Sermon Archive

Jesus is known for pushing buttons, wise sayings, and challenging teachings. There may be no single instruction he gives us that tests our hearts and our faith more than this: Love your enemies. It goes against every inclination we have- from vengence to self-protection. Yet this teaching isn’t just an ethical consideration, it’s at the heart of our faith. Indeed, it’s our only basis for hope in this life and the next. For we are never more like God, than when we love our enemies.

Everybody wants to go to heaven, but nobody wants to die. A phrase built on an oxymoron but perfectly describes the spiritual home of so many. As Jesus teaches about the nature of the Kingdom of God in the Sermon on the Plain, what becomes painfully clear to even the most devout follower is this: Everybody wants the kingdom of God, but nobody really wants to live in it. Why? Because the values of the kingdom are painfully different than the values of our earthly kingdoms.

In order to build the best organization, you need the best personnel. Recruit well and win big. Great people make for great success. These are all wise maxims that we would do well to remember. Yet when Jesus selected his twelve apostles, they could not have been more ordinary. There was nothing special about them. Uneducated, untrained, mismatched, and without any real skill set that would lend itself to the establishment of a new kingdom. Yet this is who Jesus didn’t just welcome, but went and appointed to his team. What do we make of that? What does it say about us and the lives we are called to live today?

How would you describe the ministry of Jesus? What exactly did Jesus come to do? What were his methods for his ministry during his time on earth? We might fill in the blanks to that question in multiple ways, but I wonder how many of us would describe Jesus’s ministry in the way that Jesus did. In his own words, Jesus came “eating and drinking.” When pressed on why he did so much “eating and drinking,” Jesus said it’s the only that makes sense for him to do. Why? Because feasting is what you do when the bridegroom is here and it’s what we’re all destined to.

Friend or Foe? That was the question the Pharisees and religious gatekeepers were asking when Jesus’s popularity began to grow. Was he on their side or a threat to be eliminated? What should they do with this rabbi that was doing things they had never seen? We know from the gospels that the Pharisees would play the role of chief antagonist, but it didn’t always have to be that way. What if they had chosen to see Jesus differently? What if they had listened to his message?

LoveJeffCo is an initiative of Providence Church to love our community and support local ministries that are changing lives in Jefferson County and beyond. The ministry of Heard and Held is born from a time of deep grief and pain. In 2020, Sarah and Brendan Dunn were surprised to learn that they were expecting their first child. However, their joy would be replaced by sadness as they learned that Sarah had miscarried. In processing their grief, they began to hear from so many others that had also experienced that pain. As they heard other’s stories, they realized there was a need to help others that were enduring the same grief. From that, the ministry of “Heard and Held” was created. Listen as they discuss their story and the future of this new, needed ministry.

One of the unexpected benefits of being a part of a church isn’t what you get from it, but how essential you can become to making sure others get something from it. In God’s economy, sometimes the most essential aspect of our own faith is the power and persistence of the faith of others. When a paralyzed man had physical limitations that kept him from Jesus, it was his friend’s faith that brought him to Jesus’s feet. That lesson has a powerful lesson for all of us about the way faith, hope, and love work in the kingdom of God.

What do you want? Simple enough question, but often a complex answer. It is that question, though, that gets to the heart of discipleship. More than knowledge, discipleship is about desire. When a man “full of leprosy” approached Jesus, his request revealed his heart. What he wanted, even more than to be healed was to be made clean.

LoveJeffCo is an initiative of Providence Church to love our community and support local ministries that are changing lives in Jefferson County. One of our oldest and most significant partnerships is with Life Outreach Center. In this message, Director of LOC Cathy Gleeson shares her heart for the unborn and those that find themselves with unwanted or unexpected pregnancies. LOC is the frontline of ministry and serves a crucial role in sharing the gospel and supporting those that are most vulnerable.

Few things will get you dismissed quicker in many peoples minds than confessing you believe in angels or demons. Follow that up with believing in miracles and you’ll be put in the corner as someone that can happily be ignored. Yet Luke’s gospel is full of both. Demon possession, exorcisms, healings, raising people from the dead- that’s just a sampling of what Luke documents from those that were there. So what do we, western-enlightened people, think about things like this that can be so hard to believe? For starters, we focus on the same thing Luke does- that Jesus is all-powerful, yet unfailingly kind.

Music and singing has long been a part of Christian worship gatherings. But why do we sing when we gather together as believers? As we examine Paul’s exhortation of “singing to God with gratitude in your hearts” in Colossians 3:16, we will discuss the gift and role of music in our worship.

Jesus had them right where he wanted them. He had ministry momentum. He had a growing reputation. He had people talking. He had people ready to follow. All he needed to do is capitalize on the moment and he could’ve raised a following, funded his ministry, and set a course for revolution. Instead, he made everyone mad and just about got thrown off a cliff. Why would Jesus do this? Why waste this opportunity in front of his hometown crowd? It has everything to do with what Jesus came to do and what we’re called to follow.

When Jesus calls his disciples, he isn’t simply blessing their lives with his presence. He’s calling them to a life that looks, feels, and acts radically different than the life they’ve always lived. Often that calling will result in confusion, disagreement, and frustration. In Jesus’s calling of Peter, all of these things are present, but in the midst of all of that, Peter recognizes one core truth: Jesus loves me more than, I love me. And on that singular truth, all our hopes, plans, and ultimately or lives hang.

Christianity is full of too many rules- rules that are outdated and don’t make sense. At least that’s the narrative. When Jesus deals with Satan in the wilderness, what we learn is that it’s not about the rules. It was never about the rules. It’s about understanding, knowing, and worshipping God. In order for that to happen, we must see God correctly- for who he truly is. Jesus didn’t sin, but it wasn’t because he had more willpower than the rest of us. It’s because he knew the Father, and trusted the Father, more than the rest of us.

Jesus became a human, just like us. This tenant of Christianity is essential to understanding the life, mission, and accomplishment of Jesus. However, the fact that he took on flesh and dwelt among us is not the most important of what Jesus did- as though becoming like us was the high point of Jesus’s work. As important as his incarnation was, it’s all the ways that he’s not like us that we must understand if we truly want to understand who Jesus is and what he did.

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