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Aaron Dunlop | Victoria, BC. Canada
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Page 1 | Page 4 · Found: 1399 entries · |
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Reading: Genesis 3:15 In fullness of time, the Conqueror appears in human form. Satan knows Him well. He heard the voice from heaven, “This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.” He makes one desperate effort to obtain the mastery. The... [ ... ][ abbreviated | read original blog ] |
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Reading: Genesis 3:14 “Dust shalt thou eat” are the woeful words of the Lord to Satan. This phrase denotes complete humiliation and absolute destruction. In Micah 7:17 it is prophesied against those who oppose the Lord, those who continue allegiance... [ ... ][ abbreviated | read original blog ] |
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Reading: Genesis 3:11 After the fall into sin, God made it easy for Adam to present a simple and honest confession of sin. The question “Hast thou eaten …?” is so pointed and precise that it calls for a simple yes or no answer. But depravity had... [ ... ][ abbreviated | read original blog ] |
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Reading: Genesis 3:10 Immediately after the fall of man into sin there is a strange calmness in the Garden of Eden. There is no thundering and lightening as would later accompany the justice of God against sin (as at Sinai and Calvary for example).... [ ... ][ abbreviated | read original blog ] |
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Reading: Genesis 3:9 The “sound of the Lord God walking in the garden” did not reveal the purpose of God (it was general revelation); it is the question “Where art thou?” that shows us God’s intention. “Where art thou?” ought to have been the cry of... [ ... ][ abbreviated | read original blog ] |
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Reading: Genesis 3:8 The realisation that “God is there” is acknowledged by many heathen philosophers (e.g., Acts 17:18). Many today with the realization of sin feel an awkward presence following them and with the Psalmist say, “Whither shall I flee... [ ... ][ abbreviated | read original blog ] |
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Reading: Genesis 3:7 Consider Adam and Eve in the garden as they discover their sin. They immediately try to recover themselves, to rectify the situation. But this situation could not be easily reversed. The self-righteousness of the “aprons of fig... [ ... ][ abbreviated | read original blog ] |
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Reading: Genesis 3:7 After Adam’s sin we find him a troubled individual. He realised that he was for the first time in a state of sin. But there is another problem: he feels the pain of personal sin. Like many today Adam attempts to fix this problem... [ ... ][ abbreviated | read original blog ] |
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Reading: Genesis 3:7 While something died in Adam and Eve at the fall there was a gracious awakening of a moral consciousness: “They knew that they were naked.” The conscience is an inner awareness which either excuses what we do or accuses us of... [ ... ][ abbreviated | read original blog ] |
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Reading: Genesis 3:6-7 The contrast between the paradise of Genesis 2 and the pain of Genesis 4 is striking. The world as we know it is not the same as the world as God created it. There was a time when this earth was free from the vagaries of... [ ... ][ abbreviated | read original blog ] |
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