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Sermons about Old Testament
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The Absolute Necessity of a Crucified King
As we dive back into the gospel of Mark, Pastor Lance Parrott asks us - Why does Jesus have to be crucified. Jesus has set his face towards Jerusalem where he will handed over to lawless men, mock, beaten, and killed. But why? Hear the Word of the Lord and find out.
Don't Start Your Burn At The End Of Summer: A Christian's UV Protection
That the hearers would daily “put on Christ” for the UV (“Ultimate Victory”) protection (extra grace formula) against sin in order to stand in the brilliant light and otherwise consuming Presence of our Holy God.
Jeremiah's Farewell
Jeremiah's last oracle to God's people after they fled to Egypt to escape another war. Jeremiah's message was one of warning and judgment.
Why the Law?
The Law has a purpose, it is not meant to be overlooked or just obeyed. The Law's purpose is to lead us to Christ. It accomplishes this as it exposes all of our shortcomings and offers no way for us to hide. It is the ruthless coming to terms with our own sinfulness. This is the place where we can turn to Christ.
Preaching Christ to Our Generation
1 Corinthians 10:1-4 There is no substitute for preaching Christ to one another. Jesus called us to preach the gospel with all of its power. We need to preach from the whole Bible, both the Old and New Testaments. Today we will look at a passage that reflects back to Old Testament times and God's presence, provision to His people and the "shadow" promises of Christ.
VxV Job Pt 10: Aired 6/11/09
Series: I Choose to Bless: Suffering, Sovereignty, and a Man Named Job
VxV Job Pt 9: Aired 6/10/09
Series: I Choose to Bless: Suffering, Sovereignty, and a Man Named Job
The Fruit of Loving God's Word (Psalm 119:97-104)
It seems that too often we know so much more about God's Word than what we obey and experience the fruit of. The psalmist teaches us that wisdom and fruitfulness come when we love, meditate on, and obey God’s Word. Each of these elements is important for genuine spiritual growth and reflected in the life of the psalmist.
Jesus in the Law as seen from Exodus
As we continue our look at Jesus in the Old Testament this holiday season, this week, we are going to make a leap through Biblical history and find our way from the Garden of Eden to the giving of the Law of Moses at Mount Sinai. What lies between is the equivalent of a raw hamburger: a bloody mess. After the Garden of Eden debacle, God bars Adam and Eve from the paradise that they have ruined and sends them out. This is the short story of what happens next. --- Adam and Eve have two children, Cain and Abel. Cain kills Abel. --- Cain's great, great, great grandson is named Lamech. Lamech has a short fuse and kills a man because they got into a tussle and who knows where the local buffet for all we know. Lamech also has the distinction of being the first polygamist. --- Things get so bad on the earth that God says every man's heart and intention is evil. So he takes the one semi decent guy, Noah, and tells him to build a boat. Everyone makes fun of Noah when he tells them its going to rain and they say, "What is this rain you speak of?" God puts Noah and his family along with a gang of smelly animals in the boat and floods the earth killing everybody else. Good times. --- God makes a promise to Noah never to flood the earth again, and Noah celebrates by getting drunk one night and passing out in his tent naked. --- A few years later, all the people of the earth have a Led Zeppelin moment and build a stairway to heaven once again trying to be like God on their own terms. God knocks down their puny tower, makes scrambled eggs out of everybody's language and we seem to be right back to the mess we started. --- So God gathers a people to Himself. He starts with a guy that is old, sterile, and has a cranky unbelieving wife. His named is Abraham. --- Not believing that God keeps his word, they decided for Abraham to make a baby momma out of one of their slaves. --- Along the way, God destroys a place called Sodom because they had a morality that was so bad that it made Amsterdam seem like an Amish community. --- Finally, Abraham and his wife have a child the old fashioned way and God goes about creating a people from that son, Isaac. --- From there, God creates a people who grow and grow and grow. --- One of Abraham's relatives, a guy named Joseph with a fancy nancy coat eventually works his way from slave to assistant to head man in charge in Egypt and he saves all of God's people from a drought. --- So the people of God are like the Jefferson's and they move on up to the big house in the sky of Egypt. --- The problem is that they are incredibly fertile. They are start having a gaggle of kids, and the next leader of Egypt the Pharaoh decides to make a work force out of them with no pay. He makes them slaves. --- The groaning of God's people does not go unheard. So God raises up a cowardly, stuttering man named Moses to go to tell Pharaoh, "Let my people go." --- Pharaoh is more wise in business than He is the ways of God, and He is unwilling to release his entire workforce. --- God sends blood, frogs, locust, and every other manner of plague on Pharaoh. Still Pharaoh says nope. So God kills every first born male in the whole city except those of His people. --- Pharaoh finally lets them go but in a schizophrenic moment, decides to send his army after the people of God to kill them. --- God once again destroys his enemies by water as the people of God walk across dry land but Pharaoh's army drowns in the Red Sea. So the people of God gather together, and Moses goes up on Mount Sinai to meet with God so God can give them the law by which this new community is to live. While Moses is up on the mountain, the people grow impatient; they sell all their jewelry to goldforcash.com, make a calf, and start worshipping it. Moses in his anger breaks the Ten Commandments, burns the calf and takes the ashes grinds them up into a nasty ale and forces the people of God to drink it. God threatens to blot His people out of existence but instead extends grace to what He calls "an obstinate people." So here we are. God gives His ugly, obstinate, and unfaithful people a law. If Jesus is going to be about restoring the image of God in people, He has some work to do. As we begin to understand what Jesus would have to do with a bunch of laws that range from not eating shellfish to not working on the Sabbath, we need to understand the dedication made at the very onset.



