Text: Isaiah 43:18-19 18 “Remember not the former things, nor consider the things of old. 19 Behold...
Scripture Mark 2:27-3:1-6 Then he said to them, “The Sabbath was made for humankind, and not humankind...
Tom Nelson outlines a sermon on why work matters.
Text: Our third sermon in this series returns us to the Scripture from the first sermon, though...
Mark 1:9-11 In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. And just as...
Then the apostles gathered around Jesus and told him everything they had done and taught. He said to them, “Come with me...
This remarkable passage not only teaches us compassion and hope for the obsessed and depressed, the cutters and crack-crazed, but also the...
We live in the age of the entrepreneur, the hipster, the startup, the app. Things new and digital often demand our attention...
After Jesus was arrested, he was taken to the home of the high priest, where he was interrogated by Jewish leaders from...
Jesus meets us where we are.
Some people are saying these are the end times. Jesus tells us these things aren’t the beginning of the end, they are merely the end of the beginning.
When Kevin stopped by his son’s grade school to pay for lunch, he met Linda—and got more than he bargained for. Because this cafeteria supervisor is more than a cook.
Four verbs: take, bless/thank, break, and give. These four verbs demonstrate for us how God’s economy works.
Jesus doesn’t take away our fears, but he can transform them.
Holiness happens when children are present.
Some Pharisees ask Jesus a question: “Should a man be allowed to divorce his wife?” They were probably trying to draw Jesus into a debate about the appropriate grounds for divorce.
Jesus challenged his followers to be “good salt,” seasoning their lives and their relationships with a rich gospel flavor.
In the intimate setting of the secret Galilean trail and the privacy of the home, Jesus uses very direct language. There are...
My mom was a Christian, but my dad was not. During junior high, my parents gave me the choice to go to church with my mom or stay home with my dad.
In a season focused anew on old symbols of ethnic pain, Jesus’ example reframes discrimination as a short-sighted and closed-hearted sin.