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Bib-Lit 12-7-25 Mark’s topic for today was a focus on:Learning to Study our Bibles Better. Many different versions of the Bible are available for readers. Warm up. Important ways to start studying the Bible Begin with prayer Psalm 119:18 shows the power of Bible study The Bible is a library with various types of literature. Workout Studying the Psalms. The Psalms are Israel’s prayer and book hymnal that express all the human emotions. Studying Proverbs.Proverbs is rich with wisdom, literature, and principles, not promises. Cool down Chose a reading plan Pray before you study Take notes Listen to Mark give us Scriptural guidelines to better study, understand, and apply God’s Word to our lives.

Pastor David Fleming taught Part II: How to Deal with Relational Conflict—A Biblical Approach. Jesus dealt with conflict, which means we will too. Road map 1. The inevitability of relational conflict Paul dealt with conflict and resolution throughout his life. Opposition is part of ministry. Driven by reason or emotions? 2. The nature of relational conflict Relational storm and a cycle of emotions Preserved/saved a relationship Gain new understanding of ourselves and others 3. Points for home - a Biblical Toolkit We take initiative Follow Jesus’ plan Focus on the conflict Extend forgiveness Return to the mission Listen to Pastor David share wisdom from Scripture on how we are to handle relational conflict. Our job is to love others not change them for who God wants them to be.

Pastor David Fleming taught part one of a two part class: How to Deal with Relational Conflict—A Biblical Approach. Today’s Road Map 1. The inevitability of Relational Conflict * You aren’t the only one * Jesus dealt with relational conflict * If you are a peacemaker, others need you 2. The nature of Relational Conflict The steps people consider in resolving relational conflict and how to glorify God. 3. Points for home. Prepare for conflict resolution * A spiritual perspective * A mirror to reflect our emotions * The choice to love * The power of prayer * Wisdom to discernment Pastor David shows us how to handle and how not to handle relational conflict by seeking peace. Conflict resolution is an act of love.

11-16-25 Bib-Lit Mark continued in the book of Romans with a study of Romans 7:14-25:The Struggle is Real. Part 1—Debating Romans 7:15. 3 Hidden problems or positions of this verse. 1. Assumes Paul is converted. 2. Assumes Christianity and Judaism were separate to Paul. 3. Assumes Paul had a clean break from Judaism. Paul never converted but learned to recognize the Messiah. Timeline: Paul is born Age 34ish when persecuting the church Age 35ish to Damascus a revelation and a calling Later Paul’s Christian experiences. How does verse 15 affect Romans 7 and 8? The flow of God’s thought. The Law commands, but we can’t obey without the Holy Spirit. Homework. Go thru Romans 7 and look at the tenses. Does it make sense if Paul is talking before or after conversion? Or a transition? So what? Points for home Legalism kills. Understand the already/not yet. Don’t be surprised with the struggle. Listen to Mark teach Paul’s faith and how he didn’t waver from the Jewish religion. Jesus’s sacrifice was for all time, before, now, and the future. Believing Jews transitioned from Torah-administration to the Spirit-administration.

11-9-25 Bib-Lit Pastor David interviewed Dr. Paul Copan, one of the leading voices in Christian Apologetics. He’s a philosopher, theologian, professor at Palm Beach Atlantic University, and authored and edited 45 books. During the interview, we learned about Dr. Copan’s views on campus life, Old Testament apologetics, and how to understand God in the Old Testament and New Testament. Apologetics is the art and science of defending the. Christian faith. Pastor David posed the hard questions of the Old Testament with the new, revealing severity and kindness in both. Listen to Dr. Cohan’s sharing of his work in the educational field and apologetics. His Christian worldview and apologetics are an encouragement to Christian living.

11-2-25 Bib-Lit Mark continued in the study of Romans with a focus on Chapter 7: 1-7—Paul’s most debated chapter, especially the verses studied today. Paul uses a legal analogy. What about the law? Marriage metaphor: legal, exclusive, permanent. But when someone dies, everything changes. Death ends the legal agreement of the law. Illustration Paul draws out what Scripture says: We have died to the law through the body of Christ so that we belong to God. Our purpose is to bear fruit to God. The old self bore fruit for death The new self bears fruit for the Spirit. Application We move from law to serving God Points for home Stop living the guilt Fruit comes from your union with Christ not achievement We’re not serving less but better Listen to Mark show Paul’s flow of reasoning in how living in Christ means we are dead to sin but alive to serve Him.

