Archive for Sermon ideas

The following simple outline forms a great way to teach about Jesus – who he is and what he's done.

BY THE LATE REV. WILLIAM GARDINER, M.A. VICAR OF ST. GEORGE'S, CLAINES, WORCESTER.

THE SON OF GOD AS VERY MAN.

1. Our example (1 Pet. ii. 21).
2. Our ransom (1 Tim. ii. 5, 6).
3. Our Intercessor (Heb. iv. 14, 15).
4. Our Judge (Acts xvii. 31).

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Following are the titles in an older work (1880). The titles and scripture references give you a good outline and start on a solid and needed teaching.

BY THE LATE REV. DAVID ANDERSON, M.A., VICAR OF HOLYTRINITY, TWICKENHAM.

1. What is our hope ? (1 Thess. ii. 19.)
2. Where is your faith? (Luke viii. 25.)
3. Where is thy flock? (Jer. xiii. 20.)
4. Where is my fear? (Mai. i. 6.)
5. What is your life ? (James iv. 14.)

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The following was compiled by the late F. B. Proctor, Church Homiletical Society 

1. Conscience, its immortality.—A man never outlives his conscience, and that for this cause only, he cannot outlive himself.
South.

2. Conscience, a judge.—I am more afraid of my own heart than of the pope and all his cardinals. I have within me the great pope —self. Luther.

3. Conscience, God's minister.—Conscience is God's best minister; it threatens, promises, rewards, and punishes, and keeps all under its control. The busy must attend to its remonstrances, the most powerful submit to its reproof, and the angry endure its upbraidings, While conscience is our friend, all is peace; but if once offended, farewell the tranquil mind. Mary Worthy Montagu.

4. Conscience, its power.—Let a prince be guarded with soldiers, attended by councillors, and shut up in forts; yet if his thoughts disturb him, he is miserable. Plutarch.

5. Conscience, the oracle of God.—
Yet still there whispers the small voice within,
Heard through gain's silence, and o'er glory's din:
Whatever creed be taught or land be trod,
Man's conscience is the oracle of God. Lord Byron.

6. Influence of little things.—On the summit of a hill in a western state is a court house, so situated that the rain-drops that fall on one side of the roof descend into Lake Erie, and thence through the St. Lawrence into the Atlantic. The drops on the other side trickle down, from rivulet to river, until they reach the Ohio and Mississippi, and enter the ocean by the Gulf of Mexico. A faint breath of wind determines the destination of these rain-drops for three thousand miles. So a single act determines sometimes a human destiny for all time and for eternity. Cuyler.

7. Influence illustrated.—Da Vinci's famous painting of "The Lord's Supper," originally adorning the dining-room of a convent, has suffered such destruction from the ravages of time, war, and abuse, that none of its original beauty remains. Yet it has been copied and engraved, and impressions of the great picture have been multiplied through all civilized lands. Behold a parable of posthumous influence.

8. Temptations, their personal suitability.—The devil doth not know the hearts of men, but he may feel their pulse, know their temper, and so accordingly can apply himself. As the husbandman knows what seed is proper to sow in such a soil; so Satan, finding out the temper, knows what temptation is proper to sow in such a heart. That way the tide of a man's constitution runs, that way the wind of temptation blows. Satan tempts the ambitious man with a crown, the sanguine man with beauty, the covetous man with a wedge of gold. He provides savour}' meat, such as the sinner loves. T. Watson.

9. Temptations, their gradations.—Satan seldom comes to Christians with great temptations, or with a temptation to commit a great sin. You bring a green log and a candle together, and they are very safe neighbours; but bring a few shavings and set them alight, and then bring a few sticks, and let them take fire, and the log be in the midst of them, and you will soon get rid of your log. And so it is with little sins. You will be startled with the idea of committing a great sin, and so the devil brings you a little temptation, and leaves you to indulge yourself. "There is no great harm in this." And so by these little chips we are first easily lighted up, and at last the green log is burned.
John Newton.

10. Conscience awakened.—Like the awful lightning flash, revealing in one fearful instant the secrets of the deepest darkness, though anxiously concealed in the darkened room. Yet too frequently the illumination is but for a passing moment: the heart returns again to the same darkness as before. Many have conscience enough to make them uneasy in sin, but not conscience enough to keep them from sin.
Adam.

