Matthew 26:36-46
/This sermon was preached at the Maundy Thursday worship service.
sermons | study
These are sermons preached during our Sunday worship services. (Recordings were not always successful, so there are gaps in the postings.)
This sermon was preached at the Maundy Thursday worship service.
Robert Hall, pastor of The Bronx Household of Faith for 45 years, brought this message on Palm Sunday.
We sang “Spirit of God, descend upon my heart…O, take the dimness of my soul away” prior to this message given prior to our observance of the Lord’s Supper
Timothy Roy of the Cornerstone Church in Beverly, Massachusetts preached this excellent sermon.
The apostle speaks in this text to issues as relevant to the church today as they were when he wrote this short letter.
This test completes the second of the five major teaching sections in the Gospel of Matthew. Jesus brings his instructions to a close with a look toward the future.
Jesus’ teaching in our text includes some “hard sayings” that bear our careful attention.
This text continues the second major section of Jesus’ teaching in the Gospel of Matthew, and features a threefold admonition “do not fear.”
Joshua provided excellent guidance for our consideration of Psalm 13, giving particular attention to what we can learn from this psalm of David and apply to our own prayers.
This passage continues Jesus’ teaching in Matthew chapter ten, in which he addresses the sending of his followers as emissaries of his kingdom.
This passage completes the narrative of chapters eight through ten. There are truths for God’s people today in the experiences of Aaron and his sons.
Human sin brings disaster on the first day of the congregation’s worship.
In chapter nine of Leviticus, we arrive at a significant narrative climax with important theological implications.
Leviticus chapters eight through ten record the important events of the priestly ordination and commencing of worship at the tent of meeting.
These verses finish out the literary unit seen in 2:7-17. Echoed in verses 15-17 are the themes of love, passing away, and abiding that we saw in the verses 7-11. As darkness and light were contrasted in 7-11, love of the world and love of the Father will be contrasted in 15-17.
These verses have a distinct poetic structure that renders them memorable, which emphasizes the important truths that they contain.
The apostle continues this wonderful letter as he introduces the central theme of love.
After what functions as a prologue in verses one through four, this text begins the main body of the epistle.
Joshua drew my attention to First John as a text that is in many ways appropriate for consideration during the Christmas season.