Scripture Module
This Scripture module provides a clear overview of the entire Bible and explores how it came into being. You will be introduced to key tools for sound biblical interpretation so you can understand Scripture accurately and apply it meaningfully to your life. The course then guides you through some of the major themes of God’s Word, unveiling the deeper truths of God’s plan and purpose throughout Scripture.
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Scripture Module
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Bible Overview: Old Testament
This session introduces the structure and storyline of the Old Testament. You’ll walk through the law, the historical books, the poetry and wisdom writings, and the prophets, seeing how each section reveals God’s character, His covenant purposes, and His unfolding plan to redeem humanity.
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Bible Overview: New Testament
This session introduces the structure and storyline of the New Testament. You’ll walk through the four Gospels, the book of Acts, Paul’s letters, the general epistles, and Revelation, seeing how they reveal the life of Christ, the birth of the church, the teaching of the apostles, and the hope believers have in Christ’s return.
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How We Got Our Bible
In this session, you will learn how the Bible was formed, preserved and passed down to us. The teaching sets out the structure of Scripture—66 books across the Old and New Testaments—and shows how Jesus and the apostles treated the Hebrew Scriptures as the authoritative word of God.
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Bible Interpretation (Hermeneutics)
This session lays out the basic tools needed to interpret the Bible well. It explains why Scripture carries divine authority and how Jesus Himself shows that the whole Bible ultimately points to Him.
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Types and Shadows
This session introduces the biblical idea of “types and shadows” – patterns, people, events and practices in the Old Testament that point forward to their fulfilment in Christ and in the New Testament. It explains what typology is, why it matters for how we read Scripture, and how the Bible itself uses this method: the shadow in the Old points to a greater reality in the New.
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The Authority of Scripture
This session explores one of the major themes of Scripture: the promise of the Messiah. Building on earlier teaching on the Bible’s storyline and on interpreting Scripture, the session shows how we read the Old Testament through the lens of the New and how the entire narrative of Scripture points towards a promised anointed one – the Messiah, or Christ.
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Great Themes of Scripture: The Promise of the Messiah
This session explores one of the major themes of Scripture: the promise of the Messiah. Building on earlier teaching about the Bible’s storyline and how to interpret Scripture, the session shows how the Old Testament is read through the lens of the New and how the whole sweep of Scripture points towards a promised anointed one – the Messiah, or Christ.
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Great Themes of Scripture: The Promise of the Kingdom
In this session, you’ll trace the story of God’s rule from Genesis to Revelation – from humanity’s original mandate to “rule and subdue,” through Israel as God’s kingdom of priests, the rise and collapse of human kings, the promise of a greater King in David’s line, and finally the arrival of Jesus announcing, demonstrating and embodying the Kingdom.
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Great Themes of Scripture: The Sabbath Rest
This lecture explains the Sabbath as a major theme running from Genesis to the New Testament. It shows that the Sabbath begins with God’s own rest after creation and was given to Israel as a sign of being set apart. It pointed to something God had already done, not a rule people kept to earn favour.
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Great Themes of Scripture: The Tabernacle
In this session, you will explore what the Tabernacle was and why it still matters for New Testament believers. You’ll see how this “tent of meeting” served as God’s chosen place to dwell among His people, and how every part of it ultimately points forward to Jesus and the New Covenant.
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Great Themes of Scripture: Covenant
In this session, the biblical idea of covenant is introduced and traced across the storyline of Scripture. You will see how God chooses to relate to His people through covenant—commitment, promise and faithfulness—from Genesis through to Christ.
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