- By Audience +-
- By Time +-
-
By Topic
+-
- Adversity
- Anger
- Blessings
- Christian Living
- Covenant
- Creation
- Deeper Still
- Difficult Times
- Discipleship
- Divorce
- End Times
- Faith
- Fasting
- Fear
- Forgiveness
- Getting Started
- Grace
- Grief
- Holy Spirit
- Hope
- Integrity
- Israel
- Kay
- Knowing God
- Leadership
- Love
- Marriage
- Mercy
- Money
- Morality
- Names of God
- Prayer
- Priorities
- Prophecy
- Quiet Time
- Relationships
- Resurrection
- Salvation
- Sex
- Spiritual Gifts
- Spiritual Maturity
- Spiritual Warfare
- Stress
- Strongholds
- Temptation
- The Church
- The Temple
- Tongues
- Trials
- Victorious Living
- Women
- Worship
-
By Book of the Bible
+-
- New Testament +-
-
Old Testament
+-
- Genesis
- Exodus
- Leviticus
- Numbers
- Deuteronomy
- Joshua
- Judges
- Ruth
- 1 Samuel
- 2 Samuel
- 1 Kings
- 2 Kings
- 1 Chronicles
- 2 Chronicles
- Ezra
- Nehemiah
- Esther
- Job
- Psalms
- Proverbs
- Ecclesiastes
- Song of Solomon
- Isaiah
- Jeremiah
- Lamentations
- Ezekiel
- Daniel
- Hosea
- Joel
- Amos
- Obadiah
- Jonah
- Micah
- Nahum
- Habakkuk
- Zephaniah
- Haggai
- Zechariah
- Malachi
-
By Series
+-
- Other Products +-
Galatians-In & Out Workbook (NASB)
In & Out Workbook (NASB) . . . Galatians - Who Has Bewitched You? Why and How? - (7 lessons)
As the gospel spread across the Roman world in the first decades after Jesus’ earthly ministry, conflict arose. Jews and Gentiles were believing the gospel, and a struggle over what it meant to be a Christian began. What does it mean to live under grace? Do you have to keep the Law to be a Christian? All of it or just part of it? Who is right? How will we know?
God used an apostle to write a letter to some churches that were struggling with this issue, a letter that still speaks today. Its message clearly defines the relationship between Law and grace, and how Christians live under grace, led by the Spirit, free from bondage.
In & Out Workbook (NASB) . . . Galatians - Who Has Bewitched You? Why and How? - (7 lessons)
As the gospel spread across the Roman world in the first decades after Jesus’ earthly ministry, conflict arose. Jews and Gentiles were believing the gospel, and a struggle over what it meant to be a Christian began. What does it mean to live under grace? Do you have to keep the Law to be a Christian? All of it or just part of it? Who is right? How will we know?
God used an apostle to write a letter to some churches that were struggling with this issue, a letter that still speaks today. Its message clearly defines the relationship between Law and grace, and how Christians live under grace, led by the Spirit, free from bondage.