10-26-25 Bib-lit Mark continued in Romans with a study of chapter 6:14-23. The lesson focused on liberation: to live as free in Christ and dead to sin. Mark had three points: 1. The promise of grace The purpose, reason, and result of Christ’s sacrifice Sin will have no dominion over the believer. 2. The choice of masters We are slaves to the one we obey. True freedom is serving God because He frees us. 3. The outcome of the service Sin delivers shame, bondage, and death. Righteousness delivers eternal life Points for home - rewire your mind Believe the promise Choose your master daily Remember the fruit Listen to Mark show us how we are to live as instruments of righteousness. We cannot fight sin through human effort, but through grace, we have divine power. The war against sin is over, but the fighting continues

Biblical - Literacy — October 19, 2025 For Mission Sunday, Mark interviews Dr. John Barclay , a distinguished New Testament scholar known for his insights on the writings of Paul. Originally from London, Dr. Barclay grew up in a Christian home and studied classics and theology at Cambridge. He now serves as Professor of Divinity at Durham University. Dr. Barclay believes that living out our faith means staying connected to today’s world — just as Paul did when he addressed the culture and social status of his time. Paul proclaimed that both Gentiles and Jews were called to experience the saving grace of Jesus Christ. Dr. Barclay shared three key theological truths: 1. We are, first and foremost, children of God. 2. Grace draws us into the life of Christ — not to do as we wish, but to follow God’s leading. 3. Love is fulfilled when it binds us together in unity. Listen as Mark explores Dr. Barclay’s faith, family, education, and his powerful insights on Paul’s writings about grace.

Bib-Lit Summary Oct 12,2025 Mark gives us a lot to think about in this lesson from Romans 6:11-13 Mark introduces us to a Novel by: C. E. Lewis, The Chronicles of NARNIA, The Silver Chair. In this mystical novel Lewis is asking a question through stories; Primarily What is Real? Mark addresses this through a detailed look at Romans 6: 11-13 1. Rom. 6:11, So you must consider yourself dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus. Paul, in verse 9, says we know that Christ, having been raised from the dead, will never die again. He died to sin but the life he lives he lives to God. Some of the sins we struggle with are greed, envy, honesty and pleasures. a. Align yourself with reality b. Believe what God Says c. Count yourself dead to sin and alive to God in Christ d. Do this every moment Dead to Sin --- Alive to God in Christ. 2. Rom. 6:12, Let choice not sin, therefore reign in your mortal body to make you obey its passions. 3. Rom. 6:13, Do not present your members to sin as instruments or unrighteousness, but present yourselves to God as those who have been brought from death to life and your members to God as instruments or righteousness. Points for home: 1. Your thinking Determines your Living. a. Consider yourself dead to sin and alive to God b. When temptation comes pause and say, I am dead to this. This is not who I am anymore in Christ 2. You are always going to serve someone. a. The question isn’t “will I serve ?” but “ Whom will I serve?” 3. Grace will empower what it demands. a. The same God that justifies you also sanctifies you b. You are not under law but under Grace

Bib-lit Class October 5, 2025 Mark begins the lesson by addressing a question or concern that we all may have had after giving our life to Christ. We may be worried that we have done something wrong. Everything seems to be going wrong with my life. I am not living that Christian Victory. I am not that success story that says I gave my life to Jesus and now everything is rainbows. Mark dissects these feelings by traveling through the Book of Romans: Step 3: Practical implications (Rom. 6:8-10) Step 2: The certainty of our new life (Rom. 6:8-10) Step 1: The certainty of our union with Christ (Rom. 6:5-7) Mark address how these passages and how the word of Paul effects our transition into our new life as a Christian. He delves into Romans 6:8 and addresses the way Paul used the Past, Present and Future in one verse. From these verses we can conclude that, we have died with Christ, so from the past experience, the future is one of living with Christ. Romans 6:9 brings us to the realization and answer to many questions. “We know that Christ, being raised from the dead, will never die again; death no longer has dominion over him". So you also must consider yourselves dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus. (Romans 6:11) Christ’s death was terminal to sin’s claims; his life is permanent in God’s power...So logically where are we? So you also must consider yourselves dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus.(Romans 6:11) Points for Home: Know the truth: “We know that our old self was co-crucified with him”(Rom.6:6) Process the implications: Live from your new nature, not your old habits! One who has died has been set free from sin(Rom. 6:7) Learn to use the tools: You’re not fighting to become free–you’re learning to live free! consider yourselves dead to sin and alive to God (Rom. 6:11)