11. Conscience, its susceptibility.—There is a species of poplar, whose leaves are often rustled by a breeze too faint to stir the foliage of other trees. Noticing the fact one day, when there was scarce a breath of air, Gotthold thought within himself, "This tree is the emblem of a man with a wounded conscience, which takes alarm at the most trifling cause, and agitates him to such a pitch that he knows not whither to fly."

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Jun
29

2 Good Facebook Sermon Nuggets

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I wanted to let you know that a few times per week I post original sermon nuggets on my Facebook page. I have included two of them below for you to take and convert into sermons if you like.

Also, if you have a Facebook acct, please send me a friend request. We can be Facebook friends and then you can see all my sermon nuggets. My Facebook page is found at the link below. You can just click and request to be friends. 

Friends with Eddie on Facebook
 
Facebook Nugget One: Jacob said after he awoke from his dream, "Surely God was in this place and I did not know it." What a challenging thought. How often do we miss God right where we are thinking He is to be found in what we do next? We are always on "our" way to something bigger and better. This is theologically true. But God gets no bigger and He is with each of us right now.

Facebook Nugget Two: Ever wondered why God lets you feel your way through situations, when it would be so easy for Him to "Write something on the wall for you to read"? Maybe some of the answer is that a deeper intimacy develops when we choose to trust,watch, wait, and learn to discern His ways, not just respond to His gifts. Do you sense  God more in the stillness or in the spectacular?

Like I said, I share several of these each week and you can get them on Facebook. If you don't have a page, its easy to sign up.

PS — My wife said to Friend her as well. Hey she does have great stuff to say. Her page is here: Friends with Mikki on Facebook

 
 
 
 
 
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Jun
18

4 Sermon Ideas to Ponder

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Following are some of my Facebook postings that I believe can provide ideas for sermons.

SERMON IDEA – MOVING PAST YOUR PAST!

When you are afraid to advance due to past failure, remember that the only path forward is from where you are. You cannot begin where you are "not". Eventually your options are to become frozen, to regress, or to choose to move ahead. It is always where we go from where we actually are that determines our future. Don't live in your past-good or bad. It is today that connects to tomorrow, not yesterday. Live today

SERMON IDEA – OUCH AND OH GLORY!

I love Phil. 1:6 which tells us that the Lord begins the work in us and will bring it to completion. He has an end in view of what He desires to see in our lives and He works toward that end. Sometimes He is very tender, other times very tenacious, but love always is His motive in handling us. So His hard squeezes and tender strokes work together to form Christ in us. So it's Ouch and Oh Glory simultaneously.

SERMON FAITH – PASSING THE FAITH TEST

Jesus prayed for Peter that his "faith fail not." Times of testing challenge what we have said we believed. In my failure, I and what I believed was sifted. I've tossed things that needed to go and believe more deeply in love,mercy, grace, etc. You die & discover yourself when this happens. Religion says "Do more!" Jesus says "Come to me and I will give you ________." He gives, we live. Sift & gift. Life!

SERMON IDEA – EXCHANGING PEACE FOR PANIC

I have been thinking a lot about the simplicity of walking with Jesus. The Bible says, "Be anxious for nothing(Phil. 4:6)." What does this mean? Not one thing is to be allowed to get us into anxiety. When I get anxious I have left simplicity for something of my own thinking. I have exchanged peace for panic and life gets complicated again. Keep it simple!

 

 

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What Revival Does for a Christian

(The following list is taken from R.A. Torrey’s class book, HOW TO PRAY. You can use the list as a guide and punctuate it with your own illustrations and scriptures while giving the late Bro. Torrey mention for the list. I added the title to give a definite direction for the list)

Introduction: Dr. R.A. Torrey whose work among men took place between 1856-1928 was well known for his powerful Bible preaching. He was chosen by D. L. Moody to lead his Bible Institute which became Moody Institute. He carried on the work of Moody after his death. The following comes to us from Dr. Torry as his observations about the effects of revival upon the Christian.

1. In times of revival Christians come out from the world and live separated lives. 

2. In times of revival Christians get a new spirit of prayer.

3. In times of revival Christians go to work for lost souls.

4. In times of revival Christians have new joy in Christ.

5. In times of revival Christians get a new love for the Word of God. 

 

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Nov
19

The Victorious Life — sermon

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(The following is an excerpt from chapter 8 of Andrew Murray’s book, PRAYER. It is as he wrote it. I have taken the liberty to change the layout slightly to make it more preacher friendly.)

