Podcasts about scripture: luke 13:1-13:9

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Best podcasts about scripture: luke 13:1-13:9

Latest podcast episodes about scripture: luke 13:1-13:9

Pursuit Community Church
3/8 Fruitful Faith | Bob Brice - Video

Pursuit Community Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2026 40:20


Pastor Bob Brice is back this week talking about having fruitful faith and what that means for us!

fruitful brice scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Pursuit Community Church
3/8 Fruitful Faith | Bob Brice - Audio

Pursuit Community Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2026 40:20


Pastor Bob Brice is back this week talking about having fruitful faith and what that means for us!

fruitful brice scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
City Light Church Sermons
The Gospel of Luke: Repentance Explained | Christ | Salvation | Works - Video

City Light Church Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2026 44:34


Sermon Notes: Jan 18, 2026 "There were some present at that very time who told him about the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices. And he answered them “Do you think that these Galileans were worse sinners than all the other Galileans, because they suffered in this way? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all likewise perish. Or those eighteen on whom the tower in Siloam fell and killed them: do you think that they were worse offenders than all the others who lived in Jerusalem? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all likewise perish.” And he told this parable: “A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard, and he came seeking fruit on it and found none. And he said to the vinedresser, ‘Look, for three years now I have come seeking fruit on this fig tree, and I find none. Cut it down. Why should it use up the ground?’ And he answered him, ‘Sir, let it alone this year also, until I dig around it and put on manure. 9 Then if it should bear fruit next year, well and good; but if not, you can cut it down.’” Luke 13:1-9 With our repentance, our lives should change in a way that iimpacts the world around us. Repentance is required to follow Christ. At the very beginning of Jesus's ministry the Bible records Jesus saying “Repent!” This is not something that is up for negotiation in the life of a Christian. God calls every man and every woman to repent. Jesus’s entrance into our life brings division - it should be a shift in our allegiance away from the things we hold dear, with our topmost allegiance given to Jesus. And that will cause disruption. Repentance means “radical change of heart and mind.” The Greek word translated as repentence, "metanoia," denotes a fundamental change within the self: of mind and heart. There is no entrance into the kingdom of Jesus without a change of heart and mind. In this text, Jesus sets conditions for repentance. There is urgency in all of Jesus’s commands to repent. In the height of theological thinking of Jesus's day wasthe belief that sin can bring about your demise; that God strikes people down for their errors. We, too, are prone to this type of thinking. It helps us make sense of the world that doesn’t always make a lot of sense. But truthfully some suffering won't be neatly understood on this side of the grave. So all we can say is “His grace is sufficient.” We can’t make sense of all the suffering in the world. Nevertheless, Jesus calls us to change. He shows us that ultimately ALL suffering is because of ALL sin. And greater suffering awaits those who don’t turn from their own sinful ways. Jesus forces us away from thinking that the outcomes people encounter are equivalent to their sin. Everyone suffers. And all sin leads to all death. Without repentance, we all will face death. Without Christ, we are all 1 minute away from the worst possible eternal outcome. It is the sin in the world that ensures there will be suffering in this life. But it is sin in your life that ensures your suffering in the next life. It is with urgency that we must turn to Christ and away from our sin. Believe and repent. Unless shift away from the gods of this world towards the savior Jesus Christ, we will actually truly suffer. All of us begin life by rejecting the savior - by being a fruitless fig tree. But true repentance always comes with fruit. Repentance without fruit is self deception. Your life cannot express metanoia on the inside, without showing metanoia on the outside. The way we live our lives with those around us changes. What does it look like: Selfish people becoming more generous. Scheming people becoming more genuine. Savage people become more gentle. When our heart and mind have changed, it doesn’t just happen on the inside. It happens on the outside. In the last parable, Jesus offers us a comfort and a caution. If we lay claim to a lord, but bear no fruit as though we are not connected to that lord, then one day we will be cut off. We can say “I’ve been in church all my life” but if our life doesn’t reflect that, then one day we shall be removed. But the comfort is that we have the chance to reorient ourselves and point our lives toward Christ. He is still giving us grace through His grace, His time and His nurturing. If you do not know Christ, this is an invitation. He is so merciful and so caring. Come to know Him. Turn from your sin and repent.

City Light Church Sermons
The Gospel of Luke: Repentance Explained | Christ | Salvation | Works

