“The God Who Reigns in Evil Days” (Habakkuk 1:12 sermon)

Years ago someone I knew had lost a loved one in a tragedy, and a friend of theirs asked them: “How do you manage to still look to God in a time like this?” They said, “In a time like this, where else am I going to look?” (That reminds me of when everyone was leaving Jesus in John 6, and He asked His disciples if they were going to leave too, and Peter said to Him in John 6:68, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life”!) That was my friend’s attitude also. They knew that despite the questions they had, this wasn’t a time for them to turn away from God; that was the time when they really needed to turn TO God!

You may be in a time like that right now too; if you are, you really need, because of what you are going through, to tum to the Lord. He is the only One who can help You. In fact, God may have brought you to this service here today for that very reason!

But truthfully, I believe that difficult days may be coming for all of us soon. Last week we saw that like Habakkuk, we ourselves are challenged to live by faith in a nation that is about to undergo God’s judgment. We need to turn our eyes to God in these times. But who IS this God to whom we are turning; what is this God like?   (By the way, this is also what we’re studying in our Discipleship class at 6:00 Sunday nights) We also see something about this God described in our passage today, in Habakkuk 1:12 and following:

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Teacher’s Overview of Lifeway’s “Explore the Bible” lesson: Mark 7:24-37, “Includes”

A brief overview for Sunday School teachers and Bible study leaders, of Lifeway’s “Explore the Bible” lesson of Mark 7:24-37 with the title “Includes,” for Sunday, October 1, 2023.

A video version of this overview is available on YouTube at:

INTRO:  ??? Can you share a time when you traveled outside our country — how did you feel/what did you experience??? While there, did you ever feel like an “outsider”?

Then you could say something like: in today’s lesson Jesus goes outside the boundaries of Judea and Galilee and ministers to a couple of people of other ethnic backgrounds. Scripture shows us that the Lord has always accepted those of any race or background who seek Him. We should accept them too — and not only that, we should be seek to purposefully reach people of all races through evangelism/missions as well. 

CONTEXT

We are continuing our study of Jesus’ ministry in the Book of Mark. In the last several chapters He has healed people, and then in the first part of Mark 7 He wrangled some more with the Pharisees, who were all concerned about “unclean food.” In :19 it says “Thus He declared all foods clean” — so there is now no unclean food. It is no accident that Mark moves from that to our story for today about Jesus going to some “foreign” places, because He is now showing us that there are not only no unclean food, but there are also no unclean PEOPLE whom we are not to minister to either! In our focus passage for today in Mark 7 we see Jesus taking a “mission trip” outside the boundaries of Judea and Galilee, and minister to some people there. 

(A Map would be of great help this week: show where Judea & Galilee were, also Tyre & Sidon, and the Decapolis.) 

OUTLINE

I. The International Ministry of Jesus  (:24,31)

II. The Syrophoenician woman (:24-30)

III. The Greek man (:31-37)

I. The International Ministry of Jesus (:24, :31)

Point out that in today’s text we see Jesus leaving Judea & Galilee, and ministering to people of other nations:

— :24 says “Jesus got up and went away from there (Gennesaret/Sea of Galilee: you might show where this is on the map — in Galilee) “to the region of Tyre” (often called “Tyre & Sidon” as they are “twin cities” like Minneapolis/St. Paul, etc.)

SHOW WHERE TYRE/SIDON ARE: outside of Judea/Galilee.

(??** This was some of the farthest Jesus traveled away from Palestine in His ministry travels (not counting Egypt as a child) — not that far, relatively speaking — about 36 miles — but still “outside their country”, a good distance for their day; probably at least a couple of days’ walk.) Here the Syrophoenician woman came to Him — that was the race of the people there; not Jews, but “Gentiles”. 

— Then after her story (which we’ll look at in a moment, :31 says, “Again He went out from the region of Tyre, and came through Sidon to the Sea of Galilee, within the region of Decapolis. (Show on map)  “Decapolis” in Greek literally means “10 Cities” (“Deca” = 10, “polis” = city). These were 10 Gentile cities east of the Jordan River — again “Gentile territory.”

