PODCAST · religion
West Side Church of Christ - Elkton Ky
by Doug Gregory
This podcast includes Sermons and other content for the West Side Church of Christ located at 725 W. Main St, Elkton KY. We hope that you can join us for services. We have bible class on Sunday mornings at 9 am and Worship at 10 am. We meet again at 5:30 pm Sunday Evenings, and Wednesday at 6:30 pm. If you are not able to join us then please enjoy our content. :-)
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Forgiveness Me and We (From our 5-3-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/7xh_bxwNnmMI. Introduction: The Puzzle of LifeThe Paradox of Leisure: Humans often choose "hard things" (like 1,000-piece double-sided puzzles) for fun.The Spiritual Analogy: Our spiritual life is a puzzle we must "work out."Philippians 2:12 (ESV): "Therefore, my beloved, as you have always obeyed, so now, not only in my presence but much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure."The "Hardest Piece": Forgiveness is the specific piece that makes the Christian life difficult, yet it is essential for our own salvation.II. Forgiveness is Hard Because It HurtsThe Personal Toll: Being sinned against causes physical and emotional reactions—increased pulse, betrayal, and violation.The Divine Connection: We are made in God’s image and share His emotional capacity.Psalm 7:11 (ESV): "God is a righteous judge, and a God who feels indignation every day."God’s Perspective: God experiences the pain of our sin (missing the target) and iniquity (habitual sin) every day, yet He chose to forgive us through Christ’s sacrifice before we were even born.III. Forgiveness is Hard Because It’s WorkThe Process of Reconciliation: It requires the offended party to take the initiative.Matthew 18:15 (ESV): "If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone. If he listens to you, you have gained your brother."The Goal is Unity: Forgiveness isn't about the individual; it’s about the "Body of Christ."Analogy: Just as a jaw or arm cannot "write off" a heart during a heart attack, Christians cannot write off one another without destroying the whole body.Managing Separation: If reconciliation fails after following the biblical steps, the relationship changes (treating them as an "outsider"), but the goal remains restoration, not malice.IV. Forgiveness is Hard Because It’s a Gift ("Me & We")The Transactional Element: Forgiveness is completed when someone repents.Luke 17:3–4 (ESV): "Pay attention to yourselves! If your brother sins, rebuke him, and if he repents, forgive him, and if he sins against you seven times in the day, and turns to you seven times, saying, ‘I repent,’ you must forgive him."The Internal Element (The "Me" Part): You must decide to release bitterness even if the other person never asks for forgiveness.Jesus’ Example: Hanging on the cross, He forgave those who weren't yet repenting.Luke 23:34 (ESV): "And Jesus said, 'Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.' And they cast lots to divide his garments."Refusing a Grudge: Holding onto hatred allows the offender to control your life.V. Conclusion: Uprooting the Bitter TreeThe Request for Faith: When faced with the difficulty of forgiveness, the apostles asked for an increase in faith.The Mustard Seed: Faith isn't just about size; it's about growth and work.The Real Miracle: God doesn't need us to move physical trees; He needs us to uproot anger, hatred, and resentment from our hearts.Romans 12:18 (ESV): "If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all."
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What Will GOD Do For Just One (From our 4-26-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/R2zYxooRPJcScripture Foundation: 2 Peter 2:4–9; Genesis 18–19I. The Hook: The Rescue of Captain Scott O'GradyThe Incident: An F-16 pilot shot down over Bosnia, surviving six days on bugs and rainwater.The Cost: The US military sent 40 aircraft and dozens of personnel to retrieve a single man.The Spiritual Parallel: If a human military will spend millions to rescue one pilot, what is God willing to do for just one soul?II. The Scriptural Premise: 2 Peter 2:4–9 (ESV)"For if God did not spare angels when they sinned, but cast them into hell and committed them to chains of gloomy darkness to be kept until the judgment; if he did not spare the ancient world, but preserved Noah, a herald of righteousness, with seven others, when he brought a flood upon the world of the ungodly; if by turning the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah to ashes he condemned them to extinction, making them an example of what is going to happen to the ungodly; and if he rescued righteous Lot, greatly distressed by the sensual conduct of the wicked (for as that righteous man lived among them day after day, he was tormenting his righteous soul over their lawless deeds that he saw and heard); then the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trials, and to keep the unrighteous under punishment until the day of judgment."III. Five Truths About God’s Rescue Mission1. God is willing to share the truth with the individual.Biblical Context: Genesis 18:17—God chooses to reveal His plans to Abraham rather than keeping him in the dark.Application: God has always been willing to tell an individual the truth. We see this in the Word we have today; He provides the "operational intel" we need to obey Him. 2. The value of one soul is non-negotiable.Biblical Context: Abraham’s "auction" with God (Genesis 18:22–33), bargaining from 50 righteous people down to 10.Application: Abraham thought he was being slick with numbers, but God's value for the individual isn't a negotiation. One soul is worth more than the entire physical world.3. God saves the one, but He desires everyone.Biblical Context: In Genesis 19:12, the angels ask Lot if he has anyone else—sons, daughters, or sons-in-law—to bring out of the city.Application: God starts with one, but He wants the whole family. As noted in 2 Peter 3:9 (ESV):"The Lord is not slow to fulfill his promise as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance."4. God is patient with our imperfection.Biblical Context: Lot lingered and had to be seized by the hand (Genesis 19:15–21). He even negotiated for a "little city" (Zoar) because he was afraid to run to the hills.Application: Righteousness does not equal perfection. God works with our frailty, our fears, and our "limps." He remembered that Lot was but dust.5. God restrains judgment for our safety.Biblical Context: Genesis 19:22—The angel tells Lot, "Escape there quickly, for I can do nothing till you arrive there."Application: The sovereign God of the universe "holds back" His hand to ensure the safety of His people. He provides the time and the gap necessary for us to reach the "safe zone."IV. Conclusion & Call to ActionThe Condition: God is willing to rescue, but we must be rescuable.The Warning: Remember Lot's wife—don't look back at the world you are being rescued from.The Invitation: God’s people are here to help. Don’t leave without seeking the rescue God has provided.
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Would You Do What Jesus Wouldn't? (From our 4-19-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/gtdjFUr6R_YI. Introduction: Human Achievement vs. Divine MiracleThe Illustration: The Vasco da Gama Bridge in Portugal (11 miles long).In 1998, they served lunch to 15,000 people on the bridge—setting a Guinness World Record.The logistical "astounding" feat: 200 buses, 7 tons of stew, months of coordination.The Transition: While the bridge lunch was amazing, it was not a miracle. Feeding 15,000 people (5,000 men plus women and children) is "Jesus' business."The Thesis: While the feeding of the 5,000 tells us something about God, the day after the feeding tells us something about the human heart.II. Calling Out the Motives (John 6:22–27)The Crowd’s Effort: The crowd worked hard to track Jesus down across the sea, but they weren't seeking a Savior; they were seeking a "free meal."The Accusation: Jesus immediately addresses the "why" behind their pursuit."Jesus answered them, 'Truly, truly, I say to you, you are seeking me, not because you saw signs, but because you ate your fill of the loaves. Do not work for the food that perishes, but for the food that endures to eternal life, which the Son of Man will give to you. For on him God the Father has set his seal.'" (John 6:26–27, ESV)Application: We must ask ourselves "valid questions" about why we do what we do. Are we trying to "gatekeep," or are we trying to reach the heart?III. Engaging with Honest Questions (John 6:28–40)The Dialogue: Jesus doesn't shy away from their questions, even when they are misguided.The Revelation: He identifies Himself as the true source of sustenance."Jesus said to them, 'I am the bread of life; whoever comes to me shall not hunger, and whoever believes in me shall never thirst.'" (John 6:35, ESV)The Purpose of Conversation: Questions create conversations, and conversations create communication. We cannot make disciples if we are afraid of people’s questions.IV. Refusing to "Play the Game" (John 6:41–59)The Turning Point: There comes a time to stop "playing games" and get to the truth.The Hard Truth: Jesus moves from metaphors of bread to the "hard saying" of eating His flesh and drinking His blood."So Jesus said to them, 'Truly, truly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. Whoever feeds on my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up on the last day.'" (John 6:53–54, ESV)Application: We shouldn't change our standards or "lower the bar" just to keep people interested. Whatever you draw people with is what you’ll have to keep them with. If you draw them with gimmicks, you have to keep providing gimmicks.V. The Reality of "Failure" (John 6:60–66)The Mass Exodus: Many disciples found the teaching too difficult and walked away.The Lesson in Letting Go: Jesus let them leave. He didn't chase them down with a "new program" or a compromise.Sufficiency: If Jesus and the Gospel are not enough to draw someone, nothing else will work in the long run. The "meal" was never the main attraction—Jesus was.VI. The Ultimate Question (John 6:67–71)The Question to the Twelve: "Do you want to go away as well?"Peter’s Confession: The realization that there is nowhere else to go."Simon Peter answered him, 'Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life, and we have believed, and have come to know, that you are the Holy One of God.'" (John 6:68–69, ESV)Conclusion: The invitation is to build an "unshakable faith" and a "spring of water" inside yourself.VII. Invitation/Call to ActionSelf-Examination: Where are you today? Are you here for the "bread" or for the "Bread of Life"?Availability: An offer for conversation, prayer, or spiritual guidance to help grow "spiritual roots."
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Learning From Pain (From our 4-12-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/jUnsQNZhA58I. Introduction: The Pressure of LightThe Human Drive for Exploration: Humanity has always been fascinated with "boldly going where no man has gone before," from Star Trek to recent lunar missions.The Icarus Satellite (2010): A Japanese satellite powered by a "solar sail."The Science of Light: While we think of light as weightless, it actually exerts pressure (approximately 1 billionth of a pound per square inch).In the vacuum of space, this minuscule force—equivalent to the weight of about 3,000 grains of salt—pushed the Icarus satellite to over 1,000 miles per hour.The Spiritual Parallel: If physical light has pressure, how much more does the "light" of God’s glory have weight?II. The Perspective of Paul: Light Affliction vs. Heavy GloryCore Scripture: 2 Corinthians 4:17–18"For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, as we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the things that are seen are transient, but the things that are unseen are eternal."Redefining "Light": Paul describes his horrific sufferings (shipwrecks, beatings, stonings) as "light" and "momentary." This isn't because the pain didn't hurt, but because of what he was comparing it to: the eternal weight of God's glory.III. Three Lessons Learned in the Classroom of Pain1. Pain Builds ResiliencePaul’s "Thorn in the Flesh": Despite his great revelations, Paul suffered a persistent ailment—likely failing eyesight—that forced him to rely on others and write in "large letters" (Galatians 6:11).The Strength of Weakness: 2 Corinthians 12:9–10"But he said to me, 'My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.' Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me. For the sake of Christ, then, I am content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities. For when I am weak, then I am strong."The Secret: Resilience is found in the realization that Christ is with us and strengthens us through the struggle.2. Gain from the Pain (Don't Let Go)Jacob Wrestling the Angel: In Genesis 32, Jacob is left alone and enters a literal struggle that leaves him with a broken hip.Persistence in Suffering: Genesis 32:26"Then he said, 'Let me go, for the day has broken.' But Jacob said, 'I will not let you go unless you bless me.'"The Application: When we are in the "valley" of pain, we should have the stubbornness to demand a blessing from the experience. We must strive to find the good or the growth that God is working through the hardship.3. Seeing God More ClearlyJob’s Transformation: After losing everything and enduring the "missiles" of his friends' accusations, Job finally encounters God.From Hearing to Seeing: Job 42:5–6"I had heard of you by the hearing of the ear, but now my eye sees you; therefore I despise myself, and repent in dust and ashes."The Blessing of Clarity: Pain often strips away distractions, allowing us to see God's character and presence with a clarity that isn't possible in times of ease.IV. Conclusion: Looking Past the TransientThe Example of Jesus: In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus experienced such intense stress that he "sweat drops of blood." He understands our pain because He lived it.Renewing the Inner Self: While our physical bodies waste away, our inner selves are renewed daily when we fix our eyes on the eternal.Invitation: If you are in the midst of pain, don't carry it alone. Look past the pain to the Father, just as Jesus did, to find the strength to carry on.
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Do You Want To Honor The Resurrection? (From our 4-5-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/FChEKIaqoFgI. Introduction: The Value of Accidental DiscoveryThe Problem of Rushing: Rushing often leads to mistakes or shortcuts, but sometimes those "oops" moments lead to unexpected breakthroughs.The Story of Charles Goodyear:Goodyear spent years trying to stabilize rubber, which was brittle in the cold and sticky in the heat.Through an "accident" involving sulfur and a hot burner, he discovered vulcanization.A mistake transformed a useless material into something that changed the world.II. The "Oops" in the Bible (2 Kings 13:20–21)A Rushed Burial: In a moment of panic due to invading Moabite raiders, a funeral party hurriedly threw a dead man into the grave of the prophet Elisha.An Unexpected Resurrection: Upon touching Elisha’s bones, the man was immediately restored to life.The Point: While this was a "weird" or accidental resurrection, it highlights the power associated with God’s servants and sets the stage for the most significant resurrection in history.III. The Central Resurrection: Jesus ChristThe Event (Matthew 28:1–6): Unlike the accidental resurrection in Elisha’s tomb, Jesus’ resurrection was intentional and world-changing.The Impact: Humanity marks time by His life (AD). His victory over death provides the foundation for the Christian faith.The Question: If being resurrected is a great honor, how do we honor His resurrection?IV. Way #1: Honoring through RemembranceWorship and Communion: Based on Luke 22, Christians honor Christ by participating in the Lord’s Supper.Personal Reflection: Remembering the physical reality of His sacrifice—the blood shed for individual sins—is the first step in honoring Him.V. Way #2: Honoring through the Gospel and FaithThe Power of the Message: The Gospel (Good News) is the power of God for salvation (1 Corinthians 15:1–4).The Synergy of Power and Faith: According to 1 Peter 1:3–5, we are guarded by God's power through our faith.Faith as Action: True faith is not just mental agreement; it is an action, as seen in the "Hall of Faith" (Hebrews 11).VI. Way #3: The Process of Response (Belief in Action)The speaker outlines how internal belief must manifest in external steps:Confession: What is in the heart must come out of the mouth (Romans 10:10).Repentance: A change of direction. It is not just stopping sin, but turning toward God with a new heart.Baptism: Not merely "getting wet" or cleaning the body, but an act of faith for a clear conscience before God (Mark 16:16).VII. Conclusion: Your Own Resurrection (The Main Point)The Ultimate Honor: The best way to honor Jesus’ resurrection is to undergo a "resurrection" of your own (Romans 6:3–11).The Symbolism of Baptism: * It is the doorway into Christ.It represents dying to the old self and rising to "walk in newness of life."The Call to Action: Based on Jesus' words to Martha in John 11:25–26:"Jesus said to her, 'I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die. Do you believe this?'" (ESV)Final Invitation: The speaker encourages the congregation not to leave without seeking help or making a decision to follow Christ.
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Why Are You Following? (from our 3-29-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/2P8w_ujUgCwSermon Title: Why Are You Following?Scripture Text: Daniel 3I. Introduction: The Contrast of LeadershipThe Illustration of Henry Ford:Credited with mass production and changing the world.Despite his success, he was an insecure and "horrible" leader.Established a "psychological department" (secret police) to spy on and blackmail employees.Led through intimidation, pitting people against one another.The Biblical Parallel: King Nebuchadnezzar.Like Ford, Nebuchadnezzar was an ego-driven leader who led from a place of deep insecurity.II. Following Out of Fear (Daniel 3:1–7)The Decree: Nebuchadnezzar sets up a 90-foot golden statue and demands worship under the immediate threat of death in a fiery furnace.The Motivation of the Leader: Ego is often driven by the fear of losing control.The Flaw of Fear:Fear is a poor motivator; it only produces outward obedience, not heart-felt loyalty.If you follow God only to avoid hell, you are running away from something rather than toward Him.Scripture Reference:"By this is love perfected with us, so that we may have confidence for the day of judgment, because as he is so also are we in this world. There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear. For fear has to do with punishment, and whoever fears has not been perfected in love. We love because he first loved us." (1 John 4:17–19 ESV)III. Following Out of Peer Pressure (Daniel 3:8–12)The Accusers: Certain Chaldeans maliciously accuse Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego to divert attention to themselves or please the King.The Nature of Peer Pressure:It is handing your life over to others to let them make your decisions.It exists in adulthood just as much as in youth (e.g., the pressure to join in "debauchery" or addiction).The Example of Jesus: He refused to succumb to the pressure of the religious or political leaders of His day.Scripture Reference:"And when the ten heard it, they were indignant at the two brothers. But Jesus called them to him and said, 'You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones exercise authority over them. It shall not be so among you. But whoever would be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be your slave, even as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.'" (Matthew 20:24–28 ESV)IV. Following Out of Security (Daniel 3:16–18)A Secure Leader: Unlike Nebuchadnezzar, God is never threatened. Following a secure God produces secure followers.The "But If Not" Faith:The three Hebrew men declare that God can deliver them, but even if He chooses not to, they still will not bow.This is "meekness"—power under control. It is a conviction that the world cannot rattle.Scripture Reference:"For all who are led by the spirit of God are sons of God. For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, 'Abba! Father!'" (Romans 8:14–15 ESV)V. Conclusion: God’s Leadership StyleThe Invitation of God: God does not use the "fiery furnace" to demand immediate, forced worship. Instead, He seeks those who worship Him by choice.Scripture Reference:"But the hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people to worship him. God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth." (John 4:23–24 ESV)The Call to Action: Don't leave today struggling or outside of Christ. God loves you and offers every opportunity to follow Him out of love rather than fear.
