2:13-17. The default is submission. Hold this in tension with Acts 5:29.
  • Titus 3:1. Be subject to rulers, ready for good works. (Your own teaching on this letter sits right here.)
  • Joshua 2 with Hebrews 11:31 and James 2:25. Rahab protects life against the authorities and is commended.

The honest tension to teach: the Bible commands submission as the norm and resistance as the exception, and the line is drawn where the state commands what God forbids or forbids what God commands.

6. Fight for life (wider than anti-abortion)

The midwives did not just refuse evil. They actively preserved life. That widens the application to defending all vulnerable life, born and unborn.

Supporting scripture:

  • Proverbs 24:11-12. Rescue those being led away to death. And note: "doesn't he who weighs the heart perceive it?" ties straight back to theme 2.
  • Proverbs 31:8-9. Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves.
  • Psalm 139:13-16. God formed us in the womb.
  • Isaiah 1:17. Defend the oppressed and the fatherless.
  • James 1:27. Care for orphans and widows. This answers "not just anti-abortion."
  • Matthew 25:40. What you did for the least of these, you did for Christ.

7. Good for others and glory to God (there is hope, God rules and saves)

The chapter ends dark, but the next chapters raise up a deliverer. God was never not in control.

Supporting scripture:

  • Genesis 50:20. What men meant for evil, God meant for good. (Same Egypt setting, perfect bridge.)
  • Matthew 5:16. Good works that lead others to glorify the Father.
  • 1 Peter 2:12. Live such good lives that they glorify God.
  • Psalm 103:19. The Lord's throne rules over all.
  • Daniel 2:21. God removes kings and sets up kings.
  • Acts 4:27-28. Rulers conspired, yet only did what God's plan had decided.
  • Romans 8:28, 8:31. God works it for good. If God is for us, who can stand against us.

8. The enemy targets men, so get into a ministry

Sharp observation in your notes: Pharaoh aimed at the boys specifically. That is a spiritual-warfare pattern, and the counter is to get men engaged, not passive.

Supporting scripture:

  • Exodus 1:16, 1:22. The target was the male children.
  • Revelation 12:4-5. The dragon waits to devour the male child. Same strategy, cosmic scale.
  • 1 Peter 5:8. The devil prowls, looking for someone to devour.
  • Ephesians 6:10-12. The real fight is not flesh and blood.
  • Nehemiah 4:14. Fight for your brothers, your sons and daughters, your wives, your homes. (Straight from your Nehemiah work.)
  • 1 Corinthians 16:13. Be watchful, stand firm, act like men, be strong.
  • Ezekiel 22:30. God looks for a man to stand in the gap and find one.
  • 2 Timothy 4:5. Do the work, fulfill your ministry.

A couple of threads tie the whole study together if you want a closing move: the "boy killers" pattern (Pharaoh, then Herod, then the dragon) all aim at the deliverer and all fail, and the two scared midwives end up named in Scripture forever while the most powerful man in the world is left nameless. God remembers the faithful and forgets the tyrant.

The Christian Code of Conduct for the Church Militant (Ben Lorence)

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6/21/26

Jesus is the central focus point of the good news


I love Andy Stanley’s Path Principle: Direction, not intention, determines destination.

When we evangelize in a post-Christian, postmodern world, we need to understand the people we’re trying to reach. Aaron Pierce describes this as sharing Jesus with the young, deconstructed, and non-religious.

A week ago, I attended the annual Faith at Work gathering with the SALT Christian Network team, along with representatives from more than 90 businesses across the Twin Cities. During the event, Aaron shared teaching from Not Beyond Reach, the book he co-authored with Chip Ingram.

This is a teaching diagram called “The Two-Sided Funnel.” It presents an evangelism and discipleship framework centered on Jesus as the focal point.

At the center is JESUS, representing the core message of the gospel. The funnel shape indicates that many issues exist around a person’s spiritual journey, but not all issues should be addressed at the same time.

Left side of the funnel (before faith in Christ):
The question at the top left asks:

“What is obscuring or distorting their view of Jesus and the Cross?”

