The Word of God is quick and powerful, sharper than any two-edged sword. I'm Stu Epperson. Honored to present to you our new podcast, Wednesday in the Word. A journey through the word of God to help our leaders of Wednesday in the Word and Women's in the Word that meets on Thursdays. Journeying through the Word of God together.
We'll give you special tools. We'll give you a review and a preview. Of what's going on in our Bible study.
So stay tuned, be encouraged, and be sure you pass this along to someone else and subscribe to the channel Wednesday in the Word. Here we go. It's called the Apocalypse of the Old Testament. It is a book. That is the title of the author.
The name of the central figure. We're talking about the book of Daniel, the prophetic book of Daniel, 12 chapters. Takes about an hour, just north of an hour, to read it in one sitting, and with me to talk about it. Is Pastor Sam Hoare? I'm Stu Epperson.
This is. the debut of our brand new Podcast calling it Wednesday in the Word. We have A bunch of men and women that get together every week. And study the Bible together. And we are launching the book of Daniel.
So we have come up with a podcast just to talk you through. The scriptures and to be an aid for the teachers and leaders, but also to be an encouragement for those. Who just want to travel and journey with us through Daniel?
Some of you can't get there in person where we meet at this amazing restaurant chain called Dario that there that is all over. The North Carolina area. Based in Winston-Salem. And then There's also a whole bunch of you that do get to come and join us every week for Wednesday in the Word that want to hear a little more and that you want to hear. From someone who has really studied it and done a deep dive.
In fact, we are going to be. 12 to 13, 14 weeks in Daniel and Wednesday of the Word. Pastor Sam Horne, the pastor of Palmetto Baptist Church in just outside of Greenville, South Carolina. in a town called Powdersville. Pastor Horne, you preached 22 messages in this book.
How could you get 22 messages out of 12 chapters, sir? Man, there is so much ancient wisdom for modern time in this little book. That I just buried myself in that book, and I would say it was an amazing journey for me and an amazing journey for our congregation. You know, the book has 12 chapters, but some of those chapters are upwards of 40 verses, and so it's very, very hard, for example, to get all of chapter two into one sermon.
So, some of those chapters had to be done in more than one sermon, particularly as you got into the stuff in the second half of the book. But those 22 sermons were designed to help us grasp and remember and apply this ancient wisdom for our modern-day life as we live in modern-day Babylon.
Well, and Pastor, I want to bring you up to speed in the context of Wednesday in the Word. We just finished the first book of Peter, Peter's first epistle, 1 Peter, five chapters that really gave encouragement and hope to exiles and sojourners and aliens. who were spread all about and under a lot of fire. In fiery trials. And then we're going to go to 2 Peter here eventually, which a lot of second coming and apocalyptic language and eschatology, which means the study of end times, is going to be in 2 Peter.
So, right in between 1 Peter and 2 Peter, we're jumping off. We're taking a little off-ramp. To journey through Daniel, which The first half of Daniel is all about exiles, and then the second half of Daniel is also going to bring in some pretty deep prophecy. In fact, Pastor Sam Horn. A lot of folks will don't want to take it off ramp at all.
They want to go all the way around Daniel sometimes because they might be intimidated. They're good in tracking with the fiery furnace, the dietary stuff, and the conviction of chapter one. They're good with tracking with the beautiful story of not bowing down to idols and the lion's den. But some folks are a little bit offset by All this prophecy talk. Can you talk about?
How that's important, but how you don't want to. Let that deter you from the other rich principles in Daniel. And we're doing an overview today of the book of Daniel with Pastor Sam Horn, one of my mentors, and a man of God who pastors church has a radio program. And he's agreed to do this with us here in just a few minutes to set the tone for our study of Daniel.
So, why is it important? But there's a whole lot more to Daniel than prophecy. Mm-hmm.
So, certainly, there is prophecy, and we certainly don't want to minimize that. But I think what happens is we tend to characterize a book around an idea. And I actually think Daniel has been mischaracterized. And the whole idea behind how a lot of people look at Daniel is it's a prophetic roadmap to the future. And it's got all this sort of veiled language in it.
And we're trying to figure out what these images mean and who these sort of unnamed leaders are that show up in the last half of the book. And there's a lot of speculation that happens. And I actually think the book of Daniel is far more about wisdom than it is about prophecy. It's actually numbered in the wisdom part of the Old Testament by the ancient Jews. Or Old Testament, they would put Daniel wisdom in the writings.
