(Sermon) Election got you anxious or down? It’s a symptom of a bad builder. Psalm 127 reminds us that who we permit to build our homes matters to the children we will become.
(Sermon) John and James ask Jesus for a place of honor in the glory that is to come. In the Lord’s response, Jesus reveals much about human motivation. His words call us to soul-searching when asking God for guidance.
(Sermon) The suffering metaphors of Psalm 22 are still relevant today as is the promise of God’s relief. One Hebrew word, ‘ă·nî·ṯā·nî, translated “you have saved me” connects metaphor and promise and is explored as it applies today.
(Sermon) John tells believers to love as Jesus did and feels no need to define the word beyond that. His approach is considerably more powerful and convicting than any secular definition of love.
(Sermon) When Peter is rebuked for believing nothing bad can happen to Jesus, Christ reveals a remedy for our human condition that is both paradoxical and beautiful.
(Sermon) Luke describes how Mary and Joseph complied with Jewish law for their son. The impact of abiding by the law on our service to God is explored.
(Sermon) It is hard to be Christ’s representative when your family and friends believe God’s principles are false. Jeremiah walked this path as a prophet and shows us the journey we can expect and how best to complete it.
(Sermon) Paul warns against the hazards of false apostles (unbelievers) within a Christian community. How his warning intersects with the great commission and the reality of the world is explored in the context of psychological realities about human behavior.
(Sermon) When a Canaanite mother comes to Jesus for help, she encounters a harsh reply. Her response is a wonderful exposition on grace from which all sinners can learn.
(Sermon) When God told Abraham and Sarah that she would bear a son at 90, they laughed. The reasons why might keep today’s believers from seeing divine miracles in their lives. Miracles that testify to the presence of God and once noted should be passed on as a testimony to the pervasive presence of God.
(Sermon) Paul believes that the body of Christ has many members and, like our own bodies, each is important for healthy function. This post explores the truth of his wisdom from the unusual perspective of the life of a man with no faith.
(Sermon) A confrontation between the Sanhedrin and the apostles reveals four lessons for how any Spirit led Christian can serve God at peace in a world where opposition to the Word abounds. Remarkably, the lessons create peace within the believer and minimize conflict with those who may oppose our faith and its teachings.
(Sermon) Fear is the first thing encountered after the heading Jesus Has Risen in Matthew’s gospel. Maybe the reason is because our empathetic Savior is the death of fear.
(Sermon) Seeing God’s principles at work in the good old days makes us long for them to return or for ill-advised progress to at least stop. Peter had a similar response to the Transfiguration of Jesus. His experience instructs us how best to use the past and see the power of God in the world today.
(Sermon) When Isaiah and Simon meet God face-to-face they are overwhelmed with God’s holiness and their own sinfulness. God’s response to their honest, repentant hearts reveals that remembering the infinite holiness of God is the first and perhaps most important step in serving the Lord.
(Sermon) Isaiah predicts judgment and redemption for the Jewish people. His words are applicable for us today. They convey that you and I are loved, redeemed and summoned by name to uniquely serve. That service may be surprisingly simple, wonderfully important, and personally gratifying.
(Sermon) Paul describes the devil’s schemes to destroy the unity of the church as an individual assault on each of its members. He then describes the armor needed to defend against it. Here the armor is discussed in the context of a single person’s life lived defenseless and defended.
(Sermon) God compares prospering Israel and Judah against His plumb line of right and true in the book of Amos and finds them lacking. Are we? Paul describes overflowing thankfulness as the way home.
(Sermon) If God is absolutely just, how can He show mercy? If God is absolutely merciful, how can He be just? Yet God is both and only love can explain it.
(Sermon) As Christians we often spend time trying not to sin, but sin is enticing. So we lie to ourselves and spin that lie out to the world to make the sin okay. In a confrontation between Jesus and Judas, Jesus confronts just such a lie and teaches us about our nature and how to manage it.
(Sermon) Every day, strive to love Christ exponentially more than anything in this life. Only when we give up our lives for this will we find life as the people we were intended to be.
(Sermon) Satan’s temptation of Jesus was unsuccessful. In the Lord’s response is everything we need to know to resist as well. An inspiring story of resistance from today reveals the truth of the Lord’s teaching.
(Sermon) What does it mean to have the Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his face to shine upon you and be gracious to you? It could mean you will be blessed with material things. Philippians has an entirely different interpretation that is a real blessing.
(Sermon) When you or I are separated from God, God is the last place we think to turn to settle our troubled souls. The sons of Korah counsel us not to continue down this pathway to despondency. Instead, be still and know the He is God.
(Sermon) Suffering is difficult for those who believe in a good God. Several theological responses are addressed here in the context of Job, the biblical book directly addressing the topic.
(Sermon) God’s justice and mercy by grace leaves believers wondering how justice and mercy can coexist. They do, and at the center is belief in grace, a complicated concept explored in this post.