Revelation

Find a sermon associated with this book in the Bible below.

This sermon focuses on understanding God's holiness - His complete uniqueness, perfection, and separation from everything else - and how having a proper, bigger view of God's holiness should impact how we live and find satisfaction in Him. The message culminates in showing how God's holiness, which should rightfully separate us from Him due to our sin, actually draws near to us through Jesus Christ who became unholy on the cross to make us holy.

This sermon explains that Jesus' resurrection is the "first fruit" of a coming new heaven and new earth, offering believers a tangible hope of a future where all things are made new. This resurrection hope empowers Christians to endure suffering with peace because it is secured by Jesus' substitutionary death and guarantees a perfected existence free from all pain and death.

This sermon argues that genuine worship stems from a heart captivated by God, a state achieved by focusing on His character as both Creator and Redeemer. Using the vision from Revelation 4-5, the message urges believers to repent from being captivated by trivial things and to reorient their lives around the awe-inspiring truth that Jesus, the slain Lamb, has redeemed them, making them a kingdom of priests.

This sermon uses Jesus's letter to the Church of Philadelphia to demonstrate that God's affirmation is a profound gift rooted in Christ's sacrifice, and that genuine commendation from Jesus comes from faithful living. The message encourages believers to be a church that keeps God's Word, proclaims His name, and patiently endures for the gospel, trusting that their faithfulness will be eternally rewarded.

This sermon, focusing on Jesus's letter to the church in Laodicea, warns against the spiritual danger of self-sufficiency, which blinds believers to their true spiritual poverty and makes them lukewarm in their faith. The message is a call to repentance, urging Christians to abandon self-reliance and "buy" true spiritual riches from Jesus—forgiveness, righteousness, and spiritual sight—to become zealous and effective in His mission.

This sermon uses the letter to the Church of Sardis from Revelation to warn against the spiritual danger of being a "reputationally alive but spiritually dead" church. The message emphasizes that the only cure for this complacency is to "wake up" to one's spiritual reality, strengthen gospel conviction in Christ's worthiness alone, and repent of self-righteousness.

This sermon uses the awe-inspiring vision of Jesus in Revelation to emphasize that He is the Alpha and the Omega—the uncreated beginning and the ultimate end for whom all of creation exists. The message highlights that Jesus’s divine power means there will be a coming judgment, and His sacrifice on the cross is the only way believers, who were made for His glory, can be reconciled to Him and live without perishing.