Category: Moe Bergeron

  • Meditation: 1 John 1:7

    Meditation: 1 John 1:7

    One of the grand themes of Scripture is the contrast between light and darkness. Light speaks of truth, purity, joy, and fellowship with God, while darkness represents ignorance, sin, and separation from Him. For the believer, life is to be lived entirely “in the light”—not merely touched by it, but…

  • Meditation: Micah 2:13

    Meditation: Micah 2:13

    Micah 2:12–13 offers a vision of leadership that is both intimate and triumphant. The prophet speaks not only of rescue, but of divine companionship and purposeful movement: “The One who breaks open the way will go up before them; they will break through the gate and go out. Their King…

  • Draw Closer

    Draw Closer

    From the opening garden of Genesis to the radiant vision of Revelation, Scripture reveals a God who walks—not aloof, not in abstraction, but near. He is not a distant deity, watching from heaven’s remote balconies. No, He is the God who walks among His people—intimately, attentively, and redemptively. Every step…

  • Total Ruin

    Total Ruin

    The Scriptures speak plainly—unflinchingly—about the soul apart from Christ. The Bible does not flatter fallen man. It does not describe him as well-meaning but misled, or merely misguided and morally neutral. No, the witness of Scripture is far more serious: mankind, without Christ, is perishing in a darkness that is…

  • Mediation: Psalm 107

    Mediation: Psalm 107

    Psalm 107 unfolds before us a moving tapestry of God’s heart and hand—His lovingkindness and His wonderful works. Repeated like a holy refrain throughout the psalm is this call to worship: “Oh, that men would give thanks to the LORD for His lovingkindness and His wonderful works to the children…

  • Finding Refuge in the Cleft of the Rock

    Finding Refuge in the Cleft of the Rock

    When Moses stood before the Lord and pleaded, “Now show me your glory,” he asked for something most daring (Exodus 33:18, NIV). Yet God, in His mercy, answered Moses’ request with tenderness. He said, “There is a place near me where you may stand on a rock” (v. 21), and…

  • Welcoming the Spirit’s Renewing Work

    Welcoming the Spirit’s Renewing Work

    The history of the Church is clear: every true revival has been a revival of the Holy Spirit’s work. Without exception, when God’s people have turned from self-reliance and returned to a living, humble dependence on the Spirit of Christ, the Church has awakened—and the world has noticed. “Times of…

  • Immanuel

    Immanuel

    In our previous post on the Holy Spirit we have seen how vital the Holy Spirit is in the evangelistic work of the Church. Without Him, there is no true preaching, no real conviction, and no new birth. But the Spirit’s role does not end at conversion; He is equally…

  • Rekindling Fellowship with the Holy Spirit

    Rekindling Fellowship with the Holy Spirit

    It is one of the quiet tragedies of modern church life that many believers live as if the Holy Spirit were an optional member of the Trinity. We confess the doctrine of the triune God in our creeds, yet we often live and minister in ways that are functionally Unitarian—focused…