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Corinth Pt.10 - The Question of Divorce

1 Corinthians 7:10-16

November 18, 2018 • Senior Pastor Armin Sommer • 1 Corinthians 7:10–16

We’re wrapping up our series in Corinthians with a discussion on divorce because Paul is answering several questions the Church had written to him about. There was apparently a revolving door of marriages in that congregation where people had divorced their spouses for every and any reason and remarried. So they had questions like:

"On what grounds can I divorce my spouse?"
"What if my spouse is not a Christian?"
"Or what if they leave me because I became a Christian, should I divorce them then? Can I get remarried?"
"If I was inappropriately divorced and have remarried, should I end this marriage and go to back to my first spouse?"

These are questions that are still being asked today!

Corinth Pt 9 - Let's Talk About Sex

November 11, 2018 • Senior Pastor Armin Sommer • 1 Corinthians 7:1–9

How comfortable are you with talking about sex in church and in mixed company? The apostle Paul wrote this first letter to Corinthian believers in response to problems he had heard about, and also in response to questions they had forwarded to him. Sex is one of those topics many of us feel squeamish about. But the Bible has something to say about it, to the Corinthians, and to us today

Corinth Pt.8 - Bought With a Price

November 4, 2018 • Pastor Reuben Scheeringa • 1 Corinthians 6:9–20

"Slave" - The historical context of the word makes us cringe, but the truth is that we are all slaves to something. What masters you? What SHOULD master you? Find out in today's sermon.

Corinth Pt.7 - Avoid Courtroom Drama

October 28, 2018 • Pastor Segun "Shegz" Aiyegbusi • 1 Corinthians 6

Among the many issues plaguing the Church in Corinth, apparently, some of its members had begun to bring lawsuits against one another and take each other to court, AND IT GOT UGLY! So, what happens when a fellow Christian you did business with doesn’t go a good job? What happens when a fellow believer don’t follow through on what they promised, don’t complete the work or you don’t get paid for what you did? How should Christians respond?