So you might say Jesus went on a couple of “mission trips” in this passage. (Of course His whole life was a “mission trip” to earth!) But He went “outside” what you might think of as His “homeland” of Galilee, or even Judea, to these “Gentile” areas. 

Many Jews were not fond of Gentiles, calling them “Gentile dogs.” But Jesus “came to seek and to save that which was lost” and here we see Him reaching people of other nationalities, racial backgrounds. 

There are a couple of applications for us here:

1) This is a good reminder that God cares for people of every nation and race. 

It was hard for the Jews to see this at first. They thought of the Gentiles as “dogs.” It took a lot to convince Peter to go see Cornelius in Acts 10, but after his vision and visit to Cornelius, Peter said in :34-35, “I most certainly understand now that God is not one to show partiality, but in every nation the man who fears Him and does what is right is welcome to Him” — and then he shared the gospel with the Cornelius and the Gentiles. 

— John 3:16 reminds us of this: “For God so loved THE WORLD”

— Revelation 5:9 says of Jesus that He “purchased for God with Your blood men from every tribe and tongue and people and nation.” EVERY people. EVERY nation. There is no place for racism in the church of Jesus Christ. Some from every nation will be in glory! He loves them all!

2) So second: this is good reminder that WE need to follow in His footsteps and be a part of reaching them today! Jesus went on mission to reach these Gentiles, and we need to do the same thing.

??? Which nations does Jesus say in the Great Commission that we should reach???

+x Matthew 28:18: “Go therefore and make disciples of ALL the nations …”

+x Acts 1:8 “You shall be My witnesses in Jerusalem, all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” 

So we definitely have the command from Jesus to reach all kinds of people groups in our world. 

??? You might ask your group who all had been on a mission trip/been involved in mission work somewhere, and share just a bit about their experience???

??? What “nations” could we be part of reaching in our area???

(You/your group can answer for your area. 

— For ours in South Texas there are certainly Hispanic peoples to be reached out to, our Association supports a new mission just south of us, and FBCA just donated a van to that ministry.

— Texas Port Ministry: get up in your own bed, reach people from the Philippines, Norway, Africa — and then go back to sleep in your own bed that night! 

— We help support a mission to an unreached people group in the mountains of Bulgaria; and another to unreached peoples in India …

— Pregnancy Help Center 

I’d spend some time sharing the opportunities that YOUR church has. You might even consider having a pastor or missions leader share for a few minutes with your class at this point, some opportunities for mission service/specific ways your members can be involved in reaching the nations in your church’s context. 

I like to say, we can’t ALL be involved in every mission work — but I think it’s good for a church to have multiple opportunities available so we can each plug in where we personally feel led to. I’d encourage everyone to be involved in SOME way — whichever one they are personally led to — in missions. It’s why Jesus came — and part of the Commission He gave us!

(You might even discuss doing some kind of mission project together as a class: adopt an unreached people group to pray for; go to a mission project/on a mission trip together; etc. That would be a great way to apply this passage. Remember: we aren’t just learning history here; we should apply this in our lives today!)

So we see the overall example Jesus gave us of reaching the nations. Now let’s look two specific “ethnic” people that Jesus Himself reached: 

II. The Syrophoenician Woman (:24-30)

Verse 25 starts talking about this woman who came to Jesus:

NOTICE what all it tells us about her: (??? You might ask your group to share what they see/or you just point out):

— A woman!  (:26) “A Gentile”;  Syrophoenician race (from the coast north of Palestine) and her daughter had a demon.

 HOW MANY strikes did this woman have against her: 

— “a woman” (That’s a big strike there; especially in that day! Women didn’t have rights; were considered property; werent’ allowed to testify in court, etc.)

— A Gentile (NOT one of God’s chosen people)/Syrophoenician. Jews would consider her “unclean” and have kept their distance.

— and her daughter had a demon! 

