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Sermons about Moses
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Between a Rock and a Wet Place
The Crossing of the Red Sea is more than a childhood story. It's more than a miraculous story of God's provision. The implications run much deeper for anyone who claims to be saved. This story is a paradigm of salvation itself, complete with a mediator, and a Way from death to life. Are we saved? Have we changed? And are we small enough?
Stand Firm in Christian Freedom, Part 2
Christianity is freedom not bondage. In Galatians 5:1, Paul gives two key insights concerning Christian freedom. First, he states the fact of Christian freedom (v. 1a). The purpose of Christ’s redemption was to bring about the freedom of the believer. Second, he sets forth the response to this freedom (v. 1b). The response of the believer is to stand firm in this freedom. These two key insights embody the argument of the whole letter. Since the Galatians were not children of Hagar—the slave woman—but sons of Sarah—the free woman (v. 31) they are to stand firm in this freedom by the power of the Holy Spirit and not return to living under the slavery of law, whether it is the Mosaic Covenant or any kind of legal system.
Matthew 5:1-12 THE BE-ATTITUDES, THE BE-ETHICS, OR THE BLESSINGS OF KEEPING THE COVENANT?
Was Jesus preaching on the morals of the Kingdom of God or was He, as Matthew is portraying Him, the Greater/Ultimate Moses expounding the law from the mount? Are these attitudes that we are to possess or the covenant blessings that one receives from perfect obedience to the covenant (hint #1 here, see the demand of perfection in Matthew 5:48; hint #2 here, see that beatitude is Latin for blessed and not English for attitude, see also the spelling difference)? Listen in as Dr. Skaug expounds this passage.
Stand Firm In Christian Freedom, Part 1
Christianity is freedom not bondage. In Galatians 5:1, Paul gives two key insights concerning Christian freedom. First, he states the fact of Christian freedom (v. 1a). The purpose of Christ’s redemption was to bring about the freedom of the believer. Second, he sets forth the response to this freedom (v. 1b). The response of the believer is to stand firm in this freedom. These two key insights embody the argument of the whole letter. Since the Galatians were not children of Hagar—the slave woman—but sons of Sarah—the free woman (v. 31) they are to stand firm in this freedom by the power of the Holy Spirit and not return to living under the slavery of law, whether it is the Mosaic Covenant or any kind of legal system.
Frustrated with God
God asks Moses to be a part of a story that requires obedience on his part. Moses didn't ask for this responsibility, and he wasn't looking for a new job. He tried to tell God he wasn't able or qualified and that he didn't want to do it. Moses obeys God with hesitance, and when he does... everything gets worse in his life. Why? Why can't things work when we obey God? How do we deal with the inevitable frustrations that we experience as we obey God?
Theology 101: The Importance of Baptism
Theology 101: The Importance of Baptism
Encounters with God
Moses takes a walk and meets God in the form of a burning bush. Is this just a mystical record of a religious leader and patriarch, or is God telling us something about the way He meets all of us? There are some things to learn in this story that will help us to be sensitive and responsive to all the "burning bushes" in our lives.



