Articles for the ‘Spirituality & Religion’ Category
Preach A Sermon
Four Suggestions on How to Preach A Sermon
Imagine it! Knees wobbling! Heart racing! Sweat popping! Mind Swirling! What has happened? Are you in love? No, you have just been asked by your pastor to preach a sermon in an upcoming worship service. Yikes! What do you do? Quickly say “No!” and make up an excuse; or, pray for courage and seize the moment? Let me encourage you to go for it. Whether you have been called to be a preacher or not, it can be a very rewarding experience for you. Here are some preaching and sermon preparation pointers for you to consider:
1. Start Praying for Wisdom and Courage
This should go without saying, but I am saying it just the same. Ask God to help you, direct you, and use you for His glory. Pray for the people who will be there when you preach. Pray for yourself to be calm and courageous. Pray for the message to be meaningful and memorable.
2. Select a Relevant and Helpful Topic
Since you are going to preach, use the opportunity to give people a message that will help them in their daily lives. By all means, avoid the temptation of trying to impress people.
You will make a greater impression by giving them instructions that will help them live their lives more fully.
You can easily select a topic that will help people by simply considering the problems they face and the struggles they have to go through in life. Everyone needs encouragement. Everyone needs to know how to handle wrong emotions. Everyone has to learn how to forgive, and on and on the list could go. The Bible is a great resource manual for life and will give you the instruction you will need to pass on to others.
3. Use Stories that Clearly Illustrate Your Points
People remember and relate to stories,especially personal stories. Don’t shy away from speaking about your own struggles or triumphs. This makes for good sermon material.
Sharing how God helped you or blessed you will encourage others as well. This is the power of testimony at work. The introduction or beginning of the sermon is a good place for a personal story.
Even a humorous event that happened to you can be very impacting. Just make sure you are able to weave the aim of your sermon into the particular story you tell.
4. Keep it Moving and Keep it Short
It will be far easier than you think to have more to say than you have time to say it. Use a clear and simple outline and flow through it in a timely manner.
If you finish with people wanting more, you have done well. Even a great start can be lost in a long tedious sermon. Try to keep it around 25-35 minutes maximum.
There are many more suggestions that could be made, but take these four simple ones I have shared and keep them in mind when you preach a sermon for people who like you, need lifting up and blessed.
This article writtenby Eddie Lawrence who is a pastor, author and overseer of Sermon Seedbed, a site that offers free sermons and sermon outlines for pastors and Bible teachers.
Sermons from the Heart
Billy Graham once said that some people will miss heaven by eighteen inches, the distance between their head and their heart.” We all get the point. If God is after the heart, then we need to preach sermons from the heart and sermons that aim at the heart. Consider the following comparisons.
1. The Head Preacher
This is the cranial preacher who is intellectually well prepared and who has a keen mind for theology and its accompanying terminology. Deep truths are mined out and served up that are wonderful to hear. Every preacher should strive to have such a mind and knowledge. It is not to be criticized in and of itself.
2. The Heart Preacher
I will call this the cardiac preacher. His heart is totally in what he is doing. He is enthusiastic and his emotions are engaged in his preaching.
3. The Head and Heart Preacher
This is the preacher we should desire to be. He loves God with all his heart and mind, just as we have been commanded to do. He studies and his mind engages the Word and is renewed by it. As his mind discerns and discovers truth, his heart is moved.
When he preaches, he feeds the congregation the deep truths of God’s Word. As he shares, his heart is poured out in concern and compassion. the spirit and the truth are both at work in a powerful way. His heart is moved and so are the hearts in the path of his heartfelt message. God help us all to utililize our hearts and our minds when we preach from the Bible the truths of God.
It behooves us all to do inventory on our preaching. We should ask of ourself, “Is my preaching more from the head for the head or from the heart for the heart?” Be a man of the heart going after hearts.
This article written by Eddie Lawrence, D.Min. who is an author, pastor, and also oversees Sermon Seedbed which is a resource site for pastors and Bible teachers that offers free sermons and sermon outlines.
Pastor Resources for Good Preaching
Getting the Most Out of Your Sermon Outlines
I once had a professor in one of my seminary classes state that every sermon ought to have at least one point, or else it is pointless. The goal of preaching is to communicate the truths of Scripture in a way that connects with people with accuracy and relevancy. Being accurate relates to properly communicating the original message of the Scripture for the audience at the time it was written; relevancy relates to applying the Scripture in a way that it somehow helps the people that are hearing it. A sermon should be outlined in such a way that people who listen to it can do the following:
1. They should be able to endure it.
Preacher jokes abound about long boring sermons. The mind can only absorb what the seat can endure. Honestly, evaluate how long you stay in front of the people. They are use to sound bytes and frequent commercials in their everyday life. In addition, technology continues to make the learning process more and more interactive.
