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  • Zechariah 7:9-10
    "Thus says the LORD of hosts, Render true judgments, show kindness and mercy to one another, do not oppress the widow, the fatherless, the sojourner, or the poor, and let none of you devise evil against another in your heart."

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Tim DaneTim DaneTim Dane is the Director of Front Range Bible Institute. He obtained a B.S. in Finance (1984) from UNLV in his hometown of Las Vegas. After completing his studies at The Master’s Seminary, Tim served as senior pastor of Anza Avenue Baptist Church (Torrance, CA) from 1995 to 2005. Since 1997, Tim has served as an adjunct professor at Irpin Biblical Seminary (Kiev, Ukraine) and has also taught at the seminary and institute levels in Russia, Mexico, Germany and the U.S. The desire to pursue doctoral studies and the vision to form Front Range Bible Institute led Tim, his wife Karen (since 1986), and their six children to move to the Colorado Springs area in mid-2006. Personal interests with his family include soccer, fishing, snow skiing, and antique cars.

Tim Dane has over 900 sermons available on SermonAudio.com.
Click here to listen.   SermonAudio.com MP3 Sermons

Current Events and God’s Plan for Israel

August 4th, 2009

Church history shows that throughout the first three centuries of Christianity, the universal church was overwhelmingly Premillennial in its eschatology. The general idea of Premillennialism consists in the belief that the kingdom of God which was promised in the Old Testament will come to this earth with the second coming of Jesus Christ. His return is before the Millennium; hence, a “Premillennial” viewpoint.

The Old and New Testaments promise a restoration to the universe, a restoration that includes the fulfilling of every promise God made to the nation of Israel. This doctrine includes some of the following ideas:
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Divine Revelation and the Close of the Prophetic Age

May 19th, 2009

Since the end of the apostolic age (ca. A.D. 100) and throughout church history, orthodox Christianity has strongly affirmed the sufficiency of the biblical canon. Early testimony shows that there was a growing recognition in the church for a circulating NT canon. Some of the early evidence that shows a recognition for this inspired canon comes from sources like as the following: (1) Clement of Rome (A.D. 95), (2) Irenaeus (185), (3) the so-called Muratorian Fragment (ca. 185), (4) Hippolytus (170-235), (5) Tertullian (ca. 200), (6) Clement of Alexandria (d. 215), (7) Origen (d. 254), (8) Eusebius (260-340), (9) the Synod of Laodecia (363), (10) The Festal Letter of Athanasius (367), (11) The Council of Hippo (393), (12) the Synod of Carthage (397) and (13) the Council of Carthage (419).
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The Lord’s Prayer in a Historical Context

May 1st, 2009

One of the most beloved portions of the New Testament is the Lord’s Prayer. From the earliest days of the church, this portion of Scripture has been highly cherished by the body of Christ. Throughout the Dark Ages—and even up to the present day—it is clear that the Lord’s Prayer has taken on a kind of idol status within Roman Catholicism. This certainly is not what Jesus intended when He said, ‘When you pray, pray in this manner.’
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