Épisodes

  • The Pearl of Great Price | The Parables of Jesus
    Mar 21 2024

    Have you ever held a real pearl in your hand or seen one? It's quite an amazing experience. Pearls come in all shapes and sizes, each holding a unique beauty. Today, I have something small in my pocket that I'd like to share with you. If this were a pearl, it would hold great value due to the time and effort it takes to create one.

    Pearls, formed over months or even years, are a testament to patience and perseverance. Consider the largest pearl ever found, valued at an astonishing $100,000,000. This immense value reflects the rarity and beauty of pearls, reminding us of their significance.

    Yet, tonight, our focus isn't solely on physical pearls but on the metaphorical "Pearl of Great Price" mentioned in Matthew 13:45-46. This parable, among others in the same chapter, serves as a conduit for conveying heavenly truths through earthly stories.

    One interpretation suggests the merchant in the parable represents a lost soul seeking salvation. However, a closer examination reveals inconsistencies with other scriptures. Instead, a more profound interpretation emerges: Jesus is the merchant, and the church is the pearl of great price. Jesus, the merchant, willingly paid the ultimate price with His own blood to purchase the church, aligning with numerous scriptures emphasizing salvation as a gift from God.

    Now, let's consider the three evaluations of the precious pearl:

    Firstly, the pearl is a product of suffering. Just as a pearl forms from an irritant within an oyster, Christ bore our sins and suffered on the cross for our redemption. He transformed our imperfections into something beautiful, just like a pearl.

    Secondly, the pearl is sought after diligently. Jesus actively seeks and saves the lost, prompting us to respond to His call and accept His gift of salvation.

    Lastly, the pearl is bought at great cost. Jesus willingly paid the price for our redemption, enduring unimaginable suffering out of His boundless love for us.

    In light of these evaluations, what should our response be? We should strive to live lives without blemish, reflecting the purity and beauty of the pearl. We should respond to the prompting of the Holy Spirit, acknowledging the price paid for our salvation and surrendering our lives to Christ completely.

    As I conclude, I invite you to consider your response to the "Pearl of Great Price." Have you surrendered your life to Christ? Are you striving to live a life that honors the sacrifice He made for you? The choice is yours.

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    26 min
  • The Rich Fool | The Parables of Jesus
    Mar 21 2024

    In this passage from Luke 12:13-21, we delve into the timeless wisdom of Scripture, exploring the profound truths it offers us. Through vivid imagery and relatable analogies, we're reminded of the eternal significance of our choices and priorities.

    As followers of Christ, we're called to navigate life with wisdom and discernment, recognizing the tension between the temporal and the eternal. Just as two jars symbolize different paths—one filled with treasures of heaven, the other laden with worldly pursuits—we're challenged to examine our hearts and actions.

    The parable of the rich fool serves as a cautionary tale, revealing the folly of placing our trust in earthly possessions rather than investing in eternal riches. We're reminded of the fleeting nature of material wealth and the ultimate accountability we face before God.

    As stewards of God's blessings, we're called to use our resources wisely, prioritizing service to God and others over selfish desires. This requires a shift in perspective—a deliberate choice to lay up treasures in heaven rather than on earth.

    Through introspection and prayer, we're prompted to evaluate our lives and align our priorities with God's Kingdom purposes. The invitation to salvation is extended, urging us to surrender our lives to Christ and embark on a journey of eternal significance.

    In essence, this passage challenges us to live with intentionality, seeking first the Kingdom of God and trusting Him to provide for our needs. It's a call to embrace a life of sacrificial love and eternal impact, knowing that true richness is found in being rich toward God.

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    31 min
  • The Prodigal | The Parables of Jesus
    Mar 21 2024

    Few parables are as rich and impactful as our Lord's masterful story of the Prodigal Son found in Luke 15. This narrative masterpiece encapsulates the entirety of the Gospel in vivid storytelling form.

    The preacher astutely divides the parable into three poignant phases that unveil the depths of human sin and rebellion, combined with the incomprehensible forgiveness, love and restoration offered by the heavenly Father.

    Phase 1 - "Give Me" (vv. 11-13): We witness the brazen rejection of the younger son, who arrogantly demands his inheritance prematurely, essentially wishing his father dead. This depicts the height of man's selfish depravity, squandering God's blessings to indulge fleshly lusts in unrestrained "riotous living." The famine that ensues foreshadows the emptiness and want that inevitably results from pursuing sin.