Here are some suggestions:
-When your outline becomes term paper sized, you are in trouble. Trim it down. Go over it several times making it more and more simple. You will be surprised how much more people will get out of it. If you have been preaching an hour, try aiming at 45 minutes this week. If you have been preaching 40 minutes, aim at 30 and so forth. When you land under 20 minutes consistently, you may be cutting your people a little short. This is not the issue with any preachers I know. One Sunday I preached a 19.5 minute message. Honestly, it took a lot more prep time than it would have, had I gone 40 minutes. A good pair of scissors might help most of us preachers.
– Don’t bury your sermon in endless sub points. People will struggle keeping up with you. Using PowerPoint can help this, but honestly when you go to the second page of section three under sub point two on page six……. You get the drift. Your audience are not at a required class in order to graduate. They volunteered to come hear you preach, don’t make them regret it.
-On average keep your main points to five or less.
-Vary the way you present your main points so that you do not become overly predictable. Always alliterating your messages can cause the people to become more interesting in the way you have built your sermon than it what it says. Sometimes state your points in the form of principles, or in terms of analogy, or a hundred other ways.
-Work on your introduction and conclusion meticulously. A sermon with a good start and finish helps make a lasting impression upon people.
2. They should be able to enjoy it.
Please do not misunderstand me here. I am not saying the preacher’s goal is to entertain. Just as there are pastor resources for you to use, you are a resource that your people will use. So preach in a way they will remember and enjoy. I am saying that a even a very serious topic can be presented in a way that people are engaged, challenged, and leave knowing they have been given something that can change their lives or at the least something they can chew on. It both cases, they are interacting. Their minds and hearts are participating. This is an enjoyable part of life. It is filled with adventure and agony all at the same time. It lifts us up and onward. There is nothing unspiritual in preparing a message in a way that people can receive it more easily. If the core truth presented is offensive, fine. But if it is how it was presented, that’s a shame. The truth was hindered by the truth bearer in such a case. Think about the following ideas:
-Use stories, quotes, and anecdotes to communicate bible truths in a way the common man can understand and relate to. Ever noticed that Jesus teaching style often involved parables and short sayings that the people could really bite into?
-Under each main point, make sure you have three elements present. Explain what your main point means. Illustrate the point to people. Thirdly, make sure you apply it to their lives. Answer the question, so what difference does this make to me?
-It’s alright to laugh in church. Jesus definitely used humor in some of his teachings. You are a preacher not a comedian, but a preacher is a person and laughter is a healthy natural human emotion that God gave us. Sometimes well placed humor can give the audience a little breather as well as giving them the opportunity to vocally interact with the message, both of which are good things.
A good outline will highlight many of these areas and give a fullness and a steady pace and direction to your sermons. Visit my Sermon Seedbed site to check out all kinds of sermon outlines which are yours free of charge. Remembering the above ideas may help you to avoid some of those longhorn sermons. You know the kind that has two points and a bunch of bull in between!
Eddie Lawrence is a pastor and author and holds an earned Doctorate in Expository Preaching. He oversees Sermon Seedbed which offers free pastor resources for pastors and Bible teachers.
Resources for Sermons
When I was in seminary, I remember the professor one day handing out a resource for us entitled, “How to Build A Sermon in Only Ten Hours.” We had been taught that the average time it took to build sermons was 20-40 hours per sermon. Most people simply do not realize the time that pastors and Bible teachers put into building sermon outlines and Bible studies.
With all the other demands on spiritual leaders, a huge time crunch is created when it comes to preparing for the message of the week. Like or not, ready or not, Sunday morning comes around. And for a lot of pastors, so does Sunday night, Wednesday night, and the weekly radio program, the weekly Bible study, the monthly men’s group, the frequent funerals and the occasional revival meeting. Preaching is such a wonderful calling but that does not lessen the time constraints.
Fortunately, we are in the advent of new methods of communication. There are some wonderful resources available for preachers that offer quality materials that also save time. The computer is having a great impact on the landscape of sermon preparation. Think of these factors:
1. A pastor can Google any Bible verse, word, or question and instantly get tens of thousands of pages representing a volume of study that someone has undertaken.
2. The hours of preparation time that are taken over the course of a year in just flipping pages and looking for a resource are eliminated in a click. This is certainly a wise use of time. Why take ten minutes to scour through Strong’s Concordance looking for the meaning of a Greek word when you can do a one second click and find every reference to that word in Strong’s and other word-study resources?
