1Thingmatters

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There's a lot in life that gets our attention, but ultimately, only one thing matters. Don't get distracted by what doesn't. 1 Thing Matters will help you focus on what matters most for this life, and the better life to come.

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    • Jun 15, 2025 LATEST EPISODE
    • weekly NEW EPISODES
    • 19m AVG DURATION
    • 263 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from 1Thingmatters

    Fathers, Take Your Lead from the Son (John 16:12-15)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2025 21:48


    A father doesn't typically take his lead from his son. Doing so could be disastrous! A son lacks the necessary experience and wisdom to know what's in his best interest. But in one area - which also happens to be the area that matters most! - fathers need to take their lead from the Son. Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life, and as he works in perfect harmony with the Father and the Spirit, the Triune God equips fathers with everything they need to give their children what matters most.

    Ascending & Sending, Part 2: The Means (Acts 2:1-21)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2025 18:04


    SERIES: Because He LivesJesus' ascension marked the fact that his work was complete. However, in another sense, it also marks that his work is just beginning. Through the Church, Jesus now proclaims forgiveness of sins throughout the world. This is our mission, as we saw last week. But, since the Church consists of people like us who are often timid and weak witnesses, Jesus promised to send us his Spirit to give us the power to carry out his mission, as we'll see this morning on Pentecost. Equipped with both the mission and the means to carry it out, we boldly take the gospel to the ends of the earth. And we do so with the full confidence that the One ascending and sending is the One who lives and reigns over everything for the benefit of his Church.

    Ascending & Sending, Part 1: The Mission (Luke 24:44-53)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2025 18:07


    SERIES: Because He LivesJesus' ascension marked the fact that his work was complete. However, in another sense, it also marks that his work is just beginning. Through the Church, Jesus now proclaims forgiveness of sins throughout the world. This is our mission, as we see this morning. But, since the Church consists of people like us who are often timid and weak witnesses, Jesus promised to send us his Spirit to give us the power to carry out his mission, as we'll see next week. Equipped with both the mission and the means to carry it out, we boldly take the gospel to the ends of the earth. And we do so with the full confidence that the One ascending and sending is the One who lives and reigns over everything for the benefit of his Church.

    Lead with Love (John 13:31-35)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2025 20:33


    SERIES: Because He LivesIf someone saved you from a horrible death, what would you do to thank them? Probably just about anything they asked, because that's how grateful you would be! Jesus not only saved us from eternal death in hell, but he won for us an eternity in paradise. What shall we do to thank him? He asks for just one thing: love. He asks us to demonstrate to others the same selfless love he has shown to us. That is how we thank him - we lead with love.

    Listen to the Shepherd's Soothing Voice (John 10:22-30)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2025 18:45


    SERIES: Because He Lives“Listen to your mother.” Whether those words are spoken as a soft encouragement or a stern warning, they are words of wisdom. When children ignore their mother, they often learn lessons the hard way. When they listen, they are usually blessed because of it.What is a general truth regarding mothers is an absolute truth when it comes to our Good Shepherd. Listen to his voice. Always. His voice not only provides direction for this life, but more importantly, it also provides us with the truth for eternal life. He laid down his life and took it up again for our salvation. Listen to his voice and be sure of it.

    We Don't Need to Drag Out Doubt (John 21:1-14)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2025 19:15


    SERIES: Because He LivesDoubt can serve us well. In scenarios that involve uncertainty, doubts cause us to pause and consider the possible risks and dangerous outcomes of our actions. Such doubts can keep us from making a poor decision. But doubt can also cripple us, causing us to freeze up with fear and fail to move forward. Too much doubt can stifle progress and limit us in life. Doubt, especially long-term, long-held doubt, can damage our relationship with Jesus and slowly allow our faith to erode. But we have something to counter and crush that doubt: the Resurrection. Jesus lives! There is no doubt about it, and because he lives, we don't need to drag out doubt.

    Don't Miss the Mission (Acts 5:12, 17-32)

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2025 24:02


    SERIES: Because He LivesIf Jesus remained dead, all he would provide is an example of a beautiful life. Therefore, if Jesus remained dead, the mission of his followers would simply be to share advice. “Here is how Jesus would want us to love one another. Or “Jesus would want us to think about money like this.” Or “This is how Jesus would pray.” But because he lives, his followers now have a meaningful mission. It is not to share advice, but to testify to what we have seen and know to be true. Christ has risen! Thus, Jesus is not a standard, but our Savior. Jesus is not primarily an example for this life, but the doorway into eternal life. His resurrection to glory will be the resurrection of all who put their faith in him. Sharing that good news is our mission – don't miss it!

