PODCAST · religion
Pastor David Buchs – Sermons and Bible Studies
by Pastor David Buchs
Sermons and Bible Studies by Pastor David Buchs, Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, AR.
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600
What Makes Jesus Angry (New Member Instruction: Mark 11)
Wednesday Evening Bible StudyNew Member InstructionJune 18, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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599
Rejoicing when the lost are found
Service: Trinity 3, June 21, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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598
Jeremiah & Preaching in the Temple
Sunday Morning Bible StudyJune 21, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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597
Let church be your excuse
Service: Trinity 2, June 7, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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596
Marriage & the Love of God (Mark 10): New Member Instruction
Wednesday Evening Bible StudyNew Member InstructionJune 11, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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595
Learning to Love: Sermon for Trinity 1
Service: Trinity 1, June 7, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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594
Jeremiah & the New Covenant
Sunday Morning Bible StudyJune 7, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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593
Little Faith People (Mark 9): New Member Instruction
Wednesday Evening Bible StudyNew Member InstructionJune 4, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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592
Jehoiachin & Deportation (2 Kings 25)
Sunday Morning Bible StudyMay 31, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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591
Confessing the Trinity
Service: Trinity Sunday, May 31, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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590
Discipleship by degrees (Mark 8): New Member Instruction
Wednesday Evening Bible StudyNew Member InstructionMay 27, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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589
Sermon for Pentecost 2026
Service: Pentecost, May 24, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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588
The Last Kings of Judah (2 Kings 24-25)
Sunday Morning Bible StudyMay 24, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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587
Vice & Virtue (Mark 7): New Member Instruction
Wednesday Evening Bible StudyNew Member InstructionMay 20, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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586
Confessing the Creed (Mark 6): New Member Instruction
Wednesday Evening Bible StudyNew Member InstructionMay 13, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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585
Josiah Finds the Book of the Law
Sunday Morning Bible StudyMay 17, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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584
The Ascension of Our Lord 2026
Service: The Ascension of Our Lord, May 14, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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583
Created for Glory: 7th Sunday after Easter
Service: Seventh Sunday after Easter, May 17, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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582
Do Not Answer Him (2 Kings 18-19)
Sunday Morning Bible StudyMay 10, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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581
Be Doers of the Word (James 1)
Service: Sixth Sunday of Easter, May 10, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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580
Jesus and the demons (Mark 5): New Member Instruction
Wednesday Evening Bible StudyNew Member InstructionMay 6, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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579
Hezekiah: Held Fast to the Lord (2 Kings 18 - part 1)
Sunday Morning Bible StudyMay 3, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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578
Living as Exiles: The Hope of Return Through Christ
Service: Fifth Sunday of Easter, May 3, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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577
True Religion & Faith by Hearing (Mark 4): New Member Instruction
Wednesday Evening Bible StudyNew Member InstructionApril 29, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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576
Understanding Sin (Mark 3): New Member Instruction
Wednesday Evening Bible StudyNew Member InstructionApril 29, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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575