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Building Each Other Up (From our 3-22-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/CqIviQ8VshMThis sermon uses the massive scale of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline to illustrate the even greater work of building up the body of Christ. Here is a detailed outline of the message based on the text provided.I. Introduction: The World’s Largest StrawThe Illustration: The Trans-Alaska Pipeline is over 800 miles long, four feet in diameter, and took 378 million gallons of crude oil just to fill before a single drop reached the destination.The Magnitude: It required 100,000 joints to be welded, often in freezing conditions and under X-ray scrutiny.The Comparison: As massive as that project is, the Bible speaks of something greater."He who descended is the one who also ascended far above all the heavens, that he might fill all things." (Ephesians 4:10 ESV)The Thesis: God has not asked us to build a pipeline, but He has asked us to build up His church.II. Building Up the Church Means Building Up PeopleThe Context of 1 Corinthians 14: Paul addresses the misuse of spiritual gifts. While people were bickering over who had the "better" gift, Paul points them toward the purpose of those gifts: edification."On the other hand, the one who prophesies speaks to people for their upbuilding and encouragement and consolation." (1 Corinthians 14:3 ESV)The Three-Fold Work of Edification:Upbuilding: To make a person stronger through kind words or service.Encouragement: To "put courage in" someone, helping them act rightly in spite of fear.Consolation: To stabilize someone who is teetering on the edge or down in a pit.The Homework: Every member is responsible for every other member. The challenge is to find someone in the congregation this week—specifically someone outside your immediate circle—and build them up.III. Building Up Must Be Our TargetStriving to Excel: Building the church isn't something we just "try" to do; it must be our intentional aim."So with yourselves, since you are eager for manifestations of the Spirit, strive to excel in building up the church." (1 Corinthians 14:12 ESV)The Focus: Like aiming a weapon, we should only point our efforts toward what we intend to hit. Our target should be the overflow and abounding of the body.IV. Building Up Must Be Our TestThe "Go/No-Go" Yardstick: To evaluate whether a church activity is effective, we must ask if it serves one of two purposes: evangelizing the lost or edifying the body."What then, brothers? When you come together, each one has a hymn, a lesson, a revelation, a tongue, or an interpretation. Let all things be done for building up." (1 Corinthians 14:26 ESV)Intentionality: We must avoid going through the motions or doing things out of mere habit. If it doesn't build up, we need to reassess its purpose.V. Conclusion: Growing into MaturityThe Final Design: Jesus provides the "pumps" (apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds, and teachers) to equip the saints for the work of ministry.The Result of a Working Body: > "from whom the whole body, joined and held together by every joint with which it is equipped, when each part is working properly, makes the body grow so that it builds itself up in love." (Ephesians 4:16 ESV)The Invitation: If you are struggling or need help, do not leave without seeking it. The body exists to build you up.
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Where Are You? (From our 3-15-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/XbpQHXizDEcIn this sermon, the speaker uses personal anecdotes and the Parable of the Prodigal Son to explore the fundamental question God asked Adam in the Garden of Eden: "Where are you?" The message focuses on identifying one’s current spiritual condition and understanding the Father's eagerness to welcome His children back.The sermon breaks down various spiritual states based on the two brothers in Luke 15:The Spiritual Condition of the Older BrotherThe speaker begins at the end of the parable to highlight how those who stay "at home" can still be lost in their hearts:Loveless Repetition: This is a state of going through the motions—doing what is "right" but without joy or love. It is the shift from "I get to worship" to "I have to worship."Pride and Resentment: The older brother’s focus on his own work ("I have served," "I never disobeyed") blinded him to the grace of the Father. His pride made him unable to celebrate the restoration of others.The Spiritual Journey of the Younger BrotherThe speaker then traces the path of the younger son, which mirrors the human tendency to "buy the lie" that something better exists outside of God’s presence:Dissatisfaction and "Green Grass-itis": Much like Adam and Eve, the younger son believed God (or the Father) was holding out on him, leading him to squander his inheritance in a "far country."The Peak of Chaos (Rock Bottom): This is the moment of realization. The speaker notes that "coming to oneself" requires extreme vulnerability and the courage to stop "digging the hole" deeper.The Decision to Move Forward: The son’s hope—"I wonder if I can go back"—is the turning point. The speaker suggests that true repentance is burning the ships and deciding to move toward the Father, regardless of the cost.The Heart of the FatherThe sermon concludes with a powerful description of the Father’s response. Despite the son's fear of rejection or punishment, the Father:Shames Himself to Show Love: In that culture, a nobleman running was considered undignified, yet the Father ran to meet his son while he was "still a long way off."Provides Full Restoration: He doesn't make the son a servant; he restores his status with a robe, a ring, and a celebration.The speaker emphasizes that God is not waiting to "drop the hammer," but is patient and desires all to come to repentance. He ends with an invitation to find rest in Christ, citing Matthew 11:28–30:"Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light." (ESV)
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What's The Difference? (From our 3-8-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/1P4Tq9Kl0aoIn this episode, we explore the stark contrast between two types of people we encounter in life and in scripture: those who are completely bought in, and those who are always looking for a way out. Starting with a humorous observation from the local dollar store about the excuses we make to avoid what's difficult, this message dives deep into the spiritual parallel. Why do some believers stand firm like Timothy, while others play "what if" games like the Sadducees? The defining difference is true, actionable faith.We break down Hebrews 11:1 to discover the three essential components of a faith that refuses to shrink back: a rock-solid foundation for today, a guaranteed hope for the future, and an unwavering inner conviction.Key TakeawaysThe Excuse Trap: Just like we make excuses to avoid physical exercise, it is easy to make excuses to avoid spiritual commitment. Cynics often hide behind endless "what if" questions to justify looking for a way out.Faith is an Action Word: Mere belief is not enough; even demons believe and shudder. True faith requires action based on trusting God, much like Noah building an ark before it ever rained.Assurance (The Foundation): Faith provides a firm foundation to push off of. When you trust that God is unshakeable, you can confidently step into what He calls you to do.Hope (The Future): Faith is tied to a destination. We don't have an exhaustive roadmap, but God's word provides enough light for the path ahead, pointing us toward an eternal promise we haven't seen yet.Conviction (The Evidence): Conviction is the inner resolve that says, "This is who I am, and I will not be moved." It's the stubborn refusal to shrink back or walk away from Jesus, regardless of the cost or the trials.Key Scripture ReferencesHebrews 11:1 "Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen."Hebrews 11:6 "And without faith it is impossible to please him, for whoever would draw near to God must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who seek him."Matthew 22:29 "But Jesus answered them, 'You are wrong, because you know neither the Scriptures nor the power of God.'"James 2:19 "You believe that God is one; you do well. Even the demons believe—and shudder!"Hebrews 10:37-39 "For, 'Yet a little while, and the coming one will come and will not delay; but my righteous one shall live by faith, and if he shrinks back, my soul has no pleasure in him.' But we are not of those who shrink back and are destroyed, but of those who have faith and preserve their souls."
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Union With Christ (From our 3-1-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/ll699I-WusoBig Idea: Union with Christ is the central lens of the New Testament that holds all other doctrines together. Our identity, salvation, and purpose are found only "in Him."I. The Concept: The Lego Dinosaur AnalogyThe Problem of Isolation: Individual Lego pieces are meaningless and without purpose on their own.The Power of the Whole: Meaning is derived from being part of the "whole" (the dinosaur).The Preposition of Identity: Paul uses the phrase "in Christ" (and its variations) more than any other to define a believer. He never calls himself a "Christian," but always describes himself as being "in" or "with" Christ.“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places...” (Ephesians 1:3)II. The Source: The Prayer of JesusThe doctrine of union isn't just a Pauline idea; it starts with Jesus.The Standard of Unity: Jesus prays that our connection to Him would mirror His connection to the Father.“I in them and you in me, that they may become perfectly one, so that the world may know that you sent me and loved them even as you loved me.” (John 17:23)ShutterstockIII. The Three-Fold Reality of Union1. Union in Salvation: The Giver is the GiftThe Temptation: We often divorce the gift (salvation) from the Giver (Jesus).The Reality: We don't just receive salvation from Jesus; Jesus is our salvation.Hidden in Him: Our lives are no longer our own; they are wrapped up in His.“For you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God. When Christ who is your life appears, then you also will appear with him in glory.” (Colossians 3:3–4)2. Union in the Sacraments: Participation, Not Just MemorialBaptism: It is the act of "clothing" ourselves with Christ. Just like glasses become the lens through which we see, Christ becomes the "garment" that defines us.“For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ.” (Galatians 3:27)Communion: It is a real participation (Greek: koinonia) in His body and blood. It is not a distant ritual, but a present meeting with the Savior.3. Union in the Church: The Body and the VineThe Body: We are individual members with different functions, but we only have life when connected to the Head.The Vine: Without the connection to the vine, the branch is incapable of producing fruit.“I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing.” (John 15:5)IV. Conclusion & Call to ActionExamine the Connection: If there is no fruit (love for neighbor, helping the poor, sharing the gospel), is there a disconnect from the Vine?The Warning: Doing "religious things" in His name is not the same as knowing Him and being in Him.The Invitation: Don't treat your spiritual life as a DIY project. Seek the union that provides life, joy, and purpose.
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Who Is Hurting Today? (From our 2-22-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/9d3bYZXvQ2IIntroduction: The Reality of the "Short Straw"The Unexpected Burden: Acknowledging the difficulty of stepping in during seasons of trial.The Honest Assessment: Acknowledging that the last few weeks of ministry have been "trying, painful, and hurting."The Central Question: "What hurts today?"I. The Statistics of a Hurting Body (The "100 People" Survey)Physical Pain (32%): The nagging injuries, the acute cuts, and the 25% dealing with chronic, long-term suffering.Mental Pain (23%): De-stigmatizing the "craziness" and the mental struggles we often carry in silence.Emotional Distress (40%): The "deeper" hurts: job loss, missed promotions, marital struggles, and the grief of losing loved ones.The Habits and Hangups: Recognizing that our pain often leads to cycles we can't break on our own.II. The Invitation to Exchange BurdensThe Scripture: Matthew 11:28–30"Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light."The Core Truth: We were never meant to carry these things alone.The "Yoke" of Jesus: Replacing our heavy, crushing burdens with His "easy" yoke. It is okay to ask for help; it is okay to know where to go.III. The Perspective of Pain (Joseph and Paul)Joseph: The Sovereignty of God in Suffering.Joseph experienced family betrayal, slavery, and prison.The Scripture: Genesis 50:19–20"But Joseph said to them, 'Do not fear, for am I in the place of God? As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good, to bring it about that many people should be kept alive, as they are today.'"Application: Sometimes we question God's "good," but Joseph shows that God is working through the pain for a future reveal.Paul: The Persistence in Suffering.The Scripture: 2 Corinthians 11:23–28 (The "list of perils": stripes, prisons, shipwrecks, and the "daily pressure" of concern for the churches).Application: Paul didn't give up after the first shipwreck or the first beating. He kept going because he knew the One who was taking care of the pain.IV. The Question at the Pool (The Man at Bethesda)The Context: John 5:2–6. A man paralyzed for 38 years.The Scripture: John 5:6"When Jesus saw him lying there and knew he had already been there a long time, he said to him, 'Do you want to be healed?'"Two Lessons from the Pool:Jesus Knows: He knew the man had been there a long time. He knows your resentment, your anger, and your 38-year-old hurts.The Simple Question: He doesn't ask for a checklist of chores; He asks for your "Yes."The Challenge: Taking up your bed and walking. The "easy" part is the start (baptism, confession); the "hard" part is living the Christian life daily when Satan attacks the hardest.Conclusion: Handing it OverThe Call to Action: Give the burden to Jesus. It is His burden to carry, not yours.The Community Support: You don't have to walk to the front; you can meet in the side room or talk after service.Closing Thought: When He asks, "Do you want to be healed?", let your answer be, "Yes, I do."
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God Is Good (From Our 2-15-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/IUnvfgf7Iw8In a world saturated with "bad news"—from natural disasters to personal tragedies—it is easy to become overwhelmed by the darkness. In this episode, we explore the fundamental truth that provides an anchor in the storm: God is good. Using the metaphor of a diamond, we examine the different "facets" of God’s goodness and how His character remains the standard for truth, even when our circumstances feel anything but good.Key Discussion PointsThe Internal Standard: Goodness isn't just something God does; it is who He is. We look at Jesus’ interaction with the Rich Young Ruler in Mark 10 to understand that God is the only absolute standard for "good."Goodness in the Present: God’s goodness isn't a theological abstraction reserved for the afterlife. It is "very present help" (Psalm 46). He provides common grace—like the sun and the rain—to all, and stands with His people in the middle of their deepest valleys.The Endurance of Love: A deep dive into Psalm 136 and the repetitive reminder that His "steadfast love endures forever." If God has been good throughout history, we can trust He will be good in our unknown futures.The Storehouse of Grace: God doesn't just give us enough to get by; He has abundant goodness "stored up" for those who take refuge in Him (Psalm 31).Scripture References (ESV)Psalm 34:8 – "Oh, taste and see that the Lord is good! Blessed is the man who takes refuge in him!"Mark 10:18 – "And Jesus said to him, 'Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone.'"Psalm 145:8–9 – "The Lord is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love. The Lord is good to all, and his mercy is over all that he has made."Psalm 46:1–2 – "God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear though the earth gives way, though the mountains be moved into the heart of the sea."Psalm 100:4–5 – "Enter his gates with thanksgiving, and his courts with praise! Give thanks to him; bless his name! For the Lord is good; his steadfast love endures forever, and his faithfulness to all generations."Main TakeawayLife may be hard, and the news may be grim, but God’s character is an unchangeable target. We are invited to move from being overwhelmed by the world to being overwhelmed by His stored-up blessings.
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God's Providence (From our 2-8-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/Mz4psHL_FfcIntroduction: The Airbnb AnalogyThe sermon opens with the origin story of Airbnb, explaining its name: "Air" from air mattresses rented out during events, plus "Bed and Breakfast."Founders faced ridicule and rejection; told their idea was crazy.In 2008 recession, they sold custom Cheerio boxes (political themes) to raise $30,000 and keep the company afloat.Today, Airbnb is valued at ~$74 billion, a global leader in property rentals.Key takeaway: Founders persisted because they saw potential others couldn't; they moved pieces, proved critics wrong, and were ultimately right.Analogy to God: God sees what others can't, moves pieces sovereignly, and is always right.God's SovereigntyDefined: God's ability to make plans and the authority/capability to execute them without hindrance.Biblical reference: Isaiah 46:8-11 God contrasts Himself with false idols: "I am God, and there is none like me, declaring the end from the beginning... My counsel shall stand, and I will accomplish all my purpose." God calls events and people into being; what He speaks, He brings to pass. God's ProvidenceTied to sovereignty: Providence is "sovereignty in motion"—God actively working things according to His will.Biblical reference: Ephesians 1:11-14 "In him we have obtained an inheritance, having been predestined according to the purpose of him who works all things according to the counsel of his will." God seals believers with the Holy Spirit as a guarantee of inheritance. Example: Israelites repeatedly messed up, but God's plan wasn't thwarted—He worked through it without removing free will.Providence in action: God isn't passive; He's actively shaping events.The Story of Jonah: Lessons on ProvidenceThe sermon uses the Book of Jonah (chapters 1-4) to illustrate providence. Familiar elements like the "big fish" are highlighted, but emphasis is on deeper themes, including chapter 4's intrigue.Providence Knows (Eternal Intelligence - "EI") Jonah 1:1-2: God commands Jonah (a Hebrew prophet) to go to Nineveh—a Gentile city, capital of Assyria, Israel's arch-enemy—and preach against its evil. Why send an unwilling preacher who hates them? Because God knows it will work: The entire city repents. Parallels: God sends a boy (David) to fight Goliath, or stutterer Moses to lead Israel—because He knows the outcome. Application: When opportunities or challenges keep arising that we feel unqualified for, consider God's greater knowledge. "Maybe I know something you don't... Maybe you have more talent than you think." Providence isn't always a clear roadmap; some events stem from our or others' decisions, but God may be guiding. Providence Pursues Jonah 1:3-17: Jonah flees to Tarshish (opposite direction), boards a ship. God sends a storm; mariners pray to false gods (ineffective), cast lots (falls on Jonah). Jonah admits fleeing God; tells them to throw him overboard. They try to row back but can't; pray to God, throw Jonah in—storm stops instantly. Mariners fear and worship the true God. Not accidents: Storm, lots, calm sea—all providence pursuing Jonah. Why pursue? God cares, even when we're stubborn. He's not frustrated like humans; He has backups but values each person. Application: What if recurring "bad" circumstances are God chasing you back to His path? Providence is Misunderstood Jonah 1:17-2:10: God appoints a great fish to swallow Jonah for 3 days/nights. Jonah prays from the belly: Acknowledges distress, God's salvation; vows thanksgiving (Jonah 2:1-9). Fish wasn't punishment but salvation: Jonah expected to drown (no rescue available); fish saved him from certain death. Though uncomfortable (smelly, dark), it preserved life. Parallels: Acts 8—persecution scatters Christians from Jerusalem, but they preach everywhere, spreading the Gospel (disaster becomes blessing). Application: What seems like the "worst thing ever" may be a hidden blessing. Use wisdom: Learn from past experiences to "fight what I feel with what I know to be true." Providence Positions (Right Place, Right Time) Jonah 3:1-4: God commands Jonah again; he obeys, preaches to Nineveh (a massive city, 3 days' journey across). Speculation: Fish (likely air-breathing whale) swam for 3 days, possibly carrying Jonah 300-600 miles closer to Nineveh (from Mediterranean toward east), shortening his overland journey from ~600 miles. God doesn't specify, but providence likely positioned him advantageously, not further away. Application: God can redirect us efficiently, even through detours. Providence Exposes Your Heart Jonah 3:5-10 & 4:1-11: Nineveh repents fully (from king to animals); God relents from destruction. Jonah angry: Prays for death, admits he fled because he knew God is gracious, merciful, slow to anger (Jonah 4:2). Pouts outside city, hoping for destruction. God appoints: Plant for shade (Jonah glad), worm to kill it, scorching wind/sun (Jonah faints, wants death). God questions: "Do you do well to be angry?" Jonah pities the plant he didn't create, but not Nineveh's 120,000+ innocents (children) and livestock. God's multitasking: Works on Nineveh's repentance while exposing Jonah's prejudice/heart issues. Parallels: Hebrews 4:12—God's Word as a sword revealing heart's thoughts/intents; prodigal son "comes to himself" in the pigpen. Open ending: We don't know if Jonah changes, but providence reveals flaws for growth. Application: God uses circumstances to mirror our true selves; He's never doing just one thing. Conclusion and InvitationWrap-up: Perhaps it's providence you're hearing this—struggling, hurting, needing repentance or salvation.God and His people love you; seek help (e.g., become Christian, talk to someone).Final thought: Salvation belongs to the Lord (Jonah 2:9). Don't leave without addressing your needs.