City Light Church Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2026 44:34


Sermon Notes: Jan 18, 2026 "There were some present at that very time who told him about the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices. And he answered them “Do you think that these Galileans were worse sinners than all the other Galileans, because they suffered in this way? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all likewise perish. Or those eighteen on whom the tower in Siloam fell and killed them: do you think that they were worse offenders than all the others who lived in Jerusalem? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all likewise perish.” And he told this parable: “A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard, and he came seeking fruit on it and found none. And he said to the vinedresser, ‘Look, for three years now I have come seeking fruit on this fig tree, and I find none. Cut it down. Why should it use up the ground?’ And he answered him, ‘Sir, let it alone this year also, until I dig around it and put on manure. 9 Then if it should bear fruit next year, well and good; but if not, you can cut it down.’” Luke 13:1-9 With our repentance, our lives should change in a way that iimpacts the world around us. Repentance is required to follow Christ. At the very beginning of Jesus's ministry the Bible records Jesus saying “Repent!” This is not something that is up for negotiation in the life of a Christian. God calls every man and every woman to repent. Jesus’s entrance into our life brings division - it should be a shift in our allegiance away from the things we hold dear, with our topmost allegiance given to Jesus. And that will cause disruption. Repentance means “radical change of heart and mind.” The Greek word translated as repentence, "metanoia," denotes a fundamental change within the self: of mind and heart. There is no entrance into the kingdom of Jesus without a change of heart and mind. In this text, Jesus sets conditions for repentance. There is urgency in all of Jesus’s commands to repent. In the height of theological thinking of Jesus's day wasthe belief that sin can bring about your demise; that God strikes people down for their errors. We, too, are prone to this type of thinking. It helps us make sense of the world that doesn’t always make a lot of sense. But truthfully some suffering won't be neatly understood on this side of the grave. So all we can say is “His grace is sufficient.” We can’t make sense of all the suffering in the world. Nevertheless, Jesus calls us to change. He shows us that ultimately ALL suffering is because of ALL sin. And greater suffering awaits those who don’t turn from their own sinful ways. Jesus forces us away from thinking that the outcomes people encounter are equivalent to their sin. Everyone suffers. And all sin leads to all death. Without repentance, we all will face death. Without Christ, we are all 1 minute away from the worst possible eternal outcome. It is the sin in the world that ensures there will be suffering in this life. But it is sin in your life that ensures your suffering in the next life. It is with urgency that we must turn to Christ and away from our sin. Believe and repent. Unless shift away from the gods of this world towards the savior Jesus Christ, we will actually truly suffer. All of us begin life by rejecting the savior - by being a fruitless fig tree. But true repentance always comes with fruit. Repentance without fruit is self deception. Your life cannot express metanoia on the inside, without showing metanoia on the outside. The way we live our lives with those around us changes. What does it look like: Selfish people becoming more generous. Scheming people becoming more genuine. Savage people become more gentle. When our heart and mind have changed, it doesn’t just happen on the inside. It happens on the outside. In the last parable, Jesus offers us a comfort and a caution. If we lay claim to a lord, but bear no fruit as though we are not connected to that lord, then one day we will be cut off. We can say “I’ve been in church all my life” but if our life doesn’t reflect that, then one day we shall be removed. But the comfort is that we have the chance to reorient ourselves and point our lives toward Christ. He is still giving us grace through His grace, His time and His nurturing. If you do not know Christ, this is an invitation. He is so merciful and so caring. Come to know Him. Turn from your sin and repent.

Westminster Presbyterian Church, Alexandria VA

Rev. Dr. Larry Hayward preaches on the Third Sunday in Lent. The Scripture passage is Luke 13:1-9.

scripture rev lent third sunday scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Good Shepherd UMC
My Soul Clings

Good Shepherd UMC

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2025 30:57


Good Shepherd UMC

soul scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 good shepherd umc
Good Shepherd UMC
My Soul Clings - Audio

Good Shepherd UMC

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2025 30:57


Good Shepherd UMC

soul scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 good shepherd umc
Two Rivers Community Church of the Nazarene

What is God’s response to our “why?” May God bless you as you engage in worship. Please feel free to leave feedback/comments to let us know you joined in worship. If you’d like to contribute to the ongoing ministry of Two Rivers Community Church of the Nazarene please use this link: paypal.com/us/fundraiser/charity/64291

god hurts may god nazarene scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Christ Community Church
The Fruit of Repentance

Christ Community Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 35:25


Sermon Title: The Fruit of Repentance For more information about Redemption Church or to get in touch please visit our website at: https://www.redemptionchurchokc.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RedemptionChurchOKC If you would like to support our ministry you can donate at: https:/www.aplos.com/aws/give/RedemptionChurch1/

fruit repentance redemption church scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Christ Community Church
The Fruit of Repentance - Audio

Christ Community Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 35:25


Sermon Title: The Fruit of Repentance For more information about Redemption Church or to get in touch please visit our website at: https://www.redemptionchurchokc.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RedemptionChurchOKC If you would like to support our ministry you can donate at: https:/www.aplos.com/aws/give/RedemptionChurch1/

fruit repentance redemption church scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
CrossRoads Church
Luke 13:1-9 The Gift of Unfairness

CrossRoads Church

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2023 24:16


CrossRoads Church Making and maturing disciples together as a family

luke 13 unfairness scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 series: luke
CrossRoads Church
Luke 13:1-9 The Gift of Unfairness - Audio

CrossRoads Church

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2023 24:16


CrossRoads Church Making and maturing disciples together as a family

luke 13 unfairness scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 series: luke
Calvary Chapel Crossfields
Two Crucial Truths - Audio

Calvary Chapel Crossfields

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2023 42:20


To Every Generation...The teaching ministry of Calvary Chapel Crossfields.....Join us as we go verse by verse through the Bible.

bible truths crucial scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Christ Community Church
A Sense of Urgency

Christ Community Church

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2022 32:28


Welcome to Christ Community Church of Wilmington NC. We are committed to teaching the Bible, transforming lives, and touching our world.

