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You Have Acted Faithfully

An episode of the King's Table Church Sermons podcast, hosted by Steve Savage, titled "You Have Acted Faithfully" was published on October 29, 2023 and runs 37 minutes.

October 29, 2023 ·37m · King's Table Church Sermons

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The Israelites gather to corporately confess their sins. They sing about God's repeated faithfulness - recounting the story of God creating the world, covenanting with their fathers, and delivering his people from bondage. They confess their own arrogance and stiff necks - but God's gracious, slow-to-anger forgiveness. The pattern continues. God blesses and does not withold good; His people rebel. He compassionately sends deliverers; they do what is evil as soon as they find relief from their circumstances. And now that they find themselves once again restored by God (but still under foreign rule), they praise him for is faithfulness and ask him to again remember his people and his covenant in his steadfast love.Israel's story is our story - one of repeated rebellion alongside God's repeated faithfulness. He is righteous in all that he has done. We have acted wickedly; he has acted faithfully and redeemed us by the work of Christ. And we find ourselves now very much in the place of v36 - slaves in the land given to our ancestors. The earth was given that we might enjoy its fruit and its goodness, but because of our sin, we still experience the pain and the effects of its brokenness. In fact, some of us are still enslaved by it. And all of us - even those who have been set free from the rule of sin by Jesus - cry out for the foreign intrusion of sin to be wiped away and the land returned to its rightful purpose. If you are "in great distress" - know that the invading oppression of sin's rule will soon be brought to an end in the Kingdom of King Jesus.

The Israelites gather to corporately confess their sins. They sing about God's repeated faithfulness - recounting the story of God creating the world, covenanting with their fathers, and delivering his people from bondage. They confess their own arrogance and stiff necks - but God's gracious, slow-to-anger forgiveness. The pattern continues. God blesses and does not withold good; His people rebel. He compassionately sends deliverers; they do what is evil as soon as they find relief from their circumstances. And now that they find themselves once again restored by God (but still under foreign rule), they praise him for is faithfulness and ask him to again remember his people and his covenant in his steadfast love.


Israel's story is our story - one of repeated rebellion alongside God's repeated faithfulness. He is righteous in all that he has done. We have acted wickedly; he has acted faithfully and redeemed us by the work of Christ. And we find ourselves now very much in the place of v36 - slaves in the land given to our ancestors. The earth was given that we might enjoy its fruit and its goodness, but because of our sin, we still experience the pain and the effects of its brokenness. In fact, some of us are still enslaved by it. And all of us - even those who have been set free from the rule of sin by Jesus - cry out for the foreign intrusion of sin to be wiped away and the land returned to its rightful purpose. If you are "in great distress" - know that the invading oppression of sin's rule will soon be brought to an end in the Kingdom of King Jesus.

Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, A by Mark Twain (1835 - 1910) LibriVox Come and hear the strange tale of The Boss Hank Morgan, a modern day (at the time of publication) Connecticut Yankee who inexplicably finds himself transported to the court of the legendary King Arthur (as the title of the book implies). Hank, or simply, The Boss, as he comes to be most frequently known, quickly uses his modern day knowledge and education to pass himself off as a great magician, to get himself out of all sorts of surprising, (and frequently amusing) situations, as well as to advance the technological and cultural status of the nation in which he finds himself.In the rather un-subtle sub-text of the story, Twain uses The Boss to express a surprisingly pragmatic and frequently contradictory philosophy. The Boss explores the relative merits of Democracy, and Monarchy, he expresses his views on the “Nature v. Nurture” debate, he frequently speaks forcefully against an established Church, but just as strongly advocates for religion and a variety of churches (jus Wizard, The by H. Rider Haggard (1856 - 1925) LibriVox Described by the author, best known for his King Solomon's Mines, as "a tale of victorious faith," this story begins on a Sunday afternoon in an English church. Most of the book, though, is set in Africa, and the adventure story is as engaging as any of Haggard's African tales. What makes this one different is the religious question: What has happened to miracles in the church? Is there any power left in Jesus' promise, "Whoso that believeth in me, the works that I do he shall do also, and whatsoever ye shall ask in my name, that will I do"? Redeemer King Weekly Podcast Redeemer King Stay up to date with the latest Sunday teachings Golden Road, The by Lucy Maud Montgomery (1874 - 1942) LibriVox In the sequel to The Story Girl, Sara Stanley returns to join the King children in publishing their own local magazine to entertain the town of Carlisle.
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