Christianity is often portrayed or experienced in two rooms: “The Room Of Good Intentions” or “The Room Of Grace.” In this week’s message John Lynch, one of the authors of “The Cure” ends the series by looking at the two rooms and what it looks like to live in grace.
In this series we have been looking at the reality that Christianity can be experienced, portrayed, or lived in two rooms: “The Room Of Good Intentions or The Room Of Grace.” In this week’s message, we look at the idea that when we read the Bible through the lens of the two rooms it either hurts us or helps us in our faith.
In this series, we have been talking about the two rooms and the reality that Christianity is often portrayed or experienced in two very distinctive places. One is life-changing and brings out the best in us, and the other brings out the worst in us. In this week’s message, we continue to talk about the “Room of Grace” and ask the question: How do we get there?
In this series, we are talking about the two rooms that Christianity is so often experienced in or portrayed as. In this week’s message, we take a deeper look at why the Room of Grace actually works and how Jesus makes it possible for us to actually live in grace.
Christianity teaches that we are born with a broken human nature. In this week’s message, we look at what happens in our hearts, relationships, and faith when we wear masks to self preserve the things we don’t want God or others to see.
There are two ways that Christianity is portrayed and experienced in our world and even in our churches. In this Series we look at the two ways or two rooms if you will, that we find ourselves being invited into and which room we live in.