Christ the King Presbyterian (PCA): Vero Beach, FL

Christ the King Presbyterian (PCA): Vero Beach, FL

jesus christ repent scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Christ the King Presbyterian (PCA): Vero Beach, FL

Christ the King Presbyterian (PCA): Vero Beach, FL

jesus christ repent scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
New Hope Baptist Church
Repent Or You Too Will Likewise Perish - Audio

New Hope Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2022 25:58


Tragedies have something to teach us, and it is not that the ones who suffer them are worse sinners than everyone else. Rather, they teach us that life is short and fragile, and that it could have just as easily been us instead of them. Therefore, we should repent - get right with God - while we still can.

New Hope Baptist Church
Repent Or You Too Will Likewise Perish

New Hope Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2022 25:58


Tragedies have something to teach us, and it is not that the ones who suffer them are worse sinners than everyone else. Rather, they teach us that life is short and fragile, and that it could have just as easily been us instead of them. Therefore, we should repent - get right with God - while we still can.

CIL CHURCH - Sermons
"Jesus' Perspective on Current Events" - AUDIO - Audio

CIL CHURCH - Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022 30:27


Pastor Aaron Allison preaches on the third Sunday of Lent.

jesus christ lent current events scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
CIL CHURCH - Sermons
"Jesus' Perspective on Current Events" - AUDIO - Audio

CIL CHURCH - Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022 30:27


Pastor Aaron Allison preaches on the third Sunday of Lent.

jesus christ lent current events scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Cross Community Church of the Nazarene
March 20, 2022 - Audio

Cross Community Church of the Nazarene

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022 45:20


These Forty Days, Turn from Judging, Luke 13:1-9, Pastor Jeff McVay

judge judging scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Cross Community Church of the Nazarene
March 20, 2022 - Audio

Cross Community Church of the Nazarene

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022 45:20


These Forty Days, Turn from Judging, Luke 13:1-9, Pastor Jeff McVay

judge judging scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Good Shepherd UMC
Called to Bear Fruit

Good Shepherd UMC

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022 20:27


We continue in Gathered Up In Jesus. This week: Called to Bear Fruit - Luke 13:1-9

bear fruit scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
CIL.CHURCH - Sermons
"Jesus' Perspective on Current Events" - AUDIO

CIL.CHURCH - Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022 30:27


Pastor Aaron Allison preaches on the third Sunday of Lent.

jesus christ lent current events scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Good Shepherd UMC
Called to Bear Fruit - Audio

Good Shepherd UMC

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022 20:27


We continue in Gathered Up In Jesus. This week: Called to Bear Fruit - Luke 13:1-9

bear fruit scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
CIL.CHURCH - Sermons
"Jesus' Perspective on Current Events" - AUDIO

CIL.CHURCH - Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022 30:27


Pastor Aaron Allison preaches on the third Sunday of Lent.

jesus christ lent current events scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Storyline Christian Community
Lent: Luke 13:1-9 - Audio

Storyline Christian Community

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022 37:01


Storyline Christian Community

luke 13 scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 lent luke
Lindfield United Reformed Church
One more year - Audio

Lindfield United Reformed Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022 18:20


One more year Luke 13: 1-9 Rev Keith Morrison

one more year scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Lindfield United Reformed Church

One more year Luke 13: 1-9 Rev Keith Morrison

one more year scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Three Lakes Evangelical Free Church
March 6, 2022 Worship Service

Three Lakes Evangelical Free Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2022 69:00


Three Lakes Evangelical Free Church

worship services scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Three Lakes Evangelical Free Church
March 6, 2022 Worship Service - Audio

Three Lakes Evangelical Free Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2022 69:00


Three Lakes Evangelical Free Church

worship services scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Three Lakes Evangelical Free Church
March 6, 2022 Worship Service - Video

Three Lakes Evangelical Free Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2022 69:00


Three Lakes Evangelical Free Church

worship services scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Bishop Hannington
[Saviour of the World] | Are we ready? | Ben Martin | Luke 13:1-9

Bishop Hannington

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2021 23:08


Bishop Hannington

saviour luke 13 ben martin scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 bishop hannington
Bishop Hannington
[Saviour of the World] | Are we ready? | Ben Martin | Luke 13:1-9 - Audio

Bishop Hannington

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2021 23:08


Bishop Hannington

saviour luke 13 ben martin scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 bishop hannington
The Living Cornerstone
THE MINISTRY OF MANURE - Audio

The Living Cornerstone

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2021 57:10


We are responsible for our own lives, but Jesus reveals Himself as “The Lord of the 2nd (and 3rd & 4th…etc.) Chance(s).

The Living Cornerstone
THE MINISTRY OF MANURE - Video

The Living Cornerstone

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2021 57:10


We are responsible for our own lives, but Jesus reveals Himself as “The Lord of the 2nd (and 3rd & 4th…etc.) Chance(s).