3. An idea library awaits at the nearest PC for every Bible teacher. Many times just reading one idea another preacher shares can ignite pages of thought. This is iron sharpening iron. There are tens of thousands of free sermons to be read and studied online.
These factors are just three amidst many that could be listed. Now a word about abusing privilege. Some people are concerned that pastors will simply come to rely on the work of others without studying themselves, so they discourage the use of the computer in Bible study. To this concern let me say four other quick things:
1. Yes, some will. Eden was perfect but it was still abused.
2. Some still do without the computer by just using books, cd’s, etc. Any thing good can be misused,
3. The use of other’s material to guide us can be blessed by God as we receive it into our own hearts, experience its truth for ourselves, and then share it with others and let them know where we first heard it.
4. Taking an idea that blesses us and building upon it is a method of learning we all use in every area of our lives and we should.
So, just make sure you do your study, whatever the method, with integrity and true heart hunger, and I believe you will be in a safe place and be used by God in what you do.
This article written by Eddie Lawrence, who is a pastor and also the overseer of Sermon Seedbed, a free online Bible study site.
Pastor Resources that Help Preachers Preach
What are the characteristics of sermons that audiences hear and heed. Whatever they are, they will be good to add to your pastor resources. Let’s look at some of them.I suggest that there are four things to consider that sets a sermon that works apart from others.
1. First it is memorable. Let’s face it, if after the final “Amen!” is spoken, if everyone forgets what was said, then what was said was not that impressive. An audience has a hard time applying a message from one Sunday to the next, if they cannot remember what it was. So such a sermon has elements that make it memorable. Appropriate stories, powerful illustrations that actually are illustrative, and words employed that strike the memory of the audience are all important. Correct application of the sermon also marks the memory. That “this really hits home feeling will plant it into the memory field of the hearer.
2. Secondly, it connects on three levels. The sermon should be reasonable and make sense. It should connect intellectually. A sermon on faith can stretch a man’s natural mind, yet make sense that God would work in such a way since God is a spiritual being whose ways and thoughts are beyond ours. In other words, it makes sense that we cannot always understand God. But to bathe a sermon in ignorance of context, history, good exegesis, and bad exposition can be a hindrance to the hearer. It is amazing how Jesus taught in a way that common people could easily understand his illustrations, yet were tremendously stretched by his application.
The sermon should connect emotionally. Aim at the heart and those “gut” feelings will begin to be stirred within your hearers. Aiming only at the mind without regard to the heart is equally foolish. The heart level is where life change occurs. Preaching should be done within the crucible where real life occurs. Pain is real. Lust is real. Temptation is real. Desperation is real. A message may work in a mental lab and fall flat on its face on the street corner of the real world. This is where a sermon becomes relevant.
The last aspect of connecting has to do with the will. God made us with a will and we use it constantly. Your audience is continually deciding to tune in further or change the channel on you. Aim at the will. Target why what you are sharing is important. An old adage says, “A man persuaded against his will is of the same opinion still.” You may get the mind, and the heart, but the will is the decision maker. A good message answers the question, “Why does this matter?” This is the jugular of the will. Jesus did this, “Repent or you will perish!”
3. The third mark of a sermon that works is that it is true. For the preacher to build any sermon on a foundation that will not rest upon the eternal truth of Scripture is to plan to fail. Not only will the sermon fail but the people who apply it will as well. Truth is established. It has been set in place by God Himself through His Word. Build primarily on what He has said, not what someone else has said. Known and applied truth still sets men free.
4. The last mark of such a sermon is that it is incarnational. Now, that’s a big theological word that simply means, in is delivered through a human being. The man or woman somewhat becomes the message. It is not delivered apart from the personality through which it is being presented. The truth of the Gospel is that God became a man to rescue us from the ravages of sin. Through the art of preaching, truth is brought to men as the Spirit of God bears witness. Passion and concern mark the man who has been marked by the message.
In summary, make a mental check-list as you work on your weekly sermon and impose the following four questions:
-In what ways, am I making this sermon easy to remember?
-In what ways, am I aiming at the heart of the audience?
-In what ways, am I supporting what I am saying with Scripture?
-In what ways, am I actively applying the sermon to my own life?
Certainly there are other elements to consider, but these four are important and I believe a part of sermons that work. I wish you much success in writing and delivering sermons that ultimately are lived out in the lives of your audience.
Written by: Eddie Lawrence, D.Min. of Sermon Seedbed which offers free pastor resources for pastors and Bible teachers.