— and besides that, she KEPT pestering Jesus; “Kept asking Him to cast the demon out”

This was NOT a desirable person. Not the person many would ask over for dinner! 

Then I might read (or have someone read) these verses and ask your group to point out (or you just teach)

??? What traits did this woman show in this passage???

(—Humility: she fell at Jesus’ feet (:25), then in :27 she didn’t take offense, she wasn’t “outraged” at His response; she was very humble. (Necessity makes you humble!) 

— faith, she believed He could do something for her. 

— perseverance: (:26) “she kept asking Him” (This is a Greek “imperfect” tense verb, which means it is a continual past action; NIV, ESV = “begged”; Holman/NAS/NKJV “kept asking;” (Any others?) These words show continual action. She was persistent in her request of the Lord.

She reminds me of another woman, in the parable Jesus told in Luke 18:2-5, “that at all times they ought to pray and not to lose heart”:

“In a certain city there was a judge who did not fear God and did not respect man. 3 There was a widow in that city, and she kept coming to him, saying, ‘Give me legal protection from my opponent.’ 4 For a while he was unwilling; but afterward he said to himself, ‘Even though I do not fear God nor respect man, 5 yet because this widow bothers me, I will give her legal protection, otherwise by continually coming she will wear me out.’”

??? Anyone have a long-time prayer request that has not yet been answered??? 

(You might share/or not. But the point is, many of us do. DO NOT GIVE UP on that request. “Keep asking” like this woman did.

Maybe there is a specific request you have, that you have been thinking: “I just need to take this off my list.” DON’T DO IT! Keep praying, and do not give up! 

??? Can anyone share a long-time prayer request that God finally answered — as an encouragement to others.

— When I left the church I served in North Carolina, there were two men I was praying for, to be saved. I decided to keep them on my prayer list after I left. A year or so ago (4 or 5 years later) I was scrolling through Facebook, and saw a picture showing where one of them was baptized in the church! I about came out of my shoes! God answered that request, several years later.

You can share that if you’d like, and you/your group can share other examples, as an encouragement to each other.

The point is: do not give up! “Keep asking” like this woman did!

BUT THERE IS ANOTHER THING in this passage, and it bothers a lot of people. Many ask: “Why would Jesus talk to this woman like that?” It sounds kind of rude/demeaning: “It is not good to take the children’s bread and throw it to the dogs.”

Now, we see the point: Jesus came first for the Jews, to bring them back to God, they are “the children” chosen by God. And we know the Jews called the Gentiles, “Gentile dogs.” 

But this word for “dogs” is different (kunarioi): it means “a little puppy; a household puppy.” So it was not referring to “wild dogs” but a cute household pet — which is a little better!

But still, why would He say that?

I believe it was a test. He was testing her faith. (He also did that with His disciples upon occasion, didn’t He?

??? Did you ever have a teacher/supervisor/leader test you in a certain situation???

(Mark Twain’s pilot , who was mentoring him, once tested him, asking him if he thought the river was deep enough at one point for the boat to pass over safely. He knew the answer — he was testing Twain to see how confident HE was in the answer.

In John Bunyan’s famous book, Pilgrim’s Progress, Pilgrim and Hopeful are on the road to the Celestial City. They encounter many trials along the way, including “Mr. Worldly Wiseman,” The Giant Despair, and so on. One character they meet is named “Atheist.” He asked them whither they were going;

Christian. “We are going to the Mount Zion.”

Then Atheist fell into a very great laughter. … “There is no such place as you dream of all this world.” 

Christian: ”But there is in the world to come.” 

Atheist. “When I was at home in mine own country, I heard as you now affirm, and from that hearing went out to see, and have been seeking this city this twenty Years, But find no more of it than I did the first day I set out.’

Christian. Then said Christian to Hopeful, his fellow, ‘is it true which this man hath said?” 

Hopeful: … “what, no Mt. Zion? … I say, my brother, cease to hear him, and let us believe to the saving of the soul.” [Hebrews 10:39] 

Christian. “My brother, I did not put the question to thee for that I doubted of the truth of our belief myself, but to prove thee, and to fetch from thee a fruit of the honesty of thy heart.’