Prescott Cornerstone
You Can't Take That Away - Audio

Prescott Cornerstone

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2020 33:11


In this message, guest speaker Chris Inman encourages us to to consider what we've lost during COVID-19 and what cannot be taken away from us. Pay special attention to the end of his message about how you can make your own "You Can't Take THAT Away" list.

covid-19 take that away scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Prescott Cornerstone
You Can't Take That Away - Audio

Prescott Cornerstone

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2020 33:11


Cornerstone in Prescott, AZ exists to glorify God and make disciples of Jesus. Scott Savage serves as our primary teaching pastor. Learn more: PrescottCornerstone.com

god jesus christ cornerstone prescott take that away scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Walridge Baptist Church
The Judgment of God

Walridge Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2020 47:10


Bible preaching from the pulpit of Walridge Baptist Church

bible judgement judgment of god scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Walridge Baptist Church
The Judgement of God

Walridge Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2020 47:10


Bible preaching from the pulpit of Walridge Baptist Church

bible judgement scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Early Church of Christ
Undeserved - Towers, Trees, and Trust in the Kingdom of God

Early Church of Christ

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2019 34:35


TOUGH EVENTS LEAD TO TOUGH QUESTIONS. I was having a Bible study with a young man in 1995 when he asked a tough question: "Stalin killed 35,000,000 people, mostly Russians. More than Hitler. Was this a judgment of God? Did they deserve it?" How would you have answered this young, budding believer in God? I went to this passage in Luke 13, when Jesus received a similar question. Pilate was a small fry when compared to Stalin, but the evils he perpetrated were certainly as dark. Because of recent events, men came to Jesus wondering the same thing...did the people Pilate slaughtered deserve it?

Early Church of Christ
Undeserved - Towers, Trees, and Trust in the Kingdom of God - Audio

Early Church of Christ

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2019 34:35


TOUGH EVENTS LEAD TO TOUGH QUESTIONS. I was having a Bible study with a young man in 1995 when he asked a tough question: "Stalin killed 35,000,000 people, mostly Russians. More than Hitler. Was this a judgment of God? Did they deserve it?" How would you have answered this young, budding believer in God? I went to this passage in Luke 13, when Jesus received a similar question. Pilate was a small fry when compared to Stalin, but the evils he perpetrated were certainly as dark. Because of recent events, men came to Jesus wondering the same thing...did the people Pilate slaughtered deserve it?

Wayside Bible Chapel
Lesson of Calamity

Wayside Bible Chapel

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2019 33:10


Are accidents and calamities the judgment of God? What should our reaction be? Jesus answers these questions with a warning. He continued by telling us what God expects from our lives. Are you ready for the day you will stand before the Judge of all mankind?

Wayside Bible Chapel
Lesson of Calamity | Luke 13:1-9

Wayside Bible Chapel

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2019 33:10


Are accidents and calamities the judgment of God? What should our reaction be? Jesus answers these questions with a warning. He continued by telling us what God expects from our lives. Are you ready for the day you will stand before the Judge of all mankind?

Cavanaugh Sermons
Repent… Now! - Audio

Cavanaugh Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2019 37:09


A sermon from Luke 13:1-9 by Pastor Will Harmon Cavanaugh Church Fort Smith, Arkansas

forgiveness salvation arkansas repentance parable repent xd fort smith scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 series: parables part#2
Cavanaugh Sermons
Repent… Now! - Video

Cavanaugh Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2019 37:09


A sermon from Luke 13:1-9 by Pastor Will Harmon Cavanaugh Church Fort Smith, Arkansas

forgiveness salvation arkansas repentance parable repent xd fort smith scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 series: parables part#2
Cavanaugh Sermons
Repent… Now! - PDF

Cavanaugh Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2019


A sermon from Luke 13:1-9 by Pastor Will Harmon Cavanaugh Church Fort Smith, Arkansas

forgiveness salvation arkansas repentance parable repent xd fort smith scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 series: parables part#2
Traditional Sermons
Letting Go and Holding On - Part 3 (Youth Preacher) - Audio

Traditional Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2019 14:12


17 year old Brewster Durbin is the Asbury Youth Servant Leader Council Convener and has been active in the Asbury children's and youth ministries since his family moved to Lafayette in 2005.

Salem Magley Church Podcast
The Final Hour - Audio

Salem Magley Church Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2019 27:59


On this the Fourth Sunday of Lent, we look back on the warnings of Jesus about the coming judgment that awaits the world.

jesus christ lent fourth sunday final hour hour audio scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Petaluma First Presbyterian Church
A Sign of the Times - Audio

Petaluma First Presbyterian Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2019 16:57


In Lent we admit our sin and shortcomings, that we're not yet the people God desires us to be. Yet even in our sin, by the grace of God there's still time. A merciful God gives us time to turn, to repent, to change our ways and bear fruit for God's Kingdom. The forty days of Lent is a graciously long time to turn from our sinful ways and toward God. This is the good news we hear in Luke 13:1-9. This is the good news of Lent.

Christ Church, Bayston Hill (UK)
Repent or Perish - Audio

Christ Church, Bayston Hill (UK)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2019 20:08


Christ Church, Bayston Hill (UK)

repent christchurch perish scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Storyline Christian Community
The Path of Obedience: A Word of Warning from the Patient Gardener - Audio

Storyline Christian Community

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2019 35:09


Storyline Christian Community

patients obedience gardener scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Salem Magley Church Podcast
The Final Hour - Audio

Salem Magley Church Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2019 27:59


On this the Fourth Sunday of Lent, we look back on the warnings of Jesus about the coming judgment that awaits the world.

jesus christ lent fourth sunday final hour hour audio scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Christ Church, Bayston Hill (UK)

Christ Church, Bayston Hill (UK)

repent christchurch perish scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
St. John's Lutheran Church Conover
Why Do Good Things Happen to Bad People?

