PR ResourcesReformed Encyclopaedia
SearchResourcesScriptureExploreAskLiveChurchesAboutContact
  1. Home
  2. Search

Type

Scripture

Publisher

Source

Year Range

–
PR Resources

A not-for-profit initiative making the theological riches of the Reformed faith freely available to the church worldwide.

Newsletter

Weekly digest of newly added resources

Navigate

SearchResourcesExploreAsk a QuestionAuthorsScripture Index

Community

Find a ChurchAboutContactCopyright NoticePrivacy PolicyTerms of ServiceFeature Requests(coming soon)RSS FeedSupport This Project

Related Sites

RFPAPRCACPRCSermonAudio

© 2026 PR Resources. A not-for-profit project. All content belongs to its respective authors and publishers.

Support us

Showing 10 results for “presence”

Beacon LightsJournal ArticleRelated

God’s Omnipresence

Robert C. Harbach·1984-06-01

Webster says, “Omnipresence is an attribute peculiar to God.” In that attribute He is with His whole being “present everywhere at the same time.” Webster also says, “The ubiquity (exist­ence everywhere at the same time) of God is not disputed by those who admit His existence.” Funk and Wagnalls says

CPRC SermonsSermonRelated

(2) Jehovah’s Presence With Me

Martyn McGeown·2013-12-29

(2) Jehovah’s Presence With Me Preacher: Rev. Martyn McGeown Series: The God Who Knows Me Scripture: Psalm 139:7-12 I. Present II. Inescapably Present III. Comfortably Present

SermonAudioSermonRelated

Jehovah's Presence with Us

  1. The Idea
  2. The Comfort
  3. The Response
Matthew Deboer·2019-11-03

That means God is here, but God is also in Alaska, in China, Pakistan. God is everywhere present. And He is always with us. Everywhere we go. Now, we easily forget that. We forget that often when we are tempted to sin. We think, I'm all by myself. Nobody's going to know if I do this. And we do it

Beacon LightsJournal ArticleRelated

Arminianism (8) Limited Atonement

Aaron Cleveland·2003-09-01

his own presence forever.

Beacon LightsJournal ArticleRelated

Watching Daily At My Gates

Cornelius Jonker·2005-03-01

March 13 Read Acts 17:24-28 One of the aspects of God’s omnipresence is His Immanency. Not only is He transcendent as we saw yesterday, above and beyond all things, but He is also immanent, meaning that He is constantly in all things. In Jeremiah 23:24 we read, “Can any hide himself in secret place

Beacon LightsJournal ArticleRelated

Making Confession of Faith

Paul Harbach·1977-02-01

This rich heritage that is yours right here and now, and not in some other time or some other place, is your present possession. It has always been your present possession and it is one of your most valued possessions. Therefore, it also is your possession to most jealously guard. Do you know what t

Beacon LightsJournal ArticleRelated

God’s Eternity

Robert C. Harbach·1984-05-01

with Him as the present. Hence His existence is an ever-abiding, all-embracing present, which is always contemporaneous with the ever-flowing times of His creatures. His knowledge, which never can change, eternally recog­nizes His creatures and their actions in their several places in time, and His

Beacon LightsJournal ArticleRelated

The Song of Zion

Unknown·1998-08-01

Gods presence going before us is an awesome force. Nothing can stand in His way. We must acknowledge His presence in our lives. We do this by going to Him in prayer. We do this by reading and meditating upon His word. We do this by singing and listening to the songs of Zion. And after doing all thes

Beacon LightsJournal ArticleRelated

Strangers and Sojourners – Guided by Providence

Mark Hoeksema·2013-06-01

There is no place in the whole universe where he is not. Omnipresence in turn implies two other ideas. The first is the truth of God’s immanence, which means that he is near to all his works. We find this idea in the language of the Catechism: God upholds and governs all things “as it were by his ha

Standard BearerJournal ArticleRelated

Views During The Time of the Reformation (81): Views on the Sacraments: Lord’s Supper (The Lutheran View)

Herman Veldman·1964-01-01

The Lutheran doctrine of consubstantiation, that the communicants eat and drink the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ under and with the bread and wine, is largely based upon the omnipresence of our Lord Jesus Christ, the omnipresence of His body and blood and the omnipotence of God. The Luthe