The Fall of Israel & God's Relentless Pursuit
Sunday Morning Bible StudyApril 26, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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574
What kind of Love? (1 John 3)
Service: Third Sunday of Easter, April 26, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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573
Those who are with us are more than those who are with them (2 Kings 6)
Sunday Morning Bible StudyApril 19, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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572
Sheep in Need of a Good Shepherd (John 10)
Service: Third Sunday of Easter, April 19, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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571
Forgiveness & Divine Service (Mark 2): New Member Instruction
Wednesday Evening Bible StudyNew Member InstructionApril 15, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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570
Getting a New Heart (Mark 1): New Member Instruction
Wednesday Evening Bible StudyNew Member InstructionApril 8, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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569
What is Confirmation? (John 20)
Service: Second Sunday of Easter, April 12, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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568
Elisha, the Man of God (2 Kings 3-5)
Sunday Morning Bible StudyApril 12, 2026Rev. David BuchsGrace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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567
"He has risen; he is not here!" (Easter Sunday, 2026)
Service: Easter Sunday, April 5, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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566
"Our vict'ry cannot fail!" (Easter Vigil, 2026)
Service: Easter Vigil, April 4, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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565
"Even the darkness is not dark to you" (Good Friday, 2026)
Service: Good Friday, April 3, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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564
He Loved Them to the End
Service: Maundy Thursday, April 2, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas
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563
No One Answered: The Silence of False Gods (1 Kings 18-2 Kings 2)
Sunday Bible Study – March 29, 2026Grace Lutheran Church – Little Rock, ArkansasElijah stands alone on Mount Carmel, confronting a nation divided between the Lord and Baal. While hundreds cry out, cut themselves, and plead for a response, Scripture repeats the verdict: no voice, no answer, no attention.This study traces the contrast between false worship and the living God—who answers not for spectacle, but to turn hearts back to Himself. From the fire on the altar to the still small voice, Elijah’s story exposes both the emptiness of idols and the danger of a divided heart.It also confronts a deeper question: why do people persist in unbelief even after clear signs? From Ahab’s hardness to Jezebel’s rage, and even Elijah’s despair, the lesson is clear—God’s Word does not depend on visible results, but on His faithfulness.Key Themes:The silence of idols vs. the living voice of God“How long will you go limping between two opinions?”The danger of hardening the heart against truthFaithfulness in speaking God’s Word without controlling outcomesGod’s hidden preservation of His people (the 7,000 who have not bowed)Scripture:1 Kings 18–19; Psalm 141Tags:#BibleStudy #Elijah #1Kings18 #FalseGods #Repentance #Faithfulness #GraceLutheranLittleRock #LittleRockChurch #ArkansasFaith #ChristianTeaching
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562
The Grain of Wheat Falls: The Glory of the Cross (John 12; Palm Sunday)
Palm Sunday reveals a hard truth: many want to see Jesus—but not as He is. In John 12, Christ declares that His glory is the cross, like a grain of wheat that must fall and die to bear fruit.Will we follow the signs to what they mean, or stop at what impresses us?To see Jesus rightly is to see His suffering as glory—and to follow Him in repentance, faith, and new life.Sunday Worship – March 29, 2026Preacher: Rev. David BuchsLocation: Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, ArkansasKey ThemesThe cross as Christ’s true glorySeeing signs vs. following their meaningBaptism as daily death and new lifeReceiving Christ, not just His gifts#PalmSunday #John12 #HolyWeek #JesusChrist #TheCross #LutheranSermon #GraceLutheranLittleRock #LittleRockChurch #ArkansasFaith #RevDavidBuchs
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561
A Life of Repentance: Baptism as Death and Resurrection
