Putting worship in its proper place in our lives and hearts as a humble posture that elevates Christ as King.
Further Study: Amos 5:21-24, Micah 6:6-8, James 1:27, Isaiah 29:13-16, Isaiah 53:3, 1 Peter 4:12-13, Matt 5:10-12
Sermons
Putting worship in its proper place in our lives and hearts as a humble posture that elevates Christ as King.
Further Study: Amos 5:21-24, Micah 6:6-8, James 1:27, Isaiah 29:13-16, Isaiah 53:3, 1 Peter 4:12-13, Matt 5:10-12
Jesus followed a long line of prophets from God who warned against the mysteriously idolatrous power of money and possessions. He prohibited His followers from putting their trust and security in material, 'earthly' things, and instructed His followers to invest in what would last for eternity. We cannot serve two masters\kings or kingdoms. We have to choose who we serve, where we invest our hearts. The choice is ours who and what we will serve. What will your choice be?
Jesus calls us to have no other master but God. And after doing so, Jesus immediately reminds us that God is a generous host\Creator. We can entrust ourselves to seeking God above all other concerns because we can trust in His generosity towards us to meet our needs.
Just as fasting is a way of engaging our physical bodies in spiritual mourning, feasting is a way of engaging our physical bodies into prompting or aligning with our soul in celebrating God's person, presence, promises and power.
Fasting is a spiritual discipline many Christians in the West don't have a strong history or connection with. Fasting is the natural response of a follower of Jesus to a sacred moment of grief. We are a unified being of body (physical) and mind\soul\spirit (non-physical). Biblical fasting brings our bodies into unified expression of mourning with what God mourns.
Many Christians struggle with prayer. Sometimes because we've only learned one model for prayer or one way to pray that isn't exactly how God has wired for them to hear and listen to God through prayer. Today's message acknowledges this struggle and gives some other ways to engage with God in prayer.
Most of us have had questions about the value, meaning and nature of prayer. Questions, at times, which lead us to wonder why pray, at least about some things. Jesus lived and taught as though prayer does matter, and matters greatly. Because God wants a relationship with us, where we spend our time with God, no matter what we are doing. When we do this, we are praying without ceasing.
God not only cares about what we do and how we do things, but also about why we do (or don't do) what we do. Our motives come from the desires of our heart and reveal our heart. Unfortunately, on our own we don't always know our own heart's motives, and so God calls us to reflect and confess to help us identify, clarify and reshape when necessary the desires of our heart, which will change how we live.
We never drift into the life we want, we drift into the life we have. Following Jesus isn't something we can drift along in... it requires effort for us to grow and be effective in our faith as Peter wrote. To help ourselves stay moving towards more a godly life, we need support, encouragement and structure to help us.
Faith Missionary Church Wasaga Beach
Sundays at 10:30 am
1355 River Rd W, Wasaga Beach, ON L9Z 2W6
705 429 2059
faithemc@rogers.com