Dictionary: Rest
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Jeremiah 4:5-31
Sermon
Richard L. Sheffield
I ordered a new book this week. Hope it comes soon. Because God needs to read it! It's called Your Executive Image. As CEO of all that is, that's Creator, Executive, Overseer; as CEO of anything and everything that matters to you and me, God needs to keep up appearances. And it really doesn't do God's image any good for him to go around calling people "stupid children" (Jeremiah 4:22). Yet, Jeremiah tells us, God said of his people in Israel "... My people are foolish, they do not know me; they are stupid ...

Sermon
Richard L. Sheffield
Charles Swindoll says, "... it's a mad, bad, sad world."1 You knew that already? He quotes Barbara Johnson who writes in her book Splashes of Joy in the Cesspools of Life: "The rain falls on the just and also on the unjust, but chiefly on the just, because the unjust steals the just's umbrella."2 The Prophet Amos, who lived and told it like it was about 750 years before the birth of Jesus, agreed with that assessment of life. There is a lot about this world that's mad or bad or sad or even "all of the ...

Children's Sermon
Robert B. Lantz
Object: Smiley face stickers or pins (It would be helpful to have a large yellow "Happy Face" visual aid prepared beforehand.) Lesson: That my joy might be in you. Happy is he who trusts in the Lord. Good morning, boys and girls. (Show "Happy Face.") Does everybody here know what we call this symbol that we now see everywhere these days? (Response -- A happy face.) And do you know what happens to this happy face if I turn it upside down? It becomes a grumpy face, doesn't it? (Demonstrate.) Let's see how ...

1 Thessalonians 1:6
Children's Sermon
Wesley T. Runk
Object: A mixing bowl and chef's hat or apron, two spoons Good morning, boys and girls. What do you suppose I am going to do with these things today? (Hold up objects. Let them answer.) Right. Looks like I'm going to do some baking. I thought that I would go home later today and mix up a big batch of chocolate chip cookies. Do you like chocolate chip cookies, boys and girls? (Let them answer.) Well, I really like them, too. When I was a boy, my mom used to make the best cookies in the world. No one's ...

Children's Sermon
Kenneth Mortonson
Purpose: To help children understand that they should seek help when they feel the need for such support. Material: A large bandanna to use as a blindfold. Lesson: I would like someone to volunteer to let me put a blindfold on you. (Blindfold a child.) Now, you cannot see, so I do not want you to move, because you could get hurt. Our blindfolded person knows where he (or she) is, but he cannot get back to the place where he was seated. It is up to one of you to help him. What could you do? ... Take his ...

Children's Sermon
Teresa L. Major
Object: None. Lesson: The innkeeper is accused of turning away the Savior, but actually he gave what he had to give. We are called to do the same. Help me remember some of the characters from the Christmas story. There's Mary, Joseph, shepherds, angels, anyone else? How about the innkeeper? What do you remember about him? (Children respond.) The innkeeper told Mary and Joseph there was no room for them in his inn. Sometimes when we hear about this fellow, we hear people say negative things about what he ...

Sermon
R. Robert Cueni
Our scripture for today comes from the first words of the first book of the Bible. We probably best know it as the seven-day account of creation. By way of orientation, let us remember that this is Holy Writ and not an article from The Journal Of The American Academy Of Science. As such it embodies a statement of our faith. While science has its place in our lives, this is not it. Frankly, science has a very narrow boundary on what it accepts as truth. It can describe the facts very well, but seldom, if ...

Sermon
Steve Burt
In the summer of 1976 a hurricane approached eastern Long Island, New York. Older residents recalled the 1938 hurricane which had claimed many lives and destroyed millions of dollars worth of property. Even the younger residents could remember the devastation wreaked by Hurricanes Donna, Carol, and others in the 1950s and 1960s. People took seriously the warnings of the National Weather Service; they battened down the hatches, stored bottled water, provisions, and candles in basements, and prepared for the ...

