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Sunday Sermons
"But who do you say he is"
The 2nd sermon in a series for Lent 2024: Lent with Jesus. Find us: maranathalilburn.org Follow us: facebook.com/maranathalilburn instagram.com/maranathalilburn
Rev. Dr. Larry Hayward preaches on the Second Sunday in Lent. The Scripture passage is Mark 8:31-38.
Are you a follower or fan of Jesus? Do you know the difference?
Are you a follower or fan of Jesus? Do you know the difference?
Are you a follower or fan of Jesus? Do you know the difference?
Are you a follower or fan of Jesus? Do you know the difference?
Are you a follower or fan of Jesus? Do you know the difference?
Are you a follower or fan of Jesus? Do you know the difference?
Immanuel United Church of Christ - Shillington PA Sunday February 28th 2021 9am Worship Sermon Again & Again, We are Called to Listen 2nd Sunday of Lent
Pascal Denault - Marc 8.38 DESCRIPTION : La honte de Dieu et de sa Parole est souvent le lot du croyant. Cette honte est parfois double puisque non seulement nous avons honte de Dieu devant les hommes, mais nous avons également honte de nous-mêmes devant Dieu d’avoir honte de lui. Comment être délivré de cette honte afin de devenir un chrétien fier de l’être? PLAN A. Le chrétien qui a honte B. Le Christ qui n’a pas eu honte C. Le chrétien délivré de la honte QUESTIONS 1. Quel est l’effet de la honte et l’effet de la fierté? 2. Qu’est-ce qui amène les chrétiens à avoir honte? 3. Quel est le meilleur antidote contre la honte du chrétien? 4. Qui sont ceux qui ont honte de Christ et qui sont damnés au verset 38? 5. Quelles sont les perspectives à entretenir pour être libéré de la honte?
Pascal Denault - Marc 8.38 DESCRIPTION : La honte de Dieu et de sa Parole est souvent le lot du croyant. Cette honte est parfois double puisque non seulement nous avons honte de Dieu devant les hommes, mais nous avons également honte de nous-mêmes devant Dieu d’avoir honte de lui. Comment être délivré de cette honte afin de devenir un chrétien fier de l’être? PLAN A. Le chrétien qui a honte B. Le Christ qui n’a pas eu honte C. Le chrétien délivré de la honte QUESTIONS 1. Quel est l’effet de la honte et l’effet de la fierté? 2. Qu’est-ce qui amène les chrétiens à avoir honte? 3. Quel est le meilleur antidote contre la honte du chrétien? 4. Qui sont ceux qui ont honte de Christ et qui sont damnés au verset 38? 5. Quelles sont les perspectives à entretenir pour être libéré de la honte?
Without Jesus death and resurrection, Jesus' teachings have no meaning. This sermon wraps up our series "The Gospel According to Jesus".
Without Jesus death and resurrection, Jesus' teachings have no meaning. This sermon wraps up our series "The Gospel According to Jesus".
Rich Titus kicks off our new series, "A CROSS-WARD Path to TRIUMPHANT Joy" with a look at Jesus's hard, but decisive, words In Mark chapter 8 that ultimately separate the people of the world into one of two camps, with one of two ultimate destinations.
Jesus is calling you this very day to believe in him as Lord and Savior, to be his follower. Have you heard and heeded the call?
Jesus is calling you this very day to believe in him as Lord and Savior, to be his follower. Have you heard and heeded the call?
Jesus is calling you this very day to believe in him as Lord and Savior, to be his follower. Have you heard and heeded the call?
Jesus is calling you this very day to believe in him as Lord and Savior, to be his follower. Have you heard and heeded the call?
Jesus is calling you this very day to believe in him as Lord and Savior, to be his follower. Have you heard and heeded the call?
Jesus is calling you this very day to believe in him as Lord and Savior, to be his follower. Have you heard and heeded the call?
Jesus is calling you this very day to believe in him as Lord and Savior, to be his follower. Have you heard and heeded the call?
Jesus is calling you this very day to believe in him as Lord and Savior, to be his follower. Have you heard and heeded the call?
Jesus is calling you this very day to believe in him as Lord and Savior, to be his follower. Have you heard and heeded the call?
