Living Deliberately: Taming the Tongue
/Speaker: Pam Cannon
Listen to one of our weekly sermons here!
Speaker: Pam Cannon
Speaker: Leah Pavel
This week begins our Lenten series “Perspectives”. In the first sermon of this series, Pastor Josh discusses the hunger we feel for different things in our lives and the way those longings can be filled by the things we are meant to be filled by or by cheap imitations.
This sermon is where the rubber meets the road in this Sabbath series. With all of our theological learning about the need, history and meaning of the Sabbath, we still need to implement what we’ve been talking about into a regular Sabbath practice. This week, Pastor Josh discusses what it looks like to practically implement a Sabbath into our schedules.
Psalm 92 is a song for the Sabbath. When our roots are deeply connected with the Lord through Sabbath rest, we can have peace, worship deeply, trust the Lord for our deliverance, and have fruitful longevity in our ministry.
So much of our culture is always pulling us to store up more, indulge in excess, never be content, but with Sabbath, we are actively countering those temptations, choosing contentment and gratitude and being actually fulfilled by resting in God’s presence. With Sabbath, we really can have enough.
Looking at sabbath rest through the lens of spiritual discipline, co-pastor Leah Pavel discusses how sabbath is no longer enforced upon us an a demand or order but offered to us as a gift through the fullness Jesus brought. Sabbath is a tool we engage in for spiritual maturity and emotional health that transforms our lives, aligns us with God’s ways, gives us identity, trust in God, and allows for a set apart time of intimacy with and worship of our Creator.
Sometimes we spend so much time on the thoughts of the Lord’s greatness on a grand scale, thinking of Him as the Lord of the universe or Lord of all, that we forget how He is also Lord of very specific things, like the Lord of my life, or the Lord of our church, or even the Lord of today. Every aspect of Jesus’ lordship is found entwined with the Sabbath and offers of a view of this rest that makes it much more than just a vacation or a day off.
Sabbath is most effective in our lives when we not just fit it in in one off, random spots but make sabbath rest a part of our life pattern. So what does that pattern look like and how does it affect us? Pastor Josh continues digging in to the Sabbath that remains for God’s people.
For the Israelites, the Sabbath was a non-negotiable. So much so that the death penalty was an expected punishment for breaking the command to observe the Sabbath and keep it holy. The seriousness of the command underscores the importance the observance of Sabbath to their (and our) faith.
In the first sermon of this new series on Sabbath, Pastor Josh discusses what Sabbath is really intended to be and how it only makes sense in relationship to our regular work.
Joy and happiness are not the same thing. The bible speaks often of joy and rejoicing. So what is it and how do we get?
Ecclesiates tells us there is a time for peace and when Jesus came, it was just such a time. When we have the true peace that God offers, the things of this world cannot upset the work of peace that Christ has done within us. The battle and the peace are both the Lord’s!
Hope is evidence that we have a positive expectation on something external to ourselves - something that doesn’t depend on us. Hope is what we have when we’re waiting on God to accomplish something in our lives. This first Sunday of Advent, we lean into the hope we have that is the fruit of Jesus coming once as a man and the promise that He will return again.
As ones who have been saved and have received grace and forgiveness we are entrusted with the gospel and expected to not only avoid sin but to actually produce fruit. Part of that fruit is to share the Good News with those who need to hear it, to proclaim the Gospel of the Kingdom with the urgency and importance that it deserves.
God’s gathering place, His house, where His people reside and commune with one another, is meant to be a place where we are at home and prayer is the fragrance that always fills the space. God gives us an invitation not to be guests there but to come home and stay and soak in prayer together.
SERVICE TIME & LOCATION:
10:30am Sunday @
190 Rosewood Centre Drive
Suite 101
Holly Springs, NC 27540
E: office@hollyspringsvineyard.org
P: 919-391-8247