"Abide" Tagged Sermons (Page 2)

The Abide Project: 7. Abiders Bless the World | John 15:4b-5

Fruit is God’s blessing to the world. So, it is a great metaphor for the works God desires to do in and through you. In this message we will grapple with questions from John 15:4-5. Why does Jesus promise “much fruit” through those who abide in him? What is the warning issued to his followers when he says, “As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you unless you abide in me” (v. 4)? Since non-abiding people do good things, why would he say, “apart from me you can do nothing” (v. 5)?

The Abide Project: 6. Jesus’ Invitation to Abide | John 15:4a, 9-10

After setting the stage for His vineyard teaching in John 15:1-3, Jesus invites His true followers to “abide in me.” What does this word abide mean? Further, what does it look like for followers of Jesus to abide today? In this message we consider the various uses of “abide” throughout John’s Gospel including Jesus’ own abiding relationship with His Father to see more clearly what abiding in Jesus can look like for us.

The Abide Project: 5. The Fruitful Branches | John 15:2b-3

What type of person is Jesus describing when He says, “every branch that does bear fruit he prunes that it may bear more fruit” (v. 2b) and what does “he prunes” refer to? Further, when He says, “Already you are clean because of the word that I have spoken to you” (v. 3) what is “the word” and how has “the word” made the disciples “already … clean”?

The Abide Project: 4. The Fruitless Branches | John 15:2a, 6

Today we enter week 4 of 12 in The Abide Project which includes the most vexing part of Jesus’ vineyard teaching. Who and what does Jesus have in mind when he declares in John 15:2, “Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he takes away”? Is he opposing what many call the doctrine of the perseverance of the saints? Further, what is this verse’s connection, if any, with verse 6 in which he says branches are “thrown away … gathered, thrown into the fire, and burned”?

The Abide Project: 2. The Vinedresser | John 15:1b

Why does Jesus seemingly complicate the simplicity of His invitation to abide by introducing His Father as the vinedresser who cuts some branches and prunes others? Apparently, maintaining a close, dependent and life-long attachment with Jesus also requires a wholistic view of life. Here is good news for followers of Jesus – when life doesn’t make sense and when we feel alone, this more comprehensive view of reality includes the presence of a sovereign and loving vinedresser.

The Abide Project: 1. The True Vine | John 15:1a

Today we begin The Abide Project, a 12-week journey to better understand and experience Jesus’ invitation to abide. In this teaching (John 15:1-11) on the night before His crucifixion, Jesus started by identifying Himself as “the true vine.” Why does He liken Himself to a vine and is there any significance to His use of the adjective “true?” As we explore answers to these questions, we discover that these words are more than the beginning of Jesus’ vineyard teaching, they are the beginning of life as we were created to live!

The Abide Project: Introduction | Matthew 4:12-17

“If I find in myself a desire that nothing in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world.”1 In one sentence C.S. Lewis exposes the universal hunger of our souls. It is a craving for more joy, strength, comfort, peace, help, guidance, love, awe, gratitude, compassion, self-control and more. Today we prepare in a variety of ways to begin a journey this fall to explore Jesus’ proposed solution for this longing. His answer comes as an invitation to “abide” so our focus for the next three months will be called, The Abide Project.
1 C. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity (Glasgow: Fontana Books, 1975), 118.

The Vineyard: from Vision to Fruition | 2 Corinthians 9.6-15 (Cheerful Giver)

Paul makes it clear in this text that the condition of our heart is what’s most important when we give financially. Our community has landed on the Biblical vineyard metaphor in regard to our 3 key priorities for this new ministry year, and our vision is that we all bear abundant spiritual fruit for the Lord’s glory and for our joy. This is an appeal to cheerfully respond to the opportunity to significantly invest in bringing the church’s vision to fruition, as we seek to be a community on mission together.

Grow in Abiding | John 15:1-11

On the night before His crucifixion Jesus extended a new invitation to His followers, “Abide in Me.” To abide means to live in a close continual dependent relationship with our resurrected Christ through the presence of his Holy Spirit who indwells all who put their faith in him.  In this message we discover move about this beautiful way of life and the…