    Identity Gift (John 20:1-18)

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2025 23:37


    SERIES: Because He LivesIn the darkness before dawn, the women walked to the tomb with heavy hearts. Jesus was dead. His mission was over. In their mind, they were feeble followers of a failure. All that was left to do was finish embalming the corpse and then try to move on. Yet, Jesus wasn't dead. And because he lived, they were not followers of a failure at all. They were disciples of the one who had conquered sin and defeated death.It is as simple as this. Because he lives, we have a whole new identity: not sinners, but redeemed saints; not rebels, but God's chosen nation; not doomed, but saved; not only servants, but sons and daughters of God Almighty; not losers, but victorious, because Christ gives us the victory. The living Lord has given us a whole new identity. It is all because of him. It is all because he lives.

    Nothing to See (Luke 19:28-40)

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2025 17:17


    SERIES: Open Door PoliciesAs we begin Holy Week, we see Jesus bury humanity's endless attempts at seizing power. In our world, power dynamics are almost always in play. Those who don't have power want it, often more than anything else. Those who have power are willing to do anything to keep it. In contrast, Jesus—who possesses all power as the Son of God—willingly surrendered his power and placed himself in the hands of his enemies. Why? What he wanted more than anything else was not power, but you.So, Jesus begins this Holy Week riding into Jerusalem on a donkey colt, knowing full well that he was riding to the cross. He would surrender himself to the punishment that our sins deserved, so that through Spirit-wrought faith we might seize the glory and heaven that only he deserves.

    Stop Treasuring Your Trash (Philippians 3:4b-14)

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2025 16:59


    SERIES: Open Door PoliciesIf you are able to read this, you are likely fortunate enough that you don't have to dumpster dive for your next meal. When the wastebasket in your home is full, you don't pick through it hoping to find some valuable treasure - you take out the trash. When it comes to much of what we value and treasure in life, is it really anything more than trash in the grand scheme of things? It is when we value it more highly than Jesus and our relationship with him. Is it time to take out the trash in your life? What needs to go so that Jesus remains your greatest treasure?

    To Be or Not to Be (Luke 15:1-3, 11-32)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2025 18:22


    SERIES: Open Door PoliciesWe assume people get what they deserve. We assume that what goes around comes around. We assume God helps those who help themselves. Those assumptions are false. God does not operate on the pryinciple of merit but of grace. No one is beyond the reach of God's grace. God never turns it off. At the entrance of God's open door is not a Father looking to condemn us, but a Father who has eagerly longed for our return. When we do, he takes us in his loving arms and assures us we are still his child. When the weight of our sin makes us fearful of God's condemnation, he reveals his grace yet again.

    Bear the Ripe Fruit of Repentance (Luke 13:1-9)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2025 21:48


    SERIES: Open Door PoliciesTrees don't bear fruit overnight. They require patience and diligent care. Thankfully, our Heavenly Father provides this for us, too. Not only does he desire to see fruit in our lives, but he also patiently provides everything needed for us to bear that fruit.

    Ditch the Detours

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 19:08


    SERIES: Open Door PoliciesThe door to God and the glory he has prepared for us stands wide open. However, he has mapped out a very specific pathway to that door. It is not an easy one. As it did with Jesus, this route takes us through opposition, suffering, and even death. While our human nature may cause us to want to take a detour around these things, Jesus' own life shows us that no detour is allowed. His cross came before his crown. The same path lies ahead of us. However, at the end of it, through the open door, we are offered a reward far superior to anything the world can offer.

    You Don't Stand a Chance (1 Samuel 17)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2025 18:09


    SERIES: Open Door PoliciesYou don't even have to be a churchgoer to know about David & Goliath - it's a legendary account that has cemented itself in cultures throughout the ages. But what are we to make of a slingshotting shepherd boy who takes down a giant? With God fighting our battles, should we expect to slay our own giants as well? God doesn't guarantee that. But he does foreshadow a greater guarantee through the victory of the giant slayer: an open door to heaven for all who believe.

    Giving God Glory by Getting God's Glory (2 Corinthians 3:7-18)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2025 17:53


    SERIES: Epiphany MomentsWhere in the world does one find lasting glory? Conquering nations? Championships? Awards? Any glory one finds in these is fleeting and misleading. Such achievements fade and are forgotten, only to be replaced by the next conqueror, champion, or award winner. But there is a glory that endures. And, while it isn't in you, you will find that it is for you, if you know where to look.