THE VICTORIOUS LIFE

In the chapter on ‘The More Abundant Life’, we viewed the matter chiefly from the side of our Lord Jesus. We saw that there is to be found in him – the crucified, and the risen, and the glorified one who baptises with the Holy Spirit – all that is needful for a life of abundant grace. In speaking of the victorious life, we shall now look at the matter from another standpoint. We want to see how a Christian can live really as a victor. We have already often said that the prayer life is not something which can be improved by itself. It is so intimately bound up with the entire spiritual life that it is only when that whole life (previously marked by lack of prayer) becomes renewed and sanctified that prayer can have its rightful place of power. We must not be satisfied with less than the victorious life to which God calls his children.

You remember how our Lord, in the seven epistles in the Revelation of John, concludes with a promise to those who overcome. Take the trouble of going over that seven-times repeated ‘him that overcometh’; and notice what unspeakably glorious promises are there given. And they were given even to churches like Ephesus, that had lost its first love; and Sardis, to whom it was said, ‘thou hast a name that thou livest, and art dead’ (Rev. 3.1); and Laodicea, with her lukewarmness and selfsatisfaction – as proof that, if only they would repent, they might win the crown of victory. The call comes to every Christian to strive for the crown. It is impossible to be a healthy Christian, still more impossible to be a preacher in the power of God, if everything is not sacrificed to gain the victory.

The answer to the question, of how we attain to it, is simple. All is in Christ. ‘Thanks be unto God, which always causeth us to triumph in Christ’ (2 Cor. 2.14). ‘In all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us’ (Rom. 8.37). All depends on our right relationship to Christ, our entire surrender, perfect faith, and unbroken fellowship with him. But you wish to know how to attain to all this.

Listen once more to the simple directions as to the way by which the full enjoyment of what is prepared for you in Christ may be yours. These are – a new discovery of sin; a new surrender to Christ; a new faith in the power which will make it possible for you to persevere.

1. A new discovery of sin

In Romans 3, you find described the knowledge of sin which is necessary, in repentance, for forgiveness ‘That every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God’ (verse 19). There you took your stand, you recognised your sin more or less consciously, and confessed it, and you obtained mercy. But if you would lead the victorious life, something more is needful. This comes with the experience that in you, that is, in your flesh, there ‘dwelleth no good thing’ (Rom. 7.18). You have a delight in the law of God after the inner man, but you see another law in your members bringing you into captivity to the law of sin and compelling you to cry out: ’0 wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?’ (verse 24). It is not, as it was at conversion, when you thought over your few or many sins. This work goes much deeper. You find that, as a Christian, you have no power to do the good that you wish to do. You must be brought to a new and deeper insight into the sin of your nature and into your utter weakness, even though you are a Christian, to live as you ought. And you will learn to cry out: ‘Who shall deliver me; I, wretched man, a prisoner bound under the law of sin?’

The answer to this question is: ‘I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord’ (Rom. 7.25). Then follows the revelation of what there is in Christ. It is not just as given in Romans 3. It is more: I am in Christ Jesus, and ‘the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death’, (Rom. 8.2) under which I was bound. It is the experience that the law or power of the life of the Spirit in Christ has made me free and now calls on me, in a new sense and by a new surrender, to acknowledge Christ as the bestower of the victory.

2. A new surrender to Christ

You may have used these words ‘surrender’ and ‘consecration’ many times, but without rightly understanding what they mean. As you have been brought by the teaching of Romans 7 to a complete sense of the hopelessness of leading a true Christian life, or a true prayer life, by your own efforts, so you feel that the Lord Jesus must take you up, by his own power, in an entirely new way; and must take possession of you, by his Spirit, in an entirely new measure. This alone can preserve you from constantly sinning afresh. This only can make you really victorious. This leads you to look away from yourself, really to get free from yourself, and to expect everything from the Lord Jesus.