In this sermon, Rev. David Buchs explores St. Paul’s teaching in Romans 6: repentance is not mere reform, but death and resurrection. Drawing on the Exodus, the Flood, and the Red Sea, this message shows why the Christian life is a continual return to baptism—where the old Adam is drowned and a new man rises.Israel’s longing for Egypt becomes a mirror for the divided human heart: set free, yet still drawn back to slavery. Only death with Christ can put an end to that struggle. Only resurrection with Him can produce true freedom and lasting fruit.Baptism is not a past event but a present reality—one that shapes daily repentance, faith, and life in Christ.Key Themes:Baptism as participation in Christ’s death and resurrectionThe “two hearts” of the Christian: freedom and lingering desire for sinWhy repentance is a lifelong reality, not a single momentThe Old Testament pattern: water as both judgment and salvationLiving by faith: considering yourself dead to sin and alive to GodMary’s “Let it be” as the posture of repentant trustContext:Midweek Lenten Service | Festival of the Annunciation (March 25)Grace Lutheran Church – Little Rock, ArkansasScripture References:Romans 6Exodus (Red Sea)Genesis (Flood)Luke 1 (Annunciation)Tags:#LutheranSermon #Romans6 #Baptism #Repentance #DeathAndResurrection #ChristianTeaching #Lent #Annunciation #GraceLutheranLittleRock #ArkansasChurch #RevDavidBuchs #BiblicalPreaching #LawAndGospel
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560
Elijah and the Drought: The God Who Gives What He Demands (1 Kings 16-17)
In this Bible study, Rev. David Buchs walks through Psalm 113 and the opening of Elijah’s ministry (1 Kings 17), contrasting the Lord with false gods like Baal and modern idols such as money.God is not like the false gods that demand everything and give nothing. He raises the poor, provides for the needy, and supplies what He commands. In contrast, idols like mammon promise satisfaction but never deliver.Through Elijah’s confrontation with Ahab, the drought, and the widow of Zarephath, this study shows how:False gods deceive and destroyGod alone provides life, provision, and resurrectionThe Word of the Lord goes where it is receivedFaith clings to God even when resources appear exhaustedThis sets the stage for Elijah’s coming conflict with Baal and calls hearers to examine what they trust and worship.Key texts: Psalm 113; 1 Kings 16-17Themes: False gods vs. the true God, provision, repentance, Word of God, Elijah#BibleStudy #Elijah #Psalm113 #1Kings17 #FalseGods #Mammon #ChristianTeaching #Lutheran #GraceLutheran #LittleRock #ArkansasFaith
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559
The Altar of the Heart: What Your Sacrifices Reveal (Genesis 22)
What you sacrifice reveals what you truly believe.In this sermon on Genesis 22 (Abraham and Isaac), we see that faith is not abstract—it is shown in devotion and sacrifice. Every person gives their time, attention, money, and even their family to something. That reveals what they fear, love, and trust.False gods—success, comfort, reputation—accept sacrifice but destroy what is given. But the true God gives life. Abraham trusted God’s promise and received Isaac back. And ultimately, the Father gives His own Son so that we might live.Key Topics / KeywordsGenesis 22, Abraham and Isaac, sacrifice, faith and works, repentance, idolatry, Christian living, Lent sermon, trusting God, false gods, Jesus sacrifice, Lutheran sermon
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558
Bear Fruit in Keeping with Repentance
Rev. David Buchs reflects on John the Baptist’s command to “bear fruit in keeping with repentance,” showing how repentance is not merely sorrow over sin but a complete turning of the heart: away from self-preservation, fear, and hoarding, and toward the concrete needs of one’s neighbor. Beginning with John’s image of trees and fruit, this sermon traces how Scripture describes the repentant life as one of real transformation: bad trees made good, dead stumps made living again, sinners restored by mercy and taught to live differently.Drawing together John’s preaching, David’s repentance, Christ’s teaching on daily bread, and Zacchaeus’ overflowing restitution, the sermon shows that Christian love is not strategic generosity or disguised self-interest, but fruit born from hearts already supplied by Christ. Christians are called to see vocation—parent, spouse, worker, citizen—as the ordinary place where love becomes visible in daily responsibility.The sermon also contrasts life under sin with life under grace: under sin, the question is always “What serves me?” Under Christ, the question becomes “What does my neighbor need?” Because Christ has already fulfilled what the law demands, believers are freed not into passivity, but into abundant love that no checklist can contain.Wednesday Lent 4 — Grace Lutheran ChurchLittle Rock, Arkansas — March 18, 2026Key themes:John the Baptist’s image of repentance as fruit-bearingWhy selfishness often hides beneath respectable altruismGod’s daily provision and the temptation to hoardVocation as the ordinary place of Christian loveZacchaeus as an example of reckless generosity shaped by ChristWhy repentance always feels like a costly turningScripture themes:Luke 3:10–14David’s repentance after Nathan’s rebukeDaily bread and trust in God’s provisionZacchaeus and the fruit of salvation#ChristianPodcast #LutheranSermon #Repentance #JohnTheBaptist #Luke3 #DailyBread #ChristianVocation #GraceLutheranLittleRock #LittleRockChurch #ArkansasFaith #RevDavidBuchs #LentSermon #BiblicalPreaching