This side focuses on barriers that prevent someone from seeing or trusting Jesus clearly. Examples listed are:

  • Lies
  • Idols
  • Misconceptions
  • Hurts
  • Confusion

The idea is that when sharing faith, the immediate goal is not to solve every life issue or theological question. Instead, identify the primary obstacle blocking that person’s understanding of Christ.

Examples:

  • Intellectual skepticism (“How do I know Christianity is true?”)
  • Emotional wounds (“Christians hurt me”)
  • Cultural idols (success, money, autonomy)
  • Religious misunderstandings (“I must earn salvation”)

These issues funnel inward toward Jesus because removing those distortions helps a person see Him more clearly.

Right side of the funnel (after conversion / discipleship):
The bottom right question asks:

“What should be addressed after someone trusts in Jesus and makes Him Lord of their life?”

This side addresses issues that matter, but are typically secondary to salvation. Examples listed:

  • Moral behavior
  • Political ideology
  • Non-salvific theological doctrines

These are important discipleship topics, but the diagram argues they should usually be addressed after someone comes to faith, not as prerequisites.

Examples:

  • Lifestyle habits
  • Political beliefs
  • Denominational debates
  • Secondary doctrines (end times views, spiritual gifts, church governance)

Core principle:

Do not confuse evangelism with full discipleship.

In simple terms:

  • Before faith: Remove barriers to seeing Jesus.
  • At conversion: Bring the person to Jesus and the cross.
  • After faith: Teach obedience, theology, and transformation.

Why this matters:
Many Christians unintentionally create unnecessary barriers by demanding agreement on secondary issues before someone understands the gospel.

The funnel suggests asking two diagnostic questions:

  1. What is keeping this person from trusting Jesus?
  2. What can wait until after they know Him?

This is a prioritization framework. It helps keep the gospel central while avoiding distraction by peripheral issues.

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6/5/26

Friendship with God as taught in the Psalms

Whom have I in heaven but you? And earth has nothing I desire besides you. My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion (choice) forever. Psalm 73:25–26

I like to listen to sermons and walk during lunch hour and thought this was an incredible sermon that explains Christianity in terms everyone can understand. He argues that while modern secular culture often seeks a vague sense of 'spirituality' without the demands of religion, the Bible offers a profound intimacy with God that actually embraces truth, discipleship, and sacrifice. The full sermon is worth a listen here:  Let the Psalms Teach You to Pray

As I was listening I came to walk with my friend Nitin and we had a wonderful visit. Later in the day I had a Psalm 1 experience walking back to my after a work event (listening to the Gospel shaped life) preparing for Alpha Prayer with other friends and family. 

Modern life is full of spirituality. Bookstores overflow with it. Social media is saturated with it. People light candles, practice mindfulness, curate aesthetics of transcendence, all while keeping God at arm's length. We want the feeling of connection without the demands of relationship.

The Bible refuses that bargain. What Scripture offers isn't a vague spiritual atmosphere. It's a friendship — specific, costly, and more intimate than anything we could engineer on our own.

Tim Keller argues this is exactly what the Psalms are about. And to understand why that friendship is even possible, we have to start where most people don't: with God's own nature.


Why friendship with God is possible at all

The ancient philosopher Aristotle said friendship requires similarity. You can't be friends with someone too far above you. The gap is too wide. By that logic, friendship between a human being and the God of the universe is simply impossible.

But Keller points out that the Bible changes the equation three ways.

  • First, the Trinity. God doesn't exist in isolation. He exists eternally as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — a triune relationship of love (1 John 4:8; John 17:24). Friendship isn't foreign to God's nature. It's fundamental to it. Before creation, before time, God was already a community of love.
  • Second, the image of God. Because we're made in the image of a relational God (Gen 1:26–27), our hunger for deep connection isn't a flaw or a weakness. It's a clue. The longing itself — that relentless ache described in Psalm 42 ("As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for you, my God") — points us toward the One we were made for.
  • Third, redemption. Through the Incarnation and the Atonement, God didn't just invite us to friendship from a safe distance. He entered our suffering. He became vulnerable. He laid down his life (John 15:13; Phil 2:6–8; Heb 4:15). The history of salvation isn't just a legal transaction — it's a cosmic act of friendship.

