Bölümler
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The blind man can see and receives the goodness and compassion of God (Jahweh is His name and this is half of what His name means) but remember last week as we looked at god’s name and the importance of Jesus stating that He is ‘I AM’, that the ability to act in true compassion and righteousness gives the authority to also judge…and the pharisees walk right into the trap!
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Same story, three different views. Matthew and Marks are very similar apart from the fact that Matthew has Peter walking on the water and having to get back into the boat with Jesus! The result is the same though - as soon as Jesus entered in - the winds stopped - the storm subsided. There was peace and purpose.
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Eksik bölüm mü var?
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The miracle of feeding the 5,000 should stir us… Stir us to be generous with what we have.. give it all to Him, to trust in him that in any situation He will provide the answers. Also that God wants us to participate in the story. He didn’t make us to be passive. He wants us to worship him with mind soul body…. He wants us to engage with the Holy Spirit…He wants us to be all in…
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This miracle demonstrates Jesus authority over time. Just because the man had been ill for 38 years did not mean that he was beyond saving, just because we have long standing problems we have in our lives does not mean that Jesus cannot deal with them.
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The miracle of the healing of the Officials son shows that Jesus has authority over distance. He is Lord over all of creation, He has no need to be present and healing can take place anywhere that God so chooses. By faith, when we pray, we should take time to listen to what God is saying, perhaps one day He will ask you to pray into a situation you know nothing about. When He does, and you see the results, you will be both amazed and encouraged.
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I might be wrong but I’m pretty sure everyone of us wants the miracle but not everyone wants to be in a position where they need a miracle, nobody wants to be in the need moment… Its great to have healing but nobody wants to be sick…..everybody wants to get to heaven but nobody wants to die to get there right?
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Today we are starting a new series, which will run for the next 8 or so weeks. Over this time we are going to be looking at the Gospel of John and in particular the seven miracles that John writes about. With our Pastor Andy away it is going to fall to myself and Jamie to cover most of these. This week I am going to do an introduction with a broad overall picture of the Gospel so that over the next 7 weeks we can place the miracles into a proper context.
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When the pastor asks you to preach on your aspirations for the coming year, its a bit strange what you actually come up with. You see, what my aspirations are for this year , might not be what your aspirations are for this year. You see we all sit in a different space, we live different lives but hopefully we are all striving towards the same goal.
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As we read Paul’s prayer of thanks to God for the grace He has poured out on the believers in Ephesus, the unity and faith of both Jew and Gentile - brought together in one entity - church - we can give thanks for the same grace and power at work here today
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As we look at the letter to the Ephesian church together, we will see the impact that living as ‘saved people’ must have on our families, our work situations and our communities that we engage with. Armed with this knowledge and empowered by the Holy Spirit, I want us set our focus and attention on our transformed nature and be intentional about making a difference this year. Let us be fully committed to letting Christs love work through us, changing us to the benefit of all around this year.
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We have encountered through our journey through scripture that there were many examples that looked like the promise, but were only pointers to the actual event. I think of Moses, Abraham, Joseph, Joshua, King David and Hezekiah - all ‘types’ of rescuers and saviours to Israel.Israel and the world still wait for the realisation of the promise when Jesus comes in power and majesty to bring us into the fullness of His Kingdom.
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What about us today? - well we still wait. We celebrate the birth of Jesus – born for all mankind and the fulfilment of the promise of Messiah and yet we wait for the return of Jesus in all His glory. We wait and our faith is proved as we do so.
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Perfect and fully human but also fully divine! Jesus came with a specific and designated purpose. He gave up the privileges of His divinity as we are reminded in Philippians
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Isn’t it strange how your memory can take you back to a time, place or experience which you had totally forgotten? I remember that at my parents house they had this small, unassuming bathroom cabinet. And one day when I opened it as a child, memories flooded back of our holidays in Cornwall, because it smelt exactly the same as the caravan!
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Today, we’ll be continuing the theme of God’s judgement, specifically on the topic of justice, without Christ. Justice is a word that means a lot to human society. In your dayto-day life, the context of justice usually falls under phrases related to the government’s laws or the administration of your rights.
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The man knew what he had done and he knew what the consequences were. An unbridgeable gap had opened up, he now had a finite life, after which he would for ever be on the wrong side of that gap for ever. I think if I had been in that situation I would have been utterly without hope.
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I want us to be careful about how much we interpret through our own cultural lens and make sure that we are not making the Bible say things it was never meant to say. A good adage is, if it can’t be understood to apply to the culture of the people of the Bible, it probably can’t apply to us today … the leap is just too far and leads to a misplaced understanding of scripture and a misappropriation of verses.
- Daha fazla göster