Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast Word of Life Church Podcast
| Titre | Date | Durée | |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Prophet In His Hometown | 02 Feb 2025 | 00:31:39 | |
It’s astonishing how angry some people will get if you try to take away their religion of revenge. They’re terribly upset by the idea that God might give divine favor to those they deem unworthy of it—to those who do not belong to their kind of people. The very idea that God might have mercy on all is condemned as blasphemy. This is exactly what Jesus encountered when he preached in his hometown of Nazareth. | |||
| JESUS: The Fullfillment of Scripture | 26 Jan 2025 | 00:30:09 | |
Jesus is the fulfillment of Scripture, and all Scripture is fulfilled in Christ. This may sound like a simple statement, but it’s actually an essential foundation for good theology. Scripture is not fulfilled by “biblical principles applied to your life.” Scripture is not fulfilled by geopolitical events speculated as “end time signs.” Scripture is not fulfilled by the modern nation of Israel or any other nation. All Scripture is fulfilled in the Word of God made flesh who is Jesus Christ. | |||
| You Tell Me | 24 Nov 2024 | 00:33:19 | |
Jesus of Nazareth being interrogated and ultimately condemned by Pontius Pilate is one of the most dramatic moments in the gospel story, and one of the most strangely fascinating moments in human history. Jesus on trial before the Roman governor of Judea establishes a historical context for the crucifixion. Indeed, it creeps into the Creed: “He suffered under Pontius Pilate.” If we enter into the theological depths of this historical moment, we discover that though on the surface Jesus is on trial before a Roman governor, in reality the world was on trial before the King of Kings. | |||
| Jesus the Healer: Hope For The Harassed and Helpless | 27 Mar 2022 | 00:39:26 | |
What happens when the carriers of hope and healing become the cause of harm and hurt? The wounds cut deeper, the pain becomes unbearable, and the harassed and helpless feel like sheep without a shepherd. Despite the failure of the church at times, there remains a good shepherd who walks with us through every valley. Jesus is the healer of every disease and every affliction including the afflictions suffered because of his church. | |||
| Jesus the Healer: Ultimate Healing | 20 Mar 2022 | 00:36:58 | |
Ultimate Healing | |||
| Jesus the Healer: Bringing the Sick to Jesus | 13 Mar 2022 | ||
Jesus carried our sins in his own body on the cross so that he might take away our sins, our brokenness, our sickness. This is the good news buried in the sorrow of Lent. He was wounded so that we could be healed, both body and soul, healed both on the outside and the inside, and so we bring sick people to Jesus with our prayers whether their brokenness is in their bodies, minds, or emotions. | |||
| Jesus The Healer: The Faith of Friends | 06 Mar 2022 | 00:33:33 | |
We tend to make a hard theological distinction between sin and sickness, between iniquity and illness, between guilt and death; but Jesus doesn’t seem to make that kind of hard distinction. In his great compassion Jesus looks upon all of us as soul-sick sinners broken by a terrible fall, and he comes to help us, to heal us, to forgive us, and to restore us. The salvation we find in Jesus Christ is holistic. | |||
| Ash Wednesday: Into the Ashes | 02 Mar 2022 | ||
You have heard it said, God helps those who help themselves. But I say unto you, God helps the helpless and leaves the rest to help themselves. We are saved when we call upon the name of the Lord—and we call upon the Lord when we know we can't save ourselves. When we go into the ashes and wait in the place of loss, we admit that we need God. | |||
| Epiphany: Mystics on the Mountains | 27 Feb 2022 | 00:41:44 | |
Scripture references are NRSV. | |||
| Epiphany: The Politics of Heaven | 20 Feb 2022 | 00:41:44 | |
During the season of Epiphany leading up to Lent, the Gospel readings in the lectionary are focused on the early ministry of Jesus—that is, from his baptism to his transfiguration. What we find in the first half of the Gospels is the healing and teaching ministry of Jesus as he travels throughout Galilee. This sermon will look at the core of Jesus’ kingdom message—The Politics of Heaven. | |||