I believe this is what Jesus was doing with the Syrophoenician Woman. To put it in Christian’s words, He wanted “to fetch from her a fruit of the honesty of her heart” — and He DID — He got a great answer of faith from her!  She passed the test — and importantly, we see that Jesus did care, despite what may have seemed at first to be His harsh answer, and He approved her request, healed her daughter — and her faith has gone down in history to this day as an example for us!  

And remember the big picture: this was a “foreigner” that Jesus was ministering to, whom many Jews would not have wanted anything to do with — but Jesus did. And she proved to have such persevering faith!  And it reminds us that WE should be open to ministering to people like her as well. 

III. The Deaf Greek Man (:31-37)

Then the Bible says in :31, “Again He went out from the region of Tyre, and came through Sidon to the Sea of Galilee, within the region of Decapolis (you might review this on the map — it was a good distance! But again, a land of “foreigners.”) 

Verse 32 says “They brought to Him one who was deaf and spoke with difficulty, and they implored Him to lay His hand on him.” 

So they are bringing to Jesus another man — again, most likely a non-Jew, living in the 10 Cities (Decapolis) area.  So what was Jesus response going to be? 

:33 says “Jesus took him aside from the crowd, by himself, and put His fingers into his ears, and after spitting, He touched his tongue with the saliva; (:34) and looking up to heaven with a deep sigh, He said to him, ‘Ephphatha!’ That is, ‘Be opened.’”

And :35 says “And his ears were opened, and the impediment of his tongue was removed, and he began speaking plainly.” 

So a couple of questions you could ask here if you want some discussion to get your group thinking about the text and interacting with it:

— ??? WHY do you think Jesus “took him aside from the crowd”? He specifically did this. WHY?

(— One answer might be, because some people are just “spectators,” looking for “thrills,” or something to criticize. Jesus was not out to please this kind of person.

— It also gave the man some privacy, dignity; away from the crowd. 

Several times in the Gospels Jesus did this: when He raised the girl from the dead in Matthew 9, He had the crowd put out first. I think for the same reasons. Most of the crowd didn’t believe; and it was touching, family moment; they didn’t all need to be there.

It does not specify here a reason why; but you & your group can talk about it; it might provide you with some good discussion/insight.)

— Another question could be: ??? WHY do you think He “looked up to heaven with a deep sigh”???

(Maybe just mourning this sin-sick world and all the illnesses and evil that sin has brought upon it. The same sense when He would “O unbelieving generation, how long shall I put up with you,” etc. 

But note also the 2-faceted miracle of :35: 

— “his ears were opened”

— “AND the impediment of his tongue was removed”

This is important. A deaf person was not only unable to hear, they are also unable to speak well, because of it. 

One of our Sunday school teachers told me that he had a boss who lost his hearing about 15 years ago and has a cochlear implant. He said immediately after the surgery, everyone sounded like Minnie Mouse to him. After a month or so, his brain clued into how to interpret the input it was receiving, and people started sounding normal. And, because he was not born deaf, he could speak normally.  But this same man said he once met a family who had a child who had been born either deaf or nearly deaf.  They told him about how they had purposely delayed the child’s cochlear surgery for some reason. He didn’t tell them, but it was the worst thing they could have done — because sometime around maybe 11, 12, or so, the brain loses the ability it had to learn sounds and speak them. This child, even after receiving the implant, would never speak normally because he had not heard speech in the crucial time that the brain was developing the ability to speak.

So this teacher said, it IS indeed miraculous that this man could speak normally, after possibly never hearing normal speech! 

The Bible specifically says that BOTH of these were miraculously cured by Jesus here: not only were “his ears opened” — but (literally) “his tongue was loosed” and he could speak well — that’s just as great a miracle!

Then in :36 Jesus tells them again, NOT to tell anyone — but they did — and you can understand why (we talked about this a couple of weeks ago in Mark 1:44).

