• Deuteronomy 24 Explained | Divorce, Mercy, Justice & God’s Care for the Weak
    Mar 25 2026
    Deuteronomy 24 Explained | Divorce, Mercy, Justice & God's Care for the Weak In this verse-by-verse Bible study, Elder Jonathan Moseley walks through Deuteronomy chapter 24, a chapter that reveals God's design for justice, mercy, dignity, and restraint of human cruelty within everyday life in Israel. This lesson addresses laws that governed marriage and divorce, lending and borrowing, labor practices, criminal responsibility, and care for the poor. Rather than encouraging harshness, these commands consistently protect the vulnerable, limit abuse of power, and remind God's people to act with compassion—especially toward those who are weak or easily exploited. Key themes explored in this study include: Biblical rules governing divorce and remarriage Why a bill of divorcement protected women God's limits on collateral, lending, and debt Protection for the poor, widows, and hired laborers Condemnation of human trafficking within Israel Individual responsibility for crime and punishment Fair treatment of strangers, orphans, and widows God's provision through gleaning laws and generosity Throughout the chapter, Moses reminds Israel that they were once slaves in Egypt—and that memory was meant to shape how they treated others. Deuteronomy 24 shows that God's law was not about domination, but about righteousness, and mercy. 📖 Passage Studied: Deuteronomy 24 🎙️ Teacher: Elder Jonathan Moseley 🏛️ Church: Fair Haven Primitive Baptist Church (Tifton, GA) If you're studying the Old Testament and want to better understand how God's law restrained injustice and cared for the poor, this lesson provides essential context. 👍 Like | 💬 Comment
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    28 mins
  • Deuteronomy 31- Bible Study
    Mar 25 2026
    Moses, nearing the end of his life, delivers a final charge to the Israelites, acknowledging his own limitations and the divine decree that he will not enter the Promised Land due to past disobedience. He publicly commissions Joshua as the new leader, affirming that God will go before them, ensuring their victory and promising unwavering presence, thus calling for courage and faith. Moses commands the public reading of the Law every seven years during the Feast of Tabernacles, ensuring that all—men, women, children, and strangers—would hear, learn, and fear the Lord, cultivating a generational memory of divine faithfulness. God, foreseeing Israel's future apostasy, instructs Moses to write down a song (see Ch 32 for the actual song) that will serve as a lasting testimony against them, a witness that their downfall will not be due to God's absence but to their own rebellion, even as He fulfills His promise to bring them into the land. The Law is then placed in the side of the Ark of the Covenant as a perpetual witness, and Moses, in a solemn farewell, speaks these warnings directly to the nation's leaders, affirming that their disobedience after his death is inevitable, yet the consequences are foreknown and foretold, underscoring the gravity of covenantal faithfulness.
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    26 mins
  • Final Thoughts on Romans | Msg 32 in Roman Series
    Mar 22 2026
    Welcome to our Sunday Morning Live Stream! We're grateful you've joined us today and pray this service is a blessing to you. This will 'probably' be our final message in the Roman Series. You can the whole series in this Youtube Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1b-lgVKP1HxlZNCCAFpf-EgdHoGWOX3x Or Sermon Audio Series: https://www.sermonaudio.com/series/206273 Speaker - Elder Jonathan Moseley, Pastor of Fair Haven Primitive Baptist Church in Tifton, GA.
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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • Bible Study Deuteronomy Chapter 30
    Mar 18 2026
    Deuteronomy 30 presents a profound call to covenant faithfulness, framing Israel's future in terms of life and death, blessing and curse, rooted in obedience to God's law. Though the nation will ultimately face exile due to disobedience, God promises a future restoration—both historically through the return from Babylonian captivity and ultimately in the spiritual ingathering of all believers at Christ's return. Central to this hope is a divine heart transformation, symbolized by circumcision of the heart, enabling genuine love for God and obedience from the soul. The passage's immediacy—'the word is very nigh unto thee'—is revealed in the New Testament as a veiled reference to the gospel of faith: salvation is not found in ascending to heaven or descending into the deep to aid Jesus's in his work, but in our unmerited connection to Jesus through Grace, which we know of by faith.
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    32 mins
  • Deuteronomy Chapter 23 - Explained
    34 mins
  • Confession of a Bad Attitude- Psalm 73
    Mar 15 2026
    This sermon presents a profound exploration of the tension between human perspective and divine reality, using Psalm 73 as a lens to expose the hidden sin of envy and discontent that can plague even faithful believers. The psalmist's initial struggle—feeling that God's people suffer while the wicked prosper—reveals a heart distorted by a narrow, earthly viewpoint, leading to bitterness and questioning of God's justice. However, through the transformative experience of entering God's sanctuary, he is restored by the objective truth of God's ultimate sovereignty, the inevitable judgment of the wicked, and the eternal inheritance reserved for the faithful. This shift from subjective despair to objective hope is reinforced by Romans 15 and 1 Peter 1, which emphasize that true joy and peace are not found in circumstantial ease but in faith-filled confidence in God's promises, His resurrection power, and the glorious future awaiting believers. The sermon concludes with a call to actively draw near to God through worship, Scripture, and community, recognizing that spiritual renewal comes not from self-effort but from divine grace, and that walking in honesty and holiness means putting on Christ and rejecting the lusts of the flesh in anticipation of His return.
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    52 mins
  • Q: Can you Change the World?
    Mar 14 2026
    The sermon centers on the transformative power of everyday choices, asserting that every believer, regardless of age or perceived insignificance, possesses the capacity to change the world through faithful, Christ-centered living. Drawing from Scripture—including Hebrews 13's call to entertain strangers, the parable of the Good Samaritan, and Paul's teachings on spiritual gifts—it emphasizes that genuine Christian character, marked by love, joy, peace, and mercy, is both a divine gift and a deliberate choice. The preacher illustrates how seemingly small acts of kindness, integrity, and courage—like a single word, a smile, or a moment of sacrifice—can ripple outward, influencing others in ways that echo through generations, as seen in the lineage of Jesus and the lives of biblical figures like Ruth, Rahab, and Peter. Ultimately, the message calls for authenticity over hypocrisy, urging believers to live with such integrity that their lives become a testimony to God's presence, inviting others to glorify Him not through grand gestures, but through consistent, honest, and loving choices made in the quiet moments of daily life.
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    54 mins
  • The Two Works of Christ- Rightly Dividing Scripture
    Mar 13 2026
    The sermon presents a profound theological distinction between two completed works of Jesus: the finished work of salvation on the cross and the finished work of proclaiming that salvation through His ministry and the apostolic witness. Central to this message is the idea that while salvation itself is a completed, sovereign act of God—secured by Christ's sacrifice and eternally guaranteed—its full understanding and reception depend on the revelation of that salvation through the preaching of the gospel. The sermon emphasizes that the New Testament reveals two interconnected yet distinct realities: the eternal, grace-based salvation of believers (seen in passages like Romans 8:30) and the ongoing, grace-filled revelation of that salvation through the proclamation of truth (seen in 2 Timothy 1:10 and Ephesians 1:8–9). This distinction allows for a right division of Scripture, clarifying that terms like 'saved,' 'faith,' 'gospel,' and 'repentance' often refer not to the final destination of heaven, but to the present experience of spiritual deliverance, joy, and fellowship with Christ in this life—the 'earnest' of the eternal inheritance. By rightly dividing these two works, the preacher invites the audience to embrace both the security of salvation and the transformative power of knowing the truth, leading to a deeper, more joyful Christian life grounded in both grace and revelation.
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    55 mins