Sermons from December 2013

God with Us (Matthew 1:23 & 28:20)

We all long for more peace, more joy, more fulfillment, and more of almost everything. Could it be that our longings are hunger pains for God? 700 years before Jesus’ birth the prophet Isaiah wrote, “…they shall call his name Immanuel.” Immanuel means “God with us.” Yet, can God really be with us today? The announcement in this message is “YES.” After Matthew recounts God with us walking on water, healing the sick, giving sight to the blind and raising dead children, he relays Jesus resurrected words, “…I am with you always, to the end of the age.” This is the promise of God’s enduring presence for all who believe in and follow Immanuel.

4th Week of Advent: Jesus is Our Hope (Matthew 2:1-11)

On this 4th Sunday of Advent we worship God for His gift of hope. Like oxygen, we all need a positive future to anticipate. Yet most everything we hope for is perishable. In this message we remember the hope of the Wise Men as they journeyed to see the new born King of the Jews. Centuries before His birth the prophet Isaiah announced that “in His name all the nations would put their hope” and years after Jesus’ death, burial, resurrection and ascension Paul called Christ “the hope of glory” and Peter described Him as “a living hope… imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven for you.” So, let us wisely and humbly set our ultimate hope on the only King whose birth announcement was a star.

3rd Week of Advent: Jesus the Prince of Peace (John 14:26-28a)

There are many beautiful examples of peace coming at times of crisis in our world: two of them are the Christmas Truce of 1914 and the life of Nelson Mandela. But peace in this world tends to be temporary and incomplete, and it leaves us longing for something more lasting and whole. Humanity continues to be rocked by violence and we continue to be cynical of the word “peace.” The beauty of Christmas is that Jesus comes as the Prince of Peace, to bring peace that is “not of this world.” We are given Him to receive lasting peace, and we can become transmitters of His peace when we receive it.

2nd Week of Advent: Jesus is Grace and Truth (John 1:14-18)

On this 2nd Sunday of Advent we worship Jesus whom John describes as “full of grace and truth.” We all tend to be stronger in either grace or truth. Yet, the more we exhibit both qualities the more we are capable of blessing others. When there is no grace people cannot hear. When there is no truth people cannot respect. In this message we worship King Jesus who rules in this unique way and who extends His grace to make all of His disciples in His kingdom to become more like Him.

1st Week of Advent: Jesus is Light (John 1:1-13)

The word Advent comes from a Latin word meaning “to come.” On this 1st Sunday of Advent we celebrate the first coming of Jesus as the light of the world. Similar to the transformation from darkness to light that we all experienced when we were born, so everything changes when the light of Christ shines into our spiritual darkness and we experience our new birth from above.