Investigates how God humbled and shaped Jacob into one of the most admired patriarchs of Israel.
The Pentateuch: Lesson 8
Concentrates on responsible ways to draw modern applications from the chapters in Genesis that speak of Abraham.
The Pentateuch: Lesson 7
Explores the original impact these stories were intended to have on the nation of Israel as they followed Moses toward the Promised Land.
The Pentateuch: Lesson 6
Explores the stories that ancient Israelites told about Abraham, their great patriarch.
The Pentateuch: Lesson 5
Examines Genesis 6:9-11:9, describing the direction God established for his people to follow after the great flood in the days of Noah.
The Pentateuch: Lesson 4
Examines Genesis 4:1-6:8, describing how human beings began to fill the world with violence, and how God reacted to those troubles.
The Pentateuch: Lesson 3
Examines Genesis 2:4-3:24, the story of Adam and Eve\’s sin in the garden.
The Pentateuch: Lesson 2
Gives an overview of the primeval history, the literary structure, original meaning and modern application of Genesis 1-11.
Adam’s children are delinquents – [Children of Hell]
This has been the curse of Adam’s sons— in every generation and in all parts of the earth. The calamity of evil which then descended upon the world continues to this day. Despite how sophisticated mankind believes to have arrived, the age-old curse of slavery to sin and their judgement to death can never be wiped clean on their own merits. Thus Adam and Eve’s children are equally involved in the sentence of the pain of childbirth, the curse on the ground, the obligation to live by toil and sweat, the decay and death of the body.
Adam’s Rib…
The woman’s creation out of Adam is the basis for her equality. As Matthew Henry quaintly coined it: “not made out of his head to top him, not out of his feet to be trampled upon by him, but out of his side to be equal with him, under his arm to be protected, and near his heart to be beloved.”