Christmas Presence: Joy

You’ve probably heard the phrase “happiness depends on circumstances, joy does not”. Joy accentuates the pleasurable, good things of life. Joy shared in community brings something of the Kingdom of God. Joy with God is not one directional or transactional. The joy of the Lord is reciprocal in its nature - we give and He gives. In Advent, there is joy in God’s coming and closeness. The key to lasting joy isn’t in seeking joy itself, but in pursuing the joy bringer.

Christmas Presence: Hope

Advent places the church, every year, in longing for the fullness of the throne of God to be realized. We need Advent, even if we never reach Christmas morning. What we long for is not a nostalgic look back or presents, what we’re longing for is the presence of the Holy Spirit. Hope is what grounds us now in the expectation and preparation for God’s future. In order to get from our past to God’s future, we must go through some pivot point, something that will connect those two disjointed realities: Jesus is the connection.

Identity in Christ: Saints

Most of us probably don’t feel like we qualify to be called saints, but Paul wrote to the Corinthians, a church that had all sorts of problems, and told them that they were God’s saints. By the power of Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross, we are indeed, made righteous - saints. And this type of sainthood isn’t something reserved as a posthumous honor, it’s meant to describe our lives on this earth as we reflect God’s glory and do the works He created for us to do.

The Names of God: El Roi

In Genesis, Hagar is the Egyptian slave of Abraham and Sarah that encounters in the desert a loving God that both sees and hears her. In John, Jesus convinces Nathaniel that He is the Son of God by how clearly He sees Nathaniel. In both cases, God sees these people beyond their present circumstances, meets them in their pain and doubt, and then gives them guidance and walks them through their confusion and trouble. We learn from this how God will absolutely meet us where we are, but He will not wallow there with us. He meets us in our pain, our sorrow, our lack and he leads us through and out of it, if we will obey and walk with Him.

The Names of God: The Lord Who Sanctifies

Many of us are crying out that we're the light of the world, but we're unwilling to walk out the process of sanctification. Sanctification is a walking out of the righteousness we've been given and it doesn't happen all at once. The book of James tells us that through persevering we are made complete. Being sanctified means that we listen and obey every day - it's the interchange between God and us. We can't "manage" our sinful nature or minimize it - it will lay dormant and catch up to us eventually. We have to kill it with sanctification. 
*The video shared at the beginning of the sermon can be seen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mcXtontujA

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The Names of God: The Lord Is My Shepherd

"The Lord is My Shepherd" is a name of God that we are very familiar with, but have lost a lot of connection to living in capitalistic 21st century America. This name says as much about the "Good Shepherd" as it says about us. Looking at Psalm 23 and John 10, we see that the Good Shepherd leads us to places we would never go on our own, and profoundly connects the Divine Intention to our mortal selves. Instead of being SERVED by this name, we instead get to see the profound humility understanding that the "The Lord is my Shepherd." 

The Names of God: Jehovah Rapha

In the book of Exodus, God reveals Himself as Jehovah Rapha, the God who heals. Healing is a good gift and God the Father loves to give good gifts to His children. With healing, we have to be equipped, have faith, and lean into the "not yet" of the Kingdom of God. In this sermon, Pastor Josh discusses three aspects of healing: healing is in God's nature, what our role is in healing, and why healing doesn't always occur when we want or hope for it to. 

The Names of God: Jehovah Nissi

Jehovah Nissi - the Lord is our banner. Our attempts, our efforts, the things we do, only succeed because of who God is - because He is our fortress and our banner. This name of God goes hand in hand with what we learned last week about God, The Fear of Isaac, is our provider. Being under God's banner isn't covert or silent. Like Moses raising His hands for victory in battle, God gives us freedom in the Kingdom, but also chooses to use our efforts and abilities to accomplish His purposes. Being under God's banner means that we surrender and that we give up our own story for the Kingdom story.