St. John's Lutheran Church Conover

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2019 16:27


3rd Sunday in Lent / Rev. Anton Lagoutine / based on Luke 13:1-9

rev bad people good things happen scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Bethlehem Lutheran Church
Back to the Roots 3 - Audio

Bethlehem Lutheran Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2019 20:14


The roots of all suffering is in our broken human nature, corrupted by Adam and Eve's sin, and inherited and increased by us. Jesus gives us hope and healing by nourishing us, also at the very roots of who we are, with His own body and blood to remake us in His image!

Bayside Baptist Church
Repent or Perish

Bayside Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2019 38:33


At Bayside Baptist Church, our guiding mission is to glorify God by helping people to follow Christ Jesus together. This podcast delivers weekly audio sermons from Senior Pastor John A. Nixon, Ph.D. Please visit www.baysidebc.org for more info!

god jesus christ repent perish scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Open Table Community Church
Lent 2019-1 Dung The Tree - Audio

Open Table Community Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2019 35:45


While dealing with hard news in a surprisingly un-Messianic way, Jesus tells a story that reveals how Grace can sometimes look like pain but that even in pain we are firmly in His care.

Norwalk Grace Brethren Church
His Days Are Numbered

Norwalk Grace Brethren Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2019 62:03


His Days Are Numbered

Norwalk Grace Brethren Church
His Days Are Numbered - PDF

Norwalk Grace Brethren Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2019


His Days Are Numbered

Norwalk Grace Brethren Church
His Days Are Numbered - Audio

Norwalk Grace Brethren Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2019 62:03


His Days Are Numbered

Sermons
Sermon: Whose fault was it Jesus?

Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2019 32:35


Covenant Presbyterian Church (The Barn)

jesus christ sermon whose fault scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
GracePointe Church Douglas, GA
Luke: Grace Period - Audio

GracePointe Church Douglas, GA

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2017 47:03


Tragedy and calamity draw out our deepest emotions. What should we think when terrible things happen to other people? Is it because they are worse sinners? Are we spared because we are more righteous? Jesus is asked about these things. His answers may surprise you.

jesus christ tragedy repentance period judgment scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 series: luke
Sermons at Church of the Palms

From the 9am Sanctuary Service

worship scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Sermons at Church of the Palms
The Time Is Now - 2017/03/12 (16)

Sermons at Church of the Palms

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2017 22:31


Contemporary Worship Service of Church Of The Palms, Sarasota, FL

sarasota scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 contemporary worship service
Walridge Baptist Church
One More Year