If we begin to understand this, we are prepared to admit that in our nature there is nothing good, that it is under a curse, and is nailed with Christ to his cross. We come to see what Paul means when he says that we are dead to sin by the death of Christ. Thus do we obtain a share of the glorious resurrection life there is in him. By such an insight we are encouraged to believe that Christ, through his life in us, through his continual indwelling, can keep us. Just as, at our conversion, we had no rest till we knew he had received us so now we feel the need of coming to him, to receive from him the assurance that he has really undertaken to keep us by the power of his resurrection life. And we feel then that there must be an act as definite as his reception of us at conversion, by which he gives us the assurance of victory. And although it appears to us to be too great and too much, yet the man who casts himself, without plea, into the arms of Christ will experience that he does indeed receive us into such a fellowship as will make us, from the beginning onwards, ‘more than conquerors’.

3. A new faith in the power which will make it possible for you to persevere in your surrender

You have heard of Keswick, and the truth for which it stands. It is that Christ is prepared to take upon himself the care and preservation of our lives every day, and all the day long, if we trust him to do it. In the testimony given by many, this thought is emphasised. They have told us that they felt themselves called to a new surrender, to an entire consecration of life to Christ, reaching to the smallest things, but they were hindered by the fear of failure. The thirst after holiness, after an unbroken fellowship with Jesus, after a life of persevering childlike obedience, drew them one way. But the question arose: ‘Shall I continue faithful?’ And to this question there came no answer, till they believed that the surrender must be made, not in their own strength, but in a power which was bestowed by a glorified Lord. He would not only keep them for the future, but he must first make possible for them the surrender of faith which expects that future grace. It was in the power of Christ himself that they were able to present themselves to him.

0 Christian, only believe that there is a victorious life! Christ, the victor, is your Lord, who will undertake for you in everything and will enable you to do all that the Father expects from you. Be of good courage. Will you not trust him to do this great work for you who has given his life for you and has forgiven your sins? Only dare, in his power, to surrender yourself to the life of those who are kept from sin by the power of God. Along with the deepest conviction that there is no good in you, confess that you see in the Lord Jesus all the goodness of which you have need, for the life of a child of God; and begin literally to live ‘by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me’ (Gal. 2.20).

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Nov
19

The Benefits of Prayer — sermon outline

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(The following is an excerpt from the fourth chapter of Andrew Murray’s book, PRAYER. It focuses on what a person can expect if they more passionately engage their prayer life. Under his main headings, I offer an alternate suggestion.)

SUGGESTED TITLE — THE BENEFITS OF PRAYER

If now we are delivered from the sin of prayerlessness, and understand how this deliverance may continue to be experienced, what will be the fruit of our liberty? He who sees this aright will, with renewed earnestness and perseverance, seek after this liberty. His life and experience will indeed be an evidence that he has obtained something of unspeakable worth. He will be a living witness of the blessing which victory has brought.

Consider –

1. The blessedness of unbroken fellowship with God
(SUGGESTION: THE BENEFIT OF A CLOSER FELLOWSHIP)

Think of the confidence in the Father which will take the place of the reproach and self-condemnation which was the earlier characteristic of our lives. Think of the deep consciousness that God’s almighty grace has effected something in us, to prove that we really bear his image and are fitted for a life of communion with him and prepared to glorify him. Think how we, notwithstanding our conviction of our nothingness, may live as true children of a King, in communion with their Father, and may manifest something of the character of our Lord Jesus in the holy fellowship with his Father which he had when on earth. Think how in the inner chamber the hour of prayer may become the happiest time in the whole do for us, and how God may use us to take a share in the carrying out of his plans, and make us fountains of blessing for the world around us.

2. The power which we may have for the work to which we are called
(SUGGESTION: THE BENEFIT OF A GREATER POWER)

The preacher will learn to receive his message really from God, through the power of the Holy Spirit, and t deliver it in that power to the congregation. He will know where he can be filled with the love and zeal which will enable him, in his rounds of pastoral visiting, t meet and help each individual in a spirit of tender com passion. He will be able to say with Paul: ‘I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me’ (Ph 4.13). ‘We are more than conquerors through him th loved us’ (Rom. 8.37). ‘We are ambassadors for Christ … we pray you in Christ’s stead, be ye reconcil to God’ (2 Cor. 5.20). These are no vain dreams or p tures of a foolish imagination. God has given us Paul an illustration, so that, however we may differ from him in gifts or calling, yet in inner experience we may know the all-sufficiency of grace which can do all things for as it did for him.

