Deuteronomy

An expositional sermon series through Moses’ final sermons to God’s people. The book of Deuteronomy is the gospel according to Moses, telling the glorious redemption of God and instructing the people to keep covenant. It remains relevant to God’s new covenant people today.

Don’t Steal: From Sin to Dominion in Christ

In this message on the eighth commandment we explore the profound breadth of what God prohibits: not only outright theft of possessions, but also cheating, exploiting others, withholding fair wages, piracy, kidnapping, and even robbing God himself. Far more than forbidding wrongdoing, this command protects the God-given right to personal property and freedom as the foundation for exercising dominion in his created order. We also see that the gospel transforms us: we turn from theft and become givers through hard…

Hate the Sin, Love the Savior

In this message from our series on the Ten Commandments, we examine the seventh commandment—”You shall not commit adultery” (Deut. 5:18)—and discover why sexual sin in all its forms (lust, fornication, adultery, and more) is especially heinous: it deserves death, desecrates covenants, destroys families and nations, debases individuals, damns souls, and disgraces God. Yet the gospel offers radical hope: through Christ’s forgiveness, we find power to flee temptation, guard our hearts, love our spouses, and glorify God in our bodies.…

Don’t Murder: A Command for Life in a Culture of Death

 In this message on the sixth commandment we explore its deep and far-reaching meaning. Far more than prohibiting physical killing, this command forbids heart attitudes like anger, hatred, slander, envy, and retaliation that harm others and violate God’s image in humanity. It protects the sanctity of human life from conception to natural death, addressing issues such as suicide, euthanasia, and abortion while affirming biblical allowances for just war, self-defense, and capital punishment. Ultimately, the commandment calls us not only to…

Honoring Father and Mother: The Weighty Command

The fifth commandment acknowledges the family as the foundational institution of human life and society. It is to be honored. This sermon explains what honoring means and gives five practical ways this command is lived out. In addition, we consider five reasons to motivate obedience. May this encourage us to be salt and light, honoring our parents to the glory of God.

Work Six Days, Rest in Christ: Honoring the 4th Commandment

In this sermon we explore how the Old Testament Sabbath—rooted in God’s creation rest and Israel’s redemption from Egypt—serves as a shadow pointing to its fulfillment in Jesus Christ, the true Lord of the Sabbath. While the Sabbath has passed away in the new covenant, its principles endure in the Lord’s day, the day commemorating Christ’s resurrection and finished work. This divinely appointed day calls us to cease from weekly labors, gather for worship, feed our souls through the word,…

Not in Vain: Honoring the Name Above Every Name

This sermon on the third commandment lists eight negative violations to avoid. and positively calls us to declare and praise the exalted name of Jesus, perform all good works in his name, and suffer well for his sake. The context of grace reminds us not to despair over failure but to rest in Christ’s mercy, which itself glorifies his name as he saves and transforms unworthy sinners.

No Images: Worshiping the Invisible God in Spirit and Truth

This sermon expounds the Second Commandment, showing that while the First Commandment forbids worshiping false gods, the Second forbids worshiping or representing the true God in any false way. The sermon considers six reasons for this prohibition before considering how the commandment both prohibits images in worship (including nativity scenes, crucifixes with Jesus, children’s Bible illustrations of Christ, etc.) and commends knowing and worshiping God through his self-revelation in Scripture and in the living Word, Jesus Christ.

Grace Before Law: The Gospel According to Moses

The beginning with the Ten Commandments must be understood in its proper context of grace rather than as a burdensome list of rules. The introductory context emphasizes that the historical setting and theological context frame the law as a gift to an already-redeemed people. Most crucially, God’s own preamble highlights his identity and saving grace before any command, showing that obedience flows from loving gratitude for redemption, not as a means to earn it. This pattern of grace-first-then-law is echoed…

The Truth Commission: Has Anything Like This Ever Happened?

In Deuteronomy 4:32–40 Moses convenes a “truth commission,” urging Israel (and us) to search all of history—from creation to the present—and ask two questions: Has any people ever heard the voice of God speaking from fire and lived? Has any god ever taken a nation for himself out of another nation by signs, wonders, and a mighty hand? The honest answer is a resounding no—only the Lord has done this at Sinai and in the Exodus. This same pattern continues…

Watch Yourselves Carefully: The “Gods” of Our Age and the Mercy of the True God

Moses warns a new generation that a nation rises or falls by the God it serves, for idolatry is not merely ancient history but the defining spiritual battle of every era. In our own day, sophisticated new gods—DEI, Climate Change, Expressive Individualism, Indigenous Spirituality, Multicultural Pluralism, and the Technocratic-Therapeutic State—quietly demand our ultimate allegiance, redefining sin, salvation, authority, and hope while displacing the true and living God. Yet the same Lord who spoke from the fire, redeemed his people from…

Remember the Essentials: God’s Glory, Word, Covenant, and Commands

In Deuteronomy 4:9–14, Moses urges Israel to diligently guard their souls, minds, and hearts by never forgetting God’s self-revelation at Horeb—his blazing glory, spoken word, redeeming covenant, and holy commandments—so they and their children will fear and obey him all their days. This same call echoes for us today, not at Sinai but at the cross, where Christ supremely reveals the Father, compelling us to treasure these four essentials as the non-negotiable core of faithful living, to teach them to…

What Makes a Nation Great?

Deuteronomy 4:5–8 reveals that true national greatness is not found in engineering marvels, military might, or material wealth, but in a people who honor God’s righteous law, draw near to him through the reconciling gospel of Jesus Christ, and commune with him in prayer and worship. When a nation keeps God’s statutes with heartfelt obedience, the watching world will marvel, exclaiming, “Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding people,” because no other nation has a God so near…
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