Forrest Frank and Lecrae: Check it out by clicking on the link above.
God’s Will: 1 Thessalonians 5
Reading 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 and the surrounding verses is always encouraging. Here, Paul gives his final instructions to the Church at Thessaloniki, calling them to love, act justly, and do the will of God. Not only that, but he tells them how they can accomplish all this. Paul says, “Now may the God of peace himself sanctify you completely, and may your whole spirit and soul and body be kept blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. He who calls you is faithful; he will surely do it” (1 Thess. 5:23-24). How will we become the kind of people that Paul depicts in this passage? God will work it out. He is faithful in sanctifying us completely.
This content is adapted from the New Bible Commentary and New Bible Dictionary.
THE WILL OF GOD: 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18
Let’s take a deeper look into verses 16-18: “Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.” Ever wondered what God’s will is!? It’s this! That we rejoice, that we pray, and that we give thanks—and that we do all of these things all the time. Even though we are often reminded that God will complete this work in us, it can feel overwhelming. We’re certainly not perfect at doing these three things continuously! So, let’s look to a resource for some help and encouragement.
This is from the New Bible Commentary:
“A series of brief, staccato commands indicates the basis for Christian living. They are quite general and would apply to any group of believers. Christians have grounds for joy in both their experience of salvation and their hope of what God will do in the future, but they need to express that joy; there is a right and proper place for the expression of joyful emotion.
Christians must also pray—here probably in the sense of making requests to God, since the next command is about the need to be thankful. Common to the three commands is the stress on fulfilling them all the time and in all circumstances; this does not mean, for example, that one prays uninterruptedly but that one prays regularly and frequently. Such a life is made possible, Paul adds, because God intends it to be so; he wants his people to be joyful, prayerful and thankful, and he makes it possible for them to be so.”
{Insert sigh of relief here}
D.A. Carson probably has the right idea. God doesn’t expect us to rejoice, pray, and express gratitude uninterruptedly, but often. Can you picture yourself living a life where you rejoice often? What about a life with a handful of thankfulness each day?
But here’s another question for you. What exactly did a life of frequent prayer look like for Paul?
The New Bible Dictionary (which comes bundled with the New Bible Commentary) has a lot of content around prayer. It explains what prayer looked like in the Old Testament (and it’s different periods: patristic, pre-exile, exile, post exile… ect.), the Gospels, Acts, and the Pauline Epistles. There’s a TON of information on Paul alone, but we took away this one tidbit:
“Prayer was thanksgiving, intercession, the realization of God’s presence (cf. 1 Thes. 1:2f.; Eph. 1:16ff.). He found that the Holy Spirit assisted him in prayer as he sought to know and do God’s will (Rom. 8:14, 26).”
To Paul, prayer was even the realization of God’s presence!
Not that this is something we’re perfect at, but it seems much more attainable than needing to always sit down and have a very deep conversation with God. Don’t get this wrong—those deep conversations are important, too! But prayer in the believer’s life is more than confession, thanksgiving, and intercession. It’s seeing God, recognizing Him in our circumstances, and acknowledging Him. All in all, when we realize God’s presence, it’ll be nearly impossible for us to act outside of God’s will. That should be a comfort.
Go Get It!
Did you find this information on God’s will in 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 helpful? Then continue learning!