The gap Aristotle worried about? Jesus crossed it. That's the whole point.


Five ways to deepen the friendship

Knowing friendship with God is possible is one thing. Cultivating it is another. Keller draws from the Psalms to outline five practices that grow this relationship.

1. Obedience

  • Jesus is direct: "You are my friends if you do what I command" (John 15:14). That sounds transactional at first — like friendship is something you earn. But Keller flips it. Obedience isn't how you qualify for friendship; it's how friendship actually works.
  • When you genuinely love someone, you take their reality seriously. You don't try to reshape them into what's convenient for you. Obedience is what it looks like to honor who God actually is, rather than who we'd prefer him to be. It's the path to becoming more like him — and Psalm 119:2 calls that the blessed life. (Blessed are those who keep his statutes, and seek him with all their heart)

2. Justification by faith alone

  • Here's where a lot of religious effort quietly breaks down. Without a firm grasp of grace, our relationship with God curdles into something transactional. We start performing. We keep score. We treat God like an employer whose approval we're constantly trying to secure.
  • But Keller argues that this is the opposite of friendship. A friend doesn't relate to you through a ledger. Friendship is a response to love already given — not a bid to earn it (Eph 2:8–9; Rom 5:1). Psalm 32 begins with the cry of someone who has been forgiven: "Blessed is the one whose transgressions are forgiven." That's not a person who worked their way to blessing. It's someone who received it.
  • Until we understand justification, our devotional life will always be tinged with anxiety. Grace alone makes friendship possible.

3. Dynamic two-way communication

  • A friendship without real conversation isn't much of a friendship. For Keller, this means prayer must be rooted in Scripture — not just our feelings, impressions, or internal monologue.
  • We read the Bible to hear God's voice (Heb 3:15). We let the Word shape and expose us (Heb 4:12). Then we respond — honestly, specifically, from the gut, the way the Psalms do (Ps 62:8). This is what makes prayer different from talking to yourself. Psalm 19 calls the Word of God soul-reviving (v. 7–8). Hebrews 4:12 calls it alive and active. When Scripture is the soil prayer grows in, the conversation has two real participants.

4. Seeking his face

  • This one is easy to skip over in more theologically-careful circles. But Keller doesn't skip it. He draws on Psalm 27:4 — David's famous declaration that the one thing he desires is to dwell in the house of the Lord and gaze upon his beauty — and Psalm 34:8 — "Taste and see that the Lord is good."
  • There's an experiential dimension to friendship with God. Not just intellectual assent, not just moral compliance, but an actual savoring of his presence. Keller calls this "seeking his face" — using the Word not just as information but as a guide for our hearts to move toward what is beautiful and good. Psalm 63 captures it: "My soul thirsts for you... in a dry and parched land." Not performing religion. Wanting God himself.

5. Meditating on the cross

  • The fifth practice is the one that sustains all the others. Keller calls Jesus's death the ultimate act of friendship — a demonstration of what he means by "candor and constancy." Jesus remained vulnerable to us, all the way to the end, even when we turned away. Psalm 22 — the psalm Jesus quotes from the cross — moves from "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" to confident praise. Abandonment endured for friendship's sake.
  • Galatians 2:20 puts it in personal terms: "He loved me and gave himself for me." Romans 5:8 makes it even starker: "While we were still sinners, Christ died for us." This isn't the story of a God who waited until we got our act together. It's the story of a friend who moved toward us at the moment we had the least to offer.
  • Regular reflection on the cross keeps us from drifting back into the transactional posture. It anchors us in love that cost something.


The friend we've always been looking for

Keller ends the sermon with an observation that lands hard: every human being is searching for an ultimate friend. Someone whose knowledge of you is complete — who knows everything and loves anyway. Someone whose acceptance finally, definitively, answers the question of whether you matter.

