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“Your Only Comfort…”: A Lesson from the Heidelberg Catechism

Everyone seeks comfort—not just in the sense of material prosperity but also in the sense of assurance, stability, or, perhaps chief of all, happiness. The quest for happiness is universal, transcending barriers of race and geography and time. And many regard it as an eternal quest, an unanswerable question.

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January 06, 2025

“The fruit of faithfulness will be revealed in the entire fabric of our Christian lives.” —Alistair Begg

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Copyright © 2025 , Truth For Life. All rights reserved.

Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are taken from The ESV® Bible
(The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing
ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Listen to the Truth For Life Daily Devotional Beginning January 1!

Begin each day in God’s Word by listening to the Truth For Life daily devotional!

What Jesus’ Divine Kingship Means for You

The Scriptures sing a number of melodic lines about Jesus. John Calvin identified three in particular as the munus triplex, the threefold dimension of our Lord’s ministry: Jesus is Prophet, declaring God’s glory; He is Priest, intervening to make atonement for sin; and He is King, ruling over God’s kingdom. The third of these—Jesus as the Divine King who governs His church and exercises “all authority in heaven and on earth” (Matt. 28:18)—is a particular source of encouragement to Christians.

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December 09, 2024

“For the gate is narrow and the way is hard that leads to life, and those who find it are few.” Matthew 7:14

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Copyright © 2024 , Truth For Life. All rights reserved.

Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are taken from The ESV® Bible
(The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing
ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

More Than a Nativity Scene: Christmas in God’s Story of Redemption

For many, the nativity is an isolated scene in the biblical story, more familiar as holiday décor than as Holy Scripture. It’s like a piece of a jigsaw puzzle bearing the partial image of a baby in a manger: Few seem to know where it fits into the picture of the Bible’s commands and promises, let alone human history. Instead, it has been framed on its own, sentimentalized as a moral lesson about feeding the homeless, putting coins in the red kettle, and just trying to make a difference—“because, after all, isn’t giving and working together what Christmas is all about?”

Alistair Begg on What Makes Christmas Come Alive

Dear Friend,
I hope this finds you in good heart and in no way overwhelmed by preparations for Christmas.

Hymn: “See Amid the Winter’s Snow” by Edward Caswall

See amid the winter’s snow, Born for us on earth below, See, the tender Lamb appears, Promised from eternal years.

The Purpose, Process, and Promise of Salvation

An old story is told about Brooke Foss Westcott, the last bishop of Durham in the nineteenth century. One of his clerical friends was traveling on a train and was asked by a Salvation Army officer, “Are you saved?” Curious to know how Bishop Westcott would have responded, the friend relayed the question. The bishop paused, smiled, and essentially answered, “Do you mean have I been saved, am I being saved, or will I be saved?”

The Purpose, Process, and Promise of Salvation

An old story is told about Brooke Foss Westcott, the last bishop of Durham in the nineteenth century. One of his clerical friends was traveling on a train and was asked by a Salvation Army officer, “Are you saved?” Curious to know how Bishop Westcott would have responded, the friend relayed the question. The bishop paused, smiled, and essentially answered, “Do you mean have I been saved, am I being saved, or will I be saved?”

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