The coming Jesus Christ is the expression of the grace of God who has appeared to bring salvation for all people. This salvation that he brings is a salvation from sinful and empty lives to lives that are focused on pleasing God.
Read Titus 2:11-14
The coming Jesus Christ is the expression of the grace of God who has appeared to bring salvation for all people. This salvation that he brings is a salvation from sinful and empty lives to lives that are focused on pleasing God.
Read Titus 2:11-14
This passage prophesies of light shining into darkness. The darkness is sin and its results. The light is the child who would be born who would become the great king of an everlasting kingdom of peace, justice and righteousness.
Read Isaiah 9:1-7
This passage contains two remarkable promises. Jesus’ followers will do greater works than Jesus did while he was on earth and Jesus will do whatever his followers ask in his name. The sermon examines what Jesus means by these promises.
Read John 14:12-14
This Psalm teaches that the great problem in the world is that people have rejected the God of the Bible. There is a connection between the fact that people have turned away from God and the wickedness and misery in the world. The hope for the world is in the salvation that the Psalmist longs for and that has come in Jesus Christ.
Read Psalm 14
Jesus teaches that to see him is to see the Father. The desire to connect with the transcendent is a deep human desire. Many seek to satisfy that desire through various forms of idolatry. God has revealed himself supremely through Christ that we might know him.
Read John 14:7-11
As a meal, part of the symbolism of the Lord’s Supper is that believers are nourished. This sermon explores what its means to eat Christ’s flesh and drink his blood by faith and how we are spiritually nourished.
Read John 6:47-59
This sermon explores the idea of coming to the Father in the light of the OT tabernacle and its fulfillment in Jesus Christ. The tabernacle helps us to visualize what it means to come to the Father and how Jesus is the Way. The ideas of Jesus being the Truth and the Life are considered as necessary for Jesus to be the Way to the Father.
Read John 14:4-6
This psalm is an exhortation to “Shout for joy in the LORD.” The body of the psalm give many reasons for joy in the Lord and the ending is a confession of hope that is based in the Lord. It is an amazing contrast to the hopelessness of so many in our society.
Read Psalm 33
In this passage, Jesus tells his disciples not to be troubled because he is going to prepare a place for them in his Father’s house and he will come back to take them to be with him. He will prepare a place for them by suffering and dying for them.
Read John 14:1-3
This is a unique Psalm in that there is no note of hope at the end. It is meant to teach that there are not always happy endings in life. The psalmist expresses his faith by continuing to pray in spite of no answer. From the rest of the Bible we know that the ultimate answer to such prayers is the blessedness of eternity with Christ.
Read Psalm 88