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The Power of One Word (From our 2-1-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/nghLyyTp6q8Sermon Summary: The Power of a Single WordIn this sermon, Pastor explores the profound impact of words, drawing parallels between historical inventions like the printing press and modern AI revolutions. He highlights how one misplaced or omitted word can alter history, lives, and even eternal destinies, using biblical wisdom to urge listeners to guard their speech.Key Highlights:Historical Anecdote: The Printing Press Revolution The invention of the printing press obsoleted scribes, who painstakingly copied texts by hand. In 1631, a printing error in the King James Bible omitted "not" from Exodus 20:14, resulting in "Thou shalt commit adultery." This tiny mistake—missing one word out of over 783,000—led to fines, recalls, and the company's downfall. Lesson: Words are precious and powerful; one error can change everything.Biblical Examples of Dangerous Words: The Word That Doesn't Belong (Genesis 3): The serpent twists God's command by adding doubt ("You will not surely die"), leading to humanity's fall. Modern parallels include false doctrines built on subtle additions like "don't" in "You don't have to obey." Challenge: Ask who benefits from such ideas—God, you, or someone else? The Quiet Word (Proverbs 16:28): Whisperers (gossips) spread strife and separate friends. Gossip can be true but shared with wrong intentions. Test: If you'd be mortified if it went public, it's likely harmful. Satan tempts with what we desire, making it "fun" but destructive. The Harsh Word (Proverbs 15:1): A soft answer calms anger, but harsh tones escalate it. You can be right but deliver it wrongly (e.g., responding to an apology with sarcasm). Real-life tip: Harshness often stems from personal stress—don't "kick the dog" when mad at the cat. The Worthless Word (Matthew 12:33-37): Out of the heart's abundance, the mouth speaks. We'll account for every careless (empty or lazy) word on judgment day. Examples: Inappropriate jokes or persistent bad language. Grace covers struggles, but the tongue is like a fire (James 3)—hard to tame but worth the effort. The Unreliable Word (Matthew 5:33-37): Let your "yes" be yes and "no" be no; avoid oaths or evasive promises. It's tempting to lie politely (e.g., faking interest in an event), but honesty builds trust. If prone to forgetting, act immediately (e.g., pray on the spot instead of promising later). The Ultimate Word: Jesus (John 1:1-5) Jesus is "the Word" through whom all was made, bringing light that darkness can't overcome. His love shines into our hearts (2 Corinthians 4:7), helping us combat our slips in speech.Closing Invitation:The pastor admits no one's perfect with words but encourages growth together. If you need encouragement, prayer, or to respond—whether for baptism, repentance, or support—reach out during the invitation or to elders. Don't leave without the word you need today.This message reminds us: Words shape realities—use them wisely to build, not break. Perfect for discussions on communication, integrity, and biblical living!
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Find More Joy In More Moments(Snow Day Devo 1-25-26)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/fl527UPlHYkI. Introduction: The Disruption of PlansThe Reality of Disruption: Life often goes according to plan, which lulls us into a false sense of security. We get used to the routine.The Question: How do we react when the "normal plan" is impossible? (e.g., A snowstorm preventing worship, a project stalled).The Thesis: Life doesn't always go to plan, but we choose how we react to the disruption. We can either be overcome by the "evil" of the day, or we can find the "good portion" in the unexpected.II. The Danger of Despising "Small Things" (Old Testament)Context: The Israelites return from captivity to rebuild the Temple under the leadership of Zerubbabel.The Mixed Reaction:The Joy: The foundation is laid, and the younger generation rejoices.The Disappointment: The older generation, who saw Solomon’s Temple, weeps because the new work seems small and insignificant by comparison.Scripture: Ezra 3:11–12"And they sang responsively, praising and giving thanks to the Lord, 'For he is good, for his steadfast love endures forever toward Israel.' And all the people shouted with a great shout when they praised the Lord, because the foundation of the house of the Lord was laid. But many of the priests and Levites and heads of fathers' houses, old men who had seen the first house, wept with a loud voice when they saw the foundation of this house being laid, though many shouted aloud for joy..."The Consequence of Comparison: Because the people felt the new temple "wasn't good enough," they became discouraged, and construction stopped for 16 years.God’s Correction: God speaks through the prophet Zechariah to encourage them not to look down on humble beginnings.Scripture: Zechariah 4:10"For whoever has despised the day of small things shall rejoice, and shall see the plumb line in the hand of Zerubbabel."Application: When our big plans fail, we often feel "gypped" by the smaller reality in front of us. We despise the small thing because it isn't the big thing we planned.III. Redeeming the Time (The Theology of Reaction)The Command: Paul instructs us to walk wisely and make the best use of our time.Scripture: Ephesians 5:15–16"Look carefully then how you walk, not as unwise but as wise, making the best use of the time, because the days are evil."The Definition of "Evil Days": What makes a day evil? It is often our reaction to the circumstances.The Strategy: We answer the "evil" of a bad day (or cancelled plans) with good actions.Scripture: Romans 12:21"Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good."Synthesis: Are the days only "evil" if we allow them to be? We have the agency to redeem a bad situation by choosing a good reaction.IV. Choosing the "Good Portion" (Gospel Example)The Narrative: Jesus visits Mary and Martha.Martha: Represents the "Plan." She is distracted by serving, anxious, and troubled because things (presumably) aren't going smoothly or she lacks help.Mary: Represents "The Moment." She stops to appreciate what is right in front of her (Jesus).The Rebuke and Invitation:Scripture: Luke 10:41–42"But the Lord answered her, 'Martha, Martha, you are anxious and troubled about many things, but one thing is necessary. Mary has chosen the good portion, which will not be taken away from her.'"Application: The difference between a good day and a bad day is often what we choose to focus on.You can focus on the snowstorm and the cancelled plans (Martha).Or you can focus on the unique opportunity to slow down and sit with family (Mary).V. Conclusion: Embracing the UnexpectedPersonal Reflection: The speaker admits the struggle of wanting to be productive/busy but being forced to stop.Reframing the Negative:Negative: We cannot meet for church today.Positive: We get to eat breakfast with family (a rarity), and the absence of church today will make the gathering next Sunday even sweeter.Final Challenge: Pay attention to what is in front of you. Do not be so focused on what you don't have (the failed plan) that you miss the joy of what you do have (the present moment).
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Does Love Really Hurt (From Our 11-18-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/nLSwWiVGIv4Introduction: The "Anti-Love" SongThe Hook: The speaker references the song "Love Hurts" (famously covered by Nazareth in 1975).The Lyrics: Quotes the cynical lyrics: "Love is just a lie made to make you blue... Love hurts."The Rebuttal: The speaker validates the feeling—pain is often tied to love—but rejects the song’s conclusion.If love were truly bad, the solution would be to build walls and never connect with anyone.The Truth: We cannot do that because we are designed to crave love; we need it more than air.The Goal: Since there is no "magic wand" to remove pain, the speaker aims to make sense of it. Pain is not needless torture; it is the price of something crucial.I. Pain is a Signal of Love (Jesus at Lazarus’ Tomb)Scripture: John 11:32-36The Scene: Jesus arrives at the funeral of Lazarus. Despite knowing He would raise him, Jesus weeps ("Jesus wept" - v.35).The Observation: The Jews watching didn't just see tears; they saw the relationship behind them.Verse 36: "See how he loved him!"The Connection: The depth of our grief is directly tied to the depth of our love.We do not grieve for strangers because we do not have a relationship with them.Key Takeaway: Pain is not worthless; it is a signal of the love we had and still have. Love does not disappear when a life ends.II. The Value Added by Love (The Death of Dorcas)Scripture: Acts 9:36-39The Scene: Peter arrives after the death of Dorcas (Tabitha). The widows surround him, weeping and holding up the tunics and garments she had made.The Symbolism: Why show the clothes?It wasn't about the monetary value (e.g., a $20 coat).It was about the investment. The clothes represented Dorcas’s time, talent, and care.The Connection: Love hurts because we recognize the immense value that person added to our lives.Reference to 1 John 4:16: God is love, and because we are made in His image, love adds essential value to our existence.III. The Pain of Lost Opportunity (Paul and the Ephesian Elders)Scripture: Acts 20:35-38The Scene: Paul says his final goodbye to the Ephesian elders before boarding a ship.The Sorrow: The group weeps and embraces Paul.The Root of Pain: The text notes they sorrowed "most of all" because they would "not see his face again."The Connection: A major part of grief is the realization that we lose the earthly opportunity to give and receive love from that person.Conclusion: Love Gives Even When It HurtsThe Trade-off: To remove the pain, you would have to remove the love. The speaker concludes that the love is worth the pain.The Ultimate Example: John 15:12-14"Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends."Final Charge:Jesus demonstrated that love gives even when it causes pain (laying down His life).Call to Action: We cannot quit loving. Even in grief, we must continue to love one another.Invitation: An offer for prayer, support in the "Shepherd's Room," or simply finding comfort in the community.
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Being Rich Towards God (From our 1-11-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/KPlp4TgIZlgStructure of the MessageI. Beyond the First Day (Opening Thought) The message opens with a reflection on the transition from the "first day of the week" (Sunday) to the rest of our lives. While we gather specifically on this day, the speaker reminds us that:We have the privilege of Jesus Christ’s presence with us all the time, not just during the service.We should look forward to that continuous communion with Him.II. The Call to Action: "Be Rich Toward God" The core encouragement is to take the energy of the gathering and apply it daily.The Challenge: Do not let your service end when the church doors close.The Application: Use every single day to "do something for God," actively seeking ways to be rich in spirit and service toward Him throughout the week.III. Congregational Updates & Scripture Study The speaker highlights the upcoming "Bible Bowl" event, directing the congregation's attention to specific chapters for study.Scripture Reference: John Chapters 9, 10, and 11Key Theme: Within these chapters, the focus is drawn specifically to Jesus as the Good Shepherd (found in John 10).IV. The Invitation (Closing) The message concludes with an open invitation based on the character of the Good Shepherd.Accessibility: Jesus is described as being "here" and "reached" easily by those in need.The Call: If anyone needs the Good Shepherd or needs to "come forward," they are invited to do so as the congregation stands to sing.Scripture ReferencesJohn 9, 10, 11 (Context for the upcoming Bible Bowl)Note: The speaker specifically highlights the "Good Shepherd" passage found in this text.
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Paul's Plan For Being A Better Christian (From our 1-4-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/DEPQ6tyPsIYShow NotesEpisode Summary Some men risk everything for a dream. Heinrich Schliemann risked his fortune and reputation to find the ancient city of Troy—a place everyone else said was a fable. In the New Testament, the Apostle Paul took an even greater risk, counting all his previous status and achievements as loss for the sake of knowing Christ.In this first service of 2026, we look at Philippians 3 to uncover Paul’s "recipe" for spiritual growth. Just as muscles only grow when they are strained to the point of failure, our spiritual lives require us to forget what lies behind and strain toward what lies ahead.Key TakeawaysThe Schliemann Example: Like the man who discovered Troy, we must be willing to pursue a vision even when it requires risking our comfort or current status.Self-Evaluation vs. Common Sense: Paul was confident in his salvation ("I am going to heaven"), but he never let confidence override the common sense that he still had work to do.The Art of Forgetting: Spiritual growth requires "forgetting what lies behind." This isn't accidental memory loss; it is an active, mental struggle to refuse to let past failures or successes weigh you down.Straining Forward: Growth is uncomfortable. Just as lifting heavy weights requires exertion, pressing on toward the high calling of God requires spiritual strain.Don't Move: The secret to long-term faithfulness is often simply refusing to quit.Scripture References (ESV)Philippians 3:3-21: "For we are the circumcision, who worship by the Spirit of God and glory in Christ Jesus and put no confidence in the flesh—though I myself have reason for confidence in the flesh also. If anyone else thinks he has reason for confidence in the flesh, I have more: circumcised on the eighth day, of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews; as to the law, a Pharisee; as to zeal, a persecutor of the church; as to righteousness under the law, blameless. But whatever gain I had, I counted as loss for the sake of Christ. Indeed, I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have suffered the loss of all things and count them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God that depends on faith—that I may know him and the power of his resurrection, and may share his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, that by any means possible I may attain the resurrection from the dead. Not that I have already obtained this or am already perfect, but I press on to make it my own, because Christ Jesus has made me his own. Brothers, I do not consider that I have made it my own. But one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus. Let those of us who are mature think this way, and if in anything you think otherwise, God will reveal that also to you. Only let us hold true to what we have attained. Brothers, join in imitating me, and keep your eyes on those who walk according to the example you have in us. For many, of whom I have often told you and now tell you even with tears, walk as enemies of the cross of Christ. Their end is destruction, their god is their belly, and they glory in their shame, with minds set on earthly things. But our citizenship is in heaven, and from it we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who will transform our lowly body to be like his glorious body, by the power that enables him even to subject all things to himself."Hebrews 10:24: "And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works."2 Corinthians 10:5: "We destroy arguments and every lofty opinion raised against the knowledge of God, and take every thought captive to obey Christ."
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Would You Disrespect The Son of God (From our 12-28-25 Worship)
Watch The Video Version Here: https://youtu.be/7r2aN-aavTgJesus’ parable of the wicked tenants is a warning: it’s possible to “show up” around God’s things and still disrespect God’s Son—by refusing to be shaped, acting like what we have is ours, and ignoring God’s warnings.Hook / Opening Story (Ulysses S. Grant)March 1864: Grant travels from Nashville to Washington, D.C. to meet President Lincoln and be named commander of the Union Army.Arrives late at night—no one meets him. He walks to the Willard Hotel (historic D.C. hotel).Clerk gives him the last room—an attic “broom closet” room—rudely, not realizing who he is.Later the clerk sees the registry: “U.S. Grant and son” and panics—moves him to the presidential suite.Point: Sometimes we disrespect someone because we don’t recognize them… and sometimes we disrespect even when we DO know.Main TextMatthew 21:33–46 — Parable of the tenantsOwner plants a vineyard, leases it to tenants, leaves.Sends servants to collect fruit: they’re beaten, killed, stoned.Finally sends his son: “They will respect my son.”Tenants kill the son to seize the inheritance.Jesus quotes: the rejected stone becomes the cornerstone; the kingdom is taken from fruitless tenants and given to those who produce fruit.Why This Parable MattersAppears in 3 of the 4 Gospels → God is emphasizing something weighty.The spotlight phrase: “They will respect my son.”Challenge: It’s easy to talk about “outsiders” disrespecting Jesus… but the real gut-check is:Can Christians disrespect the Son—unintentionally or through a hardened heart?Answer: Yes.Three Ways We Can Disrespect the Son (Applications)1) Refusing to “Build” (Rejecting the Cornerstone)Jesus = the perfect cornerstone (foundation and alignment).Christians = living stones being built up (cf. Peter’s imagery).We don’t have to be perfect, but we must be progressing:A heart that says: “I want God; I want growth; I want change.”Disrespect happens when we say:“I want the blessings… but I don’t want the shaping.”“I’ll attend, sing, partake, and go through motions… but won’t work on my rough edges.”Punchline: If Jesus was tortured and crucified for me, and I refuse to change—what does that say about my heart?Key idea: “Good enough” Christianity quietly insults the Savior.2) Wanting His Place (Acting Like It’s Mine)Tenants killed the son because they wanted his inheritance.Modern parallel: not that we want to “be Jesus,” but we live like:My time is mineMy money is mineMy resources are mineStewardship lens:Everything belongs to God; we manage it for Him.Illustration: Good SamaritanHe gave bandages, oil, time, transportation, money, rest, and ongoing responsibility.He treated what he had as something to use for mercy.Disrespect shows up as:“I don’t want to share.”“I don’t have time right now.”“That’s inconvenient.”Often the “small” refusal is the moment God intended to open a door for someone to see Christ.Key idea: When I cling tightly, I’m acting like I own what God entrusted.3) Ignoring the Warnings (Rejecting the Messengers)Owner didn’t surprise them with expectations—he sent messengers ahead of time.They abused the warnings instead of heeding them.Parallel: John the Baptist warned and prepared the way—and was killed.Today: Scripture is not decorationNot just a “family Bible on the shelf”It is God’s warning, guide, and preparation for judgment and faithfulness.Disrespect happens when we treat God’s word like background noise:“I meant to… I just never got around to it.”Hard truth: intentions don’t outweigh priorities.Key idea: Neglecting God’s Word is not neutral—it’s disrespectful.The Warning and the Fork in the RoadMatthew 21:40–41 — the owner will come; the lease is terminated; the vineyard is given to others who will bear fruit.Matthew 21:43–44 — you either:Build on the stone, orGet crushed by itThere aren’t endless middle options.Tone Check (Pastoral Heart)This isn’t shared to scare or beat people down.It’s a sober, loving warning meant to wake us up.We need each other because spiritual laziness is real—even for preachers.Community helps:Sometimes we gently lead someone out.Sometimes we “snatch them from the fire” (Jude imagery).Practical Takeaways (Listener Application)Inventory my “rough edges”: What have I refused to let God change?Stewardship audit: Where am I acting like my resources are truly mine?Warning check: Is my Bible opened regularly—or just present in the house?Fruit question: If my faith were judged by fruit alone, what would it show?Suggested Closing / Call to ActionAsk: “In what way am I disrespecting the Son—by refusing growth, clinging to ownership, or ignoring warnings?”Encourage: Don’t delay. Don’t settle for motion without transformation.Invitation: If you need help, repentance, prayer, or accountability—reach out and let the church help.Scripture References Mentioned/Alluded ToMatthew 21:33–46 (Primary text)1 John 1:7–10 (ongoing cleansing/confession and walking in the light)John 14 (Holy Spirit bringing Jesus’ teaching to remembrance)Jude (helping others—gentle rescue vs snatching from fire)1 Peter 2 (cornerstone / living stones concept, implied)
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The Range of Evangelism (From our 12-21-25 Worship)
Watch The Video Version Here: https://youtu.be/LEDp4srATtkEpisode Title: The Range of EvangelismEpisode Summary Why did General Motors overtake Ford in the early 20th century? While Henry Ford offered one car in one color, Alfred P. Sloan realized that people are different—they need a "car for every purse and purpose."In this message, we apply that same logic to the church. There is no single "shampoo bottle" method (lather, rinse, repeat) for bringing people to Jesus. Different people require different approaches. We explore four specific evangelism tactics found in Scripture, ranked from the simplest invitation to the most physically demanding service.Key Scripture ReferencesJohn 1: Philip and NathanaelMark 5: The Gerasene DemoniacLuke 19: ZacchaeusMark 2: The Paralytic and his FriendsMain TakeawaysThe "Ladder" of Evangelism: Just as GM created a ladder of cars (Chevy to Cadillac), there is a ladder of effort in evangelism.Level 1: The Simple Invitation (John 1): "Come and See." You don’t need a theology degree. Sometimes, people are ready, and all they need is a simple invite to church.Level 2: The Personal Testimony (Mark 5): "Go and Tell." You can't mess up your own story. When people see a change in your life (like the demoniac clothed and in his right mind), your history gives you authority.Level 3: Restitution & Repentance (Luke 19): Sometimes showing Jesus means fixing what you broke. Like Zacchaeus, making things right with others can break down barriers and prove your change is real.Level 4: Physical Service (Mark 2): "Roof Ripping." Sometimes you have to carry the mat. Meeting a physical need (sweat equity) creates the opportunity to meet a spiritual need.
