The Seventh Commandment – You Shall Not Commit Adultery
The Seventh Commandment protects the central importance that marriage and sexual union have in God’s creation, and it points us to the very purpose of creation.
The Seventh Commandment protects the central importance that marriage and sexual union have in God’s creation, and it points us to the very purpose of creation.
The sixth commandment, you shall not kill, points to the sanctity of human life arising out of God’s image and spirit, and it highlights the most profound effects of the fall.
Baptised in Jesus’ death and new life we see both the cosmic and the everyday implications of Christ’s resurrection
Good Friday – Colossians 1:15-122 – Christ’s supremacy helps us to understands the fullness of God’s love at the crucifixion.
The Fifth Commandment – Honouring our parents instils in us the inherent patterns of authority and submission built into God’s creation and into God’s work of salvation
The Fourth Commandment – The command to keep the Sabbath is both fulfilled and continued in Christ, so while we are not constrained by strict Sabbath rules, Christians are nevertheless obliged to keep Sunday as a day of worship and rest from servile labour.
In light of the second commandment, what should our church services look like?