And so I actually think that Daniel gives us. Ancient wisdom by which God intended to speak to the nations and by which God intended to speak to his own people. You know, you mentioned Peter, right next to Peter is the book of James. And in the book of James, we're told: if any man lacks wisdom, Then let him ask of God.
So there is obviously in the book of James this wisdom theme. And all of chapter three, particularly the last part of chapter three, talks about the importance of wisdom. And the wisdom that we desperately need is wisdom that comes from above. And so when you think about the book of Daniel, the book of Daniel is a book about wisdom. And I think there are four reasons we need that wisdom.
And we need that wisdom, number one, because we live in uncertain times. I mean, think about what's going on in our world today. Think about all you got to do is turn on the news. And you sort of go to bed at night and your stomach's in a knot because this is what's going on economically, this is what's going on globally, this is what's happening in the socio-political arena, and this is what's happening in our country. And on and on it goes.
We live in uncertain times.
Well, when you read the book of Daniel, you're reading the story of four faithful men. who from their youth on had to live in uncertain times. Second reason we need this wisdom is that we live in secular. And immoral. times.
We live in a culture that is increasingly godless. And deeply immoral. And we're called to speak truth and to defend righteousness courageously but graciously. And so think about these four men. Again, here they are, teenagers, yanked out of the most conservative culture on the planet.
Jerusalem temple. Judaism And they're brought to the most pagan culture on the planet, the most immoral, godless culture on the planet. And they were called to be faithful to God. They were called to be confident before God. They were called to be joyful in their walk with God.
But they were also called to speak truth. and to defend righteousness. courageously, but graciously. And so they did that. The book of Daniel is a story of how they did that.
The third reason I think we need this wisdom is that we live in spiritually dark times. You know, when you think about postmodernism and then you think about post-humanism and you think about all of the encroachment that the kingdom of darkness spiritually has made in the age and around us and sometimes even in us, we need the book of Daniel. I mean, Daniel and his three friends were called to live in a spiritually dark place. Uh, you didn't get darker than the gods of Babylon. And they were called to display the gospel's beauty through gracious, faithful living.
And what's stunning to me is that when Daniel displayed this kind of wisdom, ultimately it reached Nebuchadnezzar's heart. And I believe when we get to that chapter, we're going to see that Nebuchadnezzar actually became a Christian in the Old Testament sense of that term.
So we need Daniel because we live in uncertain times and we live in immoral cultures and we live in dark times, spiritually dark times, but we also live in desperately confusing times. There are parts in the book of Daniel where this man, as godly as he was, as faithful as he was. As old as he was, as familiar with the scripture as he was, didn't understand what was happening. And you see this particularly in chapter 9, and you see it again in chapter 10. As he starts to get these visions from the Lord about the future of his own people, they overwhelm him and he is confused.
And if we're honest as Christians, it doesn't matter how long we've been saved, how often we go to church. what we've read, how many commentaries we have on our shelves. Who our pastor is, there are just times when we come up against things that just devastate us or that confuse us, and we wonder how in the world are we going to make it? How in the world are we going to have a way forward?
Well, Daniel shows us the way as he lives a humble, prayerful, Bible-shaped life that pleased God and advanced his purposes. Wow, that's excellent. Thank you, Pastor Sam.
Now, break the book down for us. There's 12 chapters, the traditional way, and I'm not averse to this. Is chapters one through six is kind of about the exiles and about the more narrative-driven, and then chapters seven through twelve. A lot of the scholars say, well, this is more Prophecies, dreams, spiritual warfare, prayer, whatnot. But can you give folks that are kind of taking their group through Daniel and then folks that are just studying it a little direction as to how to read the book?
How to approach it from a standpoint of exegesis, you know, not esegesis. Exegesis being reading the word as God wrote the word to us, and eisegesis being, you know, taking, reading something into the word that's not there.
So give us a structure, a basic structure, Pastor Sam, getting into Daniel. 12 chapters. How do you break it down? Yeah, so that's a great question, Stu. When I started going at this, I sort of had what you described.
You know, that was kind of what we learned in seminary. And I was very committed that this was a historically accurate book.
So when you pick up the book of Daniel, it's historically accurate. And when you get to a chapter like chapter 11 and you start reading about these different things that are happening, you can actually go back. If you know history and you know the history of the ancient Near East, you can put names to those people that show up there.