    Doormat Christianity (Luke 6:27-38)

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2025 22:05


    SERIES: Epiphany MomentsThroughout this season of Epiphany, Jesus has described the governing principles of his kingdom being completely opposite to the governing principles of the world. This week Jesus asks us to befriend our enemies, to love those who hate us, and to repay evil with good. Worldly logic would say that is a recipe for being a doormat and getting walked all over. Yet… where have we seen this tactic work before? When we were Christ's enemies, he loved us to the point of death. He repays our daily wrongs with the daily goodness of his mercy. In doing so, he won us for himself.Here is the epiphany we badly need to have. Following the strategy Jesus lays out—loving our enemies—is not a capitulation to evil. It is a means of conquering it.

    Have Faith in Your Feet (Romans 10:12-17)

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2025 17:51


    SERIES: Epiphany MomentsSome dessert recipes are extremely complex, while others are very simple and easy to make. But no matter what the recipe looks like, no one will ever be able to taste the dessert if the recipe is never followed. Someone has to make it.The message of Christianity is not complex. We are sinners who need a Savior, and Jesus is the Savior we need. It's simple. But no matter how simple it is, others will not be able to experience the sweet joy of salvation unless someone tells them that message. We are that “someone.” God doesn't just bring believers to faith to then immediately whisk them up into heaven; he also brings us to faith so that we get to bring the message of Christianity to others.

    Popularity Is Not Proof of Success (2 Timothy 3:14-4:5)

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2025 19:10


    SERIES: Epiphany MomentsIn 2009, Facebook added the “like” button. That same year, Twitter added the “retweet” feature. Interestingly, reported cases of depression began to rise sharply in 2010. It is easy to think that the more people like us, the more successful our lives must be. Likewise, it is easy to believe the more people like a church, the more successful that church is. So here is an important epiphany for both individuals and churches. Popularity is not proof of success.Though there will be times when Christ's gospel and those who proclaim it are popular, that popularity is never the goal. Nor does that popularity define success. If a church makes its central focus things like personal improvement, healing for the sick, or social justice, that church may draw a crowd. It just fails to carry out the true agenda Christ has given his Church. The gospel of forgiveness is to be the center of all our preaching and teaching. The agenda for Christ's Church is set. It's the same agenda that was followed by the Church's Christ.

    Rejection Is Not Proof of Failure (Luke 4:16-30)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2025 20:12


    SERIES: Epiphany MomentsWhen you are trying to share some important information with someone, but they refuse to listen or perhaps totally reject what you are saying, it feels like you have failed. This is especially true when someone rejects the gospel! We proclaim the good news because we want others to know the love of Christ. When people are disinterested in God's Word, we feel like we've failed.So, here is this week's epiphany. Rejection is not proof of failure. Precisely because the gospel is divine revelation, it is guaranteed to be rejected by many. God's Word offends like an unwelcome diagnosis from the doctor. When someone rejects God's Word (including us), that rejection is proof that God's Word powerfully cuts straight to the heart of mankind's biggest problem—sin. Yet, what causes Jesus' words to hurt is what gives them power to heal. That reality encourages us to receive God's Word with joy and to proclaim it boldly to others.

    Prayer Priorities (Ephesians 3:14-21)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2025 19:11


    SERIES: Epiphany MomentsIt is easy for us to assume that if God says “no” to a request, we are getting less than we wanted. We need to have an epiphany moment, seeing the reality—that God always wants more for us than we want from him. Saying “yes” to all our requests would often result in us receiving less joy, less blessing, a lesser life. So, when God says “no” to our request, we can be assured it is because he wants to give us more. Far more than existing as a “help desk” or 911 dispatch, God's love for us is like that of a groom for his bride. His love for us exceeds all expectation and understanding. In that love, God always delivers more than we ask, not less.

    Remember Your Baptism (Titus 3:4-7)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2025 19:12


    SERIES: Epiphany Moments“Who is Jesus?” For the longest time, people thought the answer to that question was, “Mary and Joseph's son” or “a carpenter from Nazareth.” While true enough, those answers do not adequately describe Jesus. But when Jesus was baptized, God the Father spoke, declaring Jesus' true identity. Jesus was the dearly loved Son of God, chosen to be the Savior of the world. “Who are you?” someone asks. Perhaps you would answer by providing your name. Maybe you would add additional information—where you are from or what you do for a living. Perhaps, in some dark corner of your mind, you would answer negatively. “I'm no one.”We need to understand that none of those things really describes who we are. To answer that question—Who are you?—we must look to our baptism. Baptism is the cure for an identity crisis. There, just like he did with Jesus, our Father declares us to be his dearly loved child. Moreover, in baptism God anointed us with power for a life of selfless service. May God grant us this epiphany moment!