And :37 says “They were utterly astonished, saying, “He has done all things well; He makes even the deaf to hear and the mute to speak.”

This is actually a fulfilled prophecy: Isaiah 35:4-6 says:
“Behold your God will come with vengeance; the recompense of God will come — but He will save you. (:5) Then the eyes of the blind will be opened and the ears of the deaf will be unstopped. (:6) Then the lame will leap like a deer, and the tongue of the mute will shout for joy” (some of you may recognize these words from Handel’s “Messiah”! 

So as Jesus does these very things here in Mark 7, it points to Him as the Messiah that Isaiah prophesied would come. Jesus is the fulfillment of the Old Testament promise of the Messiah. So many things in His life showed that — including what He did here in this chapter.  

And again: He did all of this “on mission” in a primarily “non-Jewish” area; reaching out to Gentiles and outsiders — and He challenges US to do the same thing too! Hopefully all of our class members will come away with a challenge to be involved in missions/ministry in some specific way — be sure to present some specific opportunities for your members so they can make some personal application of this week’s lesson! 

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Per my licensing agreement with Lifeway:

– These weekly lessons are based on content from Explore the Bible Adult Resources. The presentation is my own and has not been reviewed by Lifeway.

– Lifeway resources are available at: goExploretheBible.com  and: goexplorethebible.com/adults-training

– If you have questions about Explore the Bible resources you may send emails to explorethebible@lifeway.com

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“Faith Under Trial: Living in a Nation Under Condemnation” (Habakkuk 1:1-13 sermon)

In David Platt’s book Radical, he writes about how on a mission trip he visited with a group of believers in Southeast Asia. He said they had to disguise themselves to meet, and come in one or two at a time, to avoid suspicion. Every one of their prayer requests they shared in the meeting involved the persecution they were experiencing there where they served as Christian leaders. He said it was such a contrast to come back home, and see the freedom and prosperity of the church in America — and his book challenges us to consider how we use our blessings in light of the needs around the world. But I also have to wonder:  how long will the freedom and prosperity we have so long experienced last, especially if our nation continues to turn away the Lord?

This morning we begin our study of the Book of Habakkuk from the Old Testament. If you were here last Sunday, we learned how to say it, how to spell it, and where to find it. But most important about this book is that although it’s 2600 years old, it speaks right to where we are as individuals and as a nation today. As we see our society continue to turn away from God, how will we live? As our faith gets tested, How will we respond? Let’s look at what God shows us today in the first verses of Hosea 1, in message I’m calling: “Faith Under Trial: Living In a Nation Under Condemnation.”

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Teacher’s Overview of Lifeway “Explore the Bible” lesson: Mark 6:30-44, “Satisfies”

A brief overview for Sunday School teachers and Bible study leaders, of Lifeway’s “Explore the Bible” lesson of Mark 6:30-44, “Satisfies,” for Sunday, September, 24, 2023. A video version of this overview is available on YouTube at:

INTRODUCTION: One way to begin this lesson would be to ask your group to share:

??? Can anyone share a time when God provided for you/someone you know in an unusual way???

(For example: After Cheryl & I had graduated from seminary, I did not immediately get a church; we ended up having to wait a year. During that time it was hard making ends meet, with only a part-time job, and a new baby! One month we had just paid the electric bill and had only about $5 left to our name — and the rent was due in a couple of days. We got a letter in the mail from Cheryl’s best friend in high school, and without any prompting from us, she had felt led to send us some money — and it was just the amount of our rent for the month! It was one of the more amazing provisions the Lord ever gave us.)


You can share that story if you feel led to, and/or you/your group can share others. Then after you do, you can share that in today’s lesson we’re going to see how Jesus provided for a crowd of people in a miraculous way as well.

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“Find Us Faithful” (Introduction to Habakkuk sermon)

Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a German Christian, pastor, and teacher, who lived in Germany in the 1930s & 40s. (By the way, speaking of Bonhoeffer, in North Carolina we had a ministry to the deaf, and each service we had a translator who sat up in the platform and signed as I preached. One of the translators, a new member of our church, kidded me after one of the services, and said: “Every time I translate for you, you bring up Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and I have to spell his whole name!”)

