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2 Thessalonians 2:1-12

The Day of the Lord and the Man of Lawlessness

November 22, 2020 • Dr. Peter Radford

In 2 Thessalonians 2, Paul revisits the topic of the Day of Lord. Throughout the passage, he reveals a timeline of events of the end times. In doing so, he corrects a misunderstanding in the Thessalonian church, and encourages them toward confidence and hope. Here is an outline of Paul’s timeline:

1. A time of preparation where the lawless one is restrained and the mystery of lawlessness takes root (6-7)

2. A Great Rebellion against God (3b)

3. The appearance of the man of Lawlessness will come with signs, miracles, and a pervasive deception (3c-4, 8a, 9)

4. A time of judgment for those who refuse to believe and follow the man of lawlessness (10-12)

5. A triumph for Jesus Christ over the man of Lawlessness (8b)

Here is the Big Idea of the passage: The onset of end-time events should make Christians eager and confident, not anxious and fearful. (1-3a)

2 Thessalonians 3:16-18

January 10, 2021 • Dr. Peter Radford

This week, we complete our study of the Thessalonian epistles. In the final verses of the text we find that Paul ends his letters right where he starts them, emphasizing grace and peace. From these final verses, we identify two key principles of grace and peace: 1. The secret to experience the peace of God is practicing God’s presence (16) 2. The secret to experiencing grace is to understand the ongoing work of the grace of Christ in our lives (18) In the end, the thrust of the sermon is that God wants believers to practice peace and walk in grace.

2 Thessalonians 3:13-15

January 3, 2021 • Dr. Peter Radford

In this brief passage, Paul instructs the church how to address brothers and sisters who fall into sin. This sobering text outlines the responsibility of believers to those who walk in disobedience: 1. Keep doing right (13) 2. Take note of the sinning brother or sister (14) 3. Disassociate from the person who has chosen a lifestyle of sin (14) 4. Don’t consider the sinning brother or sister an enemy (15) 5. Keep admonishing the Christian caught in sin like a brother (15) In the end, the Big Idea we emphasized was that you have a responsibility when your brother/sister falls into sin.

2 Thessalonians 3:6-12

December 13, 2020 • Dr. Peter Radford

In this text, Paul corrects a problem that occurs within the church of Thessalonica: Some believers are choosing to be idle and likely freeloading on the generosity of church. Paul offers the solution of grace-filled living to correct this behavior. From this week’s text, we find three principles for living in a grace-filled community: 1. Your sin can quickly infect another believer. (v. 6) 2. Your example can inspire others to follow Christ. (vv. 7-10) 3. You may need correction to continue following Christ. (vv. 11-12) The Big Idea we identify is that God calls Christians to live graciously in Christian community and to use their influence in the lives of others to bring about Christlikeness.