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As Much As Lies Within You (From our 12-14-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/KcIe-5yt19cEpisode SummaryPresident Harry Truman’s mother-in-law, Madge Wallace, famously despised him. Despite her hostility, Truman treated her with kindness and respect until the day she died. How do we maintain that level of character when dealing with people who make our lives miserable?In this episode, we dig into Psalm 120 and Romans 12 to find the biblical blueprint for dealing with conflict. We discuss the importance of leaving vengeance to God, understanding the root of our anger, and refusing to let the bad behavior of others lower our spiritual standards.Key TakeawaysRemember God’s Track Record (Psalm 120:1): Before panicking about a current conflict, remember that God has answered you in distress before. Your situation might be hard, but it is not new to God.Name the Problem (Psalm 120:2): You have to identify the deceit or the issue clearly. Sometimes, doing the emotional legwork to find the root cause reveals if the problem is truly them, or if it is actually within us.Leave the Vengeance to God (Psalm 120:3-4): It is natural to want justice, but we are not equipped to mete it out correctly. Like adding salt to mashed potatoes, only God knows the exact, perfect amount of judgment required.Accept the World is Broken (Psalm 120:5-6): We often ask, "Why me?" sometimes the only answer is that we live in a fallen world. This world is not meant to be a comfortable commune; it is a refining fire meant to prepare us for the next life.Don’t Lower Your Standards (Psalm 120:7): When the world speaks war, you must speak peace. This isn’t about being a pushover; it is about not letting evil overcome you. If you return hate for hate, the world has successfully controlled you.Scripture References (ESV)Romans 12:9-21: "Repay no one evil for evil, but give thought to do what is honorable in the sight of all. If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all."Psalm 120: "In my distress I called to the Lord, and he answered me. Deliver me, O Lord, from lying lips, from a deceitful tongue."Romans 8:29: "For those whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son..."
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One More Night With The Frogs (From our 12-7-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/y25gCnePW3QTitle: One More Night with the Frogs (Getting Unstuck)Main Text: Exodus 8:1–15I. Introduction: The Danger of Ignoring SignsThe Mount St. Helens Illustration (May 18, 1980)The mountain gave warning signs (swelling, heat) long before it blew.Harry Truman (The Lodge Owner): Despite warnings, he refused to evacuate his home at Spirit Lake.The Result: He perished under 150 feet of ash and debris because he refused to move.The Spiritual ApplicationPeople make decisions every day that are spiritually reckless.Every person is teetering on the edge of eternity (Heaven or Hell).The difference in destination is determined by the decisions we make to move or stay put.II. The Warning: We Are Not Without NoticeScripture: Exodus 8:1–2The Context:God told Pharaoh exactly what would happen: "If you refuse to let them go, behold I will plague all your country with frogs."The arrival of the frogs should not have been a shock; it was a promised consequence.Application:We live in a world of warning labels (some silly, some serious).God has given us clear warnings through His Word (the Bible).We often get "stuck" because we ignore the warning signs until we fall into the hole.Key Truth: Change cannot happen until we admit we ignored the warning. We must stop blaming others and take responsibility.III. The Pride: Making the Problem WorseScripture: Exodus 8:5–7The Magicians' Response:Instead of removing the frogs, the magicians used their secret arts to bring more frogs upon the land.Reference: This follows the pattern of Exodus 7 (turning staffs into snakes), though eventually, they fail to replicate God's power (referenced Exodus 8:18 regarding the gnats).The "Run the Wheels Off" Mentality:Human nature dictates that when we mess up a little, we might as well mess up a lot (e.g., cheating on a diet or relapsing in addiction).Pharaoh’s magicians tried to disprove God rather than help the situation.Key Quote: "Circumstances can make you a victim, but only pride can keep you one."Fighting against God is a losing battle; you cannot outsmart Him.IV. The Procrastination: Choosing "Tomorrow"Scripture: Exodus 8:8–10The Absurd Exchange:Pharaoh asks Moses to plead with the Lord to remove the frogs.Moses asks, "When?"Pharaoh answers, "Tomorrow."The Logic of Being Stuck:Why spend one more night with frogs in your bed?We often choose to stay in our mess because it is familiar (The "warm poopy diaper" analogy).We want to hang on to a shred of control.The Turning Point:There is a difference between "I want it fixed" and "I want to fix it."Scripture: Luke 15 (The Prodigal Son). The change happened when he "came to himself" in the pig pen.The hardest step is always the first one—moving from the unknown into action.V. Conclusion: The Danger of ReliefScripture: Exodus 8:12–15The Outcome:God did exactly what Moses asked; the frogs died and were gathered into stinking heaps.However, when Pharaoh saw there was a "respite" (relief), he hardened his heart again.Final Challenge:Don’t be like Pharaoh. Don't wait for "tomorrow" to deal with your spiritual condition.God is capable of bringing better things, but we must be willing to get unstuck.Consequences may remain (the land still stank), but the heart can be healed.
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Are You Really That Much Different Than Paul (From Our 11-30-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/8cmv3NWIQq8Summary of the Sermon: “God’s Plot” & “A Tool in God’s Hands”Introduction – The “Brookie”People often struggle with decisions, like choosing a dessert.A “brookie” (brownie + cookie) is the result of not choosing—and this sermon is the same: two messages blended into one.Both come from Acts 9 and the story of Saul’s conversion.SERMON 1: “God’s Plot”1. God Uses Unlikely People (Acts 9:1–2)Saul was a violent persecutor of Christians—the last person we would choose.Scripture shows God repeatedly chooses the unlikely (e.g., David overlooked by his own family).God’s choices don’t align with ours; He sees the heart.2. God Uses Unlikely Circumstances (Acts 9:3–6)Saul’s change began with a dramatic encounter on the road to Damascus.Ministry often happens in strange, unexpected situations—Facebook posts, random meetings, unusual life moments.What looks unpromising to us is often exactly the place where God works.3. God Brings Others Into the Story (Acts 9:10–14)Enter Ananias, the reluctant helper.God always provides people at the right time (like Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch).Ministry is interconnected—God uses people to reach people; we are not meant for isolated Christianity.4. People Still Must Choose (Acts 9:17–19)Even after the encounter, Saul still had to respond—he had a choice.Ananias obeyed regardless of how Saul responded.God brings opportunities, but He does not remove human responsibility.5. People Really Can Change (Acts 9:20–22)Saul immediately began preaching Christ.People were shocked—“Is this the same man?”Transformation still surprises people today, but God can radically change lives.Summary of God’s Plot: Unlikely people, unlikely circumstances, unexpected helpers, personal choice, and real transformation—all repeated over and over again. God’s plot hasn’t changed.SERMON 2: “A Tool in God’s Hands” (Shorter Sermon)1. Saul Was a Chosen Tool (Acts 9:15–16)God calls Saul a “chosen instrument”—meaning a tool designed for a specific job.Like a surgeon’s instrument or a custom-made tool, Paul was crafted for a particular purpose.2. We Are God’s Tools Too (Ephesians 2:10)All Christians are God’s workmanship—created to accomplish good works prepared in advance.God designs us uniquely for the assignments He intends for our lives.3. Tools Sometimes Get Worn or Hurt (1 Peter 4:12–16)Being used by God often involves struggle, hardship, and spiritual “pressure.”Suffering for Christ is not strange; it’s part of being a tool in God’s hands.Paul himself endured hardship (2 Corinthians 12:7–10).4. The Worst Thing for a Tool Is Not Being UsedA tool left on the shelf becomes wasted potential.Christians are meant to serve, act, go, shine, and endure—not sit unused.Conclusion – “Are You Really That Different From Paul?”Paul’s story shows a pattern God still uses:An unlikely personIn an unlikely situationWith another person involvedWho had to make a choiceAnd who shocked others with real changeThat same pattern is seen in our lives.God designed each of us as a tool for His purposes—large or small.Whatever someone needs (help, prayer, support, answers), God loves them, the church loves them, and the invitation is open.If you'd like, I can also: ✅ Turn this into a bullet-point outline for preaching ✅ Create a PowerPoint using your sermon template ✅ Make a short summary handout Just let me know!
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Being Certain Not Circumstantial (From our 11-23-25)
Watch the Video Version Here: https://youtu.be/0-xJ7lnlAXI"Being Certain Not Circumstantial," is a sermon delivered at the West Side Church of Christ. The speaker uses a real-life survival story and the biblical book of Habakkuk to discuss maintaining faith during hopeless situations.Summary of the Sermon:Opening Story of Survival: The message begins with the story of Briana Cassell, a woman who crashed her car into a drainage ditch in rural Illinois. She survived for six days with two broken legs, drinking water wrung from a hoodie, before being discovered by a contractor [00:11]. The speaker uses her ordeal to illustrate feelings of hopelessness and the sense that no one is coming to save you [03:30].The Prophet Habakkuk's Complaint: The sermon transitions to the Old Testament prophet Habakkuk, who lived during a time when it felt like evil was winning and God was silent. Habakkuk cries out, asking how long he must call for help while God seemingly does not listen [04:21]. The speaker notes that despite appearances, God always knows and cares about our situation [08:11].Waiting on God: Although Habakkuk struggles with God's plan (using a wicked nation to judge His people), he decides not to abandon his faith. Instead, he chooses to "stand at [his] watch post" and wait for God's answer, demonstrating patience and a willingness to listen rather than just complain [13:08].Certain vs. Circumstantial Faith: The climax of the message focuses on Habakkuk's prayer in Chapter 3. After recounting God's power, the prophet declares that even if the fig tree does not blossom and the fields yield no food, he will still rejoice in the Lord [18:07]. The speaker argues that true faith, love, and trust must be certain (unwavering) rather than circumstantial (dependent on things going well) [18:48].The Example of Job: The sermon concludes by referencing Job, whose faithfulness was tested to prove he didn't just love God for the blessings ("stuff") he received. The speaker challenges the audience to consider if their own faith would survive if their circumstances fell apart [20:22].
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What To Do When You Don't Know What To Do (From our 11-16-25 Worship)
Watch The Video Version Here: https://youtu.be/2ky3DZBk1bo"What to do when you don’t know what to do."The Opening Illustration: The Impossible RescueThe sermon opens with the dramatic true story of the 2018 Thai Cave Rescue. Twelve members of a youth soccer team and their coach were trapped by monsoon floodwaters deep inside a cave system.1The Dilemma: The situation was impossible. The water was rising, the boys were trapped miles in, and professional Navy SEALs were struggling to navigate the currents.The Solution: It required admitting they couldn't save themselves. They had to call in outside specialists (cave divers and an anesthesiologist). The risky plan involved sedating the boys and dragging them out underwater—something that seemed impossible but was their only hope.The Spiritual Bridge: Just as those boys were trapped and helpless, we face moments in life where we are "between a rock and a hard place," powerless to save ourselves.The Biblical Context: 2 Chronicles 20The sermon transitions to the story of King Jehoshaphat of Judah.The Situation: Judah is being surrounded by a massive alliance of armies (Moabites, Ammonites, and Meunites).The Crisis: Jehoshaphat is afraid.2 He is outnumbered, outgunned, and facing a "monsoon" of enemies. He cannot fix this problem on his own.The 4 Steps: What to Do When You Are PowerlessThe preacher outlines four practical steps based on Jehoshaphat’s reaction in 2 Chronicles 20:1. Assess the Problem (v. 1-4)You must distinguish between problems you can fix (like putting antifreeze in a truck) and problems that are beyond your human ability.Key Takeaway: When you realize the problem is bigger than you, stop running around trying to fix it and making a bigger mess. Admit you are powerless.2. Communicate & Focus on God (v. 5-12)Jehoshaphat "set his face to seek the Lord." This wasn't just a casual prayer; it was a total shift of focus.Key Scripture: "We are powerless against this great horde... We do not know what to do, but our eyes are on you." (v. 12)Key Takeaway: When you don't know what to do, you need to know where to look. Focus on the One who can solve it.3. Listen (v. 13-17)Communication is a two-way street.3 After praying, you must listen for God’s answer. God speaks through:His Word: The Bible.His People: Wise counsel and other believers (Proverbs 11:14).The Message Received: God tells them, "Do not be afraid... for the battle is not yours, but God's."4. Worship (v. 18-21)Before the battle was even won, the people bowed down and worshipped. They sent the choir out in front of the army.4Key Takeaway: Worship God not just for the outcome you want, but because He is worthy. The result of this worship was that the enemy armies turned on each other and destroyed themselves.The ConclusionThe sermon concludes with the comforting realization that while we are on the battlefield, the battle ultimately belongs to God. Just as the Thai boys had to trust the divers completely to carry them out, we must trust God to carry us through "valleys of the shadow of death."
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Be Careful How You Treat Them (From our 11-9-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/ZVDa3xPFXlwSummary: “Be Careful How You Treat Them”Introduction: The Power of Simple KindnessThe sermon opens with a true story of Ruth Reed, a woman in New Jersey who made a resolution to bless others.One day she paid for a man’s food at Wawa—who turned out to be country singer Keith Urban.The story illustrates that the world is starving for kindness, and small acts of compassion can shine light into darkness.Jesus calls His followers to be “the salt of the earth” and “the light of the world” (Matthew 5:13–16 ESV).The preacher asks, “How will they taste and see without kindness?” Kindness is how the world experiences God’s love through us.Personal Story: A Stranger Named GeorgeThe preacher recalls meeting a man named George Rolls, a traveling drifter who claimed the Holy Spirit brought him to church.George was warmly welcomed by the congregation, stayed a few days, and deeply appreciated the kindness shown to him.Later, the preacher saw George walking down the road pulling a cart that said “Jesus loves you” and “John 3:16.”This encounter led to reflection: What if this man was more than he appeared?—prompting the message “Be Careful How You Treat Them.”1. They Might Be AngelsScripture: Hebrews 13:1–2 ESV — “Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.”The focus is not just on angels, but also on love and hospitality—meeting others with generous enthusiasm.The preacher compares this to “mystery shoppers”: What if God sends “mystery visitors” to test our compassion?The lesson: Be kind to all, because we may never know who God has sent across our path.2. They Might Be God (or His Concern)Scripture: Luke 2:41–47 ESV — Jesus as a 12-year-old in the temple.For three days, people in Jerusalem likely fed or sheltered the Son of God without realizing it.The preacher emphasizes God’s love for children, quoting passages about protecting “little ones.”Lesson: Be careful how you treat the young and vulnerable—God cares deeply for them.3. They Might Be “Nobodies”Scripture: Matthew 25:31–40 ESV — “As you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me.”Those considered “nobodies” by society are precious to God.Showing compassion to the overlooked reveals a heart aligned with God’s love.True kindness isn’t natural—it’s spiritual, learned from God, not the world.4. They Might Give You a Chance to ServeScripture: Luke 10:25–37 ESV — The Good Samaritan.Serving others rarely happens at a convenient time.The Samaritan was busy, yet stopped to show mercy—just as Jesus gave His time on the cross when it wasn’t “convenient.”Every act of kindness may be a God-given opportunity to serve Him and to grow in faith.5. They Might Become the Next ChristianScripture: John 4:1–42 ESV — Jesus and the Samaritan woman at the well.Jesus reached across social barriers, offering living water and transforming her life.She became a witness, leading many others to believe.Lesson: We never know who might respond to kindness and become a follower of Christ through our compassion.Conclusion: Kindness as a Vessel for the GospelKindness opens the door for people to see Jesus through us.It is how we reflect His love, break through bitterness, and invite others into the family of faith.The closing appeal: “Be careful how you treat them.” Every person—angel, child, stranger, or “nobody”—could be part of God’s plan.
