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Series

Words I Hope I Never Hear Again

This series examines common Christadelphian clichés, misquotes, and stock phrases, showing how repeated wording can quietly shape assumptions, drift into legalism, or distort Scripture. It calls for more careful, accurate Bible language in teaching, prayer, and ecclesial culture, replacing slogans with clearer thought, better exegesis, and healthier spiritual habits.
Part 1
Some of these phrases are worse than overused and stale; they are detrimental to a life of faith and have no place in our teaching, worship, and spiritual development. 
Part 2
Christadelphian Cliches, Misquotes, Pat Phrases, Wrested Scriptures, and Legalistic Formulas
Part 3
Often repeated but never verified, “Five is the number of grace” is the poster child for Christadelphian phrases that need to be deep-sixed. Or deep-fived. 
Part 4
Christadelphian Cliches, Misquotes, Pat Phrases, Wrested Scriptures, and Legalistic Formulas
Part 5
This month's entry addressing the topic of original language references regardless of the speaker’s knowledge of Hebrew or Greek.
Part 6
This month takes on another handful of phrases we’re better off without. Three are monikers for wives, and three pertain to the Lord Jesus: helpmate, helpmeet, sister-wife, elder brother, absent Lord, and broken body.
Part 7
This month we look at the magnitude of God's grace, our understanding of it and a more simple and accurate way to define it.
Part 8
This final installment of this series includes three phrases with no particular connection among them.



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