    A Gift for Everyone (1 Kings 10:1-9)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2025 18:28


    SERIES: The Gift of GodOn Christmas Eve the angel told the shepherds, “I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people” (Luke 2:10). One wonders if those words struck those Jewish shepherds as odd. For centuries, God had given special attention to one nation—Israel. There were Jewish religious leaders who taught that only members of that special people would be saved. Not according to the Christmas angel! The birth of the Savior was good news for all people.Today we celebrate the Festival of the Epiphany (Jan. 6). Epiphany comes from a Greek word meaning “reveal.” When the Savior was born, he was first revealed to Israelites: the shepherds, Simeon, Anna. But today, we see the Lord miraculously guides foreigners across countless miles so the Savior could be revealed to them as well. How did the magi respond? “They were overjoyed” (Matthew 2:10). The Festival of Epiphany is sometimes known as “The Gentiles' Christmas.” We Gentiles (non-Jews) rejoice in the good news that this Jewish baby is not just a gift for the Jews. He is a gift for everyone—the Savior of the world.

    The Perfect Gift for Getting the Job Done (Isaiah 50:4-9)

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2024 18:25


    SERIES: The Gift of GodThe Son of God took on flesh for two reasons: to be our substitute and our sacrifice. You see, when God created mankind in his image, his desire was that we would live holy lives, full of love for him and our fellow man. When mankind fell into sin, that became impossible. So, the heavenly Father sent Jesus. He is the only human being to keep all of God's law perfectly. He did that as our substitute. Through faith, we claim his perfection as our own. But we needed another gift—one who could pay for the sin we had committed. And so, the Son of God became human for another reason—so that he might die as the sacrifice for our sins, removing that barrier between us and a holy God.Understanding we needed both—substitute and sacrifice—helps us better understand Jesus' saving work. That work includes more than Jesus' death on the cross. Jesus saving work began the moment he was born under the law and obeyed it. This week, we thank God that Jesus served us in both these much-needed ways!

    A Real Christmas Is (Not) All About You (Luke 1:39-55)

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2024 16:23


    SERIES: A Real ChristmasBy this time of the holiday season, people are often weighted down… and may still feel like there remains so much left to do! But who are we really trying to please with everything that “needs” to get done? Is it all for everyone else, or is it possible that many of our to-do's are really about us? Are we actually the ones who need everything to be a certain way for it to be “a real Christmas”? If so, it's time to shift our focus away from ourselves. When we do, we might end up being surprised by whom Christmas is about after all.

    A Real Christmas Is Filled with Delight (Zephaniah 3:14-17)

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2024 19:19


    SERIES: A Real ChristmasA real Christmas is one that results in great joy. But joy is not the same thing as happiness. It is infinitely better. Happiness is an emotion, while joyfulness is a condition. Happiness comes from your circumstances, while joyfulness comes from Christ. But how? What is it we find in Christ that results in such joy? What does Jesus have that we may otherwise spend our entire lifetime seeking and never really finding? Acceptance. And that acceptance flows into pure, permanent joy.

    God Gives Return Gifts (Malachi 3:1-7b)

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2024 17:15


    SERIES: A Real ChristmasThe closer we get to Christmas, the greater the pressure. There is so much work to be done! We want our houses to look good for out-of-town guests. We want to impress people with the thoughtfulness of our gifts. What a welcome relief, therefore, to hear what is required to really be ready for Christmas: only repentance. You see, repentance is the opposite of work. It is the candid and honest admission of our sin combined with the joyful trust that everything needed to bring us close to God has already been done by Christ.At this frenetic time of year, the call to repent is not another demand to do something more. It is a gracious invitation to set down our work to make way for Christ's work. Rooted in that repentant rest, we can fully enjoy a real Christmas.

    A Real Christmas Requires Remembering Why Christ Came (1 Thessalonians 3:9-13)

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2024 18:30


    SERIES: A Real ChristmasIt is easy to get so caught up in the imagery—a tiny newborn baby, lying in the straw filled manger under a star-filled sky—that we forget the why. Why did the Son of God come into our world and take on human flesh? So that he might die as the sacrifice for our sins. One Christmas carol puts it this way. “Neither crib nor cross refuses, all he suffers for your good to redeem you by his blood.”Advent marks the start of a new Church Year. We begin at the end, watching Jesus ride into Jerusalem on a donkey colt, knowing full well that he would be killed before the end of the week. The events of Palm Sunday serve as a microcosm for all Jesus' work, proving the Son of God was willing to humble himself and endure anything for our salvation. That is precisely why Christ came. And a real Christmas requires remembering why Christ came.