Sermon
Robert S. Crilley
In a recent article, Thomas Long shares the story of a rather unusual occurrence which happened one Sunday morning, some years ago, in a large, suburban church. Just prior to the sermon, as the congregation began to settle back in their pews, a neatly dressed man suddenly stood up in the balcony and announced in a clear, loud voice, "I have a word from the Lord!" Needless to say, several startled heads, including that of the pastor, turned in his direction. No one seemed to know the man, nor were they ...

Sermon
Robert S. Crilley
I've read that in one of Von Schlegel's avant-garde plays, the curtain rises to show the dimly-lit interior of a theater. There on the stage sit a group of people waiting for a curtain to rise. A ripple of amused laughter washes across the auditorium at the obvious irony of watching actors engage in the very activity which had occupied the audience only moments earlier. However, when this second curtain is lifted, it displays still another group sitting in front of yet another curtain. People begin to grow ...

Joshua 24:1-27
Sermon
Robert S. Crilley
Some things in life are inevitable. It doesn't matter who you are, where you live, or what you do. It makes no difference how powerful, how popular, or how prominent you've grown. One's accumulated wealth or wisdom is of little, if any, significance. Regardless of effort or endeavor, there are truths so tightly woven into the fabric of human existence that they become unalterable and absolute -- sureties which each and every one of us will encounter sooner or later. Benjamin Franklin, for instance, may ...

Sermon
Phyllis Faaborg Wolk
Did you know that November first was a holiday? It was All Saints' Day. Did you get an All Saints' card or give an All Saints' gift? Did you greet anyone by saying, "Happy All Saints' Day"? Did you decorate your house for the occasion and invite your family to a festive meal? What is included in an All Saints' Day feast, anyway? Roast pork? Potatoes? Apple pie? No one knows. It seems we don't really celebrate the day outside of a few liturgical church rattlings here and there. So today we gather. We come ...

Sermon
Phyllis Faaborg Wolk
The alarm went off early that particular Sunday morning. As Chris showered and got dressed, thoughts of the upcoming worship service and memories of the past few years swirled through his mind. Confirmation Sunday had finally arrived. After today, there would be no more requirements to be met. Sermon notes were a thing of the past. Wednesday afternoons could now be filled with sports or television, play practice, homework or just goofing around. No more memory work lurking in the back of his mind. Although ...

Sermon
Phyllis Faaborg Wolk
The alarm went off early that particular Sunday morning. As Chris showered and got dressed, thoughts of the upcoming worship service and memories of the past few years swirled through his mind. Confirmation Sunday had finally arrived. After today, there would be no more requirements to be met. Sermon notes were a thing of the past. Wednesday afternoons could now be filled with sports or television, play practice, homework or just goofing around. No more memory work lurking in the back of his mind. Although ...

Matthew 5:17-20, Matthew 5:13-16
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
Salt is very important to life. If a person lacks salt, the hunger for it is one of the strongest desires we have. Any farmer knows how cattle will find a salt block and lick it to maintain the proper balance in its body. Salt is so valuable that in some societies it has been used as a medium of exchange, a substitute for money. In the scripture, light is often used as a symbol for the existence of God. It is frequently used in a variety of ways throughout the Bible. In some cultures the sun was worshiped ...

Genesis 28:10-22, Psalm 139:1-24, Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43, Romans 8:12-25
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
The parable of the weeds and wheat is intriguing. It raises a number of issues that are complex and can be confusing. Some resolutions of the issues are suggested while for others you need to look elsewhere for more adequate explanations. Some differences are found within the parable itself and the interpretation given to the disciples. One of the issues is the question about the nature of the church. Does this parable apply to the church as part of the kingdom of God? If so, is the church a divine or a ...