But Dietrich Bonhoeffer was born in a very difficult world: his life and ministry would take place in Nazi Germany under the dictatorship of Adolph Hitler. Many people have asked: “What happened to the Christians, the pastors and churches in Germany under Hitler?” Well, as always, the responses of Christians, pastors, and churches varied: 

— Some gave up their faith in view of the persecution and suffering they saw take place during World War II. 

— Other German Christians lined themselves up with Hitler, saying we need his “masculine, positive Christianity” that will strengthen the German church. They went along with Hitler’s program against the Jews. 

— Then there were those, like Dietrich Bonhoeffer and a few others, who refused to go along with Hitler, and had to go “underground” during the reign of the Nazis in Germany. These Christians lost everything in this world during the War, the bombing, the persecution that Hitler brought on them — and many of them, including Dietrich Bonhoeffer, gave their lives for the stand they took for Christ and His word. 

So in those difficult days, when Germany went through fiery trials, there were some very different responses: 

— Some abandoned their faith

— Some compromised their faith

— And some held fast to their faith, even as everything they knew of their homeland, crumbled around them.

Is that just a history lesson? No it isn’t. Because we too are living today in a land that is changing — and not always for the better. We too live in a land that may very soon experience some fiery trials. So WE TOO may be facing some very real questions: how will WE respond to the changes we see around us? How will WE respond to the fiery trials that we go through? Honestly, even in this room, we will most likely fall into the same three camps that the Christians in Nazi Germany did:

— Some of us will abandon what we professed as our “faith” during those times.

— Others of us will compromise with the new order of things that will arise, 

— And some of us will be like Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and hold fast to the faith we have been taught, no matter what — even at the cost of our worldly possessions, and even our lives.

The question for each of us personally is: which of these will be MY response?

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Teacher’s Overview: Lifeway “Explore the Bible” lesson: Mark 3:20-30, “Questioned”

A brief overview for Sunday School teachers and Bible study leaders, of Lifeway’s “Explore the Bible” lesson of Mark 3:20-30, for Sunday, September 17, 2023, with the title, “Questioned.” (A video version of this overview is available on YouTube at:

INTRO  ??? One way to begin this lesson would be ask your group: “Can you think of a politician, or a ministry, that had some controversy or criticism?”???

(That’s an easy one, right? It would be harder to think of one that DIDN’T!

— Some might think of Donald Trump as someone who was controversial and has a lot of criticism. Others might point out that Joe Biden does as well.

— I’m reading a biography of Woodrow Wilson, and in 1916, he was strongly criticized for NOT responding to German U-boat attacks on our country’s ships by declaring war against the Germans.

— On the religious front, Franklin Graham received a lot of criticism a few years ago for his comments that the God of Islam was not the same as the Christian God, and that Islam was an “evil” religion. 

You could point out that virtually politician, pastor, minister, or leader of any kind will have some kind of controversy or criticism leveled against him. You might go so far as to say that if a person never receives any criticism, they are probably not doing something right! Because even JESUS was criticized, as we see in today’s passage. 

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Teacher’s Overview of Lifeway’s “Explore the Bible” lesson: Mark 1:35-45, “Proclaimed”

A brief overview for Sunday School teachers and Bible study leaders, of Lifeway’s “Explore the Bible” lesson of Mark 1:35-45, “Proclaimed,” for Sunday, September 10, 2023.

A video version of this overview is available on YouTube at:

INTRO: When British author Charles Dickens visited America in the 1800s he was mobbed by the crowds who wanted to see him:    “When he arrived at any railway station the crowds peered in the window at him “with as much coolness as if I were a Marble image”. There were other indignities. “If I turn into the street, I am followed by a multitude. If I stay at home, the house becomes, with callers, like a fair … Go to a party in the evening, and am so inclosed and hemmed about by people, stand where I will, that I am exhausted for want of air. I dine out, and have to talk about everything, to everybody . . . I can’t get can’t get out at a station, and can’t drink a glass of water, without having a hundred people looking down my throat when I open my mouth to swallow.”   (Peter Ackroyd, Dickens, p. 354)

??? “Have you ever been near a famous person, whom everyone was trying to see???” (Maybe a presidential candidate, or a famous singer or actor, etc.) 