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How To Be Grateful (From our 11-2-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/HN2l70OPbsESummary: “How to Be Thankful”Introduction: Gratitude in WorshipThe speaker begins by thanking the congregation for investing effort into worship, particularly in making communion meaningful.He notes that even the communion bread was homemade, showing love and devotion to God through service.Story of Corrie ten BoomCorrie ten Boom, a Dutch watchmaker and author, and her family helped hide Jewish people during World War II.They were eventually caught and sent to a concentration camp where living conditions were horrific—especially because their hut was infested with fleas.Corrie’s sister Betsy reminded her of 1 Thessalonians 5:14–18, emphasizing:“Rejoice always… give thanks in all circumstances” (ESV).Betsy insisted they should be thankful even for the fleas, though Corrie initially couldn’t.Later, they discovered that the guards avoided entering their hut because of the fleas—allowing them to hold daily Bible studies freely.Corrie realized God had used even the fleas for good, teaching true thankfulness.Transition: Thanksgiving as a Way of LifeThe speaker points out that Thanksgiving should not be a single day, but a lifestyle.True gratitude is shown through action, not just thought or feeling.Psalm 100 – “A Psalm for Giving Thanks”Psalm 100 is unique because its title is part of the original text, not a later addition—it was literally written for giving thanks.In only five verses, there are seven action verbs—showing that thankfulness involves doing, not just thinking.1. Make a Joyful Noise (v. 1)The Hebrew word means “to shout a proclamation,” like a herald announcing news from the king.Gratitude cannot be hidden—it should be expressed outwardly.The speaker gives an example of writing “Praise the Lord” on a car part, simply to express thankfulness.2. Serve the Lord with Gladness (v. 2a)Gratitude naturally leads to service.Service must be done with gladness, not out of obligation.Examples:Job—served God faithfully even through suffering.Paul and Silas—sang and prayed while imprisoned (Acts 16:25).Choosing joy and focusing on blessings helps maintain thankfulness even in hardship (“We got fleas… but the guards won’t come”).3. Come into His Presence with Singing (v. 2b)Coming before God is intentional, not accidental—it requires preparation and a right heart.Worship should be approached joyfully, not out of duty (“I get to worship,” not “I have to”).The congregation participates in a song to demonstrate heartfelt worship.4. Know that the Lord Is God (v. 3)Thankfulness begins with knowing who God is:He is Creator (Ephesians 2:10).We belong to Him—“we are His people and the sheep of His pasture.”Recognizing we are sheep keeps us humble and prevents self-righteousness (Luke 18:9-14).5. Enter His Gates with Thanksgiving (v. 4)Thankfulness must be expressed directly to God—say “thank You.”Jesus healed ten lepers, but only one returned to give thanks (Luke 17:11-19).Everyday blessings—warm homes, food, safety—should inspire daily gratitude.Remember that every good thing comes from God (Psalm 50:10).6. The Reason for Gratitude (v. 5)“For the Lord is good; his steadfast love endures forever, and his faithfulness to all generations.”Even when life is difficult, God’s goodness and faithfulness remain constant.Life’s valleys are temporary—“I walk through the valley…” (Psalm 23:4).This hope is reason enough to be thankful.Conclusion: Living ThankfullyThankfulness isn’t a reaction to comfort—it’s a deliberate act of faith.Like Corrie ten Boom, we can find gratitude even in “the fleas.”The invitation is extended for anyone who needs prayer, encouragement, or help to find that thankful heart again.
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Why Don't You Sing? (From our 10-26-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/vlE043nx1sU “Why Don’t You Sing” based on your transcript:Introduction: Malvina Farkle Day — Everyone ParticipatesStory from Lindsey Wilson College: Malvina Farkle Day—a surprise day of service and fun honoring a fictional student devoted to community and joy.Everyone—students, staff, even the president—participates in service projects and celebrations.Key takeaway: “Everyone joins in.”Sets the stage for the sermon theme: participation in worship, especially singing.Singing as Participation in WorshipConnection to current West Side Church leadership discussions about worship and traditions.Focus today: singing—why we do it, what it means, and what Scripture teaches.The Book of Psalms — A Model for ExpressionPsalms serve as a guide to worship and prayer, expressing every human emotion to God.Key categories and sample chapters:Worship – Psalms 95, 100, 150Human Emotion – Psalm 6 (sorrow), 13 (grief), 35 (confusion), 118 (joy)Prayer – Psalms 5, 17, 42Teaching and Reflection – Psalms 25, 119Prophecy – Psalms 22, 110Psalms teach that singing and prayer are ways to communicate joy, anger, frustration, hope, and more—honestly and directly before God.Example: Paul and Silas in Prison (Acts 16:19–34 ESV)“About midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the prisoners were listening to them.”Context: Beaten and jailed unjustly—yet they sing and pray.Application:Most of us would respond with anger or despair.But Paul and Silas worship through suffering—their faith produces witness (the jailer and his family are converted).Lesson: Singing in hard times shows the world we’re different and can lead others to salvation.Ephesians 5:15–20 ESV — Singing to One Another and to God“…be filled with the Spirit, addressing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody to the Lord with your heart…”The focus isn’t on instruments but on heart and participation.Singing serves two directions:To one another – encouragement, unity.To the Lord – worship, gratitude.God knows your heart—but your brothers and sisters need to hear your voice.Even if you’re off-key, your effort matters; your singing teaches and strengthens others.Colossians 3:12–16 ESV — Singing Builds Harmony and Gratitude“…teaching and admonishing one another in all wisdom, singing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, with thankfulness in your hearts to God.”Singing connects to compassion, forgiveness, and unity.We “teach and admonish one another” through song—our voices instruct and uplift.Again, two directions:Horizontal – to one another.Vertical – to God.Heavenly Preview: Singing in RevelationRevelation portrays heaven as filled with singing around God’s throne.Challenge: If we don’t sing here, why would we expect to sing there?Personal Reflections and Emotional Power of SongObservations from leading singing:Parents smiling at children, others crying from emotion or memory.Songs connect deeply to personal experiences (“How Great Thou Art” and memories of his grandfather).Music ties emotion to faith—joy, sorrow, hope.Final Challenge: Sing Like a Child (Matthew 18:3 ESV)“Truly, I say to you, unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.”Children sing boldly without fear or self-consciousness.Adults often lose that freedom.Challenge: Regain that childlike spirit—sing sincerely, joyfully, and without worry about how it sounds.Big Idea: If you won’t sing on earth, what makes you think you’ll sing in heaven?Summary SentenceTrue worship requires participation—singing from the heart to God and to one another with gratitude, sincerity, and childlike joy.Would you like me to turn this into a sermon handout or PowerPoint outline using your standard 4:3 format next?
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Is God Powerful or Dangerous? (From our 10-19-25 worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/hn7K3F_lXmsHere’s a summary with clear section headings and bullet points of your sermon “Powerful or Dangerous?”Introduction: From Song Leading to ChemistryBegins by appreciating song leaders for their challenging role.Introduces the idea of chemistry—mixing elements to achieve desired results.Transitions to the theme of power and danger, using chlorine trifluoride (ClF₃) as an illustration.Illustration: Chlorine Trifluoride — Power and DangerDescribes ClF₃ as a hypergolic oxidizer—ignites on contact with almost anything, even asbestos.Story: A 2,000-lb cylinder ruptured in Shreveport, LA; it burned through 12" of concrete and 36" of gravel.Only controllable by removing oxygen—impossible during a fire.Though dangerous, it’s essential in semiconductor manufacturing where nothing else works better.Lesson: Used properly, it’s safe and useful; used wrongly, it’s catastrophic.Analogy: Power equals potential danger (e.g., guns vs. Nerf guns).Transition: What About God?Raises the central question:“Is God powerful? Yes. But is God dangerous?”Answer: It depends on how you treat Him.Misusing God—treating Him as a tool or token—can be deadly.Case Study 1: Israel Misuses God (1 Samuel 4)Israel loses to the Philistines, then decides to bring the Ark of the Covenant into battle as a good-luck charm.God does not bless their superstition—Israel is defeated again, 30,000 die, the Ark is captured, and Eli’s sons die.Lesson: You can’t use God for your own purposes.Modern example: People who only pray “when they need a favor” (Jelly Roll’s song lyric).Emotional appeal: How do you feel when someone uses you? God feels indignation too (Psalm 7:11 ESV — “God is a righteous judge, and a God who feels indignation every day.”)Case Study 2: Philistines Misuse God (1 Samuel 5)The Philistines put the Ark in the temple of Dagon.Next morning, Dagon’s statue falls face-down.Next day, its head and hands are cut off.God demonstrates His supremacy over idols.Insight: God becomes a “stumbling block” to those who reject Him (1 Peter 2:8).Application: The wicked destroy themselves on God’s truth—“The wicked flee when no one pursues” (Proverbs 28:1 ESV).Case Study 3: Israelites Look into the Ark (1 Samuel 6)When the Ark is returned, the men of Beth-shemesh look inside and 70 die.Even curiosity and carelessness toward God’s holiness are judged.Reminder: God’s grace allows mistakes, but not flippancy.Reference: Romans 6:1 ESV — “Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound? By no means!”Case Study 4: Putting God on the Shelf (1 Samuel 7:1–12)The Ark sits unused in Kiriath-jearim for 20 years.During that time Israel falls into idolatry and chaos.Finally, Samuel calls them to repent and serve God only.They obey, fast, and pray.God thunders against the Philistines and gives victory.Samuel sets up a stone of remembrance called Ebenezer, meaning “Till now the LORD has helped us” (1 Samuel 7:12 ESV).Application: The Ebenezer StoneEncourages everyone to take a physical stone home as a reminder:“Till now the LORD has helped us.”Place it where you struggle most—car, desk, home—as a visible sign of God’s help.Reminder: If God has helped us till now, He will continue to do so if we remain faithful.Closing InvitationGod is powerful, and misused power is dangerous.But when we honor Him rightly, His power protects, delivers, and comforts.2 Corinthians 1:3–4 ESV — “Blessed be the God... of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction.”Invitation to respond—receive comfort, repent, or renew faith.Main IdeaPower becomes danger when misused. God’s power is life-giving only when we approach Him with obedience, reverence, and humility.
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The People Had A Mind To Work (From our 10-12-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/BO3_KxrRVBs“And the People Had a Mind to Work” — SummaryHook: A Modern “Mega-Build” vs. God’s WorkIllustration: Saudi Arabia’s NEOM “Line”—an enormous, glass-walled, car-less city—shows we have the tech and tools for massive projects.Point: Whether NEOM succeeds or fails will hinge on politics and money—not tools. Likewise, God’s work doesn’t fail for lack of divine resources; it stalls when God’s people won’t work.Text & Big Idea (Nehemiah)Setting: Nehemiah in exile hears Jerusalem’s walls are ruined, prays, and is sent to rebuild.Big Idea: God restores His people when they set their hearts and hands to the work.Key verse: Nehemiah 4:6 (ESV) — “So we built the wall. And all the wall was joined together to half its height, for the people had a mind to work.”What Nehemiah Heard & FeltNehemiah 1:3–4 (ESV): “…The wall of Jerusalem is broken down, and its gates are destroyed by fire. As soon as I heard these words I sat down and wept and mourned for days, and I continued fasting and praying before the God of heaven.”How God Opened the DoorNehemiah, the trusted cupbearer, appears sad; the king asks what he wants.Nehemiah 2:4 (ESV): “Then the king said to me, ‘What are you requesting?’ So I prayed to the God of heaven.”Nehemiah “shoots the moon”: asks for time off, timber, letters—and God grants it.Common Reasons We Don’t Work—and Nehemiah’s Answers“The problem is too big.”Jerusalem’s wall ~2.5 miles around, up to ~40 ft tall, ~8 ft thick—no machinery—yet God supplied what they needed.“It’s been this way too long.”The ruins had sat ~13–14 years; the right time to act was now.“It’s too dangerous.”Enemies threatened attack mid-build. Nehemiah armed workers and posted guards.Nehemiah 4:14 (ESV): “Do not be afraid of them. Remember the Lord, who is great and awesome, and fight for your brothers, your sons, your daughters, your wives, and your homes.”“I’m not skilled enough.”Chapter 3 lists perfumer, goldsmith, merchants, priests, rulers—not masons. God used ordinary people to do extraordinary work.“I’m above that work.”Nehemiah 3:5 (ESV): “…the Tekoites repaired, but their nobles would not stoop to serve their Lord.”Jesus washed feet—no one is “too good” for kingdom work.“My part is too small to matter.”Nehemiah 3:23 (ESV): “After them Benjamin and Hasshub repaired opposite their house…”Small sections add up; every “drop in the bucket” counts.What Church Life Is ForLeaders exist to equip everyone for ministry, not to do it all themselves.Ephesians 4:11–12 (ESV): “And he gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the shepherds and teachers, to equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ,”When each part works, the body grows in love and maturity (Eph 4:13–16).Applications for UsAdopt Nehemiah’s reflex: pray → plan → ask boldly → get to work.Own your section of the wall: start “opposite your house”—serve where you are.Refuse fear and pride: serve humbly; trust God amid risk.Work together: like draft horses that pull more together than alone—our combined effort multiplies.Call to ActionAsk: What is my section of the wall this week?Pray Nehemiah’s prayer, take the next faithful step, and join the work—because “the people had a mind to work” (Neh 4:6, ESV).
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Sanctify Christ In Your Heart (From our 10-5-25 worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/ktSe75OVvuk“Sanctify Christ in Your Hearts” — SummaryOpening & Pastoral EncouragementRejoices at the sound of children in worship—future leaders of the church.Brief travel note: worshiped with the South Walton Church of Christ; gratitude for the universal fellowship of believers.Funeral visitation reflection: comfort anchored in a Christian’s hope.Main Text & Big IdeaText: 1 Peter 3:15 ESV — “but in your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect.”Big Idea: When Christ is set apart in our hearts, we’re ready to explain our hope with courage and Christlike character.Why Hope Matters (Funeral Reflection)We can’t “preach someone into heaven,” but a faithful life evidences real hope.Christian hope (eternal life with Jesus) sustains the grieving and strengthens witness.Defense Requires a Good OffenseIn a spiritual war, a strong “offense” is daily discipleship: Scripture, prayer, fellowship, loving conversation.Gentle, informed communication defends the faith without attacking people.Example 1 — Courage Under Pressure (2 Samuel 10:9–12)Joab and Abishai split Israel’s forces when surrounded by Syrians and Ammonites.Mutual support plan: “If they are too strong for me… you help me; if too strong for you… I’ll help you.”Call: “Be of good courage… for our people and for the cities of our God.”Courage serves God’s people, our families, and our communities.Application: Stand for truth with teamwork and bravery when culture presses on every side.Example 2 — Compromise Creates Scandal (2 Samuel 11–12)David’s lapse with Bathsheba snowballs: lust → adultery → deception → murder → deep family pain.Nathan’s rebuke leads to confession and forgiveness, yet consequences remain.Key Warning: 2 Samuel 12:13–14 emphasizes that sin gives “occasion to the enemies of the LORD to blaspheme.”Application: When we lose focus on God, our failures harm our witness and embolden opponents.Daily Practices that Keep Christ “Set Apart”Word & Prayer: “Read your Bible, pray every day” — consistent habits grow resilience.Fellowship & Service: Encourage one another; model faith for children who will lead tomorrow.Spiritual Armor: Ephesians 6:16 ESV — “In all circumstances take up the shield of faith, with which you can extinguish all the flaming darts of the evil one.”Tone & Method of Our DefensePrepared, gentle, respectful (1 Peter 3:15).Not attacking persons; presenting God’s truth with clarity and love.Hymn Tie-In“Anywhere with Jesus” — a sung confession of the safety and courage that flow from Christ’s presence.InvitationTo the lost: Believe, repent, confess Christ, and be baptized (begin the lifelong walk).To the struggling: Seek prayers and help; re-set Christ as holy in your heart and resume the daily practices of hope.