    Live While Watchfully Waiting (Mark 13:26-37)

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 19:30


    SERIES: Live Like You'll Live Forever“Eyes on the prize.” That axiom stresses that when pursuing some good goal, focus is important. You don't want distractions or a lack of self-discipline to keep you from obtaining whatever that prize might be. You summon the willpower to fixate on that good thing. You work hard to achieve it. You let nothing divert your attention from obtaining the prize. “Eyes on the prize.”The prize that we want most is spending eternity with Jesus. As the Church Year comes to a close, Jesus promises that he will come again “in clouds with great power and glory” to give us that prize. That prize will be so unbelievably good, it is worth fixating on. It merits our striving to set aside all that would distract us from Christ. So let us work wisely, focusing on what lasts, guarding against what doesn't, and staying on task. This is what it means to live while waiting watchfully.

    Live Free from the Fear of Judgment (Hebrews 9:24-28)

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2024 20:01


    SERIES: Live Like You'll Live ForeverSocial Anxiety Disorder (SAD) affects many millions of adults. It is more than shyness. SAD includes an acute fear of being judged. An individual with SAD struggles with everyday tasks like talking to people at work or school because he is terrified that he is constantly being evaluated. Even if you don't have that disorder, perhaps you have experienced that uncomfortable feeling that others are watching you, trying to find something to criticize. We don't want others judging us. It is bad enough listening to the voice inside our own head, whispering that we aren't worthy.How do we overcome the fear of judgment? It begins by realizing that there is only one person whose opinion ultimately matters—the Judge. Everyone is going to live forever in one of two very different places. Where you spend eternity depends on a judgment that Jesus will render. This week we see why his judgment need not trigger any sort of anxiety. Judgment day is something we can joyfully anticipate. We can live free from the fear of judgment.

    Live a Life of Startling Generosity (Mark 12:38-44)

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2024 21:00


    SERIES: Live Like You'll Live ForeverPerhaps you have heard the axiom, “Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die.” In other words, while you still can, use what you have in order to enjoy life to the fullest. If this life is all there is, St. Paul agrees that would be a good philosophy. Paul wrote, “If the dead are not raised, ‘Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die'” (1 Corinthians 15:32). However, note the “if.” Paul was saying that the epicurean approach to life makes sense only if this life is all we have. But it isn't. Jesus will raise us from the dead and take us to live in his home, a place of perfect comfort and beauty. Knowing that, we are set free from the need to live a self-indulgent life now. Instead, we can be generous people, using the wealth that God has given us to serve both him and others. We can live a life of startling generosity.

    Live Like It Only Gets Better (because it does) (Isaiah 25:6-9)

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2024 20:26


    SERIES: Live Like You'll Live Forever“It will get better.” We say that to try to comfort someone who is having a bad day (or maybe a whole string of bad days). Perhaps tomorrow will be better. But perhaps it's worse. In this life, there really are no guarantees that things will get better. That isn't the case with the life that is to come. That life isn't just going to be better. It will be perfect.Since the seventh century, Christians have marked a day to celebrate those who have died in faith and now realize the perfect joys of heaven. It is called “All Saints' Day.” We thank God for bringing our Christian loved ones out of the troubles and turmoil of this world and into eternal bliss and glory. And we ask God to preserve us in our faith so that we might one day join the saints in that place where life is far more than better.

    The Courage of “No” (Daniel 3:16-18)

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2024 20:12


    SERIES: Live Like You'll Live ForeverJesus repeatedly told his followers that living as his disciples would bring hardship. Living life according to God's Law is going to make one appear odd in the eyes of the world, perhaps even evil. Sharing a message of mankind's sin and God's gracious salvation can cause offense. So why not just stay silent if that makes life easier? Why not keep our faith private? Answer: because we are going to live forever. In gratitude for Christ saving us and giving us eternal life, we share the gospel with others, hoping that they will believe and be saved too. Since we know we are going to live forever in the perfection of heaven, we don't worry if being a witness for Christ brings hardship or even death.Martin Luther wanted to reform the false teaching of the church. He stood firm in the truth of the gospel, knowing it might cost him his life. But Luther knew that, thanks to Christ, he would live forever. So will we. Therefore, like Luther, let us live a life of courageous witness.