New Bible Commentary and New Bible Dictionary


A METHOD TO HELP YOU STOP SKIMMING THE BIBLE

One of the most popular ways of reading the Bible is to open up a familiar passage, read over it quickly, and then move onto something else. When we don’t take time to ponder Scripture and ask questions, we miss out on discovering truth. By slowing down, we can be convicted, encouraged, and strengthened in new ways. The Exhaustive Questions Bible study method is a great option for solving this problem. Here’s some instructions we found inside Andy Deane’s Learn to Study the Bible. We’ve also included helpful tips on how to use this method without leaving the app. 1) CHOOSE A CHAPTER & READ IT 3x This isn’t a race to see how fast you can read the passage! Slow down. Take in each word. Think critically about what you are reading. 2) WRITE DOWN 3+ QUESTIONS FOR EACH VERSE This sounds like a lot because it is. But it’s worth it! Ask questions about everything and anything. If you create a note inside the app, all of your verse references will become hyperlinks. Just tap and a pop-up window will show you the verse. This is great for when you review your notes later! 3) RESEARCH 5 QUESTIONS FROM THE CHAPTER Now, look over all your questions. Which five stand out to you the most? Are there any words or phrases you don’t understand? What about people and places you’ve never heard of before? These questions might be the best ones to spend your time on. 4) FIND THE ANSWER! Do your best to find the answer. Most likely, you’re going to need some tools to help you! Here are a few ideas to get you started: Cross-References Strong’s Tagged Bible Commentaries Bible Handbooks Peers Pastor or Mentor When using the Resource Guide, remember that you can copy/paste quickly by using the Study Center to get to your Notes tab. 5) APPLY THE ANSWER After answering five of your questions, choose one to turn into a life application. Sometimes, it is as simple as meditating on a truth about God’s character. 6) TELL SOMEONE! Don’t keep this to yourself! Bring up what you’ve learned with a friend or relative. Start a discussion that will hopefully lead to even more encouragement and spiritual growth.
John 1: A Winding Driveway

I hope you enjoy this post. God bless.
When you’re trying out a new restaurant, it’s always good to order something simple to compare with other experiences. For instance, if you love coffee, you may order an espresso or a plain latte at a new shop. Or maybe you rank Mexican-style restaurants on their enchiladas. In the same way, it can be helpful to look at a well-known passage to understand the style and quality of a commentary. For these reasons, we are sharing an excerpt from N.T. Wright’s For Everyone Commentary Series NT on John 1. Never heard of N.T. Wright? He’s known for bringing biblical scholarship to life with engaging writing and inspiring anecdotes. Once you start reading his commentary, there’s no way you can miss it! In fact, a little teaser of what’s ahead…N.T. Wright starts off his explanation on John 1 with a story! Get started by reading the passage of Scripture below. Then we’ll share an excerpt! John 1:1-18 “1 In the beginning was the Word. The Word was close beside God, and the Word was God. 2 In the beginning, he was close beside God. 3All things came into existence through him; nothing that exists came into existence without him. 4 Life was in him, and this life was the light of the human race. 5 The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness didn’t overcome it. 6There was a man called John, who was sent from God. 7 He came as evidence, to give evidence about the light, so that everyone might believe through him. 8 He was not himself the light, but he came to give evidence about the light. 9The true light, which gives light to every human being, was coming into the world. 10 He was in the world, and the world was made through him, and the world didn’t know him. 11 He came to what was his own, and his own people didn’t accept him. 12 But to anyone who did accept him, he gave the right to become God’s children; yes, to anyone who believed in his name. 13 They were not born from blood, or from physical desire, or from the intention of a man, but from God. 14And the Word became flesh, and lived among us. We gazed upon his glory, glory like that of the father’s only son, full of grace and truth. 15John gave evidence about him, loud and clear. ‘This is the one’, he said, ‘that I was speaking about when I told you,’ ‘The one who comes after me ranks ahead of me, because he was before me.’ 16Yes; it’s out of his fullness that we have all received, grace indeed on top of grace. 17 The law, you see, was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus the Messiah. 