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557
Faith Holds On: The strength of God's promises
In this sermon, Rev. David Buchs reflects on the testing of faith through the wilderness bread of Exodus and the feeding of the five thousand in John 6. Faith always clings to something—but sinful man instinctively grabs what cannot hold: comfort, control, money, strength, and visible security. Through Israel’s manna, Philip’s calculations, and the disciples’ empty hands, Christ teaches that the deepest question is not how little we have, but whether we trust the One who gives all things.Jesus does not ask where bread may be bought because He lacks provision, but because faith must be tested. The same question reaches into marriage, parenting, weakness, aging, guilt, and death itself: where will enough love, patience, strength, healing, or forgiveness come from? Christ answers not by demanding self-sufficiency, but by giving promises that hold fast when everything else fails.Sunday Worship – March 15, 2026Grace Lutheran ChurchKey themes:Why faith naturally clings—and why sinful nature clings to what cannot saveIsrael’s manna as a daily lesson in trusting the giver rather than the giftPhilip’s calculation and the disciples’ obedience in the feeding of the five thousandWhy scarcity does not exist where Christ givesHow marriage, parenting, illness, aging, and guilt all become tests of trustWhy God’s promises hold when everything else failsThe enduring counsel: open Scripture, pray, and lean your full weight on Christ#ChristianPodcast #LutheranSermon #John6 #Exodus16 #FeedingThe5000 #FaithTested #Lent #GraceLutheranLittleRock #LittleRockChurch #ArkansasFaith #RevDavidBuchs #BiblicalPreaching #LCMS
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556
Caught by Someone: The danger of false worship & false shepherds
In this Sunday Bible study, Rev. David Buchs begins with Psalm 66, tracing how God tests His people through burden, fire, and water—not to destroy them, but to refine them like silver. The image of being caught in a net becomes a vivid picture of Lent itself: every person is caught by someone, either in the snares of the devil or in the saving net of the Lord.The study then turns to catechesis, admission to the Lord’s Supper prior to confirmation, and why Christian instruction should not peak briefly in adolescence and then collapse, but rise steadily through the whole of life. Rev. Buchs explains the distinction between admission to communion and confirmation, emphasizing parental responsibility in handing on the faith.A difficult pastoral question follows: what danger is present when someone remains under preaching that openly contradicts Scripture? Using Jeremiah’s warning against false prophets, the discussion shows why a preacher’s life can itself preach rebellion, even when biblical words are spoken. The central concern is repentance: false shepherds teach people not to fear disaster where God has warned of judgment.The final section turns to 1 Kings 12 and the division of the kingdom. Rehoboam’s folly and Jeroboam’s political calculation reveal a recurring biblical principle: corruption begins by altering worship. Jeroboam changes feast days, priesthood, worship sites, and erects golden calves—showing that the first mark of spiritual decline is often not political collapse but deviation from what God has prescribed.Key themes:• Psalm 66 and why God tests His people through hardship• “You will be caught by someone”: the net of the Lord versus the snares of the devil• Admission to communion before confirmation and lifelong catechesis• Why difficult pastoral conversations must not be postponed• Jeremiah on false prophets and why false preaching endangers repentance• Jeroboam’s golden calves and why false worship corrupts everythingSunday Bible Study – March 15, 2026Grace Lutheran Church#BibleStudy #ChristianTeaching #LutheranTheology #Psalm66 #FirstKings #Jeroboam #Confirmation #LordSupper #FalseProphets #Repentance #GraceLutheran #ArkansasFaith
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555
When a Son Dies: Severe Mercy (2 Samuel 12)
In this sermon, Rev. David Buchs reflects on David after repentance: forgiven by God, yet still disciplined by the Lord who loves His children. Through the death of David’s child, Scripture confronts the seriousness of sin, the mystery of suffering, and the way God uses even painful crosses to teach humility, faith, and trust. The sermon finally leads to Christ, the true Son who receives discipline not for His own sins, but for ours. Midweek Lent Worship – March 11, 2026 | Grace Lutheran Church, Little RockKey themesWhy forgiven sin may still carry disciplineHow David receives suffering without bitterness and turns immediately to worshipThe death of a son as both judgment and instructionChrist as the greater David, receiving the Father’s rebuke in our place#LutheranSermon #ChristianPodcast #DavidAndBathsheba #2Samuel #DisciplineOfTheLord #SufferingAndFaith #JesusChrist #Repentance #Lent #GraceLutheranLittleRock #LittleRockChurch #ArkansasFaith #RevDavidBuchs #BiblicalPreaching #ChristTheSubstitute