    Follow with Family (Ephesians 5:21-6:4)

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2024 20:23


    SERIES: “The Need for Followership”Love can cause harm. Consider the wife whose husband wants little to do with church. She loves him and does not want to upset him. So, when her husband wants her and the children to stay home Sunday morning, she complies without protest. That wife's love for her husband hurts him, her children, and herself. Or consider the father who loves his child so much that he gives the child everything that child asks for. That father's love is toxic. It is shaping that child to be a selfish, entitled adult.In our families, it is not enough that there is love. We need to love rightly, to love in a way that leads to blessings for those we claim to love. This illustrates the need for followership. In Jesus we see perfect, self-sacrificial love. Jesus loves us as we are. He also loved us too much to leave us as we are. So, in love he gave his life up so that we might be holy and blameless. His love for us shapes the way we love our spouse, our children, our parents. Today we see that followers of Christ love their family and follow him with their family.

    Following Together (Numbers 11:4-29)

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2024 19:21


    SERIES: “The Need for Followership”Certain things in life we do alone. Some out of necessity, others by choice. But when it comes to following Jesus, we are never alone. No matter how much our own fears or even the devil himself may try to convince us otherwise, we always follow Jesus with others. God has given us fellow followers to walk in his footsteps together as he leads us. May we never doubt this truth, nor take it for granted!

    Stumbling Humbly (Mark 9:30-37)

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2024 19:16


    SERIES: “The Need for Followership”Humility and pride are polar opposites. Pride exalts self at the expense of God and others. Humility exalts God and others at the expense of self. Pride is the essential vice, for it increases one's hunger for all other sins. Humility increases one's hunger for the forgiveness and healing found in Christ. The one who is proud demands to be served. The one who is humble is not content unless serving others. St. Augustine described it this way: “It was pride that changed angels into devils; it is humility that makes men as angels.”As we see all Christ did to serve us, our hearts melt. Within us grows a Christ-like obsession to serve others, without counting the cost, without any desire to be repaid. Those who are in positions of Christian leadership understand that their leadership can only be achieved through service. For followers of Christ are humble servants.

    Are You Waging a Winnable War? (Ephesians 6:10-18)

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2024 20:21


    SERIES: “The Need for Followership”What is the worst war in human history? One might point to World War II, which has the highest death toll of at least 90 million people. Or consider the Three Kingdoms War, which not only resulted in over 40 million deaths but also lasted for most of the third century. There is no end to the sad list of nominations: the Thirty Years War, the Taiping Rebellion, the American Civil War, World War I.None of those is the correct answer. The worst war in human history began when the first shot was fired in Eden. It has been raging since. It is a war against “spiritual forces of evil” (Ephesians 6:12). This is not a war over land or resources. It is a war for souls. The reality is that there are demonic forces that want to do more than kill you; they want to claim you for all eternity. The good news: Christ has already called you his own and equipped you for this war. Followers of Christ are armed for the battle.

    Power with Purpose (Mark 7:31-37)

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2024 16:38


    SERIES: “The Need for Followership”Power is neither inherently good nor bad. Fire is powerful. The chef uses fire to create meals. But the arsonist uses fire to destroy homes. Nuclear fission is a powerful force. The engineer harnesses it, producing abundant electricity. The tyrant harnesses it, threatening others with nuclear weapons. What matters is the purpose of the one who has that power.Jesus has limitless power, as the numerous accounts of his miracles demonstrate. Those who witnessed those miracles understood that Jesus used his power for good. That doesn't mean they all understood Jesus' true purpose. Some thought Jesus' purpose was to make this temporal life better. And while Jesus did that at times, his ultimate purpose was to save us from sin and give us the gift of eternal life. Followers of Christ see the true purpose of his power.

    Stop Following Your Heart (Mark 7:1-8, 14-15, 21-23)

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2024 21:06


    SERIES: “The Need for Followership”A loving father gives his son and daughter a list of rules and regulations. Chores, curfews, civilities, dress code—the father makes his will clearly known. The son strives to follow the rules for two reasons. 1) He wants to get his allowance. 2) He is afraid that if he breaks the rules, his father will punish him. The daughter strives to follow the rules, also for two reasons. 1) She believes her father established those rules not to control her but for her safety and blessing. 2) She wants to demonstrate how much she loves and trusts her father. Those two children's actions might look almost identical. Their hearts are very different!Following Christ is not simply a matter of outward observance of laws. Nor is it a matter of following our own heart. The followership Christ seeks flows from new hearts that have been radically transformed by God's law and gospel. Christ wants his followers to be less like the son described above, and more like the daughter. This week we see that followers of Christ obey his law from the heart.

    The Bread of Life: Dine or Dash? (John 6:51-69)

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2024 23:03


    As Jesus concluded his Bread of Life discourse, many said, “This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it?” and walked away. One disciple, though, reflected a drastically different response to Jesus and his teaching: “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.” Even more important than either of these two responses, however, is your response. What will you do with Jesus, the Bread of Life?

