Philippians 1:12-30 · Paul’s Chains Advance the Gospel
A Four Word Memoir
Philippians 1:12-30
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Human beings are a terrific source of creativity. Even at the time of death. For example, consider this epitaph on a grave from the 1880s in Nantucket, Massachusetts:

Under the sod and under the trees . . . Lies the body of Jonathan Pease.
He is not here, there’s only the pod . . . Pease shelled out and went to God.

Or this one from a more recent burial:

Here lies my wife . . . Here let her lie.
Now she’s at rest . . . And so am I.

Or this one from the grave of a dentist named John Brown:

Stranger! Approach this spot with gravity!
John Brown is filling his last cavity.

Epitaphs normally seek to sum up a person’s life in just a few words.  If you had to sum up your life in just a few words, how would you do it?

Author Ernest Hemingway was once challenged to prove his skill as an auth…

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Third Quarter Sermons 2011, by King Duncan