Walridge Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2017 37:04


Bible preaching from the pulpit of Walridge Baptist Church

Father Snort
Changing the Narrative - Audio

Father Snort

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2016 11:42


Brad Sullivan 3 Lent, Year C February 28, 2016 Saint Mark’s Episcopal Church, Bay City, TX Luke 13:1-9 Changing the Narrative - Did you hear about those poor Galileans whom Pilate killed? - Oh that was awful. Pilate is a monster isn’t he. - I hear he mixed their blood in with their sacrifices. - What? That’s sacrilege! - How would that even work? - I don’t know. They must have been awful people though. - That’s true, for God to have something like that happen to them. Oh hey Jesus, did you hear about those awful Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices? We don’t know exactly what the conversation was, but Jesus responded by asking them if they thought the Galileans whom Pilate killed were worse sinners than anyone else. By Jesus’ response and by what we know about how people tend to talk about things, we can guess that Jesus was spot on, and the conversation about the tragedy of the day was quickly turning into nasty stories about those awful Galileans and thanksgiving to God that the speakers were not like those awful Galileans. The people talking about the Galileans were trying to make sense of their world. They’d heard about this awful killing by Pilate. They were probably horrified, sad, frightened, and threatened all at once, and so their brains did what peoples’ brains do. They started making up stories to go along with what they had heard, to make sense of it. We do this all the time. Someone is very rude to us, and our brains immediately start making up stories about that person, about how they’re just a jerk, or about how they’ve got some misplaced grudge against us. In reality, the person who was rude was just having a bad day, and we met them in a bad moment, but we don’t know that story. We only know the stories our brains make up about what a perpetual jerk that person is. It doesn’t matter to our brains if the stories are true or not. Our brains are hardwired for story. Stories are how we make sense of our world, and when our brains make up these little stories, we get biochemically rewarded for having made sense of the world. It also helps that we usually make ourselves the heroes and others the villains in these stories, right? So that’s what the people talking about the dead Galileans were doing, and then Jesus did what he does so well. He said, “That’s not the right story, guys,” and he gave them a new story. “No, they weren’t worse sinners than anybody else. Tragic, unexpected death can happen to anyone at anytime.” “Well thanks a lot, Jesus.” Our brains hate that. Chaos, uncertainty, threats to our survival. Our brains want to rest easy, knowing that we’re going to be ok. Jesus keeps saying, “Guys, you can rest easy, knowing that you’re going to be ok, you just don’t get to do it by making up stories about how terrible everyone else is and about how righteous and therefore ‘God protected’ you are.” In Matthew 5:21-22, Jesus said, ‘You have heard that it was said to those of ancient times, “You shall not murder”; and “whoever murders shall be liable to judgment.” But I say to you that if you are angry with a brother or sister, you will be liable to judgment; and if you insult a brother or sister, you will be liable to the council; and if you say, “You fool”, you will be liable to the hell of fire. We often devalue each other in order to make ourselves feel more secure, and Jesus says that when we do that, we are making ourselves less secure. We’re pouring God’s judgment upon ourselves whenever we hate another person. We’re pouring God’s judgment upon ourselves whenever we make up these stories in our own minds about how terrible someone else is. It seems crazy to us that just hating someone is tantamount to murder, but Jesus says it is. It makes sense that a murderer is deserving of death, but are we really deserving of death in God’s eyes just for hating each other? Well, yeah. Jesus is pointing out just how darn important we are to God. We are God’s children, the apple of God’s eye. So when we are hateful and hurtful to each other, yeah, it really upsets God. Imagine a parent whose child is being bullied so that they feel badly about themselves and withdrawing inward. Do you think that parent is going to be pretty hacked off at those other kids. That’s how God feels when he sees us hating and hurting each other. That’s how God feels when he sees us making up our stories about how others are the villains and we are the heroes. “Get the log out of your eye,” Jesus says. How can you say to your neighbor, “Friend, let me take out the speck in your eye”, when you yourself do not see the log in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your neighbor’s eye. (Luke 6:42) We’ll also see the other with compassion rather than self-righteous judgment, because when we take the log out of our own eye, when we see clearly our own mess, then we can see another’s mess with greater compassion. When we see ourselves clearly and accept our mess, then we are no longer threatened by someone else’s mess. Further, Jesus teaches, there is something greater than ourselves in which we can place our security. There is something greater than our own power and our own righteousness in which we can place our security. There is a greater story than the countless self-serving stories our brains make up. That something greater is our eternal, loving Father, and that greater story, is the Gospel story of love and creation, sin and redemption, second chances and reconciliation. That’s the story Jesus led the people to when he told them the parable of the fig tree. He first had to break them down and divest them of their false, self-serving narratives. Then, laid bare, empty, and not the least bit afraid, Jesus clothed them and filled them up with the true story of God’s love for us and his striving with us. In the parable Jesus told, there is the worthless fig tree which is taking up good soil and producing nothing, and the gardener says, “Give it another year. Let me work with it. Let me tend it and care for it. Let me give it even better soil, and we’ll see if it can then bear fruit.” Looking at the idea of the garden, where were we all planted? The Garden of Eden. The fig tree is humanity. Jesus is telling us that despite how often we give up on ourselves and how often we give up on each other, we’re in his garden, and he wants to keep striving with us. Does this mean, that once we accept Jesus, that bad things won’t happen to us, or we will be perfectly shielded from tragedy or unexpected death? No. Even while loving Jesus and loving each other, we can still die unexpectedly and suddenly. When people do, however, our brains don’t need to make up stories about how they must be bad and such tragedy can’t happen to us. Jesus has given us the true story, that when we die, either tragically and unexpectedly or at a ripe old age, we continue on living with the Gardener. We need not fear death because in death we are transformed from life to life. Accept and believe that story, Jesus says, and then let it be the story not only of your death, but of your life. Let yourselves trust in God enough that you no longer have to make up stories about each other when you harm one another, but instead, I was going to say “put manure around each other,” following the parable Jesus told, but that doesn’t quite seem to work. Jesus is saying that when you hurt one another, strive with each other. Offer to one another, the compassion and forgiveness that God has given to you. Rather than making up stories about one another, accept he story in which we are all deserving of death, because we all have hatred in our hearts, and accept the rest of that story in which God does not say condemned, but rather says, “forgiven,” the story in which God calls us beloved. Accept and live the story in which there is still uncertainty in the world, but that uncertainty spurns us on to greater love, greater forgiveness, greater urgency in our desire for reconciliation, because when we love one another as God loves us, we don’t want one more day to go by with the other still hurting. When we have enmity in our hearts toward someone and we’re living God’s story, then we don’t want one more day to go by without having embraced that person and offered and received forgiveness and love. Living God’s story, trusting in his story, and placing our security in his story, we change the narratives we make up about others, no longer making them villains, but calling them beloved and forgiven. Amen.

