“Jesus Directs His Church” (Acts 1:1-8 sermon)

Steve Jobs was one of the most unique CEO’s in history. He had a lot of quirks, but he led Apple computers to become what is now THE largest company in the world, worth over 300 BILLION dollars. But among the things Jobs did well, was keep his company focused on what they were supposed to be doing:  know what people want;  produce quality products that will appeal to them;  and eliminate all unessential activities, and focus on doing your best at your most important priority. He constantly kept these directives in front of his people, to keep them on track.

As the church of the Lord Jesus Christ, we too have been left some directions by our “CEO,” who left us some specific directions about what He wants us to be doing as His people, His church. We find some of those directions here in our passage for today in Acts 1:8:

I. Accept the Challenge of Waiting

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“Lessons From Gethsemane” (Matthew 26 sermon)

I read this last week where the famous pro golfer Jack Nicklaus said that if he had only one round of golf left to play in his life, he would play it at Pebble Beach (just south of San Francisco, California, one of the iconic golf courses in the country).

Which raises the question: what would you do, if you had one more day to live; one more thing to do with your life?  In Matthew 26 this week, we read where Jesus had one more hour before He would be arrested and go to the cross to die for our sins. What He chose to do with that hour says something important, doesn’t it? He didn’t spend it getting one last lesson in with His disciples; He didn’t spend it trying to preach one more sermon. Matthew 26 says He spent that last hour in prayer, in the Garden of Gethsemane. That should tell us something about what Jesus thought was the most important thing He could do in His last hour.

There are several very important lessons we can learn from Matthew 26 and the Garden of Gethsemane. Let’s look at some of them:

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“The Revelations of Psalm 19”

Olaudah Equiano grew up in Africa in the 1700’s and was sold into slavery. He eventually was able to buy his own freedom, became educated, and even published a book. But as a young man he was a servant to a British naval officer, and he saw his master reading books. One day when no one else was present, Equiano said he picked up a book, asked it a question, and then held it up to his ear to see if it would speak to him — it seemed to speak to his master; maybe it would speak to him? He learned later that’s not how it works, of course. You read it, and let it “speak” to you through its written words.

The same thing is true with the word of God. You can’t just pick up a Bible and hold it up to your ear and expect to “hear anything.” But if you will read the words in it, and desire to hear from God, He WILL speak to you through His word. 

This morning we’re going to see what God says to us in Psalm 19 — one of the favorite Psalms to many. It breaks up naturally into 3 sections, each of which “speaks to us,” and gives us an important revelation from God:

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“In The Place of God” (Genesis 30:2 sermon)

Our first year here in Angleton I was driving to Webster, and not long after I turned off of 35, to my right, I saw some Buddhist statues! Not really what I expected to see here in south Texas — and those aren’t the only ones around, either, are they? There’s some more over by Rosharon, I’ve seen — and there may be others as well. 

Now I’m pretty sure if we surveyed this group here today, and asked the question, “Do you have any idols in your house?,” I would not be shocked if there were not a single physical idol to be found anywhere in the homes of those present here. But the absence of physical idols in our homes, does not mean that we have not put other things in the place where only God should be. 

There’s more than one way to have an idol — as we see in our passage for this morning. There’s a lot of ways that we can put other people, and other things, in the place of God. So let’s apply Genesis 30:2 for a few minutes this morning and think about how we can put other things “In The Place of God.”

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“When Yahweh Is Your God” (Genesis 28:10-22 sermon)

A few years ago a pastor I know from Oklahoma was in New York City riding in a cab. He saw a little statue on the driver’s dashboard, and he asked the man, who was from India, about it. The man said, “This is my god.” And he began to tell this pastor about his Hindu god. After he finished, he said, “Now, tell me about YOUR God.” The pastor said, “Well, to begin with, He won’t fit on the dashboard!”

Having that little statue on the dash of his taxi was part of that man’s commitment to his god. As Christians, the One True God does not ask us to put little statues of Him on our dashboards — in fact He specifically says DO NOT make little statues of Me — but He DOES ask us to make commitments to Him. In our Bible reading a couple of weeks ago in Matthew 9 we saw where Jesus called Matthew to leave his tax collector’s office and follow Him. He asked for a total commitment from Matthew — even to leave his job. And in our passage for today, we see some evidences of the kind of commitment that the Lord’s followers will make to Him, in the life of Jacob in Genesis 28. Let’s look at some of the commitments you will make, “When YHWH Is Your God”:

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“Reckoned As Righteous” (Genesis 15:6 sermon)

In the winter of 1738 Charles Wesley was serving as a missionary in America, but he wrote in his journal, he was seeking to convert the Indians, but who would convert HIM? He was earnestly seeking to be right with God, and get an assurance of salvation, but it was eluding him. He just did not feel at peace with God. In late February, Wesley got sick, and Peter Bohler, a Moravian missionary, visited him. He said, ‘Do you hope to be saved?”‘ Wesley said he did. Bohler asked him: “For what reason do you hope to be saved?” Charles Wesley answered, “Because I have used my best endeavours to serve God.” But Bohler simply “shook his head and said no more. I thought him very uncharitable,” Wesley continued, “saying in my heart ‘What! Are not my endeavours a sufficient ground of hope? Would you rob me of my endeavours? I have nothing else to trust to.”’ (John R. Tyson. Assist Me to Proclaim, Kindle 653-662)

Charles Wesley at that time was like many people are today — thinking that he might be saved by his “endeavours” — his good works; the things he could do for God. Maybe you are like him today. Maybe you’ve started off this year trying to be the best person you can be, so that you will find favor with God. If that’s what you’ve been thinking, then our verse for today is good news for you indeed! 