Getting to Know what Portable Communion Sets Are
One integral part of that helps in reaching different people in different places and winning them for God are portable communion sets.
The Holy Communion is part of an important Christian tradition.
Normally, when you hear of Communion, it is different from Baptism wherein the latter is done once while the former is a practice done all throughout a Christianâs life.
Catholics mainly follow the Communion simply because the Lord said so. During communion, Christians are expected to remember Christ and his sacrifice and suffering for humankind.
In this holy practice, there are several essential elements. However, the top two would include the bread and wine.
There are three essential views that Christians hold regarding the bread and the wine.
One view is that there is transubstantiation that occurs and the bread and wine actually becomes the real body and blood of Christ.
Another view that is held is that the bread and the wine remain unchanged, but the Lordâs presence is made spiritually real through their faith.
The last view that most Christians hold is that the bread and wine are used as merely symbols. It represents the body and blood of the Lord and remembers the sacrifice that he has done for the people.
Anybody can go ahead and participate in a Communion. Normally, you will find this done in regular churches, but there are also priests that are assigned in remote places where there is no proper church.
People who live in these places and want to participate in a communion can now do so since there are portable communion sets available. Hence, a priest can go ahead and conduct it to them.
Portable communion sets are necessary tools for a priest or any member of the clergy in any denomination to have especially if he is visiting a remote place or region.
There are many places that a clergy might make use of these portable sets.
For instance, it can be used in a hospital, a nursing home or even during the battlefield. This makes it easier for people to join and participate in this sacred worship without having to attend the church.
There are four main elements that make up communion sets. There is the cruet, paten, chalice, and pyx. There are small as well as large communion sets that you can use.
There will also be a carrying case for the set. Some pieces in the sets are ornate while others are simple and made of silver.
Each piece also has a specific function during the service. The cruet is a small container or bottle that is used to hold the wine during the service. The Paten is a small disk or plate that is used to hold the communion bread during the service.
Then you have the pyx, this is a small, often round, container that holds the host inside. Finally, you have the chalice. This is also known as the communion cup, where the wine is poured onto and drank from.
All of these help to make up the elements that are part of portable communion sets.
When shopping for communion sets, you may also consider customizing your own set by choosing what design of Communion plates you wanted or the style of communion cups you prefer, thus making it even more personal.
The Unjust Steward
In my opinion, this story has two very powerful spiritual principles that God wants us to get a hold of. These two principles are spelled out at the end of this passage.
I’ll go ahead and state the main parts of these verses, highlight the key principles to grab a hold of and then give you my opinion on what these principles are and how they apply to your life.
The Scripture Verse
This verse is Jesus talking with His disciples. This verse is from Luke 16:1-13 and it is titled the “Parable of the Unjust Steward.”
“And He also said to His disciples: “There was a certain rich man who had a steward, and an accusation was brought to him that this man was wasting his goods. So he called him and said to him, ‘What is this I hear about you? Give an account of your stewardship, for you can no longer be steward.’
Then the steward said within himself, ‘What shall I do? For my master is taking the stewardship away from me. I cannot dig; I am ashamed to beg. I have resolved what to do, that when I am put out of the stewardship, they may receive me into their houses.’
“So he called every one of his master’s debtors to him, and said to the first, ‘How much do you owe my master?’
And he said, ‘A hundred measures of oil.’ So he said to him, ‘Take your bill and sit down quickly and write fifty.’
Then he said to another, ‘And how much do you owe? So he said, ‘A hundred measures of wheat.’
And he said to him, ‘Take your bill, and write eighty.’”So the master commended the unjust steward because he had dealt shrewdly. For the sons of this world are shrewder in their generation than the sons of the light. And I say to you, make friends for yourselves by unrighteous mammon, that when you fail, they may receive you into everlasting habitations.“He who is faithful in what is least is faithful also in much; and he who is unjust in what is least is unjust also in much. Therefore if you have not been faithful in the unrighteousness mammon, who will commit to your trust the true riches?
“And if you have not been faithful in what is another man’s, who will give you what is your own?
No servant can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will be loyal to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon.”
Interpretation of the Unjust Steward
Jesus gives a very interesting parable about the relationship between the rich master and his steward. Apparently the steward is not properly handling his master’s goods so the rich master is threatening to take away all that he is a “steward” over.
The steward then apparently cooks up a scheme to get what he can out of some people who owe his master some goods. The rich master then commends the steward for what he has just done because he acted “shrewdly.”
