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This landmark three-hundredth issue of Point of Reference opens with Pastor Jack Bannister's bold declaration "God Can Do" and his poem "The God of Love," before Lois Bannister teaches the main study on God's Superlative Grace — a rich Greek word study on huper and huperballo drawn through Romans, Ephesians, and Second Corinthians, defining grace as unearned, unmerited divine favor that not only forgives sin but removes the desire for it. The "Why Go to Church?" story provides a memorable pastoral illustration, and the episode closes with a sweeping survey of sixty-plus biblical miracles across four categories: deliverance, provision, judgment, healing, and raising the dead — under the title "Our God of Signs and Wonders."
By Brett SThis landmark three-hundredth issue of Point of Reference opens with Pastor Jack Bannister's bold declaration "God Can Do" and his poem "The God of Love," before Lois Bannister teaches the main study on God's Superlative Grace — a rich Greek word study on huper and huperballo drawn through Romans, Ephesians, and Second Corinthians, defining grace as unearned, unmerited divine favor that not only forgives sin but removes the desire for it. The "Why Go to Church?" story provides a memorable pastoral illustration, and the episode closes with a sweeping survey of sixty-plus biblical miracles across four categories: deliverance, provision, judgment, healing, and raising the dead — under the title "Our God of Signs and Wonders."