The Holy Bible - Hebrews
The Letter to the Hebrews, written around 60–70 AD, speaks to Jewish Christians tempted to turn back to old ways. The unknown writer shows Jesus is better than angels, Moses, priests, and sacrifices.
The Letter to the Hebrews, written around 60–70 AD, speaks to Jewish Christians tempted to turn back to old ways. The unknown writer shows Jesus is better than angels, Moses, priests, and sacrifices.
The Letter to Titus is Paul’s short guide to his helper Titus, left on the island of Crete around 64 AD. Paul tells him to appoint good leaders, teach sound doctrine, and correct false teachers.
The Second Letter to Timothy is Paul’s last known letter, written from a Roman prison around 66–67 AD, just before his death. He writes to Timothy like a father to a son, urging him to stay strong in faith, preach the word boldly, and endure hardship.
The First Letter to Timothy is Paul’s personal guide for his young helper Timothy, written around 62–64 AD. Paul tells him how to lead the church in Ephesus, fight false teaching, choose leaders, care for widows, and handle money.
The Second Letter to the Thessalonians was written just months after the first, around 51 AD. Some believers thought Jesus had already returned or was coming any moment, so they stopped working.
The First Letter to the Thessalonians is Paul’s earliest letter, written around 50–51 AD, only months after he planted the church. He thanks God for their strong faith amid fierce persecution and encourages them to keep living holy lives.
The Letter to the Colossians is Paul’s short but powerful answer to false teaching in Colossae around 60–62 AD. He warns against mixing Christ with human rules, angel worship, or secret knowledge.
The Letter to the Philippians is Paul’s joyful note from a Roman prison around 61–62 AD. He thanks the church for their gift, urges them to stay united, and shows how to rejoice in every situation.
The Letter to the Ephesians is Paul’s grand picture of God’s plan, written from prison around 60–62 AD. He shows how Christ unites Jews and Gentiles into one new people, the church.
The Letter to the Galatians is Paul’s sharp defence of the true gospel, written around 48–55 AD. False teachers told Gentile believers they must follow Jewish law to be saved.
The Second Letter to the Corinthians is Paul’s most personal letter, written around 56 AD. He defends his ministry, explains his hardships, and begs the church to forgive a sinner and stay loyal to the true gospel.
The First Letter to the Corinthians is Paul’s firm yet loving reply to a troubled church in Corinth around 55 AD. He tackles division, sexual sin, lawsuits, marriage problems, disorder in worship, and confusion about the resurrection.
The Book of Romans is a letter from Paul to the church in Rome, written around 57 AD. It explains the gospel clearly: all have sinned, salvation comes by faith alone, and God’s grace changes lives.