18 Nobody has ever seen God. The only-begotten God, who is intimately close to the father – he has brought him to light.” Commentary on John 1:1-18 This content is adapted from the For Everyone Commentary Series by N.T. Wright. BUT FIRST, A STORY “‘It’s on the right just beyond the end of the village,’ my friend had said. ‘You’ll see where to turn – it’s got the name on the gate.'” It sounded straightforward. Here was the village. I drove slowly past the pretty cottages, the small shops and the old church. To begin with, I thought I must have misheard him. There didn’t seem to be any houses just outside the village. But then I came to the gateway. Tall stone pillars, overhanging trees and an old wooden sign with the right name on it. Inside, a wide gravel drive stretching away, round a corner out of sight. There were daffodils on the grass verge either side, in front of the thick rhododendron bushes. I turned in to the driveway. He never told me he lived somewhere like this! I drove round the corner; then round another corner, with more daffodils and bushes. Then, as I came round a final bend, I gasped. There in front of me was the house. Sheltered behind tall trees, surrounded by lawns and shrubbery, with the morning sunlight picking out the color in the old stone. And there was my friend, emerging from between the pillars around the front porch, coming to greet me. JONH’S GOSPEL: A GRAND, IMPOSING HOUSE Approaching John’s gospel is a bit like arriving at a grand, imposing house. Many Bible readers know that this gospel is not quite like the others. They may have heard, or begun to discover, that it’s got hidden depths of meaning. According to one well-known saying, this book is like a pool that’s safe for a child to paddle in but deep enough for an elephant to swim in. But, though it’s imposing in its structure and ideas, it’s not meant to scare you off. It makes you welcome. Indeed, millions have found that, as they come closer to this book, the Friend above all friends is coming out to meet them. JOHN’S INTRODUCTION: THE WINDING DRIVEWAY Like many a grand house, the book has a driveway, bringing you off the main road, telling you something about the place you’re getting to before you get there. These opening verses are, in fact, such a complete introduction to the book that by the time you get to the story you know a good deal about what’s coming, and what it means. It’s almost as though the long driveway contained signs with pictures of the various rooms in the house and the people you were going to meet there. This passage has become famous because it’s often read at Christmas carol services – though it isn’t just about the birth of Jesus, but about the full meaning of everything he was, and is, and did. And the more we explore the gospel itself, the more we’ll discover what a complete introduction to it this short passage is. JOHN’S MOST UNFORGETTABLE WORDS The gateway to the drive is formed by the unforgettable opening words: ‘In the beginning was the Word.’ At once we know that we are entering a place which is both familiar and strange. ‘In the beginning’ – no Bible reader could see that phrase and not think at once of the start of Genesis, the first book in the Old Testament: ‘In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.’ Whatever else John is going to tell us, he wants us to see his book as the story of God and the world, not just the story of one character in one place and time. This book is about the creator God acting in a new way within his much-loved creation. It is about the way in which the long story which began in Genesis reached the climax the creator had always intended. THE WORD BECOME ‘FLESH’ When I speak a word, it is, in a sense, part of me. It’s a breath that comes from inside me, making the noise that I give it with my throat, my mouth and my tongue. When people hear it, they assume I intended it. ‘But you said…’, people comment, if our deeds don’t match up to our words. We remain responsible for the words we say. And yet our words have a life which seems independent of us. When people hear them, words can change the way they think and live. Think of ‘I love you’; or, ‘It’s time to go’; or, ‘You’re fired’. These words create new situations. People respond or act accordingly. The words remain in their memory and go on affecting them. THE OLD TESTAMENT AND GOD’S WORD In the Old Testament, God regularly acts by means of his ‘word’. What he says, happens – in Genesis itself, and regularly thereafter. ‘By the word of the Lord’, says the psalm, ‘the heavens were made’ (33:6). God’s word is the one thing that will last, even though people and plants wither and die (Isaiah 40.6-8); God’s word will go out of his mouth and bring life, healing and hope to Israel and the whole creation (Isaiah 55:10-11). That’s part of what lies behind John’s choice of ‘Word’ here, as a way of telling us who Jesus really is. THE ORIGINAL CONTEXT AND GOD’S WORD John probably expects some readers to see that this opening passage says, about Jesus himself, what some writers had said about ‘wisdom’. Many Jewish teachers had grappled with the age-old questions: How can the one true God be both different from the world and active within the world? How can he be