
Acts of God: Wisdom & Power
God’s Word must be proclaimed regardless of the response. Paul, in writing to encourage the young pastor Timothy, encourages him to endure the same hardship for the sake of the Gospel.

Acts of God: Safeguarding
Everyone dies. No matter how rich or poor, no matter how powerful or downtrodden, no matter how successful or how much of a failure they seemed to be, every single person dies.

Acts of God: Attention & Care
The problems we find in our Scripture readings may be unfamiliar to us, but they are not unrelatable. In our Gospel reading, experienced fishermen face their greatest fear—an overpowering storm.

Acts of God: Development
People have used military might, political power, or the promise of temporal happiness to expand the kingdom of God. These tactics may make the kingdom of God appear to grow in its sphere of influence, but it is a hollow development.

Acts of God: Marked by Blessing
The center of everything worth seeing is Christ. He defeated and has locked up the one whose head he crushed, but whom we see so often in the temptations that surround us and rise within us.

Acts of God: Real Rest
How do you read the Law? This may sound like a question for lawyers or judges, but it’s one every single person ought to be able to answer.

Acts of God: Adoption
One plus one, equals two. It’s a mathematical concept we have taken for granted since we learned arithmetic. But, today in our songs and readings, we celebrate what we cannot comprehend. Our God tells us that he is One.

Acts of God: Testimony
Israel had three annual pilgrimage festivals—the feast of Passover, Tabernacles, and Weeks. The Lord timed his outpouring of the Holy Spirit with this third pilgrimage festival which was celebrated seven weeks and a day (or fifty days) after the Passover Sabbath.

See Him: Who Leaves Parting Gifts
For forty days, the Church has cried, “Christ is risen! He is risen indeed!” But forty days after Jesus rose from the dead, he departed from his disciples and was enthroned in glory in heaven.

See Him: Who Is Love
We must strive to reflect the love of Christ and his obedience to his Father in our lives. This isn’t optional or merely for overachievers. The branches, to connect with last week’s Gospel lesson, bear corresponding fruit of necessity.

See Him: Who Makes You Fruitful
Today’s Gospel gives us a rich metaphor for the Christian life. Jesus says I am the true vine…You are the branches. Of course, we cannot help but see that the branches are totally reliant upon the Vine for everything. So it is with Christians.

See Him: Who Is Your Good Shepherd
I am the Good Shepherd. I know my sheep and my sheep know me. Yet as we consider this relationship, it’s a bad bargain for the shepherd!

See Him: Who Is Your Advocate
The life and hope of the Church is built upon the Gospel of Jesus Christ. So what is the Gospel? The Gospel is simply good news. But any type of good news consists of two critical components: the event and the effect.

See Him: Who Brings Peace
Peace. What does this word mean to you? Does your mind race to international affairs or domestic issues? Do you think of smoothing over things at the office or handling matters at home? Sometimes a word can be so full of meaning and ideas that we cannot adequately define it.

See Him: Who Conquered Death
After more than a month of humble repentance and prayer, God’s people gather to celebrate the consumption of their prayers. Death has been defanged. The grave has been overhauled—no longer the end of life, but the beginning of eternal life.

Spared: And Strengthened
Tonight, our focus is on the enduring, enriching, and encouraging sacrament of Holy Communion.

Spared: From Humiliation for Celebration
With repentant hearts, we join our Lord’s triumphant entry into Jerusalem, confident in his everlasting rule, hailing him as our Eternal King.

Spared: Redeemed & Reunited
A snake on a pole is a hideous sight! It was a reminder of the pain inflicted by the snake’s bite and even more a reminder of the cause of the snake’s bite—sin. Now we, too, look in Lent at something initially hideous.

Spared: From Death for Life
A snake on a pole is a hideous sight! It was a reminder of the pain inflicted by the snake’s bite and even more a reminder of the cause of the snake’s bite—sin. Now we, too, look in Lent at something initially hideous.

Spared: By God’s Wisdom Not Ours
Jesus could not have accomplished his mission if he avoided suffering. Jesus could not redeem sinners without a shameful death on the cross.