|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Summary: Prayer changes things, especially when we do it in community. |
|
Summary: If we ever lose God’s Glory, we will have lost everything, for Glory is what prevents life from being an endless blur of meaninglessness or hopelessness. God’s Glory is what lifts us out of the depths of despair and takes us to the heights of appreciation. God’s Glory reassures us that God is good and that his mercy is everlasting. Glory reminds us that God’s love comes to us fresh each day like the rising of the sun. And Glory is God’s love that blesses us with a benediction like the blaze of sunset when we come to the end of our life’s day. |
|
Summary: The church was born in a time of transition, and it thrived against all odds because prayer was integral to that transition. So it is with the transition times in which we live. Prayer belongs to transition. |
|
Summary: Before he died, Jesus’ final thoughts were about us. He prayed that we might avoid the sin of separation and instead be united by our faith in God. |
|
Summary: At the end of his life, Jesus prays for his disciples, for the people he was sent to teach and those with whom he has a relationship, but not for the world in general. This statement may seem strange. Or, it could be a paradigm shift in how we see and treat the people we encounter daily. People are beautiful, divinely created individuals, and not the sum of their interactions with the world. |
|
Summary: In his high priestly prayer in John 17, Jesus prayed that his followers may “be one.” But what does that really mean? Are Christians all supposed to belong to the same denomination? Should our worship style be the same from church to church? Or is Jesus praying for something richer and deeper?
|
|
|
|
|
There are 6 sermons in your results. |
|
|