Jesus then apparently labels this “transaction” as “unrighteous mammon.” Mammon means “riches.” So apparently this rich master and “unjust steward” were in agreement in the way they conducted their “business.” Jesus then makes the comment that the sons of the “world” are shrewder than the sons of the “light.”
This statement would line up with the “business world” as we know it. Good businessmen are known for their “shrewdness” in being able to make money and “good” business deals. Corporate America is known for their ruthlessness in making money even if it means hurting others in the process. We all know how that works.
Jesus compares them with His children of the “light” which would mean Christians. Christians are bound by “higher principles” and they better be acting on better morals than their “heathen” business partners or they will have to answer to God when they face judgment after they die.
Good Christian businessmen can still make a nice profit and not run over and unjustly hurt people in the process. It’s all how you “play” the game.
Now here are the 2 key principles that Jesus brings to light off of this parable.
1. Stewardship
Jesus is using a parable involving “unrighteousness” between the rich master and his steward. The fact that He calls their transaction “unrighteous mammon” and the steward “unjust” proves that point. However, even in this unjust transaction that just took place, there is still a few lessons to be learned.
God gives all of us chances to be “stewards.” We are stewards over every blessing God has given us. Parents are “stewards” over their children. Your house, your car, your jobs, your earthly possessions are all things that you are stewards over. What God is doing with all of this is watching how you manage your “goods” just like the rich master did with his unjust steward. And just as the rich master threatened to take away from his steward all of the goods he was watching over, God can arrange to take away some of our “goods” if we do not “max out” with what has been given to us.
In order to get promoted in God’s realm to the next “level,” you have to “max out” with what He has already given you. If God has you in a certain job for a certain time, He expects you to do the best you can while doing that job. If you don’t, you risk losing God promoting you to the next level when it is time for your promotion. I believe a lot of Christians miss out on God’s best for their lives because they don’t max out on what God has already given them.
If God has given you a nice house, a nice car and some nice possessions, I feel He expects you to take good care of these possessions. Keep your house in halfway decent order. If you don’t, God will have no desire to give you any additional blessings because you have not properly taken care of the blessings that He already has given to you.
Jesus makes a very interesting comment about stewardship in general. He says that “He who is faithful in what is least is faithful also in much; and he who is unjust in what is least is unjust also in much.” In other words, God has found out that he who does well and “maxes out” with what little he has at the beginning will also do well and continue to “max out” if he is given a lot more!
And just the opposite is also true. He who is “unjust” in small matters, is also going to be “unjust” in bigger matters. That person thus cannot be trusted to be allowed to have anything else and not even “heathen business men,” much less God Himself, is going to trust this type of individual with any additional goods or possessions.
After studying the lives of a lot of great men and women in God over the last 10 years, I found something very interesting that would illustrate the above points. God has started most of these people at the “bottom of the ladder.” He’ll start them out with just enough money to get by, just enough provisions to live on and then sit back and watch how they do with what He starts them out with.
All the people who have become “successful” in their walk with God all “maxed out” with what God started them out with. These are called “small beginnings.” Because they maxed out on level one with God, God then saw fit to promote then to the next “level.” And then the same scenario repeats itself. God once more sits back and watches how they do with what is given to them on level two. And if they pass that “test,” they are promoted to level three.
That is how you keep moving up God’s “promotion ladder” – by maxing out on what God has given you at that level. And this is where a lot of Christians blow it big time with God. They do not realize they are being “tested” by God on the level that they are at. God will watch how you handle what He has given you at the level that you are at. And if you do not properly handle and max out with what He has given you, there will be no promotion and you will stay “stuck” where you are at until you get what God is trying to tell you to do. God will “play you” to see what you are made of!!!
This principle not only works in God’s realm, but it also works in the “natural business” realm as pointed out by the above parable. Not only will God keep you being from promoted due to “bad stewardship,” but so will the “world” in general. Thus you have multitudes of people who never seem to get this principle. They think the world owes them a living and they cannot figure out why no one wants to hire them or trust them with any possessions or goods. They spend the rest of their lives in poverty thinking that it’s the rest of the world and not them.
Bottom for all Christians – if you want promotions from God to higher levels of service, bigger and better blessings, etc. – then max out on the level that you are currently at with God right now. Do the best you can at the job you are currently working at. Keep your house and material possessions clean and in order. These material possessions are really blessings from God and He expects you to appreciate and take care of what has been “given” to you. If you do, you will create an incredible desire in God to want to promote you to the next level and bless you with more blessings.
There are enough verses in the Bible that show that God does have an “abundant” side to Him and that He can release abundant type blessings your way – but He will not do it unless you have already proven yourself to Him on the lower levels. He will not go into the abundant blessing mode with you unless He knows that you can handle abundant type blessings – just like the above parable is illustrating.
