Sermons from 2025
To Us a Child is Born | Part 4: Everlasting Father and Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9:7) | Tim Stephens
This sermon presents the kingdom of God as Scripture’s central theme. Christ’s kingdom is inaugurated through his death and resurrection, presently advancing through the gospel, and will be consummated at his return. From Isaiah 9:6–7, we see seven truths about this kingdom providing believers hope, comfort, and assurance in Christ’s victorious reign.
For To Us a Child is Born | Part 3: Our Everlasting Father and Prince of Peace (Isaiah 6:9)
This sermon on Isaiah 9:6 explores the final two messianic titles given to Jesus Christ. “Everlasting Father” highlights Christ’s eternal existence as God, while “Father” describes his functional role rather than his ontology. Jesus is the father of creation (through whom all things were made), the father of believers (birthing spiritual life and protecting his people), and the father of the age to come (ruling the restored future). “Prince of Peace” portrays Jesus as the divine ruler who brings comprehensive…
To Us a Child Is Born | Part 2: Our Wonderful Counselor and Mighty God (Isaiah 9:6)
Description: Isaiah 9:6 proclaims that the child born to usher in light, joy, liberty, and peace is Jesus Christ. Defending the prophecy’s fulfillment against skeptics, the sermon considers Jesus’ majestic titles, focusing on “Wonderful Counselor” (the source of divine wisdom guiding creation, redemption, and history), and “Mighty God” (evidence of his full deity, demonstrated in Scripture and his works). Ultimately, this child is “given to us” personally—for sinners to receive by faith as their own Savior, Lord, and King. Here is…
To Us a Child is Born | Part 1: The Light of Christ (Isaiah 9:1-5)
In this sermon on Isaiah 9:1–5, we’re reminded that Jesus Christ is the promised child and great light who dawns upon a people living in deep darkness—whether national, societal, or personal. The Scriptures reveal that Christ’s kingdom is inaugurated through his sacrificial death and victorious resurrection, turning darkness into light as sinners repent and believe the gospel. We consider five glorious effects of this gospel light in the lives of those who embrace Christ: multiplication of life, irrepressible joy, heartfelt…
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…
The Only Way to Live and Die
In this sermon, guest preacher Dr. Joel Beeke challenges us to determine who we are truly living for. Are we living for Christ, or are we living for the things of this world?
Living in Covenant: Faith, Obedience, and God’s Unchanging Promise
This sermon explores the concept of covenant as distinct from a contract, emphasizing its relational, grace-based nature rooted in God’s unchanging commitment to his people. This text highlights three key aspects: covenantal obedience; covenantal immutability; and covenantal warning. We see in these parallels to the New Covenant in Christ, urging believers to live faithfully, obey God’s commands, and trust in His grace, while warning against hypocrisy and calling unbelievers to seek Christ’s mercy.
Trusting God When Obedience Is Hard
This sermon explores the challenges of obeying God’s difficult commands, drawing from the narrative in Deuteronomy 3:12–29 where the tribes of Reuben, Gad, and half-Manasseh are instructed to leave their newly acquired land to fight for their brothers’ inheritance, and Joshua is charged to lead courageously despite fearsome enemies. It highlights the temptations to fear and settle for less, using the historical context of Israel’s victories over Sihon and Og and the faithlessness of the previous generation as lessons. The…
Giants in the Land
This sermon explores the biblical accounts of giants, such as the Anakim, Rephaim, and Nephilim, as described in Deuteronomy, Numbers, Joshua, and Genesis, proposing that these were historical figures descended from angelic beings intermingling with humans, as per Genesis 6:1–4. It addresses the reality of the spiritual realm and its impact on the material world. These giants, offspring of fallen angels, are part of a larger, cosmic battle against God’s people. The giants’ defeat by Israel and David, prefigures Christ’s…