Father Snort
Changing the Narrative - Audio

Father Snort

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2016 11:42


Brad Sullivan 3 Lent, Year C February 28, 2016 Saint Mark’s Episcopal Church, Bay City, TX Luke 13:1-9 Changing the Narrative - Did you hear about those poor Galileans whom Pilate killed? - Oh that was awful. Pilate is a monster isn’t he. - I hear he mixed their blood in with their sacrifices. - What? That’s sacrilege! - How would that even work? - I don’t know. They must have been awful people though. - That’s true, for God to have something like that happen to them. Oh hey Jesus, did you hear about those awful Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices? We don’t know exactly what the conversation was, but Jesus responded by asking them if they thought the Galileans whom Pilate killed were worse sinners than anyone else. By Jesus’ response and by what we know about how people tend to talk about things, we can guess that Jesus was spot on, and the conversation about the tragedy of the day was quickly turning into nasty stories about those awful Galileans and thanksgiving to God that the speakers were not like those awful Galileans. The people talking about the Galileans were trying to make sense of their world. They’d heard about this awful killing by Pilate. They were probably horrified, sad, frightened, and threatened all at once, and so their brains did what peoples’ brains do. They started making up stories to go along with what they had heard, to make sense of it. We do this all the time. Someone is very rude to us, and our brains immediately start making up stories about that person, about how they’re just a jerk, or about how they’ve got some misplaced grudge against us. In reality, the person who was rude was just having a bad day, and we met them in a bad moment, but we don’t know that story. We only know the stories our brains make up about what a perpetual jerk that person is. It doesn’t matter to our brains if the stories are true or not. Our brains are hardwired for story. Stories are how we make sense of our world, and when our brains make up these little stories, we get biochemically rewarded for having made sense of the world. It also helps that we usually make ourselves the heroes and others the villains in these stories, right? So that’s what the people talking about the dead Galileans were doing, and then Jesus did what he does so well. He said, “That’s not the right story, guys,” and he gave them a new story. “No, they weren’t worse sinners than anybody else. Tragic, unexpected death can happen to anyone at anytime.” “Well thanks a lot, Jesus.” Our brains hate that. Chaos, uncertainty, threats to our survival. Our brains want to rest easy, knowing that we’re going to be ok. Jesus keeps saying, “Guys, you can rest easy, knowing that you’re going to be ok, you just don’t get to do it by making up stories about how terrible everyone else is and about how righteous and therefore ‘God protected’ you are.” In Matthew 5:21-22, Jesus said, ‘You have heard that it was said to those of ancient times, “You shall not murder”; and “whoever murders shall be liable to judgment.” But I say to you that if you are angry with a brother or sister, you will be liable to judgment; and if you insult a brother or sister, you will be liable to the council; and if you say, “You fool”, you will be liable to the hell of fire. We often devalue each other in order to make ourselves feel more secure, and Jesus says that when we do that, we are making ourselves less secure. We’re pouring God’s judgment upon ourselves whenever we hate another person. We’re pouring God’s judgment upon ourselves whenever we make up these stories in our own minds about how terrible someone else is. It seems crazy to us that just hating someone is tantamount to murder, but Jesus says it is. It makes sense that a murderer is deserving of death, but are we really deserving of death in God’s eyes just for hating each other? Well, yeah. Jesus is pointing out just how darn important we are to God. We are God’s children, the apple of God’s eye. So when we are hateful and hurtful to each other, yeah, it really upsets God. Imagine a parent whose child is being bullied so that they feel badly about themselves and withdrawing inward. Do you think that parent is going to be pretty hacked off at those other kids. That’s how God feels when he sees us hating and hurting each other. That’s how God feels when he sees us making up our stories about how others are the villains and we are the heroes. “Get the log out of your eye,” Jesus says. How can you say to your neighbor, “Friend, let me take out the speck in your eye”, when you yourself do not see the log in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your neighbor’s eye. (Luke 6:42) We’ll also see the other with compassion rather than self-righteous judgment, because when we take the log out of our own eye, when we see clearly our own mess, then we can see another’s mess with greater compassion. When we see ourselves clearly and accept our mess, then we are no longer threatened by someone else’s mess. Further, Jesus teaches, there is something greater than ourselves in which we can place our security. There is something greater than our own power and our own righteousness in which we can place our security. There is a greater story than the countless self-serving stories our brains make up. That something greater is our eternal, loving Father, and that greater story, is the Gospel story of love and creation, sin and redemption, second chances and reconciliation. That’s the story Jesus led the people to when he told them the parable of the fig tree. He first had to break them down and divest them of their false, self-serving narratives. Then, laid bare, empty, and not the least bit afraid, Jesus clothed them and filled them up with the true story of God’s love for us and his striving with us. In the parable Jesus told, there is the worthless fig tree which is taking up good soil and producing nothing, and the gardener says, “Give it another year. Let me work with it. Let me tend it and care for it. Let me give it even better soil, and we’ll see if it can then bear fruit.” Looking at the idea of the garden, where were we all planted? The Garden of Eden. The fig tree is humanity. Jesus is telling us that despite how often we give up on ourselves and how often we give up on each other, we’re in his garden, and he wants to keep striving with us. Does this mean, that once we accept Jesus, that bad things won’t happen to us, or we will be perfectly shielded from tragedy or unexpected death? No. Even while loving Jesus and loving each other, we can still die unexpectedly and suddenly. When people do, however, our brains don’t need to make up stories about how they must be bad and such tragedy can’t happen to us. Jesus has given us the true story, that when we die, either tragically and unexpectedly or at a ripe old age, we continue on living with the Gardener. We need not fear death because in death we are transformed from life to life. Accept and believe that story, Jesus says, and then let it be the story not only of your death, but of your life. Let yourselves trust in God enough that you no longer have to make up stories about each other when you harm one another, but instead, I was going to say “put manure around each other,” following the parable Jesus told, but that doesn’t quite seem to work. Jesus is saying that when you hurt one another, strive with each other. Offer to one another, the compassion and forgiveness that God has given to you. Rather than making up stories about one another, accept he story in which we are all deserving of death, because we all have hatred in our hearts, and accept the rest of that story in which God does not say condemned, but rather says, “forgiven,” the story in which God calls us beloved. Accept and live the story in which there is still uncertainty in the world, but that uncertainty spurns us on to greater love, greater forgiveness, greater urgency in our desire for reconciliation, because when we love one another as God loves us, we don’t want one more day to go by with the other still hurting. When we have enmity in our hearts toward someone and we’re living God’s story, then we don’t want one more day to go by without having embraced that person and offered and received forgiveness and love. Living God’s story, trusting in his story, and placing our security in his story, we change the narratives we make up about others, no longer making them villains, but calling them beloved and forgiven. Amen.