    Phase 2 - "O Me" (vv. 14-19): Having hit rock-bottom destitution, feeding pigs and longing for their carob pods, the young man "comes to himself." This beautifully depicts the Holy Spirit's conviction that precedes repentance. He resolves to return home and beg to be made a hired servant, having no grounds to be received as a son. This pictures the humility and contriteness required to approach a holy God for mercy.

    Phase 3 - "Make Me" (vv. 20-32): In one of Scripture's most tender scenes, the father (representing God) sees his son "while he was still a great way off," runs to him, and smothers him with kisses of unconditional love and acceptance. This father's compassion perfectly reflects the heart of our heavenly Father, who continually pursues His wayward children.

    Instead of the servant status the son requests, the father lavishly bestows the robe of righteousness, the signet ring of authority, sandals of dignity, and a celebratory feast honoring the son's restoration from death to life. This glorious depiction of saving grace reveals that God's love is not contingent on our performances, but solely on His goodness and mercy.

    The elder brother's resentment exposes the self-righteous spirit that blindly rejects grace. Yet the parable climaxes with the father's entreaty to join the celebratory feast, underscoring God's desire that none be left outside the blessing of His Son.

    This rich narrative parabolically dismantles works-based religion, exalting the unmerited favor of being clothed in Christ's righteousness through repentant faith alone. We are all spiritually bankrupt prodigals deserving nothing, yet granted unspeakable riches through the Father's extravagant love.

    As shepherds, we must continually echo this summons to come home through the Gospel, beckoning wandering prodigals to experience the lavish and unrestrained affection of the Father for all who return in repentance and submission to His mercy in Christ. The Prodigal Son parable is the apex of God's redemptive story.

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    29 min
  • When You Need a Miracle, Just Trust in Jesus | Sunday AM
    Mar 15 2024

    When the Impossible Requires a Miracle

    In John 4, we meet a desperate nobleman whose son was deathly ill. Having exhausted every human option, he came to Jesus pleading for him to intervene before it was too late. This account provides a powerful model for how to respond when life's crises thrust us into situations that can only be remedied by the miracle-working power of God.

    Some in the crowd that day merely hoped to witness an astounding feat, viewing Jesus as little more than a sideshow spectacle. But for the anguished father, cautious intellectual curiosity was not enough. His hopeless plight forced him to cast himself in raw desperation at Christ's feet, crying "Lord, I need a miracle!"

    Jesus' initial response exposed the condition of the onlookers' faulty faith: "Unless you see signs and wonders...you will never believe." How often do we make this same demand for Jesus to dazzle us before fully embracing Him? The father exemplified bulldog faith, pleading for Christ to act before it was eternally too late.

    Then Jesus spoke those words the dying soul desperately needs: "Go...your son will live!" At this pivot point, the nobleman had to decide if he truly believed Jesus' promise, even if he could not see it manifested. He passed the test, tenaciously clinging to Christ's word and leaving the "how" to Him. This is genuine faith - embracing God's Word above human limitation.

    When we face impossible situations - terminal illness, prodigal children, marriage crises, persecution - Scripture drives us to turn to Jesus with bold, persistent appeals for His power to intervene. We must reject viewing Him merely as miracle-worker, and wholly cast ourselves at His feet as the only source of resurrection life.

    Often He will stretch our faith by not giving immediate visible confirmation, but simply a promise that requires us to go "all in" by faith. Like this father, may we be those who embrace Jesus' Word, even when it defies human logic and limitation. For He is "the Resurrection and the Life" - is anything beyond His power? So let us bring our utter impossibilities to the only One who can resolve them, take Him at His Word, and then watch what He will do for those who believe.

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    46 min
  • Palm Sunday | Easter Changes Everything
    Mar 21 2024

    As we prepare our hearts for Palm Sunday and the solemn celebrations of Easter week, the poignant events surrounding Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem take on profound significance. On that day, our Lord fulfilled centuries of messianic prophecy and set into motion the culmination of God's redemptive plan for humanity.

    The Gospel of John provides vivid details of the day we now call Palm Sunday. Just six days before the Passover, John 12 depicts Jesus arriving at Bethany, just outside Jerusalem. There he was feted with a supper in the home of his friends Mary, Martha and Lazarus - the man he had recently raised from the dead. This miraculous sign sparked great excitement among the crowds who had witnessed it firsthand.