3. The prospect which opens before us for the future
(SUGGESTION: THE BENEFIT OF A BRIGHTER FUTURE)

This is to be consecrated to take part as intercessors in great work of bearing on our hearts the need of the en Church and world. Paul sought to arouse men to pray all saints, and he tells us what a conflict he had for th who had not yet seen his face. In his personal prese he was subject to conditions of time and place, but in Spirit he had power in the name of Christ to pray blessing on those who had not yet heard of the Saviour.

In addition to his life in connection with men here on earth, far or near, he lived another, a heavenly life – one of love and of a wonderful power in prayer which he continually exercised. We can hardly form a conception of the power God will bestow, if only we get freed from the sin of prayerlessness and pray with the daring which reaches heaven and brings down blessing in the almighty name of Christ.

What a prospect! Minister and missionaries brought by God’s grace to pray, let us say twice as much as formerly, with twofold faith and joy! What a difference it would make in the preaching, in the prayer meeting, in the fellowship with others! What a gentle power would come down in an inner chamber, sanctified by communion with God and his love in Christ! What an influence would be exercised on believers, in urging them forward to the work of intercession! How greatly would this influence be felt in the Church and among the heathen! What power might be exercised over ministers of other churches, and who knows how God might use us for his Church through the whole world! Is it not worth while to sacrifice everything, and to beseech God without ceasing to give us real and full victory over the prayerlessness which has covered us with such shame?

Why do I now write these things and extol so highly the blessedness of victory over’the sin which doth so easily beset us’ and which has so terribly robbed us of the power which God has intended for us? I can give an answer. I know all too well what low thoughts we have concerning the promises and the power of God and how prone we are always to backslide, to limit God’s power, and to deem it impossible for him to do greater things than we have seen. It is a glorious thing to get to know God in a new way in the inner chamber. That, however, is but the beginning. It is something still greater and more glorious to know God as the allsufficient One and to wait on his Spirit to open our hearts and minds wide to receive the great things, the new things which he really longs to bestow on those who wait for him.

God’s object is to encourage faith and to make his children and servants see that they must take trouble to understand and rely upon the unspeakable greatness and omnipotence of God, so that they may take literally and in a childlike spirit this word: ‘Unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think … be glory … throughout all ages’ (Eph. 3.20, 21). Oh, that we knew what a great and glorious God we have!

Someone may ask: ‘May not this note of certain victory become a snare and lead to levity and pride?’ Undoubtedly. That which is the highest and best on earth is always liable to abuse. How, then, can we be saved from this? Through nothing so surely as through true prayer, which brings us really into contact with God. The holiness of God, sought for in persistent prayer, will cover our sinfulness. The omnipotence an greatness of God will make us feel our nothingness. Fellowship with God in Jesus Christ will lead us to the experience that there is in us no good thing, and that we can have fellowship with God only as our faith become a humbling of ourselves as Christ humbled himself, an we truly live in him as he is in the Father.

Prayer is not merely coming to God to ask something from him. It is above all fellowship with God and being brought under the power of his holiness and love, till he takes possession of us and stamps our entire nature with the lowliness of Christ, which is the secret of all true worship.

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Jul
21

Take Your Bibles to Jesus — sermon idea

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Robert Murray M’Cheyne (1835-1843) was a Scottish Minister whose writings still influence people today. Though he never lived to the age of 30, what he spoke and wrote lives on. One of his thoughts that remains with us in seen in this quote:

"When you are reading a book in a dark room, and come to a difficult part, you take it to a window to get more light. So take your Bibles to Christ." — Robert Murray M’Cheyne

Ah! It is so easy to bring to our reading of God’s word, the traditions that have been handed down to us, yet there are points where those traditions may have not been exposed to enough of the light. We also bring to the Scripture our own presuppositions formed by our own life experiences. These cause us to blindly read things into the Word instead of seeing what is already there. So M’Cheyne’s quote encourages us to take our Bibles to Christ. Afterall, he is truth and he is the light that lights the life of every man.

Suggestion: Consider taking the little devotional thought I put together above and building a sermon that focuses on the correct way to read and study the Word of God. You can list the ways we can blindly read the Word (I mentioned a few above) and then you can share how to allow the Spirit of Christ to lead you in studying the Scripture.

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