remote, holy and detached, and also intimately present? Some had already spoken of the ‘word’ and ‘wisdom’ as ways of answering these questions. Some had already combined them within the belief that the one true God had promised to place his own ‘presence’ within the Temple in Jerusalem. Others saw them enshrined in the Jewish law, the Torah. All of this, as we shall see, is present in John’s mind when he writes of God’s ‘Word’. But the idea of the Word would also make some of his readers think of ideas that pagan philosophers had discussed. Some spoke of the ‘word’ as a kind of principle of rationality, lying deep within the whole cosmos and within all human beings. Get in touch with this principle, they said, and your life will find its true meaning. Well, maybe, John is saying to them; but the Word isn’t an abstract principle, it’s a person. And I’m going to introduce you to him. INTRODUCING, JESUS Verses 1–2 and 18 begin and end the passage by stressing that the Word was and is God, and is intimately close to God. John knows perfectly well he’s making language go beyond what’s normally possible, but it’s Jesus that makes him do it; because verse 14 says that the Word became flesh – that is, became human, became one of us. He became, in fact, the human being we know as Jesus. That’s the theme of this gospel: if you want to know who the true God is, look long and hard at Jesus. The rest of the passage clusters around this central statement. The one we know as Jesus is identical, it seems, with the Word who was there from the very start, the Word through whom all things were made, the one who contained and contains life and light. The Word challenged the darkness before creation and now challenges the darkness that is found, tragically, within creation itself. The Word is bringing into being the new creation, in which God says once more, ‘Let there be light!’ THE CENTRAL PROBLEM IN THE GOSPEL STORY But when God sends the Word into the world, the world pretends it doesn’t recognize him. Indeed, when he sends the Word specifically to Israel, the chosen people don’t recognize him. This is the central problem which dominates the whole gospel story. Jesus comes to God’s people, and God’s people do what the rest of the world do: they prefer darkness to light. That is why fresh grace is needed, on top of the grace already given (verse 16): the Jewish law, given by Moses, points in the right direction, but, like Moses himself, it doesn’t take us to the promised land. For that, you need the grace and truth that come through Jesus the Messiah, the son of God. WE ARE A PART OF THE STORY Perhaps the most exciting thing about this opening passage is that we’re in it too: ‘To anyone who did accept him’ (verse 12) – that means anyone at all, then and now. You don’t have to be born into a particular family or part of the world. God wants people from everywhere to be born in a new way, born into the family which he began through Jesus and which has since spread through the world. Anyone can become a ‘child of God’ in this sense, a sense which goes beyond the fact that all humans are special in God’s sight. Something can happen to people in this life which causes them to become new people, people who (as verse 12 says) ‘believe in his name’. Somehow (John will tell us how, step by step, as we go forward into the great building to which this driveway has led us) the great drama of God and the world, of Jesus and Israel, of the Word who reveals the glory of the unseen God – this great drama is a play in search of actors, and there are parts for everyone, you and me included. As we make our way up this driveway towards the main building, a figure crosses our path. Is this, perhaps, our friend? The figure turns and looks, but points us on to the house. He isn’t the man we want, but his job is to point us to him. He is, in John’s language, ‘giving evidence about the light.’ If we are to meet the Word of God, all four gospels suggest we do well to begin by considering John (the Baptist). Continue Learning with N.T. Wright Check out the For Everyone Commentary Series New Testament (18 Vols.)
KJV Complete Audio Bible

Whether you plug in the headphones or stream over Bluetooth, listening to the KJV Complete Audio Bible can bring inspiration to any moment of your day. Add a new dimension to your regular quiet time – or completely transform your commute or workout. Your audio Bible is ready to fill both the intentional and the unplanned moments of your day with God’s Word! With the King James Version: Complete Audio Bible the Word of God flows clearly and gracefully, free of the distraction of awkward or overly dramatic embellishments. David Holdt’s engaging narration of the classic KJV text strikes just the right blend of elegance and grace, conveying the eternal yet approachable nature of God’s Word. Pick up your copy today and start filling your life moments with Scripture! Start Listening! Click here to get the newly released KJV Complete Audio Bible.

