Jason Isbell Jason Isbell

Sermon Archives

The most recent sermons are posted below and are available for download from this page. To view the full archive of sermon notes click here.

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Breaking Free from Lies that Enslave Us

Moving Toward a God of Love

The title of this series is “Life with a God of Love.”  As we meditate on the words of John, we’re being led through a series of spiraling reflections toward the great affirmations in the 4th chapter that “God is Love!” (4:8, 16). 

John wants us to grasp not just a slogan, but an insight into all reality. 
This is the heart of everything. 
It’s why there is a world, why we’re here,
why we have hope and confidence even in the midst of a pandemic,
why the irrationality of so much that we humans do in the world is not the final verdict on reality.
Why the world and our lives can have hope, beauty, creativity, nobility, justice.  Why we keep seeking all these things.

John knows that his readers in the 1st century certainly felt the hostility of the world around them in the Roman empire. 
That most of the world did not share their faith, their hope, their love.

He knows that there was then (and now) a great urge to move toward pessimism. Toward cynicism. Just look around. Everything’s messed up.  We had Caligula, we had Nero. Now we’re under the thumb of Domitian. It just gets worse and worse.

But John wants to call them back to see more clearly the message of the gospel, the announcement of what God has done in Jesus in all its beauty and depth. 
The way it unites both the highest spirituality – God is light and no darkness –
and the most concrete physicality – the blood of Jesus in his crucifixion.
That’s where he started.  

It doesn’t look away from the brokenness and sin of us humans. Every one of us.
But it sees that God takes on that problem in Jesus in a way that surprising and that never gives up on us even when we fail.  
That this work is not just aimed at you and me but as the deep sin of the whole world.

John’s very clear that God’s work in us is a process. John loves verbs like walking, holding on, abiding.  Especially abiding. 
We abide in what Jesus said right from the start about love and transformation.
It works. We find ourselves participating in God’s life
Walking in God’s light.
Abiding in God’s love.

We live the full range of life.  Receiving life as little children, Acting as responsible adults, growing as young people finding new strength.

We little humans actually become children of the God of the Universe.  Living toward a future that is beyond our imagination because it is in God’s creative hands, a creation of his unlimited love.

Too good to be true? Absolutely!   But true?  John says, Yes, indeed! 

That’s why John emphasizes that what he’s talking about is a challenging learning process.  He talks about how unexpected things become clearly manifest, how we come to know, come to understand, recognize things.  How we learn to see and experience “truth,” “reality” not within the cynicism created by imperial power but in the reality of the Love of God that pervades all that exists.

Doing What’s Wrong; Doing What’s Right

John tells us that that cynicism that says we’re trapped in what’s fundamentally wrong, in sin, and you just go with it because it’s the only way to success in this world. 
That’s slander about human life from the slanderer (diabolos). It’s not true.  
It doesn’t fill you with joy in this life and it blows away instantly with death.
Right now you can live a life that fills you with joy now and that is as unending as the very life of God. 

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Reggie Jackson - In Memorium

Reggie Jackson Sr. June 4, 1957 - April 14, 2020

Reggie Jackson Sr.
June 4, 1957 - April 14, 2020

We have created this space for people to leave blessings and encouragement to the Jackson family as they grieve the loss of Reggie. Simply add your comments below.

If you would like to contribute any money towards the funeral and other expenses please click the button below.

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Freedom When We Are Closed In

Philippians 1:12-27

What does it mean to be confined as a Christian? This week Tom draws a parallel from Paul's time under house arrest and the current social distancing that we are all experiencing.

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Leadership for a Community Under Challenge

Reading from a Distance – to Understand and Follow Paul writes to Timothy in c. 67 after 2 yrs house-arrest in Rome, travel to Spain and back to Aegean area. After Rome’s fire in 64, Nero’s slaughter of Christians in Rome, made it illegal to be a Christian in the Roman empire. Paul urges them to stay engaged by Faith-Gospel but to pray for emperor and for quiet life with honor. Christians vulnerable to accusation and execution. We read from our modern post-Christendom, individualism, freedom, more ignored than physically endangered. Our tradition often reads this text as a check-list of laws for church elders. Challenges in crossing centuries: Givens of Greco-Roman society (1) Patriarchy in law (2) Honor- shame culture based in evaluation of others, (3) Patronage, (4) Polytheism. Christian faith was threatened on all these fronts. People breathed this given reality as they organized life.

Why to Timothy and Titus, who’ve work with Paul 15+ yrs in difficult situations. Don’t they know? Why should overseers be married? Paul earlier (1 Cor 7) urged staying unmarried, like himself. Why so much about accusation, conflict, honor and so little about spiritual gifts as earlier. Why must pagans speak well of the overseer? Who is the “accuser” (diabolos, devil, human)? To understand the language, it helps to understand what’s at stake, what Paul is trying to do. Paul knows Timothy and Titus know the spiritual gifts needed for leadership (Rm 12, 1Cor 12...). He focuses on particular needs for leadership in the troubled churches in Ephesus and Crete.

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Men & Women Learning to Pray

Praying for a Quiet, Active Life Under a Threatening Empire. Reading scripture challenges our imagination and empathy. Or does it? Is Paul writing to his co-worker Timothy and instructing him by stating the ideal arrangements of the church? Nero began persecution of Christians in Rome after fire. No systematic official persecution. But being a Christian was illegal and anyone could bring accusation. Permission to kill. Hard vulnerability. What does a community do? Still pray for the emperor? Withdraw from public life? How can we fulfill our principal mission? How can we live by the Gospel in a world of honor and shame. There was also the vivid danger of a Heresy that focused on myths and speculation instead of Faith. Semi-Gnostic withdrawal: We are those who know our Divine inner reality. The physical is corrupt. Avoid marriage and giving birth to more flesh. Women, young widows were especially attracted. Men, fairly simple. Pray for emperor and quiet life. But stay quiet: Don’t show anger, dispute.

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Black History Month Service

SERVICE ORDER Black History Month Service SERVICE ORDER February , 16 Don't You Want To Go Welcome - Amy Amen Call to Worship - Allison Soon And Very Soon I'...
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Worship to Embrace a World

Being True to the Gospel under Powerful Threats. Reading scripture challenges our imagination and empathy, to put ourselves back in the situation of the writer and readers and hear the words as they heard them. Scripture is more than that, but it begins there. This text can seem bland or obsequious when read from a comfortable setting in modern times. But it is a text that affirms God’s heart expressed in worship in a time of vast uncertainty and threat, both from powers and divergent teaching. Put yourself in Ephesus, Roman provincial capital, about 3 years after Nero killed Christians in Rome after a great fire. [Tacitus] Things had been hard, but now the empire has given permission to denounce Christians and execute them. Some want to turn inward to become a group that doesn’t engage the world but focuses on special knowledge, speculation, and myth. Paul challenges Timothy to guide the community in prayer precisely for their fiercest enemies. What does it mean to Pray for All People and for the Emperor? Rome’s empire and politics were highly stratified. Christian communities had no ordinary power. They were too different to be incorporated into Rome’s “tolerant” paganism. But they could have railed against it. Instead, Paul draws on Jesus’ teaching to urge God’s inclusive vision.

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