So this is a historically accurate book. That's the first thing. But here's the thing that was really surprising to me. It is artfully designed. It is beautiful and it's designed.
When God inspired this book, he inspired a beautiful book. Let me give you an example. This book was inspired in two languages. Chapter 2 through 7, when God inspired that and He told Daniel to write it down, He said, Daniel, I want you to write it down in Aramaic. Which would have been the common trade language for all the nations of the world.
If you lived in Daniel's day and you wanted to do business anywhere in the world, it didn't matter if you went down to Egypt or you went over to Assyria or you crawled over to Babylon or you came down to Israel. It didn't matter where you did business. If you wanted a common business language, the trade language was Aramaic. Everybody spoke Aramaic. But the second half of the book, which is chapter eight through twelve.
is written in Hebrew. And so I got thinking about that because, you know, it's obvious that this is not a translation issue. This is actually the way God designed the book. And so if he designed it in these two languages. What is going on here?
And so just to be brief, this is how I've sort of landed. Chapter one is the introduction. And chapter one introduces you to the sovereign God who is at work orchestrating everything that you read in the book. There are times Nebuchadnezzar thinks he's the one orchestrating stuff. Belshazzar in chapter five, he thinks he's orchestrating stuff.
You get into some of the chapters in 9, 10, 11, and 12, and all kinds of different political leaders think they're orchestrating stuff. But God is the one who rules history. And so one of the big themes in the book is God rules. And he rules over the kingdoms of men. Nebuchadnezzar got to a point where he was okay with God ruling in heaven as long as he stayed out of Babylon.
But by the time he gets done, Nebuchadnezzar has had to learn that the God of heaven rules the kingdoms of men. And so all of these ideas are introduced in that first part of the chapter. Chapter one, rather. Chapters two through seven. are in Aramaic.
And those chapters, whatever's going on there, God wants the nations to know. and he wrote it in their language.
So, God has a message for the nations. You could say it this way: God has a wisdom for the nations. And he's gonna take these four men. and they're going to be the voices of that wisdom to the nations. Because when Nebuchadnezzar starts Writing about what he's learning from these four men.
He writes it to every nation, every tribe, every language under his rule.
So, this is wisdom to the nations. And so, what does God want the nations to know? And what God wants the nations to know is this. I rule over the kingdoms of men. And that was a lesson.
Hard learned. By Nebuchadnezzar. And by the way, God wants us to know that, right? He wants us to know. It's not enough for you to be okay with me ruling in heaven.
You got to let me rule the kingdom of you. I may not have a kingdom as big as Nebuchadnezzar's, but I have a little kingdom. I have the kingdom of me. And I'm happy for God to rule the kingdom of heaven, but I don't want him messing with the kingdom of me unless I need him.
Now, when I need him to deliver me from a fiery furnace or from a den of lions or from an angry king or from whatever it is that comes into my little kingdom of me, he better be there to deliver me. And God comes along through the book of Daniel, and in the first half, writing to the nations and writing to the rulers of the earth and writing to me about the little kingdom of me, God blows all of that up and he says: if you want wisdom from above, That'll do you well as you live in the kingdoms of the world. You need to know that I rule over the kingdoms of men, including the kingdom of you. That's the first part of the book. Then he writes a second part beginning in chapter eight and going through chapter 12, and he writes that in Hebrew.
There was only one nation on the planet that spoke Hebrew. And it was Israel. It was his chosen nation.
So there it's like God has this big wisdom for the nations, and then he pulls his people in close and he says to them: now I have a unique wisdom for you as you live among those nations. And here's what I want you to know. I rule over the kingdoms of men that you're in. And those kingdoms are going to oppress you. Those kingdoms are going to persecute you.
Sometimes those kingdoms are going to rise up and they're going to slaughter you. But here's what I want you to know. My kingdom. matters more. And the kingdom that I'm sending my son to establish.
Is the kingdom that belongs to you? It's going to be greater than the kingdom of Babylon. It's going to be greater than the kingdom of Persia. It's going to be greater than the kingdom of Greece. It's going to be far superior to the kingdom of Rome.
And when my son, the ancient of days, The son of man. comes and sets up that kingdom. He's going to give it to you. That kingdom belongs to you. And my promise is this: as you wait for that kingdom, And as you worship and as you serve and as you live and as you have your being in the broken kings of the world, I will protect you.
