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OpenBibleLab

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The Brick and Mortar Edge

82 members • $11/m

5 contributions to OpenBibleLab
Easter Sunday - New Bible Study is Live: Luke 24:13–35
✝️ Our Easter Sunday study is now available, and it takes us onto the road to Emmaus with two disciples who are walking, talking, and trying to make sense of everything that just happened. This passage invites us into resurrection not through instant clarity, but through patient presence and careful listening. ✨ One of the things this study lingers over is how long recognition takes. Jesus is walking with them, speaking with them, opening Scripture with them, and still He is not recognized right away. Luke seems unhurried here. The delay matters. The disciples’ hearts respond before their eyes do, and Scripture is doing its work even while understanding is incomplete. 🔥 That raises gentle questions worth sitting with. What do you notice about the pace of this story? Where does recognition finally happen, and where does it not? Is it possible for Jesus to be present and active even when He is not yet recognized? The full study is available now in the Premium course area, where we slow the text down and trace these movements carefully together. Whether you have already read it or are just encountering the passage again, we would love to keep the conversation going here. What detail from Luke 24:13–35 stands out to you right now as you think about Easter?
0 likes • 5d
I love how this shows that "our hearts burned while Jesus spoke. But yet they did not see who He was. To me this is the beginning of "Listen to that Still Voice inside of us, when going through the hard things in life." We don't have to see Him to Know Him. He speaks to us all the time, He took a beating for us so we could be Healed, Set Free, and have Peace. Even today it's hard for some to hear Him...If only We could Be Still & Know He is always with us.
📌 Welcome to OpenBibleLab
START HERE 👉 https://www.skool.com/openbiblelab-1561/classroom/5e5d1bd7?md=79f9fbe225e64b90a86b0518e6b6e093 Welcome. We’re glad you’re here. OpenBibleLab is a shared learning space for people who want to read the Bible with greater clarity, patience, and understanding. This is not a place for hot takes or rushed conclusions. It’s a place to learn carefully over time. If you’re new here, please introduce yourself by replying to this post. When you introduce yourself, share one book of the Bible you want to understand better or one book you find yourself returning to often. There’s no right or wrong answer. This helps us learn together. When you’re ready, explore the Classroom at your own pace and join discussions where you feel comfortable. There’s no required order and no pressure to keep up. Take your time. Read closely. Ask honest questions. We’re learning together.
2 likes • Feb 4
@Rhashauna Brathwaite Hello, I love the Word and just being in a group of like minded people, is wonderful. I think we all want to grow, and have so much to offer one another. I love to pray for others and see the wonders of the Lord change things. Please reach out if needed! Charlotte, I was married 45 yrs, mom of 3, Granny to 5.
📌 Prayer Lab
This space exists for prayer. You are welcome to share prayer requests, updates, or answered prayers. You may also simply pray for others without commenting at length. When responding to a request, aim to pray rather than fix. You do not need to explain everything or share more than you are comfortable sharing. Brief requests are enough. This is a place for faithfulness, gentleness, and quiet support.
1 like • Feb 4
Dear Father, I lift my city Leaders up to you, guide them, lead them in the direction they should follow. Protect us, the people and open doors that would lead us to Your Perfect will. Your word says that it is Your will that we be in good health, and prosper as our souls prosper. Asked in Jesus Name, Amen
🙏 New Bible Study is Live - Prayer Begins With Honest Address
A new Bible study on Matthew 6:9–13 is now live in OpenBibleLab. This familiar prayer opens in a way that quietly reshapes what prayer even is. In the study, we slow down at the very first words Jesus gives his disciples. Before any requests are made, before daily needs are named, prayer begins with an address. “Our Father in heaven.” That opening does more than start the prayer. It establishes relationship, posture, and trust. The rest of the prayer flows from that starting point, and the order turns out to matter more than we often notice. What’s left open is how natural or unfamiliar that address might feel, and why Jesus chose to begin there rather than anywhere else. The prayer resists rushing. It invites attention. A few questions to sit with as you read or reread the passage: 👀 What do you notice about how the prayer begins, especially compared to how prayers often start today? 🤔 Which line feels most closely connected to calling God “Father,” and which feels more distant? 🌱 Where does this prayer feel familiar, and where does it feel quietly challenging? The full study is available in the Premium course area, and this conversation is open to everyone. Read the study if you’re able, and join the discussion here. What are you noticing as you linger with this prayer?
3 likes • Feb 2
Your Will be done. The Lords prayer is comforting to me. I know that no matter what happens in life, our Father is with me, to comfort me, help me, and open doors. Jesus has taught us to seek our Father first. My only challenge is I get in the way and try to fix things myself.
🌱 New Bible Study is Live - Trust When God’s Direction Is Partial
A new Bible study on Genesis 12:1–4 is now live in OpenBibleLab. This one slows us down at a familiar passage and notices something easy to overlook. God gives a call before he gives a map. In the study, we linger with how the passage is shaped. Abram is told to go, but the destination remains unnamed. The promises are expansive and confident, yet the direction is partial. What’s striking is not just that Abram obeys, but what kind of obedience the text presents. It’s movement rooted in trust, not understanding. Even Hebrews later notices this, that Abram went out not knowing where he was going. That tension stays unresolved in the text, and it seems intentional. The story moves forward without explaining how the future will unfold. Paying attention to that choice opens up the passage in a quieter, deeper way. A couple questions to sit with as you read or reread the passage: 👀 What details stand out to you about what God says, and what God does not say? 🧭 Where do you notice movement without clarity in these verses? 🤔 What feels most open or unanswered by the end of verse 4? The full study is available now in the Premium course area. Whether you’ve read it yet or not, join the conversation here. Share one detail you noticed, or one question that stayed with you.
3 likes • Jan 18
His personal call to Abram, trusting Abram to go. There had to be a personal relationship between God and Abram. God wanted him to go now, stop what your doing and leave. It was the first thing God told Abram to do. Trust Me Abram Right now, I believe that I need to make a change, and the uncertainty of what the future hold is hard to handle at times. But the Lord knows what I need & I trust Him with my outcome. Does God speak to others like this?
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Charlotte Nepowada
2
11points to level up
@charlotte-nepowada-1044
Hi, Charlotte here owner of Shabby Frames n More. I paint, & sell vintage furniture, custom items. Located in a small Village style shop, 13 others

Active 5d ago
Joined Jan 17, 2026