Where Are the Nine?

Christ Cleanses Ten Lepers (Luke 17:11-19)

Jesus healed ten lepers but only one came back to thank Him and praise God for the miraculous healing. Jesus asked, “Were there not ten cleansed? But where are the nine?”

“Gratitude is an offering precious in the sight of God, and it is one that the poorest of us can make and not be poorer but richer for having made it.”

A.W. Tozer

Sermon for August 16, 2020 – AUDIO | TEXT PDF

Where are the Nine?

ROMANS – Paid in Full

Why the Gospel is Such Good News!

Rome was the most powerful city in the world––but Paul didn’t send this letter to:

• The Emperor of Rome –– The good news of Salvation is not in Government…
• Nor the Senate, or Courts of Law –– Salvation is not in the Courts of Law
• Or the Philosophers, or Rich or Powerful –– Salvation is Not in Man’s Wisdom!
• This Message is TO THE CHURCH! –– The Kingdom of God, the Pillar & Ground of Truth.

Rome also worshipped POWER, but Paul reveals a power greater than world empires, The Gospel is the POWER OF GOD to Save Humanity. And This Paragraph is the Heart of Romans––the Heart of the Gospel (Romans 3:21–26).
NOTE: Audio from Sunday’s sermon, video is a pre-recorded version.

Sermon for August 2, 2020 – AUDIO | TEXT PDF

ROMANS–Paid in Full

The Light of the World

There are two competing belief systems––from the world and from God. In the world’s belief system, your self worth is determined by your performance and what others think about you. However, with God, your self worth is not based on your success or failure or what others think about you––it is based on the truth of God’s love and purpose. This is why so many people who live for other’s acceptance, die by their rejection.
We are introduced to a man born blind in John chapter 9. And before it’s all over, he will be rejected by his parents, mocked and scorned by the powerful Pharisees, and yet he defends Jesus Christ against their attacks! In other words: In the End He Doesn’t Need the Acceptance of his Parents or Approval of the Pharisees, Because Jesus Had Opened His Eyes.

Sermon for Sunday, July 26, 2020 – AUDIO | TEXT PDF

The Light of the World

Battle For Peace

The news is so negative. It has always been that way. However, today it seems like the negativity carries a megaphone and a bat. Despair echoes from every direction. Conflicts boil over in every relationship. We are paralyzed with anxiety and wield our opinions like swords. The devil dances with delight.

It is time for disciples of Jesus to go on the offensive. This is the moment to fight for peace. Now is the hour to rise to the occasion. But beware, our weapons are not physical, but spiritual. The battleground is not outward, but inward. The war is won by overcoming evil with good.

The path to peace does not come from human rulers, medical advances, or powerful organizations. Our peace is greater than any worldly calm. It comes from a transcendent God.

“And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” (Phil. 4:7)

How often have I come to those words in search of peace and left frustrated!? I felt my peace should rise each morning with the dew, but it was gone just as quickly.

I discovered that peace does not come from chanting these words like a magic formula. They are not an ointment you rub on a bad day. The peace of God is a promise that depends upon tangible actions on my part. I must engage in the battle for peace, and God will ensure I win.

The strategy for winning the battle for peace is laid out in Philippians 4. Here are a few essential tactics.

Stand Together. A divided army is a defeated army. You see, there were two ladies in Philippi who were arguing, and the church felt the pain. Paul’s advice to them was to, “agree in the Lord” (Phil. 4:2). How can we spread peace, when there is no peace among us?

The blazing passions of our times are setting fires among believers. Now is the time to lay down your opinions and “pursue the things that make for peace” (Rom. 14:19). More than ever your world needs you to be a “blessed peacemaker” (Matt. 5:9).

Hold on To Joy. When days are dark it is hard to see the light of joy. You must fight for it. You must hunt it down. But it is there, in an endless reservoir, when you look in the right place. “Rejoice in the Lord always!” (Phil. 4:4). Find your joy in the Lord, for it does not crumble when the world quakes.

What makes you happy? Your anxieties reveal your true source of joy. When you are anxious about things that are temporary, worldly or selfish; when you agonize over the loss of your pleasures and plans, it is time to lay down your anxieties and “rejoice in the Lord.” Counteract every crushing report of despair with a reason to hope and rejoice in the Lord (this was the practice of the prophets and the psalmists).

Talk with God. I’m not surprised that people are afraid, uncertain, and angry. The problems of this world are too great for us. Even a microscopic virus is too great for us! But we are not alone. Through prayer we can rest in His ensuring wisdom and power. Through prayer we can fill the halls of our hearts with thanksgiving and praise. We need more prayer warriors who will lay down their constant need to be seen, and battle for peace on their knees (Phil. 4:6, 11-13).

Focus Your Thoughts. You are what you think! When our thoughts are dominated by the conspiracies, uncertainties, and violence of our day, we will be walking zombies of despair, or even worse, marching soldiers of ruin.

Guard the gate of your mind like a sentinel. Beat back the hordes of negativity. Only open the eternal real estate of your heart to things that are “true, honorable, just, pure, lovely, commendable, excellent and praiseworthy” (Phil. 4:8). In this culture, if you passively sit in your chair your mind will be captured by a parade of pessimism. It is time to break the stupor, get out of our chair, and go on the offensive and focus our thoughts on what is godly!

Take Action. The battle for peace has one more piece. Put on your shoes and do something to serve the Lord. Paul wrote, “What you have learned and received and heard and seen in me—practice these things, and the God of peace will be with you.” (Phil. 4:9). The time you spend helping the weak, saving the lost, serving the saved, healing the broken, will fill you with more peace than another hour plugged in to this cynical culture.

Lay down your pillow of escapism. Lay down your passive guzzling of pessimism. And bring the peace of God into a reality in your world.

Paul’s prayer is mine.

“Now may the Lord of peace Himself give you peace always in every way.
The Lord be with you all.” (2 Thess. 3:16)

Tim Jennings,
Castleberry church of Christ, River Oaks, Texas. 

From Focus Online