I’ve Seen Too Much
In our culture, we need to recognize that we were created to celebrate someone and something. If we don’t celebrate the King of Kings and Lord of Lords, we will begin to put other things in the place of praise, and we will allow those things to produce passion in us. On Palm Sunday, we have a reason to celebrate, worship, and praise God because he has spoken to us and given us his word. All we need is one word from God; we don’t even need a whole sermon. One word from God can change the trajectory of our life. There is power, hope, and healing in God’s word.
The Happiness Series: Part V
God is both justice and mercy. Psalm 136:1 says that God’s mercy endures forever. In other words, God would have to cease to exist for his mercy to run out. The cultural definition of mercy is to have or show compassion on the poor or guilty. From the Beatitudes, we know that we are poor and guilty before God. But, God is mercy in action. This mercy is available to us, and we are happy if we receive it and pass it on.
The Happiness Series: Part IV
This week we are continuing our Happiness or the Beatitudes series studying Jesus’ sermon in Matthew 5 where he is inaugurating the kingdom of God on earth. In this message, we will learn about what it means to hunger and thirst for righteousness (Matthew 5:6). Hunger and thirst are strong desires. The language that we see in this text around hungering and thirsting describes an intense desire of someone who is famished and desperate. Although we may not all relate to the physical experience of hungering and thirsting at such great magnitudes, those whom Jesus was speaking to might have walked through seasons of such desperation.
The Happiness Series: Part III
In continuation of our series on the Beatitudes, we are focusing on Matthew 5:5, which says, “blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.” Meek is not a word that we use often in our culture today. Translated in Greek, “meek” means strength under control. A simple definition would be that meek is not weak. When we look throughout scripture, there are several examples that can help us understand what it means to be meek.
The Happiness Series: Part II
In this season of Lent, let’s consider Jesus and look upon that cross at Calvary. When we look upon the price that was paid for our sin, we can’t help but be filled with sorrow for the life that Jesus gave for our sin, and that mourning will produce repentance, and that repentance will produce joy, and that joy will produce strength, and we are comforted in that.
The Happiness Series: Part 1
To be spiritually poor means that we’re simply aware of our spiritual condition--that without God we are nothing and can do nothing without God, but with God, all things are possible. We settle far too often for systems and structures of righteousness that are shallow and failing because it gives us a level of self-confidence. God is not looking for self-confidence but total and complete dependency on him. If we want to be truly blessed, truly happy, then we have to know what it is to come to the end of ourselves--that apart from Christ, we will never experience true happiness, understand what it means to live a life of meaning and significance.
Relationship Sunday
We are in extraordinary times and we have faced so much politically, socially, as well as in our relationships as we are in isolation from our loved ones. How we engage in our relationships changes in every season. Let’s consider what our relationships need from us, in this time and in this season. God is always wanting to strengthen and grow our capacity for love and relationships.
The Power of Words
Our words have power, and our words reveal the condition of our hearts (Matthew 12:37). We must examine the words that we speak to know the condition of our hearts. Our words not only set the course for our life, but they also reveal the condition of our hearts.