A Thanksgiving Sermon

Tomorrow is Sunday, November 23, and Thanksgiving Day is the following Thursday.  I will be preaching this sermon in the morning, perhaps it will be a blessing to someone here as well.  Anyone may feel free to use this material in a way that brings glory and honor to God.

We are going to begin with 4 scripture readings, used at different times during the service.  You will note that there is one reading each from the Old Testament, New Testament, Psalms and a Gospel.  The final reading is the text of the sermon. Continue reading

The Abbreviated Jesus

bargainjesusWhen I started this blog, one of the secret little promises I made myself was that it wouldn’t be an Internet Monk fan site.  Listening to his podcast is one of the reasons I started blogging myself.  If you read this blog, you know that from time to time I link other blogs with posts of interest.  Michael Spencer wrote a piece on the “abbreviated Jesus” this week, here’s a snippet that made me laugh out loud:

“The abbreviated Jesus can convincingly seem like the real Jesus, until you look and listen closely. Then it appears that he’s lost his laptop, his luggage and his cell phone. So for right now, he’s reading it all off the teleprompter.”

Read Do You Trust the Abbreviated Jesus?  at internetmonk for the full story.

The Invisible Sky Bully

godThe invisible sky bully; have you ever heard God referred to that way?  Even worse than calling him the “invisible man in the sky” is the notion that God pushes people around because he is bigger than them.  A real bully is often a coward, and throws his weight around or intimidates those smaller than himself with words.  Those promoting the sky bully myth would have you to believe that God orders people to worship him, and sends to hell anyone that doesn’t.  It makes it easier to not believe in a God that could be like that, or helps people to doubt there is such a God.  In a way that’s good, because there isn’t a god like that. Continue reading

Why Should Christians Hear the Gospel?

jesusWhen Jesus preached his first sermon, it was a simple message of “Repent, and believe the gospel.”  (Mark 1:14-15)  It was obviously an invitation to the lost; Jesus the evangelist inviting souls to get saved.  So the question is, why do Christians need to keep hearing the gospel?  Continue reading

Parable of the Talents

Jesus gave many different analogies of what the Kingdom of God is like.  In Matthew 25 we read the parable of the talents.  After he finishes this parable, he goes on to describe the final judgement.  Earlier in chp. 25 is the parable of the wise and foolish virgins, which teaches us to always be prepared.  We do not know the day and hour of his return; but he will return.  The parable of the talents is a lesson to believers to take good care of what has been entrusted to them. Continue reading

Does anyone know who Jesus is?

I was watching this video on Who Jesus Is and one thought in particular came to mind.  It shouldn’t surprise us that many people have no idea who Jesus is, or even that they don’t know exactly what they believe.  Ask the typical person on the street about Jesus, and you’ll always get answers like “He was a pretty cool guy,” or “He was a wise teacher, but he’s not my savior,” or maybe even “I don’t believe there was any such person.”  Most people believe he existed, but not that he was the Son of God or even that he meant to start Christianity.  But like I said, we shouldn’t be surprised by any of these answers. Continue reading

The Greatest Commandment

In the Old Testament, God gave Moses the Law so that the Hebrews could be His people and He could be their God.  Most people are familiar with the 10 Commandments, but there were many others.  You can read page after page in Leviticus and Deuteronomy about what to do if your bull accidentally kills one of your neighbors sheep and other such unlikely events.  Many laws were simply about calling the Hebrews out to be different from the culture they lived in.  Every now and then, some well-meaning Bible teacher wanders into the Levitical law and comes out preaching a sermon about how God does not want us to eat catfish.  Some people make the argument that it’s all impossible to understand, and that we could never keep all of the law.  That conclusion would be exactly the correct one to reach. Continue reading

Was Jesus a Radical?

The simple answer is yes.  Jesus was radical in his ministry and teachings.  He questioned the rulers of the Jewish faith, he threw people out of the temple, he pronounced woe to the scribes and Pharisees, he performed healings and miracles on the Sabbath, his disciples did not fast, and even ate without washing their hands.  His whole Sermon on the Mount turned the Jewish traditions and laws seemingly upside down.  The simple answer is that Jesus was a radical; however, I don’t believe it’s that simple. Continue reading

Who Does God Call?