We look for that person in romance, in achievement, in community, in online validation. None of it satisfies. Not for long.

John 15:15 records the moment Jesus told his disciples they were no longer servants but friends. And Psalm 73:25–26 — one of the most honest verses in the Psalter — captures what it looks like when someone finally finds that friend: "Whom have I in heaven but you? And earth has nothing I desire besides you. My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever."

That's not religion as duty. That's someone who found what they were looking for.


The friendship is possible. The path is real. And the One at the other end already moved toward you first.

...this is what was spoken by the prophet Joel:

“‘In the last days, God says,

    I will pour out my Spirit on all people.

Your sons and daughters will prophesy,

    your young men will see visions,

    your old men will dream dreams.

Even on my servants, both men and women,

    I will pour out my Spirit in those days,

    and they will prophesy.

I will show wonders in the heavens above

    and signs on the earth below,

    blood and fire and billows of smoke.

The sun will be turned to darkness

    and the moon to blood

    before the coming of the great and glorious day of the Lord. (Acts 2:16-21)

And everyone who calls

    on the name of the Lord will be saved.

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6/1/26

To be a bugler, using a lifeless instrument, to strengthen the whole church (Romans 10:14-17, 1 Cor 14:6-12)

 A dream more than 10 years old is giving birth. From Money, the power of God's word and dreams, I was reminded that some dreams matter and know when they occur. 

Meditating on 1 Cor 12-14, Ephesians 4, I'm seeing how beginning with the end in mind is better than just doing something. There is a thread I'm seeing throughout the scriptures:

But how can people call for help if they don’t know who to trust? And how can they know who to trust if they haven’t heard of the One who can be trusted? And how can they hear if nobody tells them? And how is anyone going to tell them, unless someone is sent to do it? That’s why Scripture exclaims, A sight to take your breath away! Grand processions of people telling all the good things of God! But not everybody is ready for this, ready to see and hear and act. Isaiah asked what we all ask at one time or another: “Does anyone care, God? Is anyone listening and believing a word of it?” The point is: Before you trust, you have to listen. But unless Christ’s Word is preached, there’s nothing to listen to. Romans 10:14-17 MSG (The Message)

Knowing if someone has not heard the Bible involves identifying a lack of familiarity with core biblical figures, stories, and teachings, often stemming from a lack of exposure to preaching or scripture. According to Romans 10:14, faith comes by hearing the gospel, meaning those who have not heard will not have believed or know the message of salvation, Romans 10:14-17

Dear brothers and sisters, if I should come to you speaking in an unknown language, how would that help you? But if I bring you a revelation or some special knowledge or prophecy or teaching, that will be helpful. Even lifeless instruments like the flute or the harp must play the notes clearly, or no one will recognize the melody. And if the bugler doesn’t sound a clear call, how will the soldiers know they are being called to battle?

It’s the same for you. If you speak to people in words they don’t understand, how will they know what you are saying? You might as well be talking into empty space.

There are many different languages in the world, and every language has meaning. But if I don’t understand a language, I will be a foreigner to someone who speaks it, and the one who speaks it will be a foreigner to me. And the same is true for you. Since you are so eager to have the special abilities the Spirit gives, seek those that will strengthen the whole church. 

So anyone who speaks in tongues should pray also for the ability to interpret what has been said. - 1 Cor 14:6-13

Here are ways to identify if someone has not heard the Bible:

  • Lack of Knowledge: They may be unfamiliar with key figures like Jesus Christ, Moses, or common bible stories.
  • Absence of Faith/Preaching: The primary marker is that they have not had the message of the Gospel preached or explained to them
  • Rhetorical Markers: As described in Romans 10:14-17, someone who has not heard is generally someone to whom no one has been sent to preach.
  • Cultural Context: In some cases, people may have heard snippets of stories but do not understand their origin or significance. 

While natural revelation (nature/conscience) exists, it is distinct from hearing the specific message of Christ.

https://www.bsfinternational.org/supporting-the-church/


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