Jesus is calling you this very day to believe in him as Lord and Savior, to be his follower. Have you heard and heeded the call?
Weekly sermons and study guides.
Weekly sermons and study guides.
The Cost of Discipleship
Please join New Life at Calvary for praise and worship of our Lord and Savior as Elder Keon Abner preaches "Counter Culture-Weighed in the Balance"! Join us at 2020 E. 79th Street, Cleveland, Ohio 44103 or at newlifeatcalvary.org.
Please join New Life at Calvary for praise and worship of our Lord and Savior as Elder Keon Abner preaches "Counter Culture-Weighed in the Balance"! Join us at 2020 E. 79th Street, Cleveland, Ohio 44103 or at newlifeatcalvary.org.
Jesus calls us not just to be fans but to be fully devoted followers, willing to give up everything for Him.
Jesus calls us not just to be fans but to be fully devoted followers, willing to give up everything for Him.
Join us as Senior Pastor Ken Whitten speaks during this Sunday morning worship service.
Join us as Senior Pastor Ken Whitten speaks during this Sunday morning worship service.
Join us as Senior Pastor Ken Whitten speaks during this Sunday morning worship service.
Join us as Senior Pastor Ken Whitten speaks during this Sunday morning worship service.
Bearing the cross has nothing to do with difficulties we face. People who succeed in anything denies themselves Jesus wants people to give their all in following him.
Halfway through Mark's Gospel, Jesus begins to teach his disciples that he must suffer and be rejected. He then tells them to take up their crosses and follow him. It's a watershed moment in Mark. After this point, events move quickly toward the cross. Pastor John continues to explain the road to Jerusalem.
Bearing the cross has nothing to do with difficulties we face. People who succeed in anything denies themselves Jesus wants people to give their all in following him.
From Paul's letter to the church at Rome we see an understanding of prayer that can help move us as the Body of Christ to more fully embrace the Kingdom of God. Coupled with the words of Jesus on self denial, we can move towards an experience of prayer that calls us to look to the interests of those who are marginalized and neglected through words and deeds.
From Paul's letter to the church at Rome we see an understanding of prayer that can help move us as the Body of Christ to more fully embrace the Kingdom of God. Coupled with the words of Jesus on self denial, we can move towards an experience of prayer that calls us to look to the interests of those who are marginalized and neglected through words and deeds.
Join us as we continue our study of how to live a generous life, modeled after our Lord Jesus. This week, we talk about being generous with our talents.
Sermons from Ramona Valley Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Ramona, CA
Sermons from Ramona Valley Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Ramona, CA
Contemporary worship service at Church Of The Palms in Sarasota, FL
Since humanity rebelled against God no one has been able to think straight. Peter shows how Jesus is counterintuitive, how his call is counterintuitive and how the consequences of that call are counterintuitive.
Connecting People to God in Christ
In the season of Lent this year we are in a series called 40 Days With Jesus. This week we look at how our view on what God is doing around us could actually be the exact opposite of what is really going on.
I received an article about resilience written by Terri Hendrix. Thinking about her friends who had gone through difficult times, she thought the dictionary definitions of resilience we lacking. They didn't simply bounce back. She wrote: “No matter how much faith we might carry in our hearts, I think it's unlikely for most of us to be pliable enough to return to our original form 'after being bent, compressed, and stretched to the breaking point.' When you walk through the bowels of hell and make it out the other side, I doubt you're unscathed from the journey...Perhaps resilience is simply mastering the art of living. Whatever it is, I think the interim between the dark and daylight is pure hell. And that's a pit you don't just "bounce" out of - you have to climb. You stick your hands into the sides of the unknown and claw until your nail beds peel back. Then you claw some more." As disciples of Jesus, we are a people of resilience. Not because tragedy bounces off of us, not because we get over it so quickly. We are resilient because we are willing climb out of the pit, to stick our hands into the sides of the unknown and claw. We are also resilient because we do not climb and claw alone. I don’t know at what point Jesus realized he was going to face a violent, bloody, and painful death. He was faithful in accepting this fate, and in believing that he would rise again after three days. We also see from his agony in the Garden of Gethsemane, however, that he was not entirely overjoyed at the prospect of being mocked, beaten, and crucified. Going on with his daily life of teaching, preaching, healing, and caring for others required resilience. Jesus had to claw his way out of the pit of fear and despair to go on with daily living, with