The Call to Greatness
This sermon is shared by our director of international ministries, Chris Zang, while Dane Lewis is away and is based on Matthew 18:1-6.
This sermon is shared by our director of international ministries, Chris Zang, while Dane Lewis is away and is based on Matthew 18:1-6.
This sermon is based on Genesis 12:1-3. While this sermon does not deal directly with the flood, it provides a needed context for the next sermon in this series, as well as a valuable overview of how God is a promise-keeping God. SERIES OVERVIEW: Water, water everywhere, God destroys the world he loves in a blink! Water, water everywhere Explain all of this and tell me what to think! Let’s face it, the flood narrative is hard to understand. Kids love it because it involves animals marching two-by-two and rainbows and an epic sea voyage. What’s not to love? But geologists frown upon it because they see no confirmation anywhere for a universal flood. And that evidence is hard to dismiss. But some theologians still hold fast. They even build life-size arks in Kentucky (admission is only $48!). But other theologians just shake their heads. For them a myth is as good as a denial. Giants and world annihilation,
This sermon is based on Genesis 6:9-20. SERIES OVERVIEW: Water, water everywhere, God destroys the world he loves in a blink! Water, water everywhere Explain all of this and tell me what to think! Let’s face it, the flood narrative is hard to understand. Kids love it because it involves animals marching two-by-two and rainbows and an epic sea voyage. What’s not to love? But geologists frown upon it because they see no confirmation anywhere for a universal flood. And that evidence is hard to dismiss. But some theologians still hold fast. They even build life-size arks in Kentucky (admission is only $48!). But other theologians just shake their heads. For them a myth is as good as a denial. Giants and world annihilation, a curse and a promise, animals and offerings, unchecked evil and an unleashed chaos, a righteous Noah and a naked Noah, an ark and a new beginning – the story of Noah and the Flood
This sermon is based on Genesis 6:5-8. SERIES OVERVIEW: Water, water everywhere, God destroys the world he loves in a blink! Water, water everywhere Explain all of this and tell me what to think! Let’s face it, the flood narrative is hard to understand. Kids love it because it involves animals marching two-by-two and rainbows and an epic sea voyage. What’s not to love? But geologists frown upon it because they see no confirmation anywhere for a universal flood. And that evidence is hard to dismiss. But some theologians still hold fast. They even build life-size arks in Kentucky (admission is only $48!). But other theologians just shake their heads. For them a myth is as good as a denial. Giants and world annihilation, a curse and a promise, animals and offerings, unchecked evil and an unleashed chaos, a righteous Noah and a naked Noah, an ark and a new beginning – the story of Noah and the Flood