I will preserve you and I will glorify myself. through your life through your suffering through your joys through your sorrow through the history of your life. Because my kingdom matters more. And when that kingdom comes. It will be your kingdom.
Wow, that's very heavy, very important for folks seeing the big picture of Daniel, 12 chapters. One of the strategic major prophets of the Old Testament, Pastor Sam Horn, real quick, right out of the gate. The author tells us this when he says, God gave. Israel, Jehoiakim, into the hand of Nebuchadnezzar. It wasn't Nebuchadnezzar running things.
It wasn't Jehoiakim who did botch things up, who was an ungodly, idolatrous king after the godly, you know, unlike his father, who was this godly Josiah, the reformer. But God gave. The Israelites, the southern kingdom, into the hand of Nebuchadnezzar.
So there's this theme throughout. Of God being in control, God being on his throne. God choreographing. In curating all these details, even the details of diet, which we will. Talk about a little bit, and I want you to just touch on the centrality and the importance of Daniel 1:8, which, by the way, that's my favorite verse in Daniel.
There's a lot of good ones, but that's a hang-your-hat on verse because Daniel purposed in his heart. That he wouldn't defile himself. Hit that real quick, and then we got to get out of here. We're going to close on a prayerful note, which everyone wants to stay tuned because it's another big theme of the book.
Some of the richest prayers in the Bible are in this book.
So, one of the things that happened to me as I went through like chapter one is it blew up a lot of sort of ideas that I had when I went into the book, even as a pastor.
So, you mentioned one of them. God is the one doing this, He is the one that gave Jerusalem into the hand of Nebuchadnezzar. He's the one that gave his sacred vessels into the hand of Nebuchadnezzar. God did that. He's the one that gave Daniel into the hand of Nebuchadnezzar.
A little bit later on in chapter one, he gave Daniel favor in the eyes of the master of the court under Nebuchadnezzar. About the food. And then he gave Daniel and Shadrach and Mishiach great wisdom.
So, three times in chapter one, God gives, God is the divine actor. in the chapter. It's not saying that Daniel and the boys were passive. It's that God is the one superintending and God is the one acting. And that's a comfort to all of us because as you read the book of Daniel, these guys are going to get into some tough spots, just like we do.
And they didn't get in those tough spots without God's active, sovereign orchestration.
So that's the first thing. And then about the food, here's the thing about the food. The food was actually food that came from the temples. and had been offered to Nebuchadnezzar's gods and had now been brought to the palace. And the reason Daniel didn't eat that food was not because it was unhealthy or not because it wasn't good, but because it had been offered to God or to the gods, to the pagan gods.
And so you'll find out in the book as we go along, there are three things and only three. That these men determined they could not do.
Now, think about that. They went to the pagan schools, they learned all the pagan knowledge, they even adopted pagan names that Nebuchadnezzar gave them. They wore pagan clothing when they were thrown into the furnace. They were dressed in Babylonian garments. And so these men only refused to do three things.
And all three of the things were actually. prohibited in the Torah. They were prohibited in the Torah. For example, they were not allowed to eat food offered to idols. That's chapter one.
They were not allowed to bow down and worship a carved metal image. That's chapter three. They were not allowed to pray to anybody other than God. That's chapter 6. And so when these men stood against the culture of the day, they didn't stand on every little thing.
They stood against the culture when it was prohibited clearly by the word of God. And that's why God honored those men. If you want to know where they got the wisdom to know what to do, they got it from the Torah. They got it from the Old Testament. That was the Bible of their day.
Well, where are we going to get it? We're going to get it from the Bible that God has given us. Like you've been teaching in your Bible study. We're going to get it from 1 Peter. We're going to get it from Daniel.
We're going to get it from 2 Peter when we get there.
So I think that's how I would look at chapter 1. It's an incredible chapter, and I think we're going to have a great time talking about it. Wonderful.
Okay, we're going to get, so next week we'll finish chapter one as we get into this dietary challenge that Daniel, God gives him great favor. We'll talk about that. This week, we're going to teach verses one through eight, give a lot of background on the book, talk about the important conviction of having integrity and conviction. And then we're going to get into the big themes this week of God's sovereignty. God is control.