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554
A Heart Made Uninhabitable for the Devil
In this sermon, Rev. David Buchs reflects on Christ’s vivid warning and promise in Gospel of Luke: Jesus does not merely visit the human heart—He cleanses it, claims it, and makes it a dwelling place for His Spirit. Through the image of hospitality, this message calls hearers to consider what fills the heart after Christ has cast out darkness: what is welcomed, remembered, and loved. Sunday Worship – March 8, 2026 | Grace Lutheran Church, Little RockKey themes:• Christ as the stronger man who binds the enemy and rescues what belongs to Him• Why baptized hearts must not be left spiritually empty• How memory, prayer, forgiveness, and Word shape a heart for Christ• The daily calling to resist what makes sin feel at home#ChristianPodcast #LutheranSermon #JesusChrist #Faith #Repentance #SpiritualWarfare #GospelOfLuke #GraceLutheranLittleRock #LittleRockChurch #ArkansasFaith #RevDavidBuchs #BiblicalPreaching #ChristianTeaching #LentSermon
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553
"You Are the Man" (2 Samuel 11-12)
King David’s fall into adultery, deception, and murder shatters every illusion that God’s love is earned by righteousness. This sermon reflects on how Scripture exposes sin not to destroy us, but to bring us into repentance where God’s mercy speaks the final word: “The Lord also has put away your sin.” Wednesday Worship – March 4, 2026 | Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, ArkansasPreached by Rev. David Buchs | Reminiscere (Lent 2)Key themes in this sermon: • David’s story reveals that no sinner stands before God by merit. • Hidden sin hardens the heart, but confession opens the way to grace. • Nathan’s words, “You are the man,” prepare us to behold Christ, who bears our sin. • Repentance is painful, yet it is where true freedom begins.#ChristianSermon #Lent #Repentance #JesusChrist #Faith #BiblePreaching #LutheranSermon #ChristianPodcast #GraceLutheranLittleRock #LittleRockChurch #ArkansasFaith #GraceLutheran #DavidAndBathsheba #Psalm51 #LentSermon
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552
A Listening Heart: Solomon, Wisdom, and the Long Game of Faith (1 Kings 3)
In this Bible study, Rev. David Buchs traces the path from Psalm 41’s vision of charity to Solomon’s prayer for “a listening heart,” showing how true wisdom is more than intelligence—it is learning to love what is good and remain faithful over time. The study reflects on how prosperity, power, and even giftedness can become dangerous when the heart drifts from the Lord, and why God’s people must always think in terms of the long game of faith. Sunday Bible Study, March 8, 2026 |Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, Arkansas Key themes:• Psalm 41: why genuine charity provokes both blessing and opposition• Solomon’s request for wisdom as a model of humility and vocation• The difference between outward success and enduring faithfulness• Christ as the true righteous King with the perfectly listening heart#BibleStudy #ChristianPodcast #ScriptureStudy #Faith #Wisdom #Solomon #Psalms #OldTestament #ListeningHeart #GraceLutheranLittleRock #LittleRockChurch #ArkansasFaith #LutheranBibleStudy #GraceLutheranChurch #RevDavidBuchs #LittleRockArkansas
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551
Two Ways & True Worship (2 Samuel 6)
What does it truly mean to be “blessed”? In this midweek Bible study, Rev. David Buchs walks through Psalm 1 as the doorway to the entire Psalter, contrasting the way of righteousness and the way of wickedness. Drawing connections to the stories of David, Uzzah, and the Ark of the Covenant, this study explores how faith trusts God’s promises, how obedience flows from trust, and why the fear of the Lord is not terror—but love-shaped reverence.Along the way, we confront modern misunderstandings about prosperity, examine the difference between servile fear and filial fear, and reflect on how God forms His people through discipline, worship, and His Word. This is a thoughtful, pastoral study for Christians and seekers who want a deeper, steadier faith rooted in Scripture.Sunday Bible Study – Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, ArkansasMarch 1, 2026Key Themes & Takeaways: • Psalm 1 as the introduction to the entire Book of Psalms • Faith that trusts God’s promises rather than outcomes • True worship shaped by God’s Word, not good intentions • The fear of the Lord as reverent trust, not terror#BibleStudy #Psalm1 #ChristianPodcast #ScriptureStudy #FaithAndObedience #FearOfTheLord #LutheranTheology#GraceLutheranLittleRock #LittleRockChurch #ArkansasFaith #LutheranBibleStudy
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Sermons and Bible Studies by Pastor David Buchs, Grace Lutheran Church, Little Rock, AR.
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Pastor David Buchs
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