Scripture
2 Corinthians
9 teachings that open 2 Corinthians.
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Making Disciples
The Soldier, the Athlete, and the Farmer
Scott closes the disciple-making series by walking through Paul's three metaphors in 2 Timothy 2 and showing that our weakness, not our competence, is what qualifies us to make disciples.
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Making Disciples
In The Dust Of The Rabbi
Scott closes Yeshua's disciple-making template on the word 'Follow,' showing that following means a living, daily relationship with the indwelling Spirit and demonstrating what it looks like in an actual disciple-making conversation.
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Making Disciples
The Weakness Of The Cross
Scott continues the teaching on cross-bearing, defining it as the daily, willful surrender that dethrones the flesh and lets our shared weakness become the source of real fellowship.
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Making Disciples
When Not To Rescue
Scott teaches that taking up the cross means joyfully bearing another's suffering, which sometimes means staying in the grief with them instead of rushing to fix it.
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Making Disciples
Death at Work in Us, Life in You
Scott moves from murdering the flesh to taking up the cross, where bearing the suffering of others becomes the channel through which the life of Messiah reaches them.
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Making Disciples
Working Out Your Own Salvation
Scott teaches that working out your salvation is the present-tense renewing of the soul, the everyday labor of disciple-making.
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Making Disciples
The Truest You Is Messiah in You
Scott teaches that the believer has exchanged the sinful nature for the divine nature, so the real struggle is between flesh and Spirit, not between two competing selves.
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Making Disciples
The Old Man Is Dead
Scott teaches that the believer's old sin nature was crucified for good, so kingdom living means refusing the flesh's lies about who we now are in Messiah.
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Making Disciples
Taking Dominion the Way the King Did
Scott teaches that the call to multiply and subdue is fulfilled through disciple-making, and that godly dominion looks like service rather than lording it over.