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No Choice But To Choose (From 9-28-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/GOyO1MfDg04“No Choice but to Choose” — SummaryOpening Illustration: Fukushima & Costly CourageNuclear plants run continuously; when support systems fail, they’re like a “temperamental 2-year-old”—they’ll meltdown if not supplied.2011 Fukushima: Plant manager Yoshida faced failed cooling and chose a controversial lifesaving action—pump seawater (which would ruin reactors) to prevent a total meltdown.Principle: Sometimes the right choice is costly and unpopular, but it protects lives. Our spiritual choices carry eternal stakes.Life as a Road: Two PathsLife is a journey; you’re moving whether you notice or not.There are two ways: the broad, easy road to destruction and the narrow, hard road to life.Matthew 7:13–14 (ESV): “Enter by the narrow gate. For the gate is wide and the way is easy that leads to destruction… For the gate is narrow and the way is hard that leads to life, and those who find it are few.”The Narrow Way Must Be “Built”The narrow path isn’t just “there”; we build it with God’s plan—cutting down obstacles, filling valleys, straightening what’s crooked (repentance lived out).Luke 3:2–6 (ESV) (selected): “Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight… every valley shall be filled… the crooked shall become straight, and the rough places shall become level ways…”The Real Decision Point: Whose Voice Will You Hear?Our world is noisy; two voices call constantly:Wisdom (God) cries out in the streets.Proverbs 1:20–23 (ESV) (selected): “Wisdom cries aloud in the street… ‘If you turn at my reproof… I will make my words known to you.’”Satan roars, seeking someone to devour; we must resist, sober-minded and watchful.1 Peter 5:6–10 (ESV) (selected): “Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion… Resist him, firm in your faith…”To hear God, we must be still amid the noise.Psalm 46:10 (ESV): “Be still, and know that I am God.”Testing Wisdom: Earthly vs. HeavenlyEarthly wisdom breeds jealousy, selfish ambition, disorder.Heavenly wisdom is pure, peaceable, gentle, open to reason, full of mercy and good fruit.James 3:13–18 (ESV) (selected): “This is not the wisdom that comes down from above… But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, open to reason…”Expect Resistance While You BuildDoing good often meets nearby evil; the work is hard but holy.Romans 7:21 (ESV): “So I find it to be a law that when I want to do right, evil lies close at hand.”Yet God cares for and sustains the righteous.Psalm 37:25 (ESV): “I have been young, and now am old, yet I have not seen the righteous forsaken or his children begging for bread.”On the Same Road: Help Fellow TravelersLike the Good Samaritan, those in a strong position lift the wounded. A rising tide lifts all boats; Jesus repeatedly stopped to help.The Non-Optional Choice: Slaves of Sin or of RighteousnessYou will serve something—sin leading to death, or obedience leading to righteousness. Neutrality is a decision.Romans 6:16–18 (ESV) (selected): “You are slaves of the one whom you obey, either of sin, which leads to death, or of obedience, which leads to righteousness… having been set free from sin, have become slaves of righteousness.”TakeawayLike Yoshida, you may face choices that cost you—but save lives (including your own).Build the narrow road daily by repentance and obedience.Choose whose voice you’ll heed. If you “don’t decide,” you’ve already decided.Invitation: Be set free from sin and walk the narrow way with Christ.
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Why We Do What We Do ( From our 9-21-25 Worship)
Watch the video Version here: https://youtu.be/jW0wCJtNPzISummary: 1 Corinthians 13 and the “More Excellent Way”Big IdeaPaul’s “love chapter” isn’t a sentimental poem—it’s the solution to a divided, chaotic church: “So now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is love.” (1 Corinthians 13:13, ESV)Text Overview (1 Corinthians 13)Without love, gifts and sacrifices are empty (vv. 1–3).What love is/does: patient, kind, not envious/boastful/arrogant/rude; not self-seeking or resentful; rejoices with truth; bears, believes, hopes, endures (vv. 4–7).What will last: miraculous gifts are temporary; love never ends (vv. 8–12).What must remain: faith, hope, love—and love is greatest (v. 13). Full text: “So now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is love.” (1 Cor 13:13, ESV)Context in Corinth (Why Paul wrote this)The church was fractured by division and comparison (cf. 1 Cor 1:10–13).Even spiritual gifts became a contest (cf. 1 Cor 12:29–31). Paul offers a “more excellent way”—love—as the cure for chaos (1 Cor 12:31).What “Abide” MeansAbide = persist, remain. Prophecies, tongues, and partial knowledge will pass away; faith, hope, and love remain as the church’s bedrock (1 Cor 13:8–12).Where Do Faith, Hope, and Love Abide?They certainly reside with God (Heaven), but Paul’s burden is that they abide in us—become lived realities, not just ink on a page.Faith in us: “I am reminded of your sincere faith … now … dwells in you.” (2 Timothy 1:5, ESV)Hope in us: “… we have our hope set on the living God …” (1 Timothy 4:10, ESV)Love in us: “… God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit …” (Romans 5:5, ESV). Full text: “… and hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.” (Rom 5:5, ESV)Why Is Love the Greatest?When faith feels weak and hope runs thin, love still acts—and often rekindles faith and hope. Love moves us toward others in concrete service, pulling us back from discouragement.Illustration (Modern Echo)A homeowner sheltered students during a school crisis—opening the door, organizing contacts, feeding, calming, and ensuring each child got home. That embodied love restored steadiness in the midst of fear—exactly what Paul envisions love doing in chaos.Practical TakeawaysFor a divided world/church: Practice the more excellent way. Let love govern gifts, opinions, and platform.When your soul is low: Do a specific act of love for someone else—visit, feed, call, serve. Love often re-sparks hope and strengthens faith.Make it personal: Ask, Do faith, hope, and love abide in me? Where, this week, will I let them live out loud?Key Verses to Carry1 Corinthians 13:13 (ESV): “So now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is love.”Romans 5:5 (ESV): “… hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit …”John 15:9–10 (ESV) [for abiding in love]: “As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love. If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love …”Bottom line: In a world (and church) prone to noise, rivalry, and despair, love is the enduring way—and the way back when faith and hope waver.
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The Only Solution That Will Abide (From our 9-14-25 worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/AXga0ZYxrv0Summary: Summary: 1 Corinthians 13 and the “More Excellent Way”Big IdeaPaul’s “love chapter” isn’t a sentimental poem—it’s the solution to a divided, chaotic church: “So now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is love.” (1 Corinthians 13:13, ESV)Text Overview (1 Corinthians 13)Without love, gifts and sacrifices are empty (vv. 1–3).What love is/does: patient, kind, not envious/boastful/arrogant/rude; not self-seeking or resentful; rejoices with truth; bears, believes, hopes, endures (vv. 4–7).What will last: miraculous gifts are temporary; love never ends (vv. 8–12).What must remain: faith, hope, love—and love is greatest (v. 13). Full text: “So now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is love.” (1 Cor 13:13, ESV)Context in Corinth (Why Paul wrote this)The church was fractured by division and comparison (cf. 1 Cor 1:10–13).Even spiritual gifts became a contest (cf. 1 Cor 12:29–31). Paul offers a “more excellent way”—love—as the cure for chaos (1 Cor 12:31).What “Abide” MeansAbide = persist, remain. Prophecies, tongues, and partial knowledge will pass away; faith, hope, and love remain as the church’s bedrock (1 Cor 13:8–12).Where Do Faith, Hope, and Love Abide?They certainly reside with God (Heaven), but Paul’s burden is that they abide in us—become lived realities, not just ink on a page.Faith in us: “I am reminded of your sincere faith … now … dwells in you.” (2 Timothy 1:5, ESV)Hope in us: “… we have our hope set on the living God …” (1 Timothy 4:10, ESV)Love in us: “… God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit …” (Romans 5:5, ESV). Full text: “… and hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.” (Rom 5:5, ESV)Why Is Love the Greatest?When faith feels weak and hope runs thin, love still acts—and often rekindles faith and hope. Love moves us toward others in concrete service, pulling us back from discouragement.Illustration (Modern Echo)A homeowner sheltered students during a school crisis—opening the door, organizing contacts, feeding, calming, and ensuring each child got home. That embodied love restored steadiness in the midst of fear—exactly what Paul envisions love doing in chaos.Practical TakeawaysFor a divided world/church: Practice the more excellent way. Let love govern gifts, opinions, and platform.When your soul is low: Do a specific act of love for someone else—visit, feed, call, serve. Love often re-sparks hope and strengthens faith.Make it personal: Ask, Do faith, hope, and love abide in me? Where, this week, will I let them live out loud?Key Verses to Carry1 Corinthians 13:13 (ESV): “So now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is love.”Romans 5:5 (ESV): “… hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit …”John 15:9–10 (ESV) [for abiding in love]: “As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love. If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love …”Bottom line: In a world (and church) prone to noise, rivalry, and despair, love is the enduring way—and the way back when faith and hope waver.
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Be A God Pleaser Not A People Pleaser (From our 9-7-2025 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/jXLmneiBJg4Summary:Title: People Pleasing vs. God PleasingIntroduction The song This World Is Not My Home reminds us that we’re just passing through—but often that “passing through” feels like a grind of endless demands and expectations. Every time we turn around, someone wants something more from us. In those moments, it feels easier to say yes than to risk the pushback of saying no.Jesus as Example – Mark 1:28–39 (ESV)Jesus was surrounded by people with needs—healing, demons, suffering.After a long night, He rose early to pray in solitude.When the disciples said, “Everyone is looking for you,” the implied demand was, “Come back and keep working.”But Jesus said no to that town and yes to His mission: “Let us go on to the next towns … for that is why I came out.”Jesus shows us that sometimes the good can become the enemy of the best.Aaron as Warning – Exodus 32While Moses was on Mount Sinai, the people pressured Aaron to make an idol.Out of fear and people-pleasing, Aaron gave in. The result was wasted time, wasted talent, idolatry, and chaos.People-pleasing led Aaron to:Waste his gifts on building a false god.Violate his values by organizing false worship.Blame others and lie when confronted.Bring guilt and judgment upon himself and the people.Principles for UsYou’ll always be outnumbered – but God calls you to stand firm.People-pleasing wastes time and energy that God gave for better purposes.It violates values when you trade God’s truth for human approval.It doesn’t make anyone better—leadership requires the courage to say no.It brings guilt and regret—better to disappoint people than to disobey God.New Testament Application – Galatians 1:10 (ESV) “For am I now seeking the approval of man, or of God? … If I were still trying to please man, I would not be a servant of Christ.”You cannot be both a people pleaser and a God pleaser.God values you—you are worth standing up for because Christ died for you.Conclusion Saying no isn’t about selfishness; it’s about priorities. Jesus modeled it, Aaron failed at it, and Paul preached it: God’s approval matters most. Don’t let fear or guilt push you into pleasing people at the expense of serving Christ.
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I Want To Go Home ( From Our 8-31-25 Worship)
Watch the Video Version Here: https://youtu.be/83Hd5FKgW58Summary: Here’s a structured summary of your sermon with section headers:Introduction: A Personal Turning PointEach year at PTP brings deep reflection and sometimes a “spiritual meltdown.”This sermon grew out of that experience—not about the preacher personally, but about the bigger theme of home.Pictures and personal stories are used only as illustrations to invite listeners to reflect on their own.The Stages of Home1. Ignorance of HomeAs infants, we are unaware of home—it simply exists around us.Life is about survival and needs being met.2. Home Shapes IdentityAs we grow, home influences who we are.The people, habits, and environment become part of our character—for good or for bad.3. Leaving HomeAdolescence and young adulthood bring the desire to “set out” and build independence.This transition leads to creating a new home.4. Home as ResponsibilityHome takes on weight as bills, relationships, and family come into play.Raising children adds a new dimension: responsibility for lives entrusted to us.5. Home as a TribeOver time, we learn that home is more than a place—it is people.Not always biological family, but a chosen community of support, love, and belonging.A Spiritual Longing for HomeEden: The Original HomeGenesis 2 describes God’s intent for humanity to dwell in Eden in perfect relationship with Him.This is the home our hearts still long for.Eternity Placed in Our HeartsEcclesiastes 3:10–11 – God placed eternity in man’s heart, giving us a built-in desire for home with Him.Every culture reflects this longing through worship and searching for God.God’s Call to ObedienceDeuteronomy 11 – God promised Israel blessing if they obeyed and curses if they turned away.The principle remains true: our eternal home requires faithfulness, love, and obedience.The Promise of an Eternal HomeRevelation 21:1–7 – God promises a new heaven and earth, a dwelling where He will be with His people.No more tears, death, mourning, or pain. All things made new.The Final Stage: “I Want to Go Home”Beyond nostalgia, the Christian longs for the eternal home with God.A poem illustrates the struggle of “swimming” through trials, temptations, and pain, knowing the reward is eternal rest with God, Christ, and the Spirit.Home started with being related by earthly blood, but eternal home comes only through the blood of the Lamb.Conclusion & InvitationDo you want to go home?Today is the best day to start living in obedience, faith, and hope of that eternal dwelling.The invitation is extended: if you want help finding your way home, now is the time.
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Four Types of Prayer (From our 8-24-25 worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/rlgamoAhMKoSummary:Sermon Summary: The Four Types of PrayerIntroductionWorship through singing must be “with the spirit and with the understanding” (1 Corinthians 14).Songs that include Scripture help us worship with clarity and understanding (Colossians 3:16).Illustration: CMYK printing model – four colors combine to make every color. Similarly, Paul lists four distinct types of prayer in 1 Timothy 2:1: supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings.Though often used interchangeably in English, each word carries a unique meaning and purpose.1. Supplications – Prayer for Specific, Felt NeedsDefined as specific, heartfelt petitions—requests that arise from pressing burdens or anxieties.Philippians 4:6 – “...by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.”Supplication is not casual—it’s urgent, personal, and consuming, often tied to deep anxiety or need.Example prayer emphasized asking God for personal strength and forgiveness, showing raw dependence on Him.2. Prayers – Conversational Communion with GodThis word for “prayer” in Greek implies turning toward God in relationship.More than formal requests—it can be a simple desire to be in God’s presence.Matthew 26:39 – Jesus prayed in Gethsemane, not just to ask, but to commune with His Father.Sometimes prayer is less about words and more about dwelling in God’s presence.3. Intercessions – Standing in the Gap for OthersIntercession means praying on behalf of others’ needs.Romans 8:34 – Christ intercedes for us at the right hand of God.James 5:16 – “The prayer of a righteous person has great power as it is working.”This type of prayer covers:Elders praying for their congregation.Congregation members praying for elders.Prayers for children, youth, deacons, and fellow believers.Intercession reflects Christlike love by carrying others’ burdens before God.4. Thanksgivings – Gratitude in All CircumstancesExpressing thanks, even in hardship, transforms perspective.Jesus gave thanks for the cup during the Lord’s Supper, though it symbolized His suffering and death (Matthew 26:27).Gratitude shifts focus from hardship to God’s faithfulness.Revelation 7:9–12 and Psalm 26 show thanksgiving as a vital part of worship before God’s throne.Conclusion – Prayer Shapes a Godly Life1 Timothy 2:1–6: Supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings are for “all people...for kings and all who are in high positions.”Purpose: That believers may live peaceful, godly, and dignified lives.God desires all people to be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth.Prayer—whether supplication, communion, intercession, or thanksgiving—draws us closer to God and aligns us with His will.Invitation: Whatever your need—salvation, strength, or support—God listens and cares.
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You Must Be Prepared (From our 8-17-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/n_96w3q7KKYSummary:Summary: Be PreparedOpening & ContextPreacher expressed gratitude for the congregation and their encouragement.Reflected on a recent visit to the Ark Encounter—the size, design, and purpose of the ark highlighted God’s wisdom and Noah’s obedience.Transitioned to the theme: Are we spiritually prepared?Lessons from ScriptureMatthew 25:1–13 – The Ten VirginsFive wise virgins prepared with oil.Five foolish virgins were unprepared and shut out.Lesson: Christ is the Bridegroom, and His people must be ready at all times.Noah’s Example (Genesis 6–8; Hebrews 11:7)Noah prepared an ark in faithful obedience.His preparation saved his household.The unprepared world perished in judgment.Parallel to TodayLike those mocking Noah, many mock Christians for living differently.But when judgment comes, the unprepared will face regret, fear, and hopelessness.The Emotions of the LostFear – facing God’s judgment without hope.Hopelessness – no assurance of salvation.Loneliness – separation from God and His people.Regret – realizing too late the need to obey.The Hope of the SavedChristians have:Faith, Hope, and Love (1 Corinthians 13:13).Assurance in God’s promises, which never fail.Salvation through Christ, pictured in 1 Peter 3:20–21: baptism corresponds to Noah’s salvation through water.Call to ActionDaily preparation is essential:Walk with God faithfully like Noah.Bear the fruit of the Spirit in everyday life.Stay spiritually minded, serving Christ with obedience and joy.Invitation extended:Repent, confess Christ, and be baptized for forgiveness of sins.Continue growing through study and fellowship.Major Topics:Preparation for eternity (Matthew 25; Genesis 6–8)Faith, obedience, and salvation (Hebrews 11:7; 1 Peter 3:20–21)Hope in Christ vs. fear of the lost (1 Corinthians 13:13)
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You Can't Trust Your Heart ( From our 8-10-25 worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/bafcxsFwrMoSummary:“You Can’t Trust Your Heart—But You Can Trust God”(summary of your message)Big ideaOur inner perceptions can mislead us—like a pilot’s inner ear in the somatogravic illusion—so don’t let your heart lead. Instead, train your heart to follow God and His Word.Key text flow: Psalm 64 → Proverbs 20:5 → Jeremiah 17:9–10 → John 12:48 → Proverbs 18:4; Romans 11:33; 1 Corinthians 14:33; Matthew 11:28–30.Opening illustrationQuestion: “Which way is up?”Analogy: Pilots who can’t see the horizon (night, weather, clouds) can feel like they’re climbing when they’re not. Trusting that feeling, some have pushed the nose down and flown into the ground.Spiritual parallel: Your heart can do the same—it lies when you can’t “see the horizon.”Jer 17:9 (ESV, excerpt): “The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately sick…”Psalm 64 — What it shows us about the heartTroubled (vv. 1–2)The psalmist cries out from dread and fear of hidden threats.Real life: people can smile on the outside and still carry dread within.Obstinate (vv. 3–6)The wicked pursue their purpose and justify it; they scheme and say, “Who can see?”v. 6: “The inward mind and heart of a man are deep”—hard to probe, easily self-deceived.Dismissive (vv. 7–9)Even when God acts, people often shrug until consequences fall.We delay hard realities (sin, death, judgment) and live for the moment.Tension/hope (v. 10)“Let the righteous… take refuge in Him.”Question: If the heart is deceitful, how can we be upright in heart?The path forward — Train your heart to be a follower, not a leaderDraw the heart out with understandingProv 20:5 (ESV, excerpt): “The purpose in a man’s heart is like deep water, but a man of understanding will draw it out.”Practical means: steady Scripture intake, prayerful reflection, wise counsel, even counseling when needed. If you’re not working on your heart, your heart is working on you.Submit to God’s searching and standardJer 17:10 (ESV, excerpt): “I the LORD search the heart and test the mind…”John 12:48 (ESV, excerpt): “The word that I have spoken will judge him on the last day.”My heart isn’t the standard; God’s Word is.Trust the depth that brings peace, not chaosProv 18:4 (ESV, excerpt): “The fountain of wisdom is a bubbling brook.”Rom 11:33 (ESV, excerpt): “Oh, the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God!” (God’s wisdom is deep but not disorienting.)1 Cor 14:33 (ESV, excerpt): “God is not a God of confusion but of peace.”Yoke your life to JesusMatt 11:28–30 (ESV, excerpt): “Come to me… take my yoke upon you… and you will find rest for your souls.”Following Jesus trains the heart to walk in step with Him.ApplicationsCheck your instruments: When emotions are loud and visibility is low, fly by the instruments—the clear commands and promises of Scripture—rather than by feelings.Name the currents: Journal or pray through the “deep water” motives pulling you (Prov 20:5). Ask a mature believer or counselor to help you “draw them out.”Replace self-justification with Scripture-submission: Before acting, ask, “Where does God’s Word authorize or correct this?” (John 12:48).Stay with the body: We help each other keep our eyes on the horizon—stirring one another to love and good works (Heb 10:24–25).Refuge, then rejoice: Take refuge in the Lord (Ps 64:10), then let joy follow obedience, not feelings lead obedience.LandingThesis restated: You can’t trust your heart; you can trust God.Like Peter, we know where to look but can lose focus—so keep your eyes on Jesus, lean on His Word, and let your heart follow Him.Invitation: Whether your heart feels like “deep waters,” you’re ready to become a Christian, or you simply need prayer and a hug—the Lord and His people stand ready to help.