    The next day, on the Jewish people's preparation day for Passover, Jesus made his way to Jerusalem. Fulfilling Zechariah's prophecy of the humble, righteous king arriving on a donkey's colt, Jesus was welcomed by adoring crowds waving palm branches and shouting "Hosanna!" This joyous scene represented the people's great hope that their long-awaited Messiah had finally arrived to establish his kingdom and overthrow Roman oppression.

    Yet in tragic irony, many of these voices praising the Son of David would soon turn, crying "Crucify him!" just days later. The fickle crowd celebrated a conquering king without understanding the true nature of Christ's mission - to be the suffering Servant who would bear our sins and be sacrificed for our redemption.

    From the ultimate vantage point of God's sovereign plan, the Lamb of God was making his way to the altar of Calvary. The place - Jerusalem, the city of peace - was where heaven's peace would be secured for all who placed their faith in Christ's atoning work. Jew and Gentile alike, all people represented in that stirring Palm Sunday scene, were the diverse ones for whom Christ would ransom with his very life.

    While the Jewish leaders clashed with this upstart "king," Jesus remained focused on his purpose - to give his life as the perfect, sinless sacrifice so that we might experience life abundantly through faith in him. Just as the Psalmist declared, our help is found in the name of the Lord who redeems and sustains us.

    As modern followers preparing to remember our Lord's passion, we must ask ourselves - where would we have been on that day when heaven's King arrived? Would we have joined the ranks of skeptical, indifferent onlookers? Or would we have embraced the miraculous events unfolding before us with humble faith? The call is to respond like those in the crowd who recognized Jesus as Lord based on the testimony of his works and words. His deeds of power and authority vindicated the Truth he spoke - that he alone is the Way to reconciliation with God.

    May this Easter season find us recommitting to walk intimately with the risen Savior, allowing the life-changing power of his death and resurrection to continually transform us. Just as the course of human history was forever altered by that first Palm Sunday, so our destinies can be redirected from sin and despair to hope and eternal life as we crown Christ the Lord of our lives.

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    45 min
  • Easter Is Coming | Easter Changes Everything
    Mar 15 2024

    As we countdown to Easter, Pastor Jennings' recent sermon from Acts 17 provides a powerful reminder of our mandate as Christians to share the life-changing message of the resurrection. Just as Paul was stirred to engage the idolatrous Athenians with the truth of the risen Christ, we too should be compelled by the reality of Easter.

    Passion for the Lost Should Be Stirred

    Like ancient Athens, our society worships at the altars of fortune, fame, fitness, and fun. Pastor Jennings rightly observed that "we worship the same gods they worshiped 2,000 years ago, we've just changed their names." Yet the Apostle Paul was "stirred" - gripped with righteous anger - when he witnessed the Athenians' spiritual blindness. Their intellectual brilliance and cultural sophistication was no substitute for knowing the one true God.

    Similarly, we live amongst spiritual "agnostics" who are ignorant of the living God, yet chase after hollow idols that can never satisfy. As believers in the risen Lord, our hearts should be broken over this lostness. With only 21 days until Easter, now is the time for a fresh passion for those perishing apart from Christ.

    A Simple Gospel Approach

    Paul did not meet the philosophers of Athens with complex philosophical arguments. Instead, his approach was simple and straightforward - preaching "Jesus and the resurrection" in a way even children could understand. He started from the beginning, declaring God as the sovereign Creator and Sustainer of all life Who can be personally known.

    We don't need to be intimidated by the intelligentsia or try to match the verbiage of modern philosophies and worldviews. The gospel is profound yet simple - Jesus died for our sins, rose from the dead, and offers forgiveness and new life to all who believe in Him. Like Paul, we can sweep away the idols and point people directly to the one true God who made us and longs for us to know Him.

    A Steadfast Resurrection Focus

    Paul was single-minded in Athens, consistently steering every conversation back to "Jesus and the resurrection." This is the core message, the hinge on which eternity turns. All people, whether the hedonistic "Epicureans" or the stoic philosophers, need to hear and understand the glorious truth that the crucified Christ has conquered death through His bodily resurrection.

    As we invite family, friends, neighbors and co-workers to Easter services, let us remain steadfastly focused on the resurrected Savior. Let us not be distracted by peripheral issues or doctrinal nuances, but lift up Jesus as the only way to know the God who gives true life, purpose and eternal destiny.

