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Lukewarm Christianity

Part >> 6

October 18, 2020 • James Locke

We live in a turbulent, challenging time. Our institutions are being attacked. Our financial security and even our physical health are at risk. Many Christians have been and are calling for "revival" in the church. But, at the same time, church engagement is dropping away. Divisions within the church and across denominations are evident now more than ever. The plague of lukewarm Christianity has never been more clear. Jesus came to restore our relationship with God that was shattered in the fall. It's that relationship, not rituals like baptism and communion, or even obedience to God's Word, that will sustain our souls and lead to true revival. There is nothing more precious or more important than our personal relationship with Jesus. That relationship alone is the antidote to lukewarm Christianity.

Faith in Action

December 6, 2020 • Chan Mitchell

Faith is not just something we have, it’s something we do. Faith must be expressed through action. It’s not even possible to please God without faith. Without faith, we can only go so far. Throughout the letter to the Hebrews, the author seeks to passionately persuade his readers of the superiority of Christ. As he brings the letter to a close, he turns from his carefully reasoned "sermon" to a series of practical applications for our faith. The book closes with a reminder that true faith requires confidence in a God that we cannot always see; in promises that are not always immediate; and in a hope that we can’t always express. But one thing about faith – it never does nothing. It acts. It moves. It battles. It overcomes. It conquers. Faith declares, “Nothing is greater than Christ!”

Unshakeable Kingdom

November 29, 2020 • Chan Mitchell

Many scholars agree that the book of Hebrews reads more like a sermon rather than a letter. If that’s true, then chapter 12 would be the crescendo or the conclusion of that sermon. The author of Hebrews says, in a sense, we are all searching for a “city of peace”. We all have a need for some kind of safety and security in our life. We all need a place of fulfillment and comfort. That’s why we work so hard to earn a degree, or to secure a job, or to gain an opportunity. It’s also the reason why we save our money so we can buy a ring, get married, have a family, and live our dream life. We are all looking for that “city of peace” – that place of security and comfort. However, if we build our life on any foundation other than Jesus, we are only building on sinking sand. For there is coming a day when the Lord will shake all of heaven and earth, and anything that is not built on the foundation of Jesus Christ, will crumble away.

Running The Race

November 22, 2020 • Mark Hartman

Many people have a difficult time understanding how to reconcile the idea of an all powerful, loving God who allows suffering to go on in the world. Christians and Non-Christians alike, have struggled with this problem. Some have concluded that the fact that suffering exists is evidence that the kind of God the Bible describes simply doesn’t exists. However, in Hebrews chapter 12 we see that God has good reasons for allowing suffering to continue. He is using suffering to draw sinners to himself and also refine his children. We also learn that God is not indifferent to our pain. He is actually so committed to making sure that none of our suffering is wasted, even the suffering we bring upon ourselves because of our foolishness, that he was willing to also suffer. Jesus endured the cross so that we could be redeemed and brought into the family of God. Because fo the cross, we no longer relate to God as criminals to a judge, but rather as children to their father. As Christians we can know that every ounce of suffering we experience in this life has a purpose, and even if we never get to see what that purpose was in this life, we can trust the ultimate purpose is for our good and God’s glory.