Holiness

Find a sermon associated with this topic below.

This sermon emphasizes that wrestling with God is an invitation to deepen our understanding of His holiness and grace, as exemplified by the Syrophoenician woman's encounter with Jesus. Through honest engagement with God, we are reminded of the abundant mercy available to us through Christ's sacrificial work on the cross, which invites us to trust in His provision and faithfulness.

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, from the "Three in One" series, teaches that God's perfect and unmatched holiness exposes our own flaws and calls for our unconditional obedience. Jesus, as the ultimate embodiment of that holiness, took on our judgment to offer grace, empowering us to live as a holy people set apart for His purposes in the world.

This sermon, based on Hebrews 12, teaches that God disciplines us not in anger but as a loving trainer, using painful hardships to nurture our growth and produce righteousness. We are called to endure this process, trusting that His discipline is for our good and leads to ultimate blessings, including healing and sanctification.

This sermon teaches that true purpose and fulfillment are found not in worldly success, but in living a life of holiness, which means being set apart for God's exclusive use and service. This pursuit is fueled by a grateful response to the gospel, knowing that believers have been redeemed by Christ's precious blood, which motivates a glad and willing obedience rooted in hope and reverent awe for God.

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 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 explains that the God of the Bible is not only real and self-existent but also desires a personal relationship with humanity, actively seeking us out despite our sin. The message highlights that while God's holiness creates a barrier, Jesus Christ, the pre-incarnate "angel of the Lord," is the ultimate solution who, through His sacrifice on the cross, bridges the gap and makes a personal and transformative relationship with God possible.

This sermon argues that effectively sharing the gospel requires three "batteries": a gospel burden, a gospel identity, and a gospel circle. The message emphasizes that by understanding our true identity in Christ's righteousness, we can be freed from shame to actively and lovingly share the precious gospel message with those in our lives who need to hear it.