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Jesus' Playbook (From our 8-3-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/EeOsQsCmqwoSummary:Here’s a structured summary of your sermon transcript with the key flow, illustrations, and Scripture references preserved.Sermon Summary – “Jesus’ Playbook”Opening Illustration: Armando Galarraga’s Almost Perfect GameStory: Since 1901, only 24 “perfect games” have happened in Major League Baseball (27 batters up, 27 down).In 2010, pitcher Armando Galarraga had retired 26 batters when a blown umpire call at first base robbed him of perfection.His response: no anger, no argument—he stayed calm and respectful.Later, the umpire apologized in tears.Application: His response was Christ-like—similar to Jesus in 1 Peter 2:20-24 (when wronged, He did not retaliate).Main ThemeLast week: “Satan’s Playbook” — lies and tactics to destroy.This week: “Jesus’ Playbook” — truths and motives that guide Him.Text focus: Philippians 2:6-11.Jesus’ Motivation & Modus Operandi (Philippians 2:6-11)Selfless MotivationPhilippians 2:6: Though God, He didn’t grasp at equality with God.Came to earth not to prove Himself but out of love.Self-EmptyingPhilippians 2:7: Left the Father’s side; became a servant, born in humble conditions.Ultimate HumilityPhilippians 2:8: Obedient to death—even crucifixion.God’s ExaltationPhilippians 2:9-11: Exalted because He wasn’t self-seeking; every knee will bow.Jesus’ Rolodex of TruthsFor Those Who Don’t Care About GodRepent or perish – Luke 13:3,5.I won’t force you – Romans 1:24-28.My kindness is to lead you home – Romans 2:4.I take no pleasure in your death – Ezekiel 33:11.I don’t want you to perish – 2 Peter 3:9.Satan is a liar – John 8:44-45.I care for you – John 10:11-13.For Those Outside Christ but SeekingI came to seek & save you – Luke 19:10.Come to Me, I’ll never cast you out – John 6:37.I’ll give you rest – Matthew 11:28-30.You’re not too dirty to be cleansed – Isaiah 1:18.You’re not too broken to be restored – Psalm 51:17; 34:18.You must be born again – John 3:3-5; Acts 2:37-38.Heaven will rejoice over you – Luke 15:7.I’ve been watching and waiting – Luke 15:20.For ChristiansI don’t want to condemn you – Romans 8:1; 1 Timothy 2:3-4.Satan has already lost—don’t listen to him – Revelation 12:9-10.You’re different—show it – 2 Corinthians 5:17; Ephesians 2:10; Matthew 5:13-14.You need other Christians & they need you – Hebrews 10:23-25.When I discipline you, it’s out of love – Hebrews 12:5-6.You don’t have to be perfect, but you must be faithful – 1 John 1:7-9; Joel 2:12-13.We’ll spend eternity together—bring others – Matthew 28:19-20.Conclusion – Philippians 2:1-5Be united, humble, selfless, and look to the interests of others.Goal: Have the mind of Christ in how we think, act, and respond.Invitation: Wherever you are in your spiritual journey—indifferent, seeking, or a believer—God loves you and calls you to Him today.
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Satan's Playbook (From Our 7-27-25 Worship)
Watch the Video Version Here: https://youtu.be/rOj0vYRU028 Summary:The speaker shares a real-life story of Scott Thompson, former Yahoo CEO, who lied on his resume about having a computer science degree—despite already being highly qualified. He lost his job when the truth came out.This story illustrates how lying doesn’t pay and introduces the root of lies: Satan is the source of lies.Key Scripture: John 8:44 (ESV) "You are of your father the devil, and your will is to do your father's desires. He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks out of his own character, for he is a liar and the father of lies."The main goal: To help Christians recognize Satan’s tactics (his “playbook”) and avoid being deceived.Section 1: Satan’s Modus Operandi (How Satan Operates)1. Satan is a DeceiverRevelation 12:9 (ESV) "And the great dragon was thrown down, that ancient serpent, who is called the devil and Satan, the deceiver of the whole world—he was thrown down to the earth, and his angels were thrown down with him."Deception = Pulling people off God’s path. Example: Like a billboard on the side of the road distracting travelers from their true destination.Matthew 7:13-14 (ESV) "Enter by the narrow gate. For the gate is wide and the way is easy that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is narrow and the way is hard that leads to life, and those who find it are few."Satan works to pull us off the “narrow path.”2. Satan is a SchemerEphesians 6:11 (ESV) "Put on the whole armor of God, that you may be able to stand against the schemes of the devil."He constantly plots, tricks, and sets traps.Job 1: Satan tries to prove to God that Job only serves Him because he is blessed.3. Satan Disguises Himself2 Corinthians 11:14 (ESV) "And no wonder, for even Satan disguises himself as an angel of light."Satan doesn’t always appear obviously evil; sometimes his temptations seem good or reasonable.4. Satan is an AccuserRevelation 12:10 (ESV) "And I heard a loud voice in heaven, saying, 'Now the salvation and the power and the kingdom of our God and the authority of his Christ have come, for the accuser of our brothers has been thrown down, who accuses them day and night before our God.'"Satan accuses believers before God, but God knows us and loves us.5. Satan is a Tempter1 Thessalonians 3:4-5 (ESV) "For when we were with you, we kept telling you beforehand that we were to suffer affliction, just as it has come to pass, and just as you know. For this reason, when I could bear it no longer, I sent to learn about your faith, for fear that somehow the tempter had tempted you and our labor would be in vain."He tempts us at our weakest points (e.g., tempting Jesus with bread after fasting).6. Satan Seeks to Capture and Ensnare2 Timothy 2:25-26 (ESV) "...God may perhaps grant them repentance leading to a knowledge of the truth, and they may come to their senses and escape from the snare of the devil, after being captured by him to do his will."Like a fisherman uses bait to catch fish, Satan lures us with temptations.7. Satan Seeks to Devour1 Peter 5:8 (ESV) "Be sober-minded; be watchful. Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour."His ultimate goal is destruction.Section 2: Satan’s Rolodex of LiesSatan customizes his lies to suit different types of people:A. Lies for Those Who Don’t Care About God“God’s Word Isn’t True.”Genesis 3: The original lie to Eve.People treat the Bible as just a fairy tale or book of morals.“You Can Define Truth for Yourself.”Romans 1:28-32 (ESV) "And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be done... Though they know God's righteous decree... they not only do them but give approval to those who practice them."Moral relativism and “my truth/your truth” thinking.“You’re Fine Without God.”Luke 12:16-21 (ESV, Parable of the Rich Fool) "And he thought to himself, ‘What shall I do, for I have nowhere to store my crops?’... But God said to him, ‘Fool! This night your soul is required of you, and the things you have prepared, whose will they be?’"Material success leads to pride and self-sufficiency.“Just Fit In—Don’t Stand Out.”Matthew 7:13-14 (see above)Pressure to conform, avoid being “too religious.”“You Have Plenty of Time.”2 Corinthians 6:2 (ESV) "For he says, 'In a favorable time I listened to you, and in a day of salvation I have helped you.' Behold, now is the favorable time; behold, now is the day of salvation."The lie of procrastination: “You can serve God later.”B. Lies for Those Who Want to Follow God“You Can’t Be Forgiven.”Romans 7:24-25; Romans 8:1 (ESV) "Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?... There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus."Guilt and shame as tools to keep you from God.Example: Judas (Matthew 27:3-5): He despaired and gave up.“You’re Too Weak to Resist.”1 Corinthians 10:13 (ESV) "No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your ability, but with the temptation he will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it."The feeling of failure and hopelessness.“This Is All Your Fault.”Matthew 13:24-28 (ESV, Parable of the Weeds) "...An enemy has done this."Self-blame and despair.“You Can’t Change.”Ephesians 4:17-20 (ESV) "Now this I say and testify in the Lord, that you must no longer walk as the Gentiles do, in the futility of their minds... But that is not the way you learned Christ!"The lie of permanence: “This is just who you are.”C. Lies for Christians“You’re Saved, So Nothing Else Matters.”Romans 6:1-2 (ESV) "What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound? By no means!"The error of “cheap grace” or “easy-believism.”“You Can’t Make a Difference.”1 Corinthians 12:21-22 (ESV) "The eye cannot say to the hand, ‘I have no need of you’... On the contrary, the parts of the body that seem to be weaker are indispensable."Feelings of uselessness or insignificance.“That’s Not Really a Sin.”
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Are You Wheat Or A Tare? (From our 7-20-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/jyEhowHNElYSummary:Introduction: County Fairs and the Desire to Be the BestCounty fairs highlight our competitive nature—art contests, tractor pulls, pie baking, etc.People naturally want to be seen as the best—even if it means faking it.Story of Han van Meegeren, a Dutch painter who faked 17th-century masterpieces, even deceiving Nazi officials. He was eventually exposed but only after nearly being convicted for selling national treasures.Point: Faking it can be dangerous—not just in art, but spiritually.Spiritual Deception: The Parable of the Wheat and Tares (Matthew 13:24–30, 36–43, ESV)Jesus’ parable teaches that the Kingdom of Heaven contains both genuine and false members.Tares (weeds) resemble wheat early in growth, but:Wheat bows under the weight of grain (fruitful).Tares stand tall but contain poisonous seeds.Jesus explains:Good seed = sons of the kingdom.Weeds = sons of the evil one, sown by the devil.Judgment will come at harvest (end of the age).Main warning: Not everyone who looks like a Christian is one.Application: What’s the Difference Between Wheat and Tares?Outward appearances can deceive.One key difference: true Christians meet physical needs to reach spiritual hearts, like Jesus did.Jesus’ Ministry Model: Meeting Physical Needs FirstFeeding the 5,000 (John 6:1–14, 25–35, ESV)Jesus fed people, not just to fill stomachs, but to lead them to the “bread of life.”He challenged them not to work for perishable food but for eternal life.Many rejected His spiritual teaching (John 6:66), but some believed (John 6:68–69).The Woman at the Well (John 4:1–30, ESV)Jesus broke social norms by speaking to a Samaritan woman.He asked her for water—not because He needed it—but to acknowledge her worth and open a door to spiritual truth.She went from isolation to evangelism, changing her village.Healing the Leper (Mark 1:40–42, ESV)Jesus touched a leper before healing him—something no one else would do.The touch itself met a deep emotional need for human connection.It showed Jesus’ compassion in action.Everyday Evangelism: Be Like JesusJesus’ “Go” (Matthew 28:18–20) means as you go—in daily life, on errands, at work.Like the Good Samaritan, opportunities come in everyday life.Be ready to meet physical needs to open doors for spiritual conversation.Final Thoughts and EncouragementDon’t let fear or inconvenience stop you from serving.You may never get another chance with that person.Even a small act—like a kind word, a meal, a ride, or a touch—can lead to a changed eternity.Scriptural ChargeJames 2:14–17 (ESV): "What good is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith but does not have works?... Faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead."Ephesians 2:10 (ESV): "For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them."InvitationIf you have a physical or spiritual need, come.God loves you. His people love you.Let us help—whether with a kind word, a prayer, or an act of service.
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The Hardest Part of Belief (From our 7-13-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/klHV20BwAFASummary: Introduction — Information Means Nothing Without ActionThe preacher opens with a simple physics question (a rock splashing in water) to show that bigger forces create bigger waves.He then tells the real‑life story of the Vajont Dam disaster in northern Italy (9 Oct 1963). A 60‑story‑tall, mountain‑sized landslide (≈ 20 football fields long × 10 wide) plunged into the reservoir, sending a wall of water over the dam and killing almost 2,000 people.Engineers knew for years the mountaintop was creeping—but they never warned the valley.Lesson: “You can have all the information in the world, and it does you no good if you don’t act on it.”What Belief Is (and Is Not)Belief is not mere dataJohn 3:16 (ESV) — “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.” Knowing that verse is not the same as trusting and obeying its message.Belief is an active “work”John 6:29 (ESV) — “This is the work of God, that you believe in him whom he has sent.” Jesus calls believing a work because it demands response.Belief transforms the heart (parable of the sower, Matthew 13:1‑9, 18‑23).Seed must die and change the soil; God’s word must change us.True belief produces fruit—30, 60, 100‑fold.The Hardest Part of Belief — Staying ChangedPeter’s relapse at Antioch (Galatians 2:11‑14) shows even apostles can slide back.Paul’s reminder:Galatians 2:20 (ESV) — “I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me…” Ongoing crucifixion of self is required.Continuous renewal is commanded:Romans 12:1‑2 (ESV) — “I appeal to you… present your bodies as a living sacrifice… Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind…” The verbs (“be transformed,” “keep on renewing”) are present‑tense—never finished.The Struggle With Sin & the Assurance We HaveHonest strugglePaul describes the inner war (Romans 7:7‑25): wanting to do right yet doing wrong.No condemnation in ChristRomans 8:1‑2 (ESV) — “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. For the law of the Spirit of life has set you free in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and death.”Struggle ≠ lost salvation.The Spirit empowers us to “put to death the deeds of the body” and live as adopted sons and daughters (Romans 8:12‑17).Take‑Home PointsInformation demands transformation. Knowing truth without acting is deadly—like ignoring a moving mountain.Belief begins with change but lives in perseverance. The greatest challenge is to keep growing, not to start.Struggle is normal; condemnation is cancelled in Christ. Keep returning to the cross, renewing your mind, and relying on the Spirit.Respond today. If you need prayers or help, don’t leave without it—the family of God is ready to stand beside you.