St. Francis Episcopal Church Podcast
February 28, 2016 Lent 3 Sermon

St. Francis Episcopal Church Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2016 10:16


sermon audio from the 11 a.m. Lent 3 sermon at St. Francis Episcopal Church in Houston, TX on 2-28-16

tx sermon lent lent 3 scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
St. John's Lutheran Church Conover

St. John's Lutheran Church is a vibrant congregation with active adult ministries and numerous opportunities for children and youth. Founded in 1798, St. John's continues to grow being nourished by the Word of God.

god worse sinners founded scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 john's lutheran church
Central UMC Florence
Perishing Differently

Central UMC Florence

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2016 14:06


Central UMC, Florence SC

perishing scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 florence south carolina central umc
Weekly Messages
The Fruit of Repentance - Audio

Weekly Messages

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2016 18:39


We are called to bear fruit. Repentance is not just something we do; it is a continual part of who and what we are as the body of Christ. The fruit of repentance helps us to focus on the power of God to bring change in our life and in the world.

god jesus christ fruit repentance scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Another Sermon Podcast
The Fruit of Repentance - Audio

Another Sermon Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2016 18:39


We are called to bear fruit. Repentance is not just something we do; it is a continual part of who and what we are as the body of Christ. The fruit of repentance helps us to focus on the power of God to bring change in our life and in the world.

god jesus christ fruit repentance scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Another Sermon Podcast
The Fruit of Repentance - Audio - Audio

Another Sermon Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2016 18:39


We are called to bear fruit. Repentance is not just something we do; it is a continual part of who and what we are as the body of Christ. The fruit of repentance helps us to focus on the power of God to bring change in our life and in the world.

god jesus christ fruit repentance scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Another Sermon Podcast
The Fruit of Repentance - Audio - Audio

Another Sermon Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2016 18:39


We are called to bear fruit. Repentance is not just something we do; it is a continual part of who and what we are as the body of Christ. The fruit of repentance helps us to focus on the power of God to bring change in our life and in the world.

god jesus christ fruit repentance scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Another Sermon Podcast
The Fruit of Repentance - Audio

Another Sermon Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2016 18:39


We are called to bear fruit. Repentance is not just something we do; it is a continual part of who and what we are as the body of Christ. The fruit of repentance helps us to focus on the power of God to bring change in our life and in the world.

god jesus christ fruit repentance scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Sequoyah Hills Baptist Church
Disciples and Tragedy - Audio

Sequoyah Hills Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2015 34:06


Walking with Jesus, Led by the Spirit

Vintage 242
Fruit of the Spirit in Your Life - Audio

Vintage 242

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2015 31:52


Steve follows up Scott's message from last week by unpacking God's love of the fruit of the spirit and his expectation for our lives to bear fruit. Steve uses Scripture to examine what Jesus has to say about fruit in our lives and how we can bear fruit!

god jesus christ scripture fruit repentance fruit of the spirit scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 series: sunday morning
Vintage 242
Fruit of the Spirit in Your Life - Audio

Vintage 242

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2015 31:52


Steve follows up Scott's message from last week by unpacking God's love of the fruit of the spirit and his expectation for our lives to bear fruit. Steve uses Scripture to examine what Jesus has to say about fruit in our lives and how we can bear fruit!

god jesus christ scripture fruit repentance fruit of the spirit scripture: luke 13:1-13:9 series: sunday morning
Walridge Baptist Church
Except Ye Repent

Walridge Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2015 40:37


The universal call to repentance

salvation repentance repent scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
CrossPoint Baptist Church
The Fig Tree and Repentance - Audio

CrossPoint Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2015 49:40


CrossPoint Baptist Church

repentance fig tree scripture: luke 13:1-13:9
Coast Bible Church
Tragedy Can Strike at Any Moment - Audio

Coast Bible Church

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2015 44:27


Teaching on Luke 13:1-9, Pastor Neil asks us to consider the fragility of life and to make peace with God, through faith in Jesus Christ, before our lives are required of us.

Coast Bible Church
Tragedy Can Strike at Any Moment - Audio

Coast Bible Church

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2015 44:27


Teaching on Luke 13:1-9, Pastor Neil asks us to consider the fragility of life and to make peace with God, through faith in Jesus Christ, before our lives are required of us.

Crossway Christian Church
Hard Hearts, Barren Branches, and Real Repentance

Crossway Christian Church

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2014 43:58


God is speaking, God is calling to us, but have we made ourselves impenetrable to his voice? Jesus looks at those who have insinuated themselves from hearing God speak, and says 'You'd better listen carefully. You need to repent, for all of the reasons you think you're safe and in no danger from the judgment of God are wrong.'

Central Baptist Church of New York City
40 Days of Purpose: Praying For God's Best - Audio

Central Baptist Church of New York City

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2014 32:25


40 Days of Purpose: Praying For God's Best

praying 40 days god's best best audio scripture: luke 13:1-13:9