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Looking for Jesus (Part 4)

Looking for Jesus (Part 4)

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The Psalms don’t just sing; they signal. We open the Hebrew songbook and find a roadmap to Jesus that runs from identity to destiny: the divine Son who rules, the eternal Priest who mediates, the rejected cornerstone who rises, and the coming King who judges with perfect equity. Rather than treating these passages as vague poetry, we follow the trail the New Testament highlights, connecting Psalm 2, 45, 110, 22, 16, 89, and 118 to moments in the Gospels and to the hope that still stands in front of us.

We start with who the Messiah is—God’s begotten Son, priest in the order of Melchizedek, sovereign over the nations—and then move into the vivid fulfillments: mockery at the cross, pierced hands and feet, unbroken bones, garments divided, the cry of dereliction, and the promise that the Holy One would not see decay. These aren’t scattered proof texts; they form a coherent portrait the apostles preached openly. From calming the sea to becoming the cornerstone, the Psalms anticipate the contours of Jesus’ life and mission in ways both specific and sweeping.

Then we lift our eyes to what is still ahead. The Psalms promise a world judged rightly, a reign that brings justice without partiality, and a creation that bursts into praise as it is renewed. The apostles anchor this hope in the resurrection and point toward the restoration of all things. Along the way, we reflect on the staggering odds of prophetic fulfillment and why that fuels confidence for the promises yet to be kept. If you’re looking to see Christmas as promise kept and the future as promise sure, this conversation will help you read the Psalms with fresh eyes, steady hope, and a clear view of Jesus at the center.


Video available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uiI18SseFsQ

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