He will test you and prove you first to see if you can handle it before releasing any type of “abundance” to you. That is why most Christians are not really blessed with any real serious “abundance.” They are either not maxing out at the level that they are at with God, or they simply do not have what it takes to handle abundance – especially abundant amounts of money.
2. Who Will You Serve?
Jesus ends this parable with what I feel is the 2nd major principle and idea to grab a hold of. He says:
“No servant can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will be loyal to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon.”
The above parable is illustrating an “unrighteous transaction” between two businessmen – the rich master and his steward. The last sentence in the above verse speaks volumes! Each Christian must decide who they will serve – God or mammon (which means riches).
Do you decide what you are going to be when you “grow up” or do you let God decide? Do you decide whom you should marry, or do you let God decide? Do you let God lead and control your life or do you decide how you will lead your life?
There is only one way for each Christian to properly live this life and that is under a “full surrender to God the Father” Everything goes on His altar. He wants total control of your life so He can “max you out” with whatever His desire and will is for your life.
He knows best who you should marry – you don’t. He knows what you would be best at when you “grow up”, you don’t. His knowledge is perfect – yours is not. He knows how to perfectly get you from point a to point b – you do not. He can pave the way ahead of you to prepare for your next steps, you cannot. He can protect you and prolong your life if He wants to, you cannot.
That is why Jesus says in the Bible “without Me, you can do nothing.” He is the vine – the tree trunk, we are the branches. We have to totally depend and lean on Him, not on our own understanding and what we think is right. The Bible says that those who are led by the Holy Spirit are the true sons of God. It is the job of the Holy Spirit to lead us – but He will not lead us unless we give God the Father a complete and unconditional full surrender of our bodies, souls, spirits and our entire lives into His hands.
The Bible says that with the measure we use, will be the measure that will be measured back to us. In other words, if we give God 50%, He will only give us 50%. But if we give him 100%, then God will come back and give us His 100%. And to get God’s 100% in our lives, we have to fully surrender every aspect of our life over to Him so we can “free” Him up to work with His 100%.
But here is the hardest part – especially for “American Christians.” We live in the most blessed country in the entire world. We are the richest and most abundantly blessed country in the world. Very intelligent Christians know that all the “wealth” is there for the “taking.” All they have to do is figure out what their strengths are, figure out the appropriate strategies to get the wealth and then go for it. Some do it legitimately and others do it illegitimately breaking all the rules of society to get their wealth.
But the Christian is faced with a dilemma. Do I turn my life over to God and let Him decide what He wants to do with my life or do I make my own decisions and pursue and go after what I want and what I think is best for me?
A lot of Christians are really “afraid” to let God make these choices. They are afraid of letting go of the “American dream” because they feel they will have a “better life” if they make their own choices as versus letting God make the choices Himself. They know that abundant wealth may not be in God’s plan for them.
God may call them to be a missionary over in China working for “pennies.” God obviously does not bless everyone with abundant material wealth. These people know they have the “smarts” to get that abundant wealth because our society is setup for the more intelligent people to get this wealth.
That is why Jesus is saying in the above parable that you cannot serve both God and mammon, both God and riches. You have to make a choice. Do I surrender my life to God and go with His “call” on my life or do I make my “own call,” go after what I want and try to become stinking rich. The natural businessman is obviously going to go for calling all of his own shots. And he may just succeed in acquiring vast amounts of wealth before he dies.
However, when he dies, not one ounce, not one penny, not one amount of material possession will go with him into the next life. He takes nothing with him. He will then face God for judgment and God will “reward” him for what he “accomplished in God” while down here on earth.
So who do you think is going to get the greatest rewards in heaven – the Christian businessman who became wealthy calling his own shots and doing his own thing, or the Christian who fully surrendered his life to God and completed God’s mission and purpose for his life?
The answer is obvious. I will be doing another article on the rewards that are available for believers when they cross over into heaven. There are some Scripture verses that a lot of Christians are not aware of regarding how God is going to specifically reward you by what you accomplish for Him while down here on earth.
The time we spend down here is not even the “blink of an eye” compared to the “time” we will spend in heaven. Our time in heaven is for eternity. Our time spent down here is just for a “moment” compared to the eternal time that is operating up in heaven.
The Bible tells us to lay up treasures in heaven where the moths cannot eat them. These treasures are the good works that you do for God while down here on earth. If you fully surrender your life to God and go with His “call” on your life, then everything you do and accomplish down here will be good treasure that will be “stored” up in heaven and God will reward you accordingly once you enter into heaven. Good treasures stored up in heaven are also the good and loving relationships you establish with people down here who will be joining you up in heaven.