    The Bread of Life for Eternal Life (John 6:35-51)

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2024 21:22


    There are many different theories about the healthiest way to eat. There's the old food pyramid, built on a foundation of whole grains. There's the Mediterranean diet, the Atkins diet, the Paleo diet, and many others. While we can debate which is best, what is not up for debate is that no diet can keep us alive forever. Even the best diet cannot divert death. However, in his Bread of Life discourse, Jesus offers what no diet can ever provide: food that enables us to live forever.

    The Best Bread (John 6:24-35)

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2024 18:48


    Physical food is a blessing from God without which we would literally wither away and die. That is why Jesus lovingly and miraculously fed thousands of followers with only five loaves of bread and two fish. Yet, while physical food is a good thing, it is far from the greatest thing God provides us. The greatest blessing God provides is spiritual food. The best thing God gives us is his Son, the bread of life. Without that spiritual food, we wither and die in a much worse way.This week we see the multitudes coming to Jesus looking for two things: ever more temporal blessings—full bellies, healthy bodies—and an explanation of how to gain them. Jesus explains the greater need for spiritual food. He assures us that there is nothing we do to earn it. Our Father urges us to come to him for our daily bread, asking him to provide for our temporal needs. But may we hunger most for our greatest need: spiritual food that Christ freely gives.

    Fearless Ministry (Mark 6:45-56)

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2024 19:56


    Shortly before he ascended, Jesus told his followers they were to engage in meaningful ministry—to work their way through the world, sharing the good news of salvation. Our loving Lord knew that was a big and often intimidating task. So, his next words were a promise. “Surely I am with you always” (Matthew 28:20). God's people still need to hear that promise. For several weeks, we have been discussing the reality that the Lord of the Church has called all believers to meaningful ministry. Ministry will come with challenges. It can cause fears to arise: the fear of rejection, the fear of inadequacy, the fear of persecution. So, listen again to your Savior. “I am with you always.” We conclude our series on meaningful ministry empowered by that gracious promise, and asking God to bless us with a fearless ministry mindset!

    Ministry Means Care & Compassion (Mark 6:30-34)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 20:00


    In the ancient Middle East, a shepherd needed certain skills to do his job well: knowledge of edible grasses, ability to trim hooves, capacity to fend off predators, competency to birth lambs. However, the greatest qualification of a shepherd is much simpler. A good shepherd needed to care for his sheep. Without that, none of those other skills would be fully utilized. In Scripture meaningful ministry is often pictured as a compassionate shepherd caring for his sheep: Jesus' care for us; a spiritual leader's care for his “flock.” Certainly, gospel ministry requires specific skills: ability to actively listen to people, aptitude for applying the gospel to someone's situation, etc. But ultimately, meaningful ministry requires a compassionate heart—a profound caring for others. An individual might know God's Word backwards and forwards. But if they lack compassion, they will not fully perform meaningful ministry. Today, we ask the Spirit to see how Jesus models a compassionate shepherd's heart so that we might be filled with that same compassion.

    Hold Firmly (Titus 1:5-9)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2024 16:48


    When a child asks a sibling to do something there isn't much certainty as to the results. The sibling might simply ignore the request. However, if that same child goes to a brother or sister with “Dad said so,” it's a very different story! Now the father's authority is behind the child's request.  As believers carry out gospel ministry, encouraging others to turn to Christ in repentance, people might push back. “What gives you the right?” Maybe we ask that question ourselves. “I'm far from perfect. So, what gives me the right to talk about things like sin?” This week we are given the answer to that question. “Dad said so.” When our God calls us to do ministry, he also gives us authority. In calling us to ministry, God isn't asking us to share our advice or our opinion or even our values; rather, he's calling us to share his own authoritative Word. Let us then hold firmly to that Word, and to the authority by which we conduct Gospel ministry.

    Surviving Snubbed Service (Ezekiel 2:1-7)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2024 19:12


    If ministry involves serving others with love and compassion, you would think that people would respond only with glee and gratitude for the help they received. Sometimes, but not always. If you offer to help a family member who is having trouble paying his bills, he might be offended, wondering if you are implying that he is not a good provider. Likewise, if you try and share the gospel with someone, he might resent the message that he is a sinner in need of salvation. You are trying to minister to this man's greatest need. Your intentions are loving. Yet he responds with rejection and resentment. When our ministry efforts are met not with glee and gratitude but rejection and resentment, we are in good company. The prophets, apostles, and even Jesus himself all had those who responded negatively to their ministries. When that happens to us, it doesn't mean our ministry is no longer meaningful. For if others do not appreciate our efforts to serve them, God still appreciates our efforts to serve him.

