The MacArthur Bible Commentary Quotes
The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
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John F. MacArthur Jr.539 ratings, 4.44 average rating, 27 reviews
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The MacArthur Bible Commentary Quotes
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“different perspective. Matthew looks at Him through the perspective of His kingdom; Mark through the perspective of His servanthood; Luke through the perspective of His humanness; and John through the perspective of His deity. The Book of Acts chronicles the impact of the life, death, and Resurrection of Jesus Christ, the Lord and Savior—from His Ascension, the consequent coming of the Holy Spirit, and the birth of the church, through the early years of gospel preaching by the apostles and their associates. Acts records the establishment of the church in Judea, Samaria, and into the Roman Empire. The twenty-one epistles were written to churches and individuals to explain the significance of the person and work of Jesus Christ, with its implications for life and witness until He returns. The NT closes with Revelation, which starts by picturing the current church age, and culminates with Christ’s return to establish His earthly kingdom, bringing judgment on the ungodly and glory and blessing for believers. Following the millennial reign of the Lord Savior will be the last judgment, leading to the eternal state. All believers of all history enter the ultimate eternal glory prepared for them, and all the”
― The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
― The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
“God’s election or predestination does not operate apart from or nullify man’s responsibility to believe in Jesus as Lord and Savior (cf. Matt. 3:1, 2; 4:17; John 5:40). before the foundation of the world.”
― The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
― The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
“13:4–7 In the previous comments (vv.1–3), the focus is on the emptiness produced when love is absent from ministry. In these verses, the fullness of love is described, in each case by what love does. Love is action, not abstraction. Positively, love is patient with people and gracious to them with generosity. Negatively, love never envies, or brags, or is arrogant, since that is the opposite of”
― The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
― The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
“The Firstborn Over All Creation (Col. 1:15–20) This passage includes a powerful defense of Christ’s deity. Apparently, a central component of the heresy that threatened the Colossian church was the denial of the deity of Christ. Ironically, throughout the centuries some cults have used the phrase “firstborn over all creation” (1:15) to undermine Christ’s deity. The assumption is that if Jesus was born at creation, then He is more like us than He is like God. The Greek word for firstborn, however, can refer to one who was born first chronologically, but it most often refers to preeminence in position or rank (Heb.1:6; Rom. 8:9). Firstborn in this context clearly means highest in rank, not first created (Ps. 89:27; Rev. 1:5) for several reasons: • Christ cannot be both “first begotten” and “only begotten” (see John 1:14, 18; 3:16, 18; 1 John 4:9); and, when the firstborn is one of a class, the class is in the plural form (1:18; Rom. 8:29), but “creation,” the class here, is in a singular form. • If Paul were teaching that Christ was a created being, he would be agreeing with the heresy that he was writing to refute. • It is impossible for Christ to be both created and the Creator of everything (1:16). Thus, Jesus is the firstborn in the sense that He has the preeminence (1:18) and that He possesses the right of inheritance “over all creation” (Heb. 1:2; Rev. 5:1–7, 13).”
― The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
― The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
“The one constant theme unfolding throughout the whole Bible is this: God for His own glory has chosen to create and gather to Himself a group of people to be the subjects of His eternal kingdom, to praise, honor, and serve Him forever and through whom He will display His wisdom, power, mercy, grace, and glory. To gather His chosen ones, God must redeem them from sin.”
― The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
― The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
“Matthew looks at Him through the perspective of His kingdom; Mark through the perspective of His servanthood; Luke through the perspective of His humanness; and John through the perspective of His deity.”
― The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
― The MacArthur Bible Commentary: A Faithful, Focused Commentary on the Whole Bible
