Sermon

We have life with the cross

Based on: Mark 8:27-35

Over the summer I finished reading “War and Peace” by Leo Tolstoy.  It is a very long book and I will not say when I started.  To be honest I don't remember when I started – it  was that long ago.  “War and Peace” is historical fiction.  It describes Russia at the time Napoleon invaded Russia, interweaving the stories of fictional characters into the historical events of the time.

God uses the one he changes

Based on: Nehemiah 4:1-3; 6:15-16

What do you think about history? Did you like history as a subject in school?  I would guess that many of you would say that history was not your favorite subject.  That seems to be a fairly common sentiment.  But what about family history?  Do you find that a little more interesting?  I think that when the history is a little closer to home we tend to be a little more interested.  As we look at the Jews and their good times and bad times, we should realize that they are our spiritual ancestors.  They were God's church in their time, and we are not very different from them.  What we see happening to physical Israel then, we also find happening to spiritual Israel now.

God has plans for you

Based on: Jeremiah 29:10-14

I have to tell you about the surprise birthday party I planned for my wife.  I rented the basement of the church we attended in Milwaukee; I invited her friends; I had a Powerpoint presentation with pictures of her throughout her life.  There was cake, decorations and even cardboard cutouts of my parents and her parents so they could be involved even though they lived far away.  All of this planning and Sallie didn't know a thing about it. 

To whom will you preach?

Based on: Jonah 4:5-11

Edward Spencer was a Bible student in Illinois in 1860.  He was planning to be a minister of the Gospel, but a shipwreck in the fall of 1860 changed his life.  The steam boat, “Lady Elgin” collided with another boat on Lake Michigan near Evanston, Illinois.  Edward Spencer was not on the boat.  He was on the shore.  When he saw some of the passengers struggling for shore he tied a rope around his waist and swam out to help them.  Sixteen times in a six hour period he went out into the frigid water of Lake Michigan and rescued a total of seventeen people.  The exposure and exhaustion left Spencer in poor health the rest of his life.

To whom will you listen?

Based on: 1 Kings 12:3-11

What would you do?  You have before you one of the most important decisions you will ever make in your life.  You are the new king of Israel and the people come to you and say that taxes are too high.  They want you to lessen the financial burden they are under.  How do you answer?

You have one group of advisers who helped your father make decisions and they say, “Give them what they ask for and things will go well for you in the future.”  But they are from a different generation and you don't know them very well.  They just don't seem to think the same way you do.

What a Difference Forgiveness Makes

Based on: 2 Samuel 12:9-14

You have seen commercials and advertisements, whether on TV, in the paper or on the Internet, that show you “before” and “after” pictures so you can see what their product will do.  It may be cleaning supplies, beauty products, plant growth, or whatever, but none of them can compare to the difference in a person who is forgiven by God.  Today as we see King David forgiven by God, we will look at the “before” and “after” pictures of his spiritual life.

Christ’s Love Compels Us

Based On: 2 Corinthians 5:14-21

I remember one job I had in Texas working for MCI, the telecommunications company.  I had a supervisor who was very good at motivating his employees.  He didn't use force or threats or even money, instead, he would work for them.  If you needed help getting your work done, he would find help or he would sometimes help.  If a piece of equipment would help you do your job better, he would put it in the budget.  If you had an interest in a particular technical field, he would help you get training – even if it meant you might get promoted out of his group.  I remember feeling very motivated to work hard for this person who was willing to do so much for me.

There are no outcasts in the kingdom of God

Based on: Ruth 1:15-18

In our sermons this summer we have followed the family tree of Jesus Christ beginning with Adam and Eve, through Noah, Abraham, and the Children of Israel governed by Moses.  Today we move forward in time and find the Israelites living the land of Canaan just as God promised Abraham they would.  It is the time after entering the land of Canaan but before King Saul and King David ruled over them.  As long as they remained faithful to God, things would go marvelously well for them, but every time they started to slip away – when God's Word and church attendance became less important – God would bring enemies to trouble them so they would turn back to God.  During this time period we see Ruth playing her part in the coming of the Savior.

The Privilege of Bringing Good News

Based on: Exodus 3:14-17

It was only about a month ago that Ed McMahon died. He was well known as the co-host to Johnny Carson on the Tonight Show.  He was also seen quite often in commercials for American Family Publishers urging you to send in your sweepstakes entry and sign up for magazine subscriptions because, as he would say, “You may have already won ten million dollars!”  As a result, I'm sure many people dreamed of seeing Ed McMahon walk up to their front door and of hearing him deliver the good news that they had won $10,000,000.

Faith

Based on: Genesis 12:1-4

I am very glad to see all of you sitting and not standing.  It means that all of you have faith in the pews.  Right?  After all, if you did not believe that the pew would hold you up then you would all still be standing up.  I know most of you have been in these pews before and you know from experience that they will hold you up, but what if you go somewhere you have never been before and you see a chair?  The very shape of the chair holds out a promise, “If you sit on me, I will hold you up!”  The shape suggests that it was made for sitting and so you put you faith in the chair. You believe  the promise of “I will hold you up!” implied by the shape of the chair.  Then, your faith leads to action.  Because you so firmly believe the promise the chair makes, you sit down.  Now you are blessed by your action based on faith – your feet get to rest.

It may seem silly to talk about having faith in a chair, but we use that simple illustration to describe faith in God's promises, and we will do that in the context of Abraham, the man of faith.

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