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  • Session 6 - The Communicable Attribrutes of God

    Session Overview

    If God is love, can He also hate? If God is gracious, can He also be righteous? How do these characteristics relate to one another? Even more, if God is sovereign, how can man be free?Upon completion of these session, the student will have come to a better understanding of the concept of the communicable attributes of God. The attributes of omniscience, omnipotence, sovereignty, goodness, righteousness, love, and grace will all be defined and defended from Scripture.
    http://feeds.bible.org/video/ttp/TTP-TR06.flv
    http://feeds.bible.org/ttp/ttp_tr06.mp3
    Biblical Topics: 
  • Session 5 - Incommunicable Attributes of God, Part 2

    Session Overview

    Does God change? Can God change? If not, why does He change His mind in the Scriptures? Is God everywhere? If so, how is this different than pantheism? This session is a continuation of the last session on defining what makes God, God. Upon completion of this session, the student should have a better understanding of the incommunicable attributes of immutability, omnipresence, and aseity.
    http://feeds.bible.org/video/ttp/TTP-TR05.flv
    http://feeds.bible.org/ttp/ttp_tr05.mp3
    Biblical Topics: 
  • Session 4 - Incommunicable Attributes of God, Part 1

    Session Overview

    What makes God, God? What is the definition of God? What characteristics does God have that make Him worthy of the title God? Having now defined God philosophically as “that which above the arch,” this lesson will further examine what it means to be above the arch. The students will learn that God has attributes that necessarily are a part of “godness.” These attributes are often referred to as incommunicable attributes, since God cannot communicate them to man.
    http://feeds.bible.org/video/ttp/TTP-TR04.flv
    http://feeds.bible.org/ttp/ttp_tr04.mp3
  • Is Your Spiritual Vision 20/20? Meditations on Psalm 73

    Psalm 731

    May 22, 2005

    Introduction2

    A few months ago I was walking across campus at Dallas Theological Seminary, and I saw a blind man making his way across a court yard. He was using a walking stick with confidence, and I stood for a moment and watched him walk just amazed at the resiliency of the human mind.

    http://feeds.bible.org/steve_sanchez/misc/steve_sanchez_psalmvision.mp3
    /assets/worddocs/sanchez_ps73.zip
    Biblical Topics: 
    Passage: 
  • Session 3 - The Existence of God

    Session Overview

    Upon completion of this session, the student should have an understanding of the major arguments for the existence of God. The student will be challenged to answer the question “Why is there something rather than nothing?” learning that all responses other than “a self-existing God created all that there is” are insufficient and self-defeating.
    http://feeds.bible.org/video/ttp/TTP-TR03.flv
    http://feeds.bible.org/ttp/ttp_tr03.mp3
  • Soteriology - Course Description

    Get Started NOW... If you are ready to get started with the Bibliology and Hermeneutics course, click here to go to classroom now...

    Course Description

    This course is a study of the nature of salvation. It will focus on the process and responsibilities of salvation from the standpoint of God and from the standpoint of man.

    Biblical Topics: 
  • Session 1 - Introduction and Worldviews

    Session Overview

    What is God? How should he be defined? What is the difference between the Christian view of God and that of other religions? Often these pivotal questions are left unanswered, leaving no foundation for the rest of ones theology of God. During the course of this session, the student should be convinced of the need for believers to clearly define what the Christian conception of God is according to the theistic worldview.
    http://feeds.bible.org/video/ttp/TTP-TR01.flv
    http://feeds.bible.org/ttp/ttp_tr01.mp3
  • Session 10 - Toward an Evangelical Hermeneutic

    Session Overview

    How should we interpret Scripture? What is the correct method? Are there common mistakes that we should avoid? During this session we will complete the history of interpretation, bringing the student to a better understanding of the evangelical method of hermeneutics. The student should leave with a firm conviction that the best way to interpret Scripture is allowing the text to speak for itself, not reading into the text what we want it to say or think it ought to say.
    http://feeds.bible.org/video/ttp/TTP-BH10.flv
    http://feeds.bible.org/ttp/ttp_bh10.mp3
    Biblical Topics: 

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