the knowledge of his impending violent and bloody death. It took resilience for Jesus to do this, and it took his friends being there with him in that knowledge. Jesus told his disciples about his death and resurrection so they would remember and believe, and I’d guess he also told them because he needed them for their support. He needed their help to be resilient. I’d guess that’s why his rebuke of Peter was so strong. Peter thought he was helping by saying Jesus should never have to go through suffering, but he was actually making it even more difficult for Jesus. Denying someone’s pain or the hell someone is facing does not help them through it. Being there with them in the pain…that is what is needed for resilience, folks who’ll let you climb out of the pit and offer you a hand, not deny that you’re in the pit. Peter had to be resilient too after his rebuke. He needed his friends there with him too. Resilience requires friends. Some parts are alone, then when we need friends to help pull us out, we really need them. As Christians, we are people of resilience. We are dragged down into pits of fear and despair just like everyone else, but we are not alone. We have Jesus with us to be in there with us. Jesus supports us when we start clawing our way out of the pit. We have our friends to help pull us out of the pit. We don’t go through life unscathed, but we do go through with resilience, trusting in Jesus who faced hatred, scorn, torture, and death with resilience. Teaching us, his disciples to walk in that same way in which he led.
Pastor John shares the first discussion of Christ's Passion and how He changed the rules. This recording includes Pastor John's Discovery Time talk with the children.
I received an article about resilience written by Terri Hendrix. Thinking about her friends who had gone through difficult times, she thought the dictionary definitions of resilience we lacking. They didn't simply bounce back. She wrote: “No matter how much faith we might carry in our hearts, I think it's unlikely for most of us to be pliable enough to return to our original form 'after being bent, compressed, and stretched to the breaking point.' When you walk through the bowels of hell and make it out the other side, I doubt you're unscathed from the journey...Perhaps resilience is simply mastering the art of living. Whatever it is, I think the interim between the dark and daylight is pure hell. And that's a pit you don't just "bounce" out of - you have to climb. You stick your hands into the sides of the unknown and claw until your nail beds peel back. Then you claw some more." As disciples of Jesus, we are a people of resilience. Not because tragedy bounces off of us, not because we get over it so quickly. We are resilient because we are willing climb out of the pit, to stick our hands into the sides of the unknown and claw. We are also resilient because we do not climb and claw alone. I don’t know at what point Jesus realized he was going to face a violent, bloody, and painful death. He was faithful in accepting this fate, and in believing that he would rise again after three days. We also see from his agony in the Garden of Gethsemane, however, that he was not entirely overjoyed at the prospect of being mocked, beaten, and crucified. Going on with his daily life of teaching, preaching, healing, and caring for others required resilience. Jesus had to claw his way out of the pit of fear and despair to go on with daily living, with the knowledge of his impending violent and bloody death. It took resilience for Jesus to do this, and it took his friends being there with him in that knowledge. Jesus told his disciples about his death and resurrection so they would remember and believe, and I’d guess he also told them because he needed them for their support. He needed their help to be resilient. I’d guess that’s why his rebuke of Peter was so strong. Peter thought he was helping by saying Jesus should never have to go through suffering, but he was actually making it even more difficult for Jesus. Denying someone’s pain or the hell someone is facing does not help them through it. Being there with them in the pain…that is what is needed for resilience, folks who’ll let you climb out of the pit and offer you a hand, not deny that you’re in the pit. Peter had to be resilient too after his rebuke. He needed his friends there with him too. Resilience requires friends. Some parts are alone, then when we need friends to help pull us out, we really need them. As Christians, we are people of resilience. We are dragged down into pits of fear and despair just like everyone else, but we are not alone. We have Jesus with us to be in there with us. Jesus supports us when we start clawing our way out of the pit. We have our friends to help pull us out of the pit. We don’t go through life unscathed, but we do go through with resilience, trusting in Jesus who faced hatred, scorn, torture, and death with resilience. Teaching us, his disciples to walk in that same way in which he led.
Sunday Morning Worship Service
The cross and resurrection have implications for our lives. It demands that we lose our life in pursuit of the One who laid down His life for ours.