Wayne Stiles served in leadership at Insight for Living Ministries, the Bible-teaching ministry of Chuck Swindoll, for twelve years. He also served on the Board of Directors for the National Religious Broadcasters and as an adjunct professor at Dallas Theological Seminary. His newest project, Walking the Bible Lands, will take students on a virtual tour of the Holy Land through video and audio.
Dr. Stiles has been married to his wife, Cathy, for thirty-six years and served as an elder and the Bible teacher of the Marathon Fellowship Class at Stonebriar Community Church.
Wayne Stiles teaches from Leviticus 23:1-3 that believers celebrate God’s Sabbath rest by resting in Christ’s finished work on the cross. In our lives, we should also insist on a regular cessation, and trust God with what is undone.
Wayne Stiles teaches from Leviticus 21-22 what worship really is. It isn’t just singing or music on Sundays. In fact, there is no division between our spiritual life and our secular life. Our entire life is a worship service to God.
Wayne Stiles teaches from Leviticus 20 that what we believe determines what we do. The only way we can shun ungodly practices comes by saturating our minds with God’s Word.
Wayne Stiles teaches from Leviticus 18-19 how to deal with your biggest challenge living in a world of sin. The Lord calls every believer to exclusive loyalty to Him, and to live a holy life—and also to love unbelievers.
Wayne Stiles teaches from Leviticus 23:9–14 how the Feast of Firstfruits points to Jesus Christ’s resurrection as the reason we can have hope. The feast reminds us that thanking the Lord with the first portion of our blessings is an act of faith in His promise to provide.
Wayne Stiles teaches from Leviticus 23:4-8 about how to fill your empty heart. From the feasts of Passover and Unleavened Bread we glean principles of gratitude, conviction, and purpose that overflow in our lives so that we “might no longer live for themselves, but for Him who died and rose again on their behalf.”
Wayne Stiles teaches from Leviticus 16 how we know all our sins can be gone. As God provided complete forgiveness annually through the Day of Atonement, so God provides complete forgiveness eternally through the death and resurrection of Jesus.
Wayne Stiles teaches from Leviticus 13–15 that our lives are in God’s hands. Just as one ritual bird died and the other flew away free, we see that our condition could have condemned us, but God has made us whole by His grace. What God requires of us, God provides for us—but we must accept it by faith.
Wayne Stiles teaches from Leviticus 12 that only those who are whole—both spiritually and physically—may enter the presence of our holy God. And only Jesus makes that possible.
Wayne Stiles teaches from Leviticus 11 how we can apply the timeless truths of Israel’s kosher laws to our lives today. In truth, a kosher walk with God was never about food alone—but food merely helped facilitate a holy life and pointed us to our holy God.