Remember, you take none of your material possessions with you when you cross over – but all of your Christian friends that you have developed good friendships with will be crossing over with you – and the friendships you have established down here will last for eternity up in heaven. Your material possessions, your titles and your trophies will not.
To the intelligent American Christian businessman, I ask you – whom will you serve? God and the call that He wants to put on your life to do His will or your own call doing what you think is in your own best interests?
The Bible tells you where the real reward will lie. Jesus says in the Bible what good does it do a man to gain the whole world but lose his own soul in the process. Jesus plainly says at the end of the above parable that you cannot serve two masters. You cannot serve both God and your own call and your own goals for your life. If you try and do both, you will end up as Jesus is saying, loving the one but hating the other. You cannot have it both ways. It will tear you apart trying to live in both “realms.”
You may have to sacrifice “fame and riches” by going with God’s call on your life but you will much happier in the long run, more fulfilled and more highly “rewarded” once you enter into heaven. And those rewards will be for eternity. The wealth and riches you would gain down here are but just for a moment and will be gone forever once you die.
Conclusion
I’ll leave you with one “classic statement” made in Scripture on all of the above. One of the most powerful stories in the entire Bible is the story of Joshua. He doesn’t get much publicity because his story comes right after the story of Moses. But Joshua was the one who led the Israelites into the Promised Land.
He “wholeheartedly followed God” and was the first leader to lead the Israelites into the Promised Land and defeat and conquer the enemies that were on the land that they were to possess. His story is one of the most powerful stories in the Bible about someone who “did it right” in God’s call on his life.
He made a classic statement that each Christian should grab and get a hold of. He said:
“Choose for yourselves this day whom you will serve … but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” (Joshua 24:15)
He was so “successful in God,” that one of the books in the Bible was named after him – “The Book of Joshua.”
God and Jesus have made it as clear as they possibly could in Their Word that there is only one way to live the rest of your allotted time down here on earth – and that is under a full surrender to God the Father. Let God place the call or calls that He wants on your life and I guarantee you that you will never ever regret the most important decision that you will ever make in this life.
Another important topic that we must also be aware about are Human Trafficking Facts , Human Trafficking ,and Sex trafficking in the United States.
Sermon Starters
I love the quote, “The journey of a thousand begins with one step. Likewise, the preaching of a great sermon begins with one thought. In this article I will share with you three simple methods of getting ideas for your sermon starters folder. These are not meant to replace your Bible study at all, but just ways to lead you into the Bible for a relevant preaching idea. Having a seedbed of starters is a great resource for any preacher or Bible teacher.
Idea Number 1: Record That Thought!
I wish I had all the great ideas for those sermons that never got preached because I failed to record the inspiration that whizzed through my mind. These are the big fish that got away because I did not set the hook. Writing down that inspired thought is the way the preacher sets the hook to reel in a good sermon.
Keep a little notebook with you, record it into your cell phone, send yourself a text message….just get a record of the thought some way. Have you ever awakened in the middle of a night having had a dream that was very vivid. You thought of getting up and writing down the details, but you thought it was so vivid and clear that you could never forget it. The next morning when you got up, you could not remember it to save your life. Where did the dream go? It went to the same place those great sermon starting ideas go that you didn’t write down.
Idea Number 2: Read That Title!
I have been amazed at the times I have read the title or headline of a newspaper article, an internet news story, the title of a book, and of course, the titles of other people’s sermons and gotten an idea that started me on a quick jog into sermon building paradise. Just the title which is the leader board of a story to follow can set your imagination in motion. With the idea that a title pops in your mind, you will often begin imagining what it is about before you ever read further. Your mind will begin building your own sermon just from the title. Notice these things and consciously think about them as sermon starters. Even billboards can stuff a sermon starter into your cranial cavity form time to time.
Idea Number 3: Research that Question!
This one will unleash an avalanche of sermon ideas for you. Think of questions that people ask about life, love, and problems and then research them. You will be swamped in an hour with a mountain of sermon ideas, sermon illustrations, and starting points for topics that people are hungry to hear about. Then you can add what the Bible teaches on that subject and you are on your way to helping others through a relevant heart touching Bible based sermon.
Now that you have three simple ideas for sermon starters, all that is left for you to do is to get started. That great sermon is just waiting to be thought of, inspired with creativity, and launched to waiting ears. God bless you as you get going.
Written by Eddie Lawrence, who is an author, pastor, and overseer of Sermon Seedbed a resource site for pastors and Bible teachers which provides free sermons and sermon outlines.