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In Christ (From our 7-6-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/FUat7V23xUASummary:Introduction: The Largest Movable Structure in the WorldThe speaker introduces the New Safe Confinement at Chernobyl—the world’s largest movable land-based structure.Dimensions: 850 feet wide, 530 feet long, 350 feet tall.Built 600 feet away from its final location due to deadly radiation, then slid into place over the failed reactor.Notably, it has no doors (other than a sealed airlock), designed to keep everything inside contained—no entrance, no exit.Spiritual Application: The Meaning of "In Christ"Transition: Just as the Chernobyl structure is sealed with no entry or exit, the idea of being “in” or “out” has great significance in the Bible.The phrase “in Christ” appears about 115 times in Scripture, signifying something very important.Biblical Exploration of "In Christ"1. The Church is "In Christ"Romans 12:3–5—The church is described as one body in Christ.Ephesians 1:19–22—The body is the church.Matthew 16:13–18—Jesus builds His church upon the confession that He is the Christ.2. There Is an "Outside of Christ"If some are “in Christ,” others must be “outside.”Matthew 15—Some thought they worshiped rightly but were actually “outside” because they followed man’s traditions rather than God’s commands.The Bible is the standard for determining spiritual realities, like a tape measure ends all debate about width.3. Christians Are "In Christ" (Saints)Philippians 1:1; Ephesians 1:1—Saints are simply faithful Christians "in Christ."The Bible does not reserve “saint” for a select few; it’s the biblical name for all believers who are faithful and “in Christ.”4. Faith Must Be "In Christ"Philippians 3:7–9—Paul gave up everything to be found "in Christ," valuing Christ above all.Faith is action that follows belief; real belief leads to changed life and costly sacrifices (illustrated by the $20,000 moonshine story).5. Obedience and Evidence of Being "In Christ"1 John 2:3–6—If we claim to know Jesus but don’t obey, we’re lying.There must be evidence: “Whoever says he abides in him ought to walk in the same way in which he walked.”Not perfection, but real, visible change.6. The Blessings of Being "In Christ"Ephesians 1:3—Every spiritual blessing is found "in Christ."Romans 8:1—“There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”If all blessings are in Christ, there are none outside of Him.7. How to Get "In Christ"Just as the only way into a building is through a door, there is a way “into Christ.”Galatians 3:26–27 (ESV):"for in Christ Jesus you are all sons of God, through faith. For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ."Romans 6:3–7—Baptism is described as a burial and resurrection with Christ; it is the point of transition into Him.Not baptism alone, but belief, repentance, confession, and baptism are all part of entering Christ (Mark 16:16, Romans 10:10).8. The Gospel’s FoundationThe gospel is based on Christ’s death, burial, and resurrection (1 Corinthians 15:1–4), which we participate in through baptism.Conclusion: The Importance of Being "In Christ"Every spiritual blessing, including no condemnation, is for those "in Christ."The invitation: Consider whether you are "in Christ" or "out of Christ."Baptism is the doorway—not the end, but the beginning of a life lived for Christ as a “living sacrifice” (Romans 12:1).Final encouragement to respond if help is needed.Key Points to RememberThe Chernobyl containment is a vivid illustration: once the door is closed, entry is impossible—mirroring the importance of entering “in Christ” now.Being “in Christ” is the only place where spiritual blessings and salvation are found.Baptism is the God-given way to enter “in Christ,” along with faith, repentance, and confession.Faithful living is required, not just a one-time event.
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What Does God Want? (From our 6-29-25 Worship)
Watch the video version: https://youtu.be/hxZqZLBXcTQ Summary:Main Questions:What do you want? Not just short-term desires, but ultimately—at the end of your life—what do you truly want?What does God want? This is the central question the lesson seeks to answer.Scripture Foundation: Isaiah 53–57 (ESV excerpts)Isaiah 53: The prophecy of the Suffering Servant (Jesus), who bore our griefs, carried our sorrows, was pierced for our transgressions, and brought us peace through His wounds.Isaiah 54–55: A message of restoration, covenant love, and invitation to come to God freely:“Fear not…your Maker is your husband” (Isaiah 54:4–5)“Come, everyone who thirsts…without money and without price” (Isaiah 55:1)“Seek the Lord while He may be found…” (Isaiah 55:6)Isaiah 56: A declaration that even foreigners and eunuchs (outsiders) who seek the Lord will be accepted and given an everlasting name.Isaiah 57: A contrast between the righteous, who enter peace, and the wicked, who find no rest. God is high and holy but draws near to the contrite and lowly.Key Themes:God’s Suffering Servant (Isaiah 53): Jesus willingly suffered and died for our sins—not for His own benefit, but because God wants us.God’s Desire for Relationship (Isaiah 54–55): Despite our past, God desires to restore, gather, and bless His people. He calls us to come freely, to return to Him, and to receive compassion and pardon.God Welcomes the Outsider (Isaiah 56): All who choose what pleases Him—regardless of background—are welcomed into His presence.God Revives the Broken (Isaiah 57): God does not dwell only in heaven, but with the one who is “contrite and lowly.” He sees, heals, and restores those who turn back to Him.Final Message:What does God want? He wants you. From Genesis to Revelation, from Isaiah’s time to today, God has always wanted His people—His creation—to come back to Him.No matter how far you've wandered, no matter how broken you've been, God still wants you. His love is steadfast, His call is open, and His promise is everlasting.Closing Appeal:“I don’t know what you need this morning, but if we can help you in any way…”A call to respond—whether it be repentance, baptism, prayer, or simply returning to the Lord.Let me know if you’d like this turned into a sermon outline, discussion guide, or PowerPoint.
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If You Believe Something You Must Do Something (From our 6-22-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/aD1WUsL7FTISummary:Summary: If You Believe Something, You Must Do Something1. Real-Life Example: Irena Sendler and the Warsaw GhettoBackground: In 1941, Poland was under Nazi occupation. Jews were rounded up and confined to the Warsaw Ghetto in horrific conditions: starvation, overcrowding, and disease.Irena Sendler’s Courage:Irena was a social worker with access to the Ghetto.Deeply moved by the suffering, she decided to act—smuggling out about 2,500 Jewish children, giving them new identities and saving their documentation for later reunification.Her belief in the value of every human life, taught by her father, drove her actions despite great risk and eventual arrest by the Nazis.Main Point: If you truly believe all life has value, you cannot do nothing when you see injustice—you must act.2. Belief and Faith: Not Just Feelings, But ActionsScripture Reference: Hebrews 11:6 (ESV)“And without faith it is impossible to please him, for whoever would draw near to God must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who seek him.”Belief vs. Faith:In English, “belief” and “faith” are often used interchangeably, but the Bible distinguishes them.Belief is what you hold to be true.Faith is belief put into action.Scripture Reference: James 2:14–24 (ESV)“Faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead.”Abraham’s faith was completed by his works—he acted on what he believed.3. Faith Is an Action WordExamples from Hebrews 11:“By faith Abel offered…”“By faith Noah…constructed an ark…”“By faith Abraham obeyed…”All these examples demonstrate faith through doing something.Main Point: True faith always produces action. You cannot claim to believe in something deeply and remain unmoved.4. Application: What Do You Believe About God, and What Will You Do?Scripture Reference: Philippians 2:9–13 (ESV)“Therefore, my beloved, as you have always obeyed… work out your own salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure.”Personal Challenge:If you believe in God’s word, it calls you to respond—to work on your salvation, to grow, to act.Excuses come from Satan: Don’t wait until you’re “good enough” to act; respond now.Scripture Reference: 2 Corinthians 6:1–2 (ESV)“…now is the favorable time; behold, now is the day of salvation.”5. The Church: More Than Sunday WorshipScripture Reference: Ephesians 4:11–16 (ESV)“...to equip the saints for the work of ministry... for building up the body of Christ... when each part is working properly, makes the body grow so that it builds itself up in love.”Being a Christian is not just about attending worship—it’s about a way of life, doing life together, and serving others.Acts 2:42–47: Early Christians lived, worked, and worshipped together as a community.6. Final Challenge and InvitationWhat do you believe about God?What are you going to do about it?Faith must lead to action:God doesn’t expect perfection, but He expects growth and obedience.If you need help, support, or to act in faith today—don’t leave without responding.Key Takeaway“If you believe something, you must do something.” Faith is only real when it leads to action—both in biblical examples and in our lives today.
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Being Daddy Is Hard (From Our 6-15-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/qaOpaiROmRISummary:Introduction: The Challenge of Being a ParentRecalls the previous Mother's Day sermon on how hard it was for Mary, the mother of Jesus, to watch her son at the cross.Shifts focus to Father’s Day, emphasizing: "Being Daddy is Hard Too."Notes there’s no instruction manual for being a dad—everyone starts out learning as they go.Abraham: An Example of a Tested Father (Genesis 22:1–19)Reads and summarizes Genesis 22:1–19—God’s test of Abraham, asking him to sacrifice his son Isaac.Emphasizes that Abraham’s character and faith made his family (and all families) better and impacted generations.Lessons from Abraham’s Example1. A Father’s LoveBiblical Reference: Genesis 22:2 — “Take your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love…”Dads are capable of deep love, even if they show it differently than moms.Abraham’s love is seen in his:Obedience: He immediately obeys God’s command, even when it’s hard.Preparation: He prepares everything needed for the sacrifice, showing care and responsibility.Endurance: The journey took three days—Abraham persisted even though it was difficult.2. A Father’s PresenceHighlights the repeated phrase, “Here I am,” from Abraham (to God, his son, and the angel).Explains that “Here I am” means giving full, undivided attention—being present.Applies this to modern fathers: It’s possible to be physically present but emotionally or mentally absent. Families need fathers to be truly present.3. A Father’s FaithKey Point: Abraham tells his servants, “We will worship and then we will come back to you.”Shows Abraham’s trust that God would keep His promises, even when the situation looked impossible.Applies to dads: Sometimes you don’t know how things will work out, but faith and confidence in God are essential.4. The Role of Fathers as LeadersNotes that being a leader doesn’t mean knowing everything—instead, it means being the first follower of God.The greatest lesson kids learn may not be from formal Bible studies, but from watching their dad live out his faith.“More is caught than taught.” Kids pick up on honesty, integrity, and faithfulness from a dad’s actions.Personal Story: Integrity in ActionShares an anecdote about being pulled over for speeding and choosing to tell the truth about not wearing a seatbelt, even when it could have been easier to lie.Son noticed the honesty, reinforcing the lesson that actions often teach more than words.Encouragement and InvitationAcknowledges Father’s Day can be hard for some—maybe due to loss or absence.Reminds everyone of the love of our Heavenly Father and the family of God’s people.Extends an invitation for anyone needing help, support, or prayer.Main Takeaways:Being a dad is hard, but Abraham’s example shows us:Love is shown through obedience, preparation, and endurance.Presence matters—be available and attentive to God and your family.Faith and trust in God guide fathers through uncertainty.Leadership is about following God first and letting your actions teach your children.
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44
Love Is A Choice (From our 6-8-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/0haa2bhbfH0Summary:Introduction & Audience EngagementThe sermon begins by asking the congregation to open their Bibles to 1 John 3 and mark it, hinting that they’ll revisit it throughout the lesson.The preacher sets up the theme with questions about the biggest, hardest, and easiest decisions in life, emphasizing the impact of our choices.Scripture Reading (1 John 3–5)The preacher reads a large section of 1 John 3–5, focusing on God’s love for us and the command for us to love one another.Key Verse:"See what kind of love the Father has given to us, that we should be called children of God; and so we are." (1 John 3:1, ESV)The reading highlights:The difference between the children of God and children of the devil.The call to love one another and not be like Cain.The victory that comes through faith in Jesus Christ.The repeated command: Love one another.Key Theme: Love Is a ChoiceThe preacher points out that the word "love" is repeated over and over in these chapters.Main Point: Love is a choice.God chose to love us, even at great cost—sending His Son to die for us (John 3:16).Our response should be to choose to love others.Supporting ScriptureJohn 3:16 (ESV):“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.”Romans 8: Nothing can separate us from the love of God because God has chosen to love us.1 Corinthians 13 (selected, ESV):“If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. … Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant … Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.”Every description of love in 1 Corinthians 13 is presented as a choice—to be patient, to be kind, to forgive, to hope.Application: Daily Choices and GrowthEvery day, every minute, and with every person, we have the choice to love.The highest form of love—agape love—acts for the good of others, even when it is hard or costly.God did not enjoy watching His Son suffer, but He chose love for our sake.We must choose love every day, regardless of our past decisions.Practical EncouragementNo matter your situation—struggling, at rock bottom, or thriving—you can start making the right choice now: choose love.The church family is present to love and support each other, though imperfectly.If you need help or support, choose to reach out, rather than suffering alone.The enemy wants to "divide and conquer," but unity in love gives us strength.Homework/ChallengeThe congregation is asked to meditate on 1 John 3–5 throughout the week.The core takeaway: Love is not just a feeling; it is a continual, deliberate choice we must make—just as God chose to love us.Summary Statement: God’s love is a deliberate, ongoing choice—He chose and continues to choose to love us. In turn, we are called to make the daily, intentional choice to love others, in word, in action, and from the heart.
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43
Prepping With God's Preparation (From our 6-1-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/eEuCJnSaIDMSummary:Summary: Prepping With God's PreparationIntroduction: The Grueling Dakar RallyThe Paris-Dakar Rally is the world’s longest and most grueling endurance race (started in 1979, about 6,200 miles).It takes place in an environment that is hostile to both man and machine; survival depends on preparation.Story of Mark Thatcher (navigator, 1982): After a breakdown, a recording error left his team stranded 35 miles off course for 6 days. Their survival depended on supplies they had prepared in advance—water, flares, and even the ability to make smoke signals.Life Application: Physical vs. Spiritual PreparationUnlike rally racers, modern life rarely puts us in such immediate danger, but spiritually, we all cross a desert-like world.If we’re not prepared for the spiritual dangers around us, we risk not making it through “alive” spiritually.Transition to Scripture: Elijah’s Desert Preparation (1 Kings 17)Elijah lived during a literal drought—a desert experience for three and a half years, one he himself announced to King Ahab.God prepared Elijah for this ordeal; the sermon focuses on how God prepares His people and what we can learn.Key Points from 1 Kings 171. God’s Word is Our Preparation PlanElijah received direct instruction from God; today, we have God’s instructions in the Bible.2 Peter 1:20-21 (ESV): “...men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit.”The Bible is our only reliable guide through the moral “desert” of this world.2. Preparation Takes TimeGod told Elijah to go and wait by the brook Cherith, where ravens would feed him and water was supplied.The drought (and Elijah’s waiting) lasted years, not days; spiritual growth and preparation aren’t instant.Grace gives us “space to mess up and still be heading in the right direction”—progress matters more than instant perfection.3. God’s Provision Requires ObedienceElijah had to follow God’s instructions exactly—provision was found only where God directed.Obedience isn’t perfection, but a heart that desires to follow God and keeps returning after failure (see 1 John).We may not get everything right, but God’s grace is for those who keep striving and learning.4. Preparation Requires FlexibilityEventually, the brook dried up, and God told Elijah to move to Zarephath, where a widow would provide for him.Sometimes God’s plan requires us to change direction (“pivot”), even when we’re comfortable.Willingness to change and trust God’s leading is a crucial part of spiritual preparation.Final Application & InvitationLike Mark Thatcher’s team in the rally, being perfectly prepared isn’t the point—being prepared enough and trusting God is.You may feel lost, like you’re “drinking out of the radiator,” but God still loves you and provides new opportunities.Today is a new chance to get prepared for eternity—by learning from God’s word, striving to obey, and trusting Him when it’s time to pivot.Summary in a sentence: Just as survival in the Dakar Rally depends on preparation, our spiritual survival depends on trusting God’s word, obeying Him (even imperfectly), allowing time for growth, and being willing to change direction when God calls—because God always provides for those who follow His preparation plan.
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42
What Does Forgiveness Give? (From Our 5-25-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/D6DjTL0iWHoSummary:OverviewThe sermon uses Memorial Day as a springboard to explore forgiveness—not as a cold doctrine but as a costly, emotional gift that restores broken relationships. Joseph’s long reconciliation with his brothers (Genesis 37 – 50) becomes the primary case study.1. Remembering and Our “Negativity Bias”Memorial Day reminds us to honor those “who didn’t come home,” yet people quickly forget or fixate on the wrong memories.Human nature clings to hurtful moments; that bias makes forgiveness especially hard.2. Joseph’s Wound and His Opportunity (Genesis 42 – 45)Initial betrayal: brothers strip him of the “coat of many colors,” plan murder, then sell him (Genesis 37).Years later Joseph, now Egypt’s vizier, meets his starving brothers:He speaks harshly, demands Benjamin, and jails them three days—testing more than retaliating.Yet he secretly returns their silver, showing a heart already inclined toward mercy.Emotional reveal (Genesis 45:4-5, ESV):“So Joseph said to his brothers, ‘Come near to me, please.’ … ‘Do not be distressed or angry with yourselves because you sold me here, for God sent me before you to preserve life.’”3. What Forgiveness GivesThe word “for-give-ness” hides give—it offers a second chance and reconciliation (“to be friends again”).True forgiveness is decided internally before it can be transacted externally.It does not erase memory or pain, but it refuses revenge and opens a future.4. Joseph’s Public Act of Grace (Genesis 50:15-21)After Jacob dies, the brothers fear payback, beg, “Please forgive…”Joseph reassures them:“As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good, to bring it about that many people should be kept alive…” (Genesis 50:20, ESV)He provides for them in Goshen—proof that his earlier private forgiveness is now public mercy.5. Principles for UsForgiveness hurts: Joseph “wept aloud” (Genesis 45:2). Pain does not disqualify obedience.Leave justice to God: “Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord.” (Romans 12:19 ESV)Boundaries are wise; forgiveness seeks restoration, not perpetual abuse.Our model is God:“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son…” (John 3:16 ESV)Jesus bore the agony of Psalm 22:1 on the cross so we could be forgiven.Eternal aim: God moves history from a banished Genesis-3 humanity to a fully restored people where “He will wipe away every tear…” (Revelation 21:3-4 ESV).Warning & promise: “If you forgive others…your heavenly Father will also forgive you, but if you do not…” (Matthew 6:14-15 ESV).6. Application & InvitationExamine lingering wounds; begin the internal work of forgiveness today.Trust God with ultimate justice while setting healthy boundaries.Offer the gift that God first offered you; relationships—both human and divine—hang in the balance.The assembly is urged to seek prayer or respond publicly “while we have this invitation song.”Key Take-AwayForgiveness is costly giving: we absorb hurt so that, like Joseph—and ultimately like Christ—we can trade broken memories for reconciled relationships and point the world to a God who “meant it for good.”
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
This podcast includes Sermons and other content for the West Side Church of Christ located at 725 W. Main St, Elkton KY. We hope that you can join us for services. We have bible class on Sunday mornings at 9 am and Worship at 10 am. We meet again at 5:30 pm Sunday Evenings, and Wednesday at 6:30 pm. If you are not able to join us then please enjoy our content. :-)
HOSTED BY
Doug Gregory
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