Matthew 18:21-35, Romans 14:1--15:13, Exodus 13:17--14:31, Psalm 114:1-8
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
Unlimited Forgiveness The parable uses the analogy of a reverse comparison. On the one hand a huge, almost inconceivable debt is forgiven. The amount of the debt of the first character in the parable is staggering. To the person hearing the parable it would be scarcely possible to imagine a debt so monumental, perhaps as hard as to try to imagine today the size of the national debt in the United States. The second character has a relatively trivial debt. It is more the size one might run up on a credit ...

Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
Context of the Lectionary The First Lesson. (Exodus 32:1-14) The passage recounts the experience of the people of Israel in the wilderness when Moses had gone up the mountain of Sinai. They assumed that he was not returning. They appealed to Aaron for a god to lead them. He got from the people all the gold of their jewelry and from that produced the golden calf. The people proceeded with an orgy of worship. Moses came down and discovered what was happening. In his anger he shattered the tablets which ...

Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
The parable has given us a new meaning for talents. At the time of the parable it was a unit of measure for silver or gold. Now we have talent shows, talent searches, talent contests. The beauty pageants that came under attack from feminists for being sexist with their emphasis on bathing suit competitions have tried to shift to the talent of the women. Scholarships are offered as prizes so that talented competitors may continue to develop their talents. Some people still put the emphasis on the monetary ...

Sermon
John A. Stroman
How is the power of the Holy Spirit within the Christian community related to divine activity in the world as a whole? Does the wind of the Spirit that blows within the church blow elsewhere in the world? There are those who almost instinctively sense that the Spirit is moving about in all levels of human activity seeking to unlock many doors and seeking to resolve many of our human dilemmas. In John 3:8 Jesus talks about the wind (pneuma) as the Spirit and that the wind "blows where it wills." This ...

Sermon
Thomas Long
The dinner party had gone well. It was the kind of evening when good food was matched by rich conversation and warm cheer. As the dishes were being cleared and cream was being stirred into after-dinner coffee, the conversation took a more serious turn. The guest of honor was a church leader from central Europe, the Soviet Union had come apart only months before, and the table was filled with eager questions. How had the church in his country fared during the long Soviet frost? What changes were occurring ...

Sermon
Thomas Long
I forget now whether it was a famous football coach, a former president, or a positive-thinking teacher who put on his wall the motto, "When the going gets tough, the tough get going" -- probably all three of them. In any case, I am aware of the fact that there are some people who pride themselves on being able to get motivated in tough situationns, to face head-on the tough issues. "Give it to me straight, Doc," they say to the surgeon, "I can handle it." They sign up for courses from the roughest ...

Sermon
Thomas A. Pilgrim
G. K. Chesterton was once asked the question, "Why did you join the church so late in life?" He answered, "To get rid of my sins."1 That is a wonderful answer. It is still the solution for so many of the world's problems and the problems of people everywhere. So many of us know that there is something wrong, something which must be set right at some point along the way. And we want someone to set things right. Yet, many times we have the feeling that we cannot break through, cannot make the connection, ...

Matthew 10:40-42
Sermon
Marc Kolden
What is this passage about? Is it about the disciples, the twelve? Yes, of course, it is about them; these are Jesus' final words of instruction to them and astonishing words they are! "Whoever welcomes you guys welcomes me," Jesus says, "and whoever welcomes me welcomes the Father who sent me" (10:40). Their mission was God's mission; their words were God's words; the people whom they met encountered God in them and their teachings. These are strong words, but we know that these disciples (minus Judas) ...

Drama
Dallas A. Brauninger
WHAT'S HAPPENING? First Point Of Action As Jesus walks along, he sees a congenitally blind man. Second Point Of Action Jesus' conversation with the disciples: The disciples question him about whose sin, the parents' or the man's, caused the man's blindness. Rejecting the notion that sin causes blindness, Jesus notes God's purpose in the blindness. Jesus uses the light of the world metaphor. Third Point Of Action Jesus heals the blind man: Jesus spits on the ground, makes mud with the saliva, and spreads it ...