Express It With Flowers Says UK Funeral Directors
Think of any memorial service and you see flowers. It really is barely astonishing that both funeral directors and florists declare that funeral wreaths and sprays come 3 rd in their leading 5 selling goods. Flowers have already been utilized at funerals for years and years. In ancient times, not simply were they decorative, they were practical, given that their perfume assisted to cover up unpleasant odours.
These days, flowers are seen as a classic expression of grieving and, as with the rest of the funeral, they feature a great amount of social grace. Floral sprays â and also what are frequently known as as sympathy plants â usually are sent direct to the memorial service residence when the death is announced. On the day of the funeral, these are put in the hearse, arranged on and across the coffin, accompanying the loved one on their ultimate journey.
Typically, the most popular funeral flowers consist of lilies, carnations, chrysanthemums, gladioli and also roses. Muted colors tones will always be common, in particular for a feminine touch, whilst red-colored suggests unequaled love and white signifies tranquility. The particular season may also impact on accessibility to certain flowers.
Nevertheless, florists are the experts and will often provide advice. They can create unique tributes, which range from easy ‘cottage garden’ baskets and arrangements to sophisticated, contemporary arrangements. Wreaths are a common option, since they are made by means of a circle, that is the symbol of eternal existence. Flower sprays tend to be equally well-liked. These lie flat, exhibiting the blossoms much more openly for viewing from just one single side.
The important thing to selecting proper flowers should be to pick an offering you think family members is likely to appreciate. Some families request that donations be made to a particular good cause instead of flowers. This is a more pragmatic approach, as floral tributes are usually discarded by funeral directors following two or three days and in the case of cremations they are usually disposed instantly following the service.
However, few funerals are totally without flowers. Unlike the commonly sombre tone and dress of the mourners, they bring in a warm component of beauty and colour. Flower tributes display regard to the deceased, whilst offering great comfort to the family members, as they visibly convey emotions that many find hard to put into words.
Even though traditional, floral tributes don’t need to always be limited by the time of funeral or cremation. A lot of funeral directors will tell you that bereaved families value receiving blossoms within the weeks and even a few months following the memorial service. They provide a comforting reminder that people have not forgotten their loved one, especially if combined with a little individual note.
The Significance of Communion Wafers
If you are not a Christian or just vaguely familiar with the religion, then you might have wondered what communion wafers are and what itâs for.
To let you know, these wafers are used during the Holy Communion to represent the body of Christ. Even though the symbolism is a bit complicated, the ingredients for the piece are actually quite simple.
It has hardly any taste at all, but it is this lack of taste that makes it such a great ritual piece. Since it hardly has any taste, you are allowed to focus on the meaning when you consume the wafer.
There are plenty of manufacturers for the communion wafer. Each of them have special ways of creating the wafer, however, most of them use the same basic ingredients.
These two common ingredients include water and pure wheat flour. Of course, as mentioned, other communion breads are created with more complex ingredients than the two, but this depends on the manufacturer.
Some of the other ingredients used in these recipes could include yeast or salt so that it can have a small hint of flavor.
However, there is one very special ingredient that is sometimes added when making these holy wafers and that is holy water. Â
There are instances when makers would sprinkle a small amount of holy water on the dough. It is incorporated into the dough and then made into the holy wafers that we know and use today.
Most Christians are familiar with communion wafers, however, not everyone knows where or who makes them.
However, this isnât very surprising since back in the day, the work of creating these wafers fell only to a select few.
History dictates that churches used to pick out only one baker that was tasked to create the wafer. Apart from that, there was a special oven designated for this purpose only so that the ritual of making the wafers was kept sacred.
As time passed, traditions changed and so did the secrecy to creating the wafers.
Today, there are several large manufacturers that create these wafers. They are no longer exclusively created by nuns or special bakers from the church.
Although there are plenty of manufacturers in this industry, there are still companies that hold a monopoly when it comes to being a supplier for these church wafers.
In fact, there is one company that is said to be the primary supplier for over three quarters of the churches in the US.
The history and significance of these holy wafers cannot be underestimated. Even though most non Christians might not be familiar with them, there is no doubt that it is an essential part of the faith as well as the ceremony of these churches.
If you are a Christian, taking part of the Holy Communion and taking in communion wafers should signify something far beyond the bland taste of this sacramental bread, it should symbolize and signify your faith in the Lord and his undying love for you as his child.
Now that you are aware of the importance of communion wafer, you may also consider the benefit and importance of having your personal communion cup or perhaps you may want to own a portable communion set.