    Defying Death Is Not Death-Defying (Mark 5:21-24a, 35-43)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2024 22:01


    Most people fear death to some degree. Some fear death because they assume it is the end. Others fear death because they assume it isn't the end at all, but that there is some sort of reckoning after death which might not go well for them. And have you seen what happens to a dead body? It is far from pretty. So, it is understandable that most people would fear death. Not so for those to whom God has given a top-down faith. Christianity teaches that for God's children death is not discipline but deliverance. The living Lord gives Christians such a radically different view of death that they can have confidence to face death in their effort to give Christ glory. They understand that death does not cut us down, but only raises us up. Finally, the Christian has been given the top-down faith that believes Jesus can wake us from death as easily as we can wake a sleeping child from his nap.

    Serving Through Storms (Mark 4:35-41)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2024 19:14


    A powerful tornado rolls through your neighborhood. A massive hurricane heads straight for your city. A bolt of lightning sends 300 million volts to earth. The raw power and unpredictability of storms can inspire both awe and terror. We cannot stop storms from coming. We can only hope to survive them. However, we know the Almighty God can stop storms. He can calm literal storms. He could remove metaphorical storms, other types of troubles and trials. So, if he can, why doesn't he? Well, would you rather have a God who was distant from you but removed all the storms of life? Or would you rather have a God who allowed some storms to come but promised to be right there by your side within them, holding you close? May God give us the top-down faith that sees that the latter is by far the better option. God promises to be with us through all the storms of life. Sometimes he removes them. But when he doesn't, it's only because he has plans to use even storms for our eternal good.

    Sow What? (Mark 4:26-34)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 19:12


    Usually, a kingdom advances and is secured through things like military might or political force or worldly wealth. It can be tempting to believe the same holds true in the kingdom of God. Perhaps we think churches would flourish if we had the right rulers passing and enforcing the right laws. Or we believe that for a church to do good requires a robust budget. Political force. Worldly wealth. This way of thinking is breathtakingly wrong. We need God to give us the top-down faith that grasps the fact that kingdom of God advances in ways that are imperceptible. Through something that seems insignificant to most—the gospel—the King of kings establishes his reign in human hearts. Even Jesus himself taught that the gospel seems unimpressive, for he often compared the gospel to a tiny seed. Yet within a seed is hidden life. As the seed of the gospel is planted, the largest of all kingdoms grows. 

    Victory from Defeat (Genesis 3:8-15)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2024 17:49


    Look at our lives—the problems, the pains—and it's easy to conclude that we are losing. Look at the world—the brokenness, the bedlam—and it's easy to believe that the devil is winning. It all can lead us to despair. Yet this turmoil is exactly what God said would happen already in the Garden. There God declared that until the end of time enmity would prevail between the devil and mankind. But God promised more than that. He promised that from humanity would rise one who would completely defeat the devil. We need a top-down faith to understand that things are definitely not what they seem. Yes, the devil and his allies are constantly doing their worst. Their work always brings pain. Yet, ultimately, even in the face of what appears at times to be defeat, Jesus always wins. And his victory is our victory. 

    Real Rest Is God-Given (Mark 2:23-3:6)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2024 20:46


    After a long day of work, you have earned the right to sit down in your favorite chair, put your feet up, and watch your favorite program. After a hard week on the job, you have earned the opportunity to relax a bit that weekend. After doing your job well for many months, you have earned those two weeks of vacation at the beach. This is how everyone thinks: rest is something you earn through hard work. We even teach that to our kids: no gaming until homework is done, no playing with friends until chores are complete. Since that concept of rest being earned is so deeply engrained in us, to properly understand spiritual rest requires a top-down faith. God needs to send us the Spirit so that we can grasp this truth. True spiritual rest cannot be earned. In fact, the harder you try, the more restless and the less peaceful you become. Spiritual rest is a gift that God gives. The rest we need most—from guilt, from worry, from shame, from hopelessness—is graciously given to us by the Lord of the Sabbath.

    Not Alone (John 15:26-27; 16:4b-11)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2024 19:54


    Jesus told his disciples that, though he was going to ascend into heaven, he wasn't going to leave them alone. He was going to send “the Advocate,” a title for the Holy Spirit. But Jesus wasn't sending the Spirit to replace him; rather, he was sending him to assure us of Jesus' eternal presence and power in our lives. With the confidence of Jesus' ongoing power to save, the Holy Spirit equips his church - us! - to participate in Christ's saving work. Through our testimony, the Spirit raises the spiritually dead to life, just as he did on the Day of Pentecost. 

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