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Showing posts from November, 2015

The Days Are Coming

Reading Jeremiah 33: 14-16 Listen Link:  http://www.firstcovenantcadillac.org/#!this-weeks-sermon/c20mw Have you noticed that the sanctuary is pretty bare of Christmas decorations? Unlike many of our stores that are already celebrating Christ with all kinds of decorations and sales, we are holding back. The Advent season is used by the church to build anticipation of the great celebration of the arrival of God in the form of a man who would live a sinless life and turn the world right side up again. We are not just celebrating a famous birthday. We are celebrating the moment that God showed up in the neighborhood and moved in to be our next door neighbor. Jesus is our Lord, the Righteous Savior. Thanks be to God! He has fulfilled the good promise he made to the people of Israel and Judah! Jesus is indeed a righteous branch sprouted from David’s line. Mary is a descendant of David, and wonder of wonders, so is Joseph, the adoptive father of our Lord. God made all the arrangements

Fruitful Organizational Structures

Scripture: Acts 6:1-7 Listen Link: http://www.firstcovenantcadillac.org/#!this-weeks-sermon/c20mw As I begin my message about fruitful organizational structures it seems fitting to begin with a farming parable. That’s because the Bible does that. It uses farming illustrations to talk about fruitfulness in ministry. You know, the sower sowed the word, and some fell on good soil and it bore a crop, thirty, sixty, even a hundred fold. Also, “You reap what you sow.” This all leads to the conclusion that the fruit we are getting is exactly what we are planting, if we are planting anything. As organizational people say, “Your system is perfectly designed to give you the results you are getting.” So here is my parable. To get a good crop, the farmer works in partnership with God. God makes things grow. But the farmer has to plow the field, plant the seed, water and maybe even fertilize it. There is plenty of work for the farmer to do as he works within God’s will to prod

Culture of Godly Leadership

Listen link: http://www.firstcovenantcadillac.org/#!this-weeks-sermon/c20mw Hebrews 13:7-17 I like sailing. When I was in high school my friend Bill and I would go sailing. His family owned one of the smallest sail boats you could get, a little sunfish. It wasn’t much more than a kayak but you sit on the upper part and only put your feet down in the hole where kayakers sit. The sail was only about 8 feet tall and the boom was only about 18 inches above the so-called deck. When the boom was swinging over from one side to the other you really had to duck out of the way. We had a lot of fun sailing in that little thing out on Hudson Bay in Long Island Sound. It was the ocean, salt water, but in that protected area the waves were never very big. It was more like a large lake. Anyway the sailing we did was just for fun. Never any place to go in particular and nothing to do but sail for the fun of it. Even with that, only one person could be the leader, in charge of navigation. Bill

Sacrificial and Generous Living and Giving

Listen link: http://www.firstcovenantcadillac.org/#!this-weeks-sermon/c20mw Reading: Romans 12:1-8 This message is actually a very good next step after the heartfelt worship message from Oct. 25. Sacrificial and generous living and giving can be called embodied worship. What we do with our time and talents and finances is really the best expression of worship because if worship is only what we say and sing on Sundays then all we are doing is paying lip service to God and that can’t be called worship if it is not backed up with our sincere behavior. God doesn’t like lip service. I quote Isaiah 29:13, The Lord says: “These people come near to me with their mouth and honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me. Their worship of me is based on merely human rules they have been taught.” I know that none of us want to be insincere in our worship. All of us want to be faithful in stewardship. The problem comes in what we typically think is good enough compared to what