    A Timely Easter Opportunity

    Statistics show that unchurched people are most open to responding to the gospel at Christmas and Easter. With Easter only 3 weeks away, we have a critical window to be intentionally looking for those who are lost and extending Spirit-led invitations for them to hear the message of Christ's empty tomb.

    May we be stirred with a holy passion like the Apostle Paul. May our gospel presentations be simple and clear like his. And may we remain unwavering in our purpose to "preach Jesus and the resurrection" to all who will hear. For the life-giving power of the Easter message is the only hope for the spiritually dead all around us. Let us make the most of this season to share the risen Savior with all who worship at the altars of idols, that they too may experience the resurrection life only Jesus can give.

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    44 min
  • Decisive Moments | Biblical Stewardship
    Jan 26 2024

    On New Year's Day, I was disappointed to see my beloved Alabama Crimson Tide fall short against Michigan in overtime of the college football playoff semifinal. It came down to one decisive moment - a risky fourth down call that didn't pay off - ending Alabama's championship hopes.

    As an Alabama fan, it was certainly hard to take. But as I reflected more on that game, I realized that decisive moments far more consequential than a single football play happen throughout all of our lives. The decisions we make in those pivotal moments can dramatically impact the trajectory of our lives.

    I was reminded of this truth when I read a powerful sermon transcript about the most important decisive moment in human history. It describes Jesus' excruciating struggle in the Garden of Gethsemane on the night before his crucifixion. Knowing the horrific suffering that awaited him, Jesus prayed three times for God to take away this "cup" of wrath, agony, and separation from God that he would endure for humanity's salvation.

    Yet ultimately, Jesus surrendered his will, committing to drink the cup and bear our sins so that we could be forgiven. His decision in Gethsemane set the stage for our redemption on the cross. Without Jesus surrendering his will to the Father's, there would be no hope of salvation.

    The stakes of our daily choices may not be as eternally significant as Jesus' sacrifice for us. But we all face moments where we need to decide whether to follow our own will or God's. Just like Jesus, it's rarely easy even when we know God's way is best. Every day brings an invitation to surrender our desires to what God asks of us, even when it comes at great personal cost.

    As we start 2024, may we follow Jesus' example in Gethsemane, trusting that the eternal benefits of pursuing God's will far outweigh the temporary costs of sacrifice. Our attitudes and actions in the small, daily decisive moments can ripple into eternity.

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    46 min
  • 2 Mankind: Genesis 1:27-28 | 16 Verses That Tell The Whole Story
    Jan 25 2024

    “So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.” Genesis 1:27

    Who am I? Our culture grapples greatly with identity today. But the Bible reveals that our deepest identity is found in being made in the image and likeness of God. As His representatives on earth, we reflect His glory and steward His creation. This brings great meaning and purpose.

    Made to Bear God’s Image

    In Genesis 1, God powerfully speaks the world into being, declaring each part “good.” Yet Adam and Eve’s creation uniquely involves intimate, personal care as God forms them from dust and bone (Gen 2:7, 21-22). This signals humanity’s special calling as living images of the Creator, reminders on earth of His reign over all things.

    Made to Rule God’s World

    Being God’s image-bearers shapes Adam and Eve’s identity and purpose. He calls them to fill and subdue the earth (Gen 1:28), extending the garden until God’s glory covers everything through their offspring. They are to exercise dominion—godly stewardship—over creation, harnessing its potential for human flourishing while never exploiting it (Gen 1:28). As representatives of the King, they find meaning in caring for His world and making Him known.

    Made for Relationship with God

    Above all, Adam and Eve are made for intimate fellowship with their Maker as He walks with them in the cool of the garden (Gen 3:8). More than anything we do, bearing God’s image means we are designed for loving relationship with Him, the One our souls are restless for.

    Tragically, this is shattered when Adam and Eve betray God’s loving trust. Now we seek our own glory instead of reflecting His image. Banished from God’s presence, His creation, one another, and even ourselves, humanity spirals into the darkness of sin.

    Restored to God’s Image

    Yet God promises a Rescuer who will defeat evil and restore us as image-bearers (Gen 3:15). That Rescuer is Jesus Christ, the perfect image of God (Heb 1:3), who redeems and recreates all who trust in Him. As His new creation people (2 Cor 5:17), we reclaim our calling to live as faithful representatives of the King until His kingdom comes fully when Christ returns. Then the whole earth will resound again with the beautiful declaration that God’s creation is supremely good.

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    46 min