God

Find a sermon associated with this topic below.

This sermon teaches that while everything in life is temporary, the immutability of God—His unchanging nature—provides a stable and loving foundation. It emphasizes that God remains both just and loving by applying His unchanging justice to Christ on the cross, which in turn allows His unchanging love to be poured out on believers, who can find hope and stability in Christ alone.

This sermon focuses on the Incarnation—God becoming human in Jesus—as the ultimate example of God's humility, which provides a foundation for a proper view of ourselves and others. It encourages believers to be "incarnation people" by living out this same humility, denying their own rights for the flourishing of others, and bringing "Shalom" (peace) to a broken world, particularly in the face of racial injustice.

This sermon uses Isaiah's vision of God's holiness to illustrate that true awareness of our own sinfulness comes from a vertical look at God's perfection. It then pivots to the good news that God's holiness is not just a source of our disintegration but also our development, as the sacrifice of Jesus atones for our sin and imputes His own holiness to us, making us new.

This sermon explains that God's wrath is a deserved, controlled, and ultimately absorbed response to humanity's rebellion and desire for self-rule. It uses the arrest of Jesus in Gethsemane as a picture of our collective enmity toward God, demonstrating that all people, regardless of background, stand in opposition to Him.

This sermon, based on Psalm 8, reveals three aspects of God's majesty: His power shown in creation, His mindfulness in caring for insignificant humanity, and most importantly, His humility revealed in Jesus Christ. The message argues that Jesus, the Creator, willingly became human and suffered a temporary humiliation "a little lower than the angels" to die on our behalf, ultimately restoring humanity's purpose and providing the greatest reason for our worship.

This sermon explains that Christians can endure hardship by understanding that God, as a perfect parent, uses discipline to train and nurture His children. It emphasizes that this divine discipline is a sign of His love, which, though painful in the moment, ultimately produces a peaceful fruit of righteousness and allows believers to share in God's holiness.

This sermon emphasizies that a secure identity is found not in worldly achievements but in a relationship with Jesus, who transforms our past and secures our future. The message encourages the congregation to find their purpose by remaining faithful to God's calling and continuing His mission of spreading the gospel.

This sermon distinguishes God's holy jealousy from human envy, explaining that it stems from His profound love and desire for an exclusive relationship with His people. It argues that God's jealousy is rightly provoked by idolatry, which is anything that takes priority over Him, and that His ultimate goal is to bring about our sanctification through a relationship of priority and fidelity.

This sermon uses the prophet Habakkuk as a model for wrestling with God about suffering and injustice, encouraging believers to bring their honest doubts and fears to God without abandoning their faith. The message highlights that God is actively at work in ways beyond human comprehension, and we must trust in His ultimate plan rather than judging Him by our limited perspective.