The King Is Coming: Faith and Obedience in the Parable of the Minas

As Jesus traveled to Jerusalem for the last time before His crucifixion, many thought He would be crowned as a king and immediately begin ruling over Israel (Luke 19:11). Jesus addressed this assumption with a parable, which is recorded in Luke 19:12–27. In Jesus’ story, a nobleman leaves his servants at home as he travels to receive a kingdom, giving each of them money to invest in his absence. His servants and citizens respond to these circumstances in different ways—some in rebellion, some in disobedience, and some in faithfulness.

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Topics: Articles


Wallpaper: Set the Mind

“To set the mind on the flesh is death, but to set the mind on the Spirit is life and peace.”
— Romans 8:6

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Topics: Weekly Wallpaper


Can God Use Me?

You can probably think of someone who seems like just the sort of person God would use—someone, say, with fantastic gifts and an attractive personality. Perhaps you’ve wished you were like that person or that you had this gift or that quality so you could be more useful for Christ. Yet while it’s good to want to grow, we must remember: we often don’t measure usefulness the way God does.

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Wallpaper: Show the World

“Let us rejoice in the Lord always; let us show the world that we are a happy and a blessed people.”
— C.H. Spurgeon

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Sermons on Christ’s Resurrection


Jesus’ resurrection from the dead is at the heart of Christianity. If He is not alive, our message is in vain, and our lives are without lasting hope. In the following selection of sermons, Alistair Begg explains the importance of Christ’s resurrection and why it demands a response from all.

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Topics: From the Archives


Was Jesus Always Supposed to Die on a Cross?

It’s hard to fathom Jesus Christ’s final, agonizing hours upon a Roman cross. The floggings, the torture, and the humiliation He had endured were reserved for the worst of criminals. It is no wonder, then, that with His last breath, Jesus cried out in a loud voice “Tetélestai!”—“It is finished” (John 19:30).

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Contempt, Contemplation, Conviction: Three Responses to the Resurrection of Christ

The historicity of Jesus’ death by crucifixion is widely accepted. Jesus’ resurrection, on the other hand, is still met with doubt. Everyone dies, after all, but very few people in history, even as the Bible records it, have experienced someone coming back from the dead. So from the beginning, the resurrection, and particularly its implications, has proven a stumbling block for many.

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Wallpaper: Entirely Undeserved

“God, in the immensity of His love, has taken and credited me the righteousness of Jesus Christ, a credit that is entirely undeserved. Why would I then do anything other than grant to people something of that same measure of forgiveness?”
— Alistair Begg

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Topics: Weekly Wallpaper


Weighed Down by a Guilty Conscience? There Is Hope.

The central message of the book of Hebrews is the superiority of Jesus Christ. Chapter after chapter declares that Jesus surpasses all that came before Him and all that exists in creation. This glorious truth leads the writer to conclude that the new covenant Jesus inaugurated is superior to the old covenant with its laws, regulations, priests, and sacrifices—including in the way it deals with a guilty conscience.

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This World Is Not Our Home: Six Marks of a Heavenly Citizen

In Philippians 3:20, Paul lays down a principle that has been a great hope for each ensuing generation of believers: “Our citizenship is in heaven, and from it we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ.” Peter puts this concept another way in his first letter, calling the Christians to whom he writes “sojourners and exiles” in their own country (1 Peter 2:11).

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