One of the great blessings of reading through the Bible together this year is that in the course of the year we will come across all of the greatest verses in the Bible at one point or another — and it will give me the opportunity to preach on many of these great verses this year. Our verse for today has to be considered one of those: Genesis 15:6, “Then he believed in the Lord; and He reckoned it to him as righteousness.”

Genesis 15:6 is one of the Old Testament verses that is most often quoted by the authors of the New Testament (Romans 4:3, 4:20-22, Galatians 3:6, James 2:23). And rightly so, because this verse teaches us some of the most important truths about salvation. If you want to be “saved”: if you want to know that your sins to be forgiven, that you are right with God, and have a home in heaven, you need to understand what this verse is teaching us about being “Reckoned As Righteous.”

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“The Ruts of Righteousness” (Psalm 23:5 sermon)

I am currently reading a biography of Steve Jobs, the founder of the Apple computer company, and it is a very interesting life story. Jobs was not a Christian, as some of you may know, but there are really powerful lessons, both good and bad, from his life that we can profit from. One thing he said that was very thought-provoking: that in the first half of your life, you make your habits — then in the second part of your life, your habits make YOU!

That’s an interesting thought. The habits that we make in our lives are indeed very important — and they CAN end up either making or breaking us. 

We mentioned last week that Psalm 23 was one of the best-loved passages in the Bible, as it talks about how the Lord shepherds us. But verse 5 of the Psalm has an interesting turn of phrase that can challenge us as we wrap up this Christmas season and begin a new year this week. David says there that the Lord “leads me in the paths of righteousness for His name’s sake.” That is a very familiar phrase to many of us, but it also has a deep meaning to it. 

The word “paths” here, according to the venerable Brown/Driver/Briggs Hebrew lexicon, means “wagon tracks”, the place where the wagons have gone before, leaving their hard, beaten-down path — we might well call them “ruts”!  Many of us have been on an old dirt country road, where there were just “ruts” worn in the dirt from the cars driving on it over and over. 

We often speak of “being in a rut” as a bad thing — and it can be, for sure. But the Bible shows us here that there are also some good “ruts” we can be in. When David says: “He leads me in the paths of righteousness for His name’s sake,” he’s talking about “good ruts.” He says the Lord leads him like a shepherd in “the ruts of righteousness.” So there are some “good ruts” we can be in: “Ruts of Righteousness.” Let’s think about some of the good “ruts of righteousness” for a few minutes:

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Family Gingerbread Contest 2021

Help us determine the winner of our annual family gingerbread house contest. Vote for your favorite from the six below. You can use any criteria you wish: just the one you like best. THANK YOU for helping us continue our annual tradition!

House #1: “Frosty & The Crooked Door”

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“Herald of His Advent” (Micah 5:2 sermon)

When Mark Twain visited the Holy Land in the 1860’s, he did not find Bethlehem to be very impressive.  In fact, he wrote later of its “mouldy domes and turrets” and disparaged its “noisy mob” and “leprous beggars.”  He said he was never so glad to get away from a place in his life.  And yet, years later he wrote to a fellow traveler on that trip, that he was glad that he had been to Bethlehem, and that it was indeed a special place to him, because despite all of its shortcomings, he knew that our Savior had been born there. 

This morning we are going to be looking at Micah 5:2, which is a “Herald of the Advent.”  “Advent” is a word which describes the coming of a great person – and. in this most famous case in Micah, the coming of Jesus Christ to earth. 

Just a little background on the prophet Micah and his book: Micah lived about 750 years before the time of Christ – about the same time as the prophet Isaiah.  Micah lived in a time in which the people of God had turned away from Him, and were serving false gods, living in all kinds of sin, and they were about to be judged for it by the Babylonians.  Some of Micah’s and Isaiah’s prophecies were about the judgment that was about to come – things were about to get pretty ugly in their land.  But amidst all of the darkness of their prophecies, there was good news: a Messiah was coming, who would save us and make us right with God.  Micah 5:2-5 is one of those bright spots in the book; let’s look at its message for us:

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“In The Word 2022” (Ezra 7:10 message)

A few years ago they came out with an interesting list, of the books that people most frequently lie about reading, in order to appear well-read!

The top four were George Orwell’s 1984, (42%), Tolstoy’s War and Peace (31%), James Joyce’s Ulysses (25%) and, of all books — the Bible (24%) which is pretty ironic, that people would LIE about having read the Bible! If they HAD really read the Bible all the way through, they would have come across the 9th Commandment, which tells us not to bear false witness!

Well I don’t know how many of us here today have ever read all the way through the Bible, but I hope that by the end of 2022, you will be able to say that you did. It is a big deal – to know that you have read entirely through THE single greatest book in all the world. 

As a young man, Bill Tolar was an atheist, and he was very proud of his intellectual ability. But one day he was asked by a friend, since he was so intellectual, if he had ever read through the world’s #1 best-selling book of all time? He asked, what IS the best-selling book of all time? His friend told him it was the Bible. When Bill heard that, he wanted to read it just so he could say, for his own intellectual pride, that he had done it. But as he read the Bible, God’s Spirit began to work in him. He later said I began to realize that if this book was right, my life was wrong. And he ended up giving his life to Jesus as his Savior — and went on to become one of the most amazing professors, at Southwestern Baptist Seminary in Ft. Worth.   

God does great things when we get into His word. So I hope you’ll join us January 1st as we begin a year-long journey reading through the Bible together as a church family, “In The Word 2022.” To help us prepare for that, I want us to look at the commitment that Ezra, one of the great men of God in the Old Testament, had to the word of God, which we find in Ezra 7:10:

“For Ezra had set his heart to study the Law of the Lord and to practice it, and to teach His statutes and ordinances in Israel.” (Ezra 7:10)

God used Ezra in a great way, and one of the reasons He could, was because Ezra had developed some habits in his life, in the scriptures.

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