In the first chapter of Mark (I happen to be leading a study of Mark) Jesus begins to call his first disciples.  Jesus had many followers, but from those he called out 12 to be his “inner circle” if you will.  In verses 16-20 he calls first Simon (Peter) and Andrew, then James and John.  All 4 of these men were fishermen.  This was not the most respected vocation in first century Israel.  Fishermen worked long hours, spent a lot of time away from home and family, and they, well to be honest, stank.  Fish stink, guys that spend a lot of time with them also stink.  It was hard work, and while you could make a living at it, a fisherman would never really “be somebody.” 

In Mark chp. 2 Jesus calls Levi (Matthew).  He was a tax collector.  He may have had more education than a fisherman, and would have definitely had more money.  Most were crooked however, so he still would not have had a lot of friends.  If he did, they were also crooks and/or tax collectors.  We don’t know as much about some of the other disciples.  Luke was not one of the 12, but he was obviously hanging around.  Remember that Jesus had other followers and students besides the 12.  If Luke was not following Jesus from place to place during his ministry, we know for sure that he was very much involved in the formation of the early church.  Luke was physician.  This was a guy that was not only educated, he would have been respected in the community.  So what am I getting at?

God calls all types of people into his service.  There is not a Christian type, but he invites all types to become Christian, then uses whatever they bring with them to the table to further his kingdom and spread the gospel.  In Luke 8, we find out that many women were not only following Jesus, but supporting his ministry financially.  Luke does not neglect to list some names for us.  And just to top off the list, one of the first miracles performed by Jesus was healing Simon’s mother-in-law (Mark 1).  There’s only one way to get a mother-in-law; it’s a small detail, but we learn that Simon was married.  God calls into his service the educated and the illiterate; the single and the married; men and women; those respected by the community and those disrespected.  God is not interested in our ability, but in our availability. 

One more thing: Go back to Exodus chp 3  and see what happens when God calls someone who is not interested.  After God speaks to Moses from the burning bush, Moses’ first response is “Who am I to go before Pharaoh?”  God answers he will be with him.  In chp 4 Moses questions if the people will believe God spoke to him.  Moses complains he is not a good speaker.  He finally comes right out and asks God to please send someone else.  By this time God is angry with Moses.  We are the body of Christ; he has already done the hard stuff.  We need to be willing to respond when he calls us.  And there is no one that he cannot use, no matter how many excuses we can come up with.  Let’s be the salt and the light people.

The Faith of Satan

We’re studying the Gospel of Mark in our Sunday morning small group, and my wife was fascinated by one of the stories in chapter one.  As this person possessed by a demon is approached by Jesus, he identifies Jesus and asks why he is there.  Jesus at once commands his silence, then casts out the unclean spirit.  This event was early in his ministry, and Jesus didn’t want anyone blabbing out who he really was just yet.  On at least one occasion, Jesus will instruct those just healed to tell no one what has happened.  The interested thing, though, is that the demonic spirit knew immediately that Jesus was the Holy One of God when he saw him.  Many people would listen to the sermons, see the signs and wonders, and still not believe.  Jesus would read from the prophets, have long talks with leaders such as Nicodemus, and still people would walk away puzzled not knowing what to believe.  But any demon or unclean spirit Jesus encountered at once knew who he was, and often questioned if they were to be punished before the time.  We should not be surprised at their apparent knowledge. 

Jesus exists from everlasting to everlasting with God.  The Nicene Creed describes him as being the eternally begotten Son of God.  Before their fall from grace, the angelic beings worshipped God (and his Son) in heaven.  Consider also the temptation of Jesus by Satan in the wilderness.  The devil can quote scripture, no doubt.  And just why was he offering Jesus all this stuff anyway?  He knew that by following God’s plan, Jesus could ruin all of his plans.  Herod had tried to kill Jesus as an infant, now Satan would attempt to derail his ministry just as it was beginning.  Just because someone believes in God or knows scripture doesn’t make them a true believer.  This is illustrated by James 2:19 that says “…even the devils believe and shudder.”  They know the scripture, the prophesies, and even the God that created them better than we do.