Series
What Does God Think of Me? Pt. 1
Do you ever wonder what people think about you? Do you even care? To some extent, most of us do care what others think of us. Have you ever wondered what God thinks of you? In today's text, Paul instructs a young minister to remind the people of what God thinks about them. Today's message is the first of two parts in which we examine what God thinks of us from Titus 3:1-8. Is it possible to know what God thinks about us? Do we want to know what He thinks about us? Well, our passage this morning reveals exactly what God thinks about us.
Hope and a Future
Jeremiah tells the exiled Israelites they would live in Babylon for at least 70 years. Therefore, they should settle down, build houses, marry and even pray for the peace and prosperity of the city in which they now found themselves (Jeremiah 29:4-10).
The words of Jeremiah 29:11 were spoken to people in the midst of hardship and suffering; people who were likely desiring an immediate rescue. However, God’s response is not to provide immediate escape from the difficult situation. Rather, God promises that He has a plan to prosper them in the midst of their current situation.
Christians facing difficult situations today can take comfort in the Good News of Jeremiah 29:11 knowing that it is not a promise to immediately rescue us from hardship or suffering, but rather a promise that God has a plan for our lives and regardless of our current situation, He can work through it to prosper us and give us a hope and a future.
Called to Freedom
On July 4, 2022, Americans will celebrate 246 years of independence as a nation. Countless lives have been sacrificed to gain and ensure our national and personal freedoms. However, Jesus Christ offered His life as an atoning sacrifice freeing us from the bondage of sin and death. Paul distinguishes between freedom to sin and freedom to serve. Freedom or license to sin is no freedom at all, because it enslaves you to Satan, others, and your own sinful nature. As Christians, we should not be slaves to sin, because we have been freed to do what is right and to glorify God through loving service to others. In Christ, you have been called to freedom.
Hope in the Lord
Happy New Year! 2021 is gone and 2022 is here!
David wrote Psalm 31 during a distressing time in his life when he was being unjustly troubled by family, friends, neighbors, and enemies, and he turned to God to ask for help from his distress. In today's message, we will look at David's prayer and see how we can get through the distress in our lives through God's help.