After you/your group have shared, then you can say: that is very much like the context for our passage from Mark 1 today:

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“Christ’s Model of Obedience” (John 14:31 sermon)

One of the most glorious moments in the American Revolution was George Washington’s daring raid on Trenton, N.J., in December of 1776, when he led his men across the swollen Delaware River in freezing weather to launch a surprise attack against the German Hessians.

One of the Americans in the group (John Greenwood) wrote: “‘None but the first officers knew where we were going, or what we were about. This was not unusual, however, as I never heard soldiers say anything, nor ever saw them trouble themselves, as to where they were or where they were led. It was enough for them to know that wherever the officers commanded they must go …’.” (David McCullough, 1776, pp. 277-278)

Washington’s victory at Trenton was one of the most important in the whole war for Independence, NOT because that battle “won the war,” or anything like that, but because at that point, everybody had given up on the Americans and thought the British had won — but this battle showed our own troops, as well as the British, that they could win after all. It changed the whole course of the Revolution. But it’s significant that this key victory was based upon one important ingredient: the OBEDIENCE of the American soldiers, who did not even ask where they were going or what they were doing — they just obeyed. 

Obedience is such an important thing. And that’s true for us as God’s people today. At the very end of John 14, Jesus makes a statement that is easy to overlook, but which is packed with meaning for us. He tells us about the kind of obedience He gave to His Father, and is a model for our obedience to Him as well. Jesus said, “I do exactly as the Father commanded Me.” That’s a very simple statement — but look at how much it teaches us about how we should obey our Heavenly Father:

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Teacher’s Overview of Lifeway’s “Explore the Bible” lesson: Mark 1:1-13, “Introduced”

A brief overview for Sunday School teachers and Bible study leaders of Lifeway’s “Explore the Bible” lesson of Mark 1:1-13, for Sunday, September 3, 2023.

A video version of this overview is available on YouTube at:

INTRO: Read some famous “opening lines” of books and see if members can identify them:

— One site said “Call me Ishmael” was the most famous opening line of a book. (Herman Melville’s Moby Dick.)

— I would say it might be: “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times” (Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities)

— “It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.” (Jane Austen, Pride & Prejudice)

— “Mr. and Mrs. Dursley of number four, Privet Drive, were proud to say that they were perfectly normal, thank you very much.” (Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, J.K. Rowling)

— “Once there were four children whose names were Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy.” (C.S. Lewis, The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe)

Why is the opening line of a book considered to be so important?

(Because it gets your attention; and it may set forth the course of the rest of the book.)

That’s what :1 of the Book of Mark does here: “The beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God.”

??? What do you think of his introduction/first line???

(It’s brief, to the point. It does tell us what this book is going to be about: Jesus, the Son of God. That’s “typical Mark”!)

INTRODUCTION TO THE BOOK OF MARK

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“Coming To Worship Jesus” (Luke 21:38 sermon)

Charles Spurgeon once told a story about how Caesar Augustus was invited to a feast in his honor; but the attendance was so poor, and the feast was so mediocre, that he arose in the midst of it and lamented: “Alas, you have fooled me; I supposed that I had been invited to be honored — but I find instead that I was invited to be shamed!” 

In light of Caesar’s statement, we might want to ask ourselves could we be doing the same thing to the Lord? When we come together on Sunday, we are supposedly doing these “worship services” in His honor.  But are they? Does the way we attend, the way we participate, the way we actually worship, really honor Him — or does it shame Him?

Luke 21:38 describes some things about the way the people came to be with Jesus that day, which should challenge us today regarding the way that we worship: 

“And all the people would get up early in the morning to come to Him in the temple to listen to Him.”

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