Bray, Gerald Lewis (1948-). Amcl2006-5: Lead Us Not Into Temptation, but Deliver Us From Evil. Moore Theological College. 2006. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://images.quartexcollections.com/moore/thumbnails/preview/69ea4763-f45d-4bb6-bf1b-641ab6562ae9.
APA citation style
Bray, G. (2006). AMCL2006-5: Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://images.quartexcollections.com/moore/thumbnails/preview/69ea4763-f45d-4bb6-bf1b-641ab6562ae9.
Chicago citation style
Bray, Gerald Lewis (1948-).Amcl2006-5: Lead Us Not Into Temptation, but Deliver Us From Evil. Moore Theological College. 2006. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://images.quartexcollections.com/moore/thumbnails/preview/69ea4763-f45d-4bb6-bf1b-641ab6562ae9.
Note:
These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Bray speaks on the experience of most people in coming to Christ, sharing his own experience on how this changed his relationship with his family. He explains that it can be harder after coming to Christ, and explores the spiritual battle and the need to continue to always be vigalant. Bray explores the way Satan works through temptation, including his use of partial truth. He examines the temptations which the church faces, especially when numbers are going down. Bray explored the relationship between sin and temptation, explaining that temptation is not sin. He expounds Jesus' temptation in the desert. Bray explains that to use the text effectively, we must have our doctine and theology correct. To achieve this we need ongoing, faithful teaching. Bray examines what our spiritual warfare is, who is involved, and it's effectiveness. Talk is followed by questions.
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