God rules from heaven even when things are chaotic on earth. Man, I can't think of a more relevant subject to today's world. And there's so many ways to make this practical. Pastor Horn, I want to ask you to pray us out, but first, Give a quick. Plug for prayer because you discovered, and we won't focus on this as much in our introduction, but you actually started in circumstances in your life and things going on.
You started in chapter nine of Daniel when you kicked off your introduction and just on the importance and the primacy of prayer. In this book and throughout the Bible, and it should be in our life. Hit that real quick, and then I'm going to ask you to pray us out of here and to pray for all of our leaders and teachers and everyone that is hearing this, that God will bless them as they share this with others. Absolutely. You know, one of the hidden themes in the book that you don't really pick up as you're reading it is how much Daniel prayed.
You know, there's the implicit praying that takes place in chapter one, where he's trying to figure out what do I do now that the, you know, Aspenaz said, I got to eat the meat and God said, I can't. What do I do?
So there's implicit prayer there. There's explicit prayer in chapter two. Hey, the king's going to cut our heads off. What do we do? Hey, quick, boys, call a prayer meeting.
And they have a prayer meeting. We get an answer before they even go back to the king. Let's thank God.
So there is this prayer theme that runs all the way through the book until you get to chapter nine. And in chapter nine, you have this amazing prayer. If you want to know how Daniel prayed, read the book of Daniel. If you want to know what he prayed, read chapter nine. And it's a stunning thing because in that prayer, as God begins to interact with Daniel in prayer.
What you see is that our prayers aren't just words that we pray to heaven, that God is actually hearing them and he engages with us in prayer.
So Daniel finds out in his prayer 9 and 10: Daniel, you are greatly loved by God. There's no need to fear. Great peace is available to you. You can be strong and courageous. God's God's word will guide you.
It will strengthen you. All of these ideas are communicated back to Daniel, either through angelic beings God sent to him or through God himself. And so prayer isn't just us talking to God. It's this active communication, two-way communication that helps us to navigate the hard parts of life.
So as I pray, I'm going to pray, Stuart, some very specific things. I'm going to pray that we receive the book of Daniel thankfully. and that we read it thoughtfully. and we apply it personally. And we live it faithfully.
So, that the grace God has put in that book can reach modern-day Nebuchadnezzar's around us. I lovely pray for that. Thank you. Thank you that we could talk together. Lord, we thank you for this wonderful, marvelous book.
that you have put in the bible 2600 years ago these ancient words 2,600 years in a culture far removed from ours are so relevant to us today.
So, we want to thank you for the book. We want to receive it thankfully. Lord, we're going to need your help to understand it and to read it thoughtfully and interpret it carefully.
So, Lord, help us, we pray. And then, as we apply it personally, Lord, there will be hundreds of people. Uh, studying this book for the next 12 weeks, and they will have all kinds of different things going on in their life that Daniel will touch.
So, would your spirit help them to know what in Daniel is being said to them and to their circumstance, and then give them the courage and the help to live it faithfully so that the people in their life that you're intending to teach or to reach. Would come to the same conclusion that Nebuchadnezzar came to: that you are the God of heaven. And you became his God, and may you become their God as well. And we'll thank you in Jesus' name. Amen.
Amen. Thank you, Pastor Sam Horne.
Now, at the end of every podcast, we're going to do a review and a preview.
So, for our review this week, is the overview. I got a lot of views going on here of Daniel, 12 chapters. We've got the overall theme of God is in control, God is. Overall, and in all and working all things out. We have eight, the first eight verses of how they got there, which is the fulfillment of a lot of prophecies from Jeremiah, from Ezekiel.
This, the exiled Hebrews brought in to as really as slaves into Babylon, a hostile world, and how they responded, and how their names were even changed, but their hearts weren't, and how they stood up in this hostility. And Daniel purposed in his heart a key verse. Verse 8. That's our Review for preview for next week. We're going to start in 9 and go all the way through the end of the chapter and how God is now giving great favor.
to these believers that are in exile. In Babylon.
So, we're going to get into that in a lot of detail and get into the diet, is the on the surface, but the deeper issue of the heart and again about when you, when you, in all your ways, acknowledge him, he directs your paths, he makes your path straight and he takes care of his own. He's a faithful God, and we're going to see that in Daniel.
So, Pastor Sam Horn. I appreciate you, brother. What a blessing, man. Thanks for sharing this with us. And our leaders that are listening to me are going to be hearing your sermons too because you've graciously opened the vault up to share those messages with us.
