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Jesus shifts worship from physical locations and old covenant shadows to spirit and truth (John 4:24). His once-for-all sacrifice perfects believers; the Spirit empowers authentic, location-free worship everywhere, fulfilling temple types and inaugurating kingdom reality through Christ’s superior priesthood.
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Philippians refutes ethnic exclusivity in God’s favor toward Israel, held by early Jewish unbelievers and dispensationalists, by expanding categories like “Israel,” “circumcision,” and “citizenship” universally through faith in Jesus Christ. It redefines Israel as all believers—Jews and Gentiles—anchored to historical promises, including Gentiles as heirs.
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The first three weeks lay the foundation: Scripture tells one story centered on Christ. The Israel of God is the new-creation people — Jew and Gentile united by faith. The kingdom has come in the King, not postponed. Old Testament signs find their reality in Jesus, correcting ethnic-only views of God’s people.
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The first three weeks lay the foundation: Scripture tells one story centered on Christ. The Israel of God is the new-creation people — Jew and Gentile united by faith. The kingdom has come in the King, not postponed. Old Testament signs find their reality in Jesus, correcting ethnic-only views of God’s people.
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Week 2 examined Galatians 6:16 and Romans 9:6-8. Paul declares that those who walk by the “rule” of new creation in Christ are the true Israel of God — one unified people, not two. Ethnic markers no longer define God’s family; belonging comes through faith, election, and the promise fulfilled in Jesus.



