Sermons
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SERMON SERIES
- Advent 2020: The Mothers of Jesus 4
- Advent 2023: Prepare The Way 6
- Advent 2024: 5
- Beside Still Waters 6
- By Faith 4
- Called to Community 3
- Easter 2023 1
- Ephesians: Our Sovereign God 5
- Esther 7
- Forgiven 6
- James: The Wisdom of Faith 4
- Judges: Right In Their Own Eyes 6
- Life In Exile 9
- Mark: Who Is This Jesus? 18
- No One Can 9
- Our Lords Prayer 9
- Palm Sunday 2023 1
- Philippians: Joy In Chains 9
- Pray God Down 11
- Psalms 7
- Psalms For The Journey 5
- Return: Ezra-Nehemiah 14
- Sermon On The Mount 16
- Stand Alone Sermons 12
- The Banquet 7
- The Church 8
- The Coming King 5
- The Final Hours 5
- The Promises 52
- The Seven Deadly Sins 7
- To The One Who Conquers 8
- Worshiping the Spirit 1
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Jesus: The Lord of the Storm
How does Jesus display his divinity? In Mark 4 we see Jesus calm the storm as the disciples are afraid that they are going to die. They marvel at the fact that even the wind and waves obey him and they were greatly frightened. What does this tell us about who Jesus is in our lives?
Jesus: The Radical
What is blasphemy of the Holy Spirit? At this point in Jesus’s ministry he had become a phenomenon and was constantly surrounded by the crowds. He was blamed for using the power of Satan to cast out demons, but Jesus responds with a far more radical answer.
Jesus: The Lord of the Sabbath
Jesus begins his ministry with many signs and wonders and healing of the sick, but the Pharisees were skeptical of Jesus. When they saw his disciples eating grain on the Sabbath in the fields, they put Jesus to the test. But Jesus says he is the Lord of the Sabbath and teaches us why the Sabbath, true rest, is given and commanded by God.
Jesus: The King
How would you define the gospel? Is it just the good news that Jesus died for your sins and you get to live forever, or is it something far bigger and better? Mark tells us that Jesus began preaching the gospel from the very beginning of his ministry. So what is the gospel if Jesus was preaching it before he ever died on the cross?
Jesus: The Beloved Son of God
Mark begins with John the Baptist announcing the arrival of the Messiah. Jesus is first introduced to us as the beloved Son of God with whom the Father is pleased.
A Healing Community
The Christian community is a healing community. The love that we are called to exhibit to one another allows us to empathize with the suffering and associate with the lowly. Our lives are to be so intertwined that we rejoice and weep with another.
A Loving Community
To be a Christian is to be called to a radical new life. Paul teaches us how this new life together is marked by genuine love, patient in hardship, and caring for the needs of one another. This new life allows us to enter into the suffering of others and to resist evil and avenging wrongdoing.
A Holy and Humble Community
In Romans 12, Paul tells the church to present itself as a living sacrifice to God. That wasn’t just an individual call, but a call to the entire church, to offer itself in service unto God as a unified, corporate body. This lies at the heart of the community of faith: being renewed in our minds and laying aside the ways of the world together.
Contentment In Christ
How can we face whatever comes our way, whether we are blessed or brought low? Paul teaches us the secret of contentment and how he has come to know how to face whatever happens in his life. The secret is Jesus and finding him in every circumstance and trusting that he is in control and writing your story.
The God of Peace
God is a God of peace, yet we don’t often feel at peace. Paul exhorts those in the church to be reconciled if they are at odds. He encourages those who are anxious to lay their concerns before God so that they might know the peace that surpasses understanding. How can we access this peace that’s available to us?
Christ Our Hope
How can we let go of our past and lay hold of what Christ has for us in the future? Paul teaches us how to look forward to the prize of God’s upward call, when we will be fully with Christ in transformed bodies. The glory of what awaits us is beyond measure and offers comfort when we look at the past and hope when we look to the future.
To Know Christ
When Paul converted his life was radically changed and he lost everything. Yet in his letter to the Philippians he says he counts all that he had as loss. All of his privilege and status and position were lost, yet he says it was as nothing compared to the surpassing knowledge of Christ. He would gladly lose everything because Christ was his.
Looking Out For Others
Paul shows his deep love for the Philippians, but also for Timothy and Epaphroditus. Their hearts had been woven together by the gospel of grace and is an example to us. Why does the gospel weave such strong relational bonds when it’s at work in our lives?
Conquering Complaining
Paul desires unity among the people of the Philippian church, to be of the same mind, and know the joy of being in full accord. How is this type of unity brought about in the life of God’s people? It’s when we lay aside our selfish ambitions and put on the humility of Christ who emptied himself and became a servant.
To Live Is Christ
Despite his circumstances and being in prison, Paul is hopeful. His life has come down to simply knowing Christ, and therefore, his circumstances and struggles are secondary. Why do we allow our circumstances to become the focus and how can we find Jesus and the freedom Paul speaks about? Suffering is inevitable in this life, yet Paul says in Christ our suffering is redeemed.
Christ Is Proclaimed
While in prison Paul remains focused on proclaiming Christ and seeing God use his circumstances to bring about kingdom impact. We often fear trial and tribulation, yet Paul shows us the importance of finding Christ and seeing his purposes above our own comfort and ease.
That You May Abound In Love
Paul writes Philippians from a Roman prison cell while sitting in chains. He opens his letter with his desire for the Philippians to abound in the love of Christ.
Prayer of Repentance
In Psalm 51, David teaches us what true repentance before God looks like and not just worldly sorrow over sin.
Prayer for Security
In Psalm 16, David teaches us what it looks like to seek security in God rather than trying to find it in earthly things.
Prayer for a New Song
In Psalm 98, the psalmist is ready to sing a new song of what God has done. He looks forward to the future by remembering what God has done in the past. In this, the psalmist finds hope that God will surely move on behalf of his people.