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Good Friday Service 2024

The Ultimate Sacrifice

March 29, 2024 • Joel Brantner • Isaiah 53

For thousands of years, the Church has gathered on Good Friday to remember the betrayal, arrest, torture, and death of Jesus Christ. The Apostolic Constitutions called Good Friday “a day of mourning, not a day of festive joy.”  Yet we do not mourn as those without hope,  but we mourn because it was our sin that Christ took upon Himself in His death on the cross.

This Good Friday service takes place between Palm Sunday, where we   celebrate the triumphal entry of King Jesus into the city, and Resurrection Sunday, where we celebrate the King’s victory over death and begin the season of Easter. Yet, between these days of celebration, we gather to mourn and lament, to remember that the triumph of the King over sin, Satan, and death required the King to wear a crown of thorns, to be mocked instead of praised, and to be nailed to a cross.

On Good Friday, we worship God: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Our great God and Father, according to His wisdom and love, ordained the plan of redemption. Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ accomplished salvation through His suffering and resurrection. And God the Holy Spirit applies the work of salvation to all who are called and believe.

We look at the events leading up to the Crucifixion and Christ’s ultimate suffering and death, marveling at what a Savior we have in Jesus Christ. The cross should bring us to the collision of seemingly contradictory     places. For at the cross, we see the collision of purity and depravity, mercy and judgment, sorrow and thanksgiving, and on and on we could go. On Good Friday, we remember that “He who hung the earth upon the waters was hung upon the cross.”

 

Lost Parables of Jesus

May 12, 2024 • Joel Brantner • Romans 10:14, Acts 8:31, John 10:27, Acts 20:29, Luke 15:1–7

The Bible tells us that Jesus was full of grace and truth. That's 100% of each not 50% one and 50% the other. Typically we are bent to side heavily on either truth or grace. This is why many churches are divided. They either let everything go and call it "grace" or they call out every little infraction in someone's life and call it "truth." Jesus was equally both and this is one of the main goals of the Christian; to hold both truth and grace with the same measure. The parables of Luke 15 reveal to us the heart of God and helps us to balance the law of God. Without an understanding of Luke 15, one will be hard pressed to understand most of the Bible...particularly, the whole reason why Jesus came.

Fresh Faith: FOMO-Fear of Missing Out

May 5, 2024 • Joel Brantner • Malachi 4, Malachi 3:13–18, Luke 18:18–30

In every Christian's life there will come a time when he or she will have to determine whether the "vertical" or the "horizonal" will determine what will be done. FOMO or the fear of missing out can forgo the priority of our "vertical" relationship with God when the "horizonal" pressures of life are present. God's people's "hard words" in Malachi toward God reveal a heart filled FOMO. Listen in to hear how FOMO can be a pattern of behavior that can lead to stale faith.

Fresh Faith: Blaming God

April 21, 2024 • Joel Brantner • Malachi 2:17—3:5, Genesis 3:11–13, Romans 3:23, 1 John 3:5, Psalm 46:10

Ever stepped on your dog's tail and then get angry at your dog for what you did? We do it all the time. Blaming prevents us from seeing the full truth. In this sermon, Pastor Joel will address Malachi's third indictment against God's people that had led to a stale faith.