Love

Find a sermon associated with this topic below.

This sermon teaches that knowing the Holy Spirit frees us from fear and ignorance, allowing us to fully experience God's grace and embody His love. By understanding His person and work, we are empowered to engage with culture and navigate our lives with divine wisdom.

This sermon, centered on Psalm 107, calls believers to give thanks by remembering God's faithful redemption from their troubles. It encourages the congregation to trust in God's unchanging goodness and covenant love rather than their own performance, and to actively proclaim His faithfulness throughout their discipleship journey.

This sermon teaches that the gospel of grace is an indispensable, inconceivable, and immeasurable gift from God, one that cannot be earned. Understanding this grace leads to true humility, freeing us from the need for self-promotion and self-loathing by showing that all are spiritually bankrupt without it.

This sermon teaches that our worship through singing is a powerful and beautiful response to God's worthiness, not just a transaction for blessings. When we sing, we unleash God's power in spiritual warfare and affirm our confidence in His unchanging covenantal love for us.

This Good Friday message teaches that the darkness at the crucifixion symbolizes the judgment Jesus willingly endured as the ultimate payment for our sins, fulfilling his sacrificial role. The tearing of the temple veil at his death signifies that all barriers between us and God have been removed, making his grace and forgiveness accessible to everyone who accepts him.

This sermon teaches that abiding with Jesus is crucial for an abundant life, as it is rooted in His passionate desire to be with us, demonstrated through His atoning sacrifice. By intentionally spending time with Him, we find true rest for our souls, a new identity, and the fulfillment of our ultimate destiny to be with Him forever.

This sermon teaches that true love, as defined by God, is a powerful, selfless choice to benefit others, and it is the greatest command to love God and neighbor as ourselves. Ultimately, our ability to love in this way is not innate but is a direct result of receiving God's love through Christ's sacrifice, which empowers us to love freely through forgiveness, patience, and service.

This sermon confronts the crippling nature of worry, arguing that it can only be overcome not by human effort, but by the supernatural "peace of God," which guards our hearts and minds. This peace is a fruit of the gospel, cultivated by actively thinking on God's truth, thanking Him in advance for His sovereignty, and loving Jesus who has already borne the weight of our sin and worry on the cross.

This sermon honors mothers as a tangible representation of God's love and self-sacrificial nature, teaching that the way we love and honor them reflects our own relationship with God. By honoring our mothers through gratitude, care, and radical forgiveness, we fulfill a foundational biblical command and grow in our understanding of God's grace.