A little shout out to Greg Hennett, one of our Wednesday Word guys, who wrote a book on Daniel.
So I've been looking at his notes, and it's fun to read from these great men of God, isn't it, Sam Horn? Let's give a shout out to three or four of your best tools. In the in the let's go to the tool shed real quick as we get out here. Yeah, I uh obviously I love the book of Daniel. And you know, when you think about uh what's what's happening there, I think I gave you a couple.
Let me just really quickly shout out a couple. Uh, there's a little commentary by Ralph Davis, uh, Dale Ralph Davis called The Message of Daniel and the Bible Speaks Today series. Super readable, super awesome. Um, Nancy DeMoss Wolgenmuth has a little book called Heaven Rules. That's just a wonderful, uplifting book that I would recommend to any person that's really wanting to get some hope out of Daniel.
Uh, George Schwab wrote a little book called Hope in the Midst of a Hostile World, The Gospel According to Daniel, and it just really points out how the gospel of Jesus Christ shows up in this book. It's an amazing little book. And then R. Kit Hughes has a little series called Preach the Word, and the volume on Daniel is all about the triumph of God. kingdom.
And that's super helpful and practical and encouraging. And then I also sent you and I will send you a teaching guide and study questions for each of our times together that you can make available to anybody who wants them.
So I'm hopeful that as we go together, we'll be resource rich so that someone can go as shallow or as deep as they want to go in this book.
Well, now Wednesday in the Word is on Instagram. Wednesday in the Word is on Facebook. And Wednesday in the Word is on YouTube.
So you can watch our teachings. We're going to do some more video type stuff with Pastor Sam, but this is an audio podcast. You can subscribe to it, and it'll hit you every week. And it's here to aid the teachers of Wednesday in the Word, to give them some tools as they teach, and also to be a blessing to anyone that wants to journey through Daniel with us, whether you're in person at our wonderful sponsor of Wednesday in the Word, Dario, 12 restaurants all across North Carolina, wonderful folks that we meet in. They don't serve breakfast, but they serve us breakfast at 8 a.m.
Wednesday mornings and then 8 a.m. on Thursday mornings at several of the locations that host the women's meetings, women's in the Word.
So that's what this is for those of you that kind of came in late. My tool shed, of course, Warren Wearsby, you know, he's good on everything. He's got a commentary in his B-series called Be Resolute, his little commentary on Daniel. I love the expositors, Bible commentary. Gabeline is the editor-in-chief of that.
Also, a few other ones that I've been using. In addition to the ones Pastor Horn shared, I took a picture of his. We had breakfast in Greenville last week, and I took a picture. He was kind enough to bring all those commentaries to lug them in, and I took a picture of those. And then I've got a few.
I love the Everyman's commentary. I've got the Tyndale Bible commentary, and then there's some. Walvoard has a, out of Dallas Seminary, has a good commentary on Daniel. Of course, I mentioned Greg Hennett, one of our own Wednesday Night Word leaders. He wrote a book called Daniel Notes.
Jimmy D. Young has one on the apostle of Apocrypha, the apostle, the prophet Daniel. Jimmy D. Young, I called him Uncle Jimmy. He is with the Lord now, a great speaker on prophecy and end times.
And then David Jeremiah has got a great commentary on Daniel. called the writing on the wall. There's a whole bunch more, and we'll drop some of those in later. Hey, Pastor Sam, bless you, my friend, and we'll do it again soon. And thank you.
Yes, sir. And we'll thank you for the wonderful emails, resources, and I'm forwarding those on to so many who are listening here as well. And we'll talk again soon. I appreciate you. And to all the leaders and people who are joining us, I'm praying fervently that as we go through this together, God will just ignite in us a spirit of Daniel so that we can have a whole bunch.
of modern day Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego, and Daniels running all over this country for the sake of the gospel. Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God. I'm Stu Everson. Thank you for joining us for this week's Wednesday in the Word. We'll be back next week as we drop another episode of what God is doing in the Word of God with a review and a preview of everything going on in our study.
Wedintheword.com is our website. We're also on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube. To watch some of these messages right before you're there, you can download, you can follow, you can like, you can share. And a special thanks to our friends at Dario for being such amazing hosts this week. God bless you.
Stay in the word and keep sharing it everywhere you go.