| Epiphany: Hence Comes the Healer | 13 Feb 2022 | 00:28:37 | |
When Jesus began his public ministry in Galilee around the age of thirty, the thing that drew the crowds and spread his fame was that he was a healer. John the Baptist was famous as a preacher and baptizer, but Jesus was first of all famous as a healer and miracle worker. From curing Peter’s mother-in-law of her fever in Capernaum at the beginning of his ministry to resorting Malchus’ severed ear in the Garden of Gethsemane at the end of his ministry, Jesus was a healer. When we look at the ministry of Jesus we can say…Hence Comes the Healer. | |||
| Epiphany: Depart From Me | 06 Feb 2022 | 00:32:34 | |
"Every one of us is shadowed by an illusory person: a false self. This is the man that I want myself to be but who cannot exist, because God does not know anything about him. And to be unknown by God is altogether too much privacy. My false and private self is the one who wants to exist outside the reach of God’s will and God’s love—outside of reality and outside of life. And such a self cannot help but be an illusion. … The secret of my [true] identity is hidden in the love and mercy of God." | |||
| Epiphany: Hometown Jesus | 30 Jan 2022 | 00:34:32 | |
Jesus was rejected in his hometown. What are we to think of the people of Nazareth? Were they just more dull-witted or hard-hearted than the people of Capernaum? No. They had simply stumbled at the offence of familiarity. And today in Western society, we're all from Jesus hometown. | |||
| "All Will Be Thrown Down" | 17 Nov 2024 | 00:34:17 | |
In his Olivet Discourse Jesus predicted that the Temple would be destroyed, saying “all will be thrown down.” This came to pass a generation later when the Roman legions destroyed Jerusalem. But if Jesus’ words are words that “will not pass away,” what do these words say to us today, these words that—“all will be thrown down”? | |||
| Epiphany: Praying The Psalms | 23 Jan 2022 | 00:38:41 | |
| Epiphany: Vintage Christianity | 16 Jan 2022 | 00:36:05 | |
My life has become so intertwined with the story of the Wedding Feast at Cana that it has become the primary way that I tell my born again again story. Every time I read about how Jesus turned the water to wine, I feel a deep personal connection with the story. It’s become my story—or at least some of my story. And when the Gospel stories become our stories, this is when Scripture is doing its most profound work in our lives. I love the whole Bible, but I have a particular love for the story of Jesus’ first miracle. My love for this story is such that whenever I just hear the word Cana, it makes me happy. When I hear the baffled steward say, “But you have kept the best wine until now!”, I think, “That’s my story too!” The story of how in midlife Jesus turned the water to wine and I discovered the vintage I’d been looking for all my life. | |||
| Epiphany: Water and Flame | 09 Jan 2022 | 00:36:45 | |
The spiritual genius of the lectionary is on display when the water and flame poem of Isaiah 43 in the Old Testament is connected with Luke’s account of Jesus’ baptism in the New Testament. By making this connection, we are shown that God’s promise to be with us as we pass through rivers and waters, through fire and flame, is fulfilled, as all the promises of God are, in Jesus. For Christ Jesus is the one who joins us in the waters of baptism and the one who purifies us in the baptism of fire. | |||
| Christmas 2021: The Rising Star | 02 Jan 2022 | 00:30:32 | |
The star of Bethlehem is not to be found in a re-creation of ancient astronomy. The star of Bethlehem is the "more sure word of prophecy" that rises in our hearts in response to the proclamation of the gospel. | |||
| The Season Of Advent: Where the Word Enters the World | 19 Dec 2021 | 00:30:49 | |
Christ is not just born in the beautiful places of our lives, as if we live in the idyllic bubble of a snow globe. Christ is also born in the war-torn places of our lives, littered with rubber bullets and teargas canisters. Jesus was not born into a fairytale but into the world as it is. | |||
| A World Full of Blessings | 08 Aug 2021 | ||
Our secular age doesn’t make much room for a world filled with blessings. Our age is one that wants to reduce everything down to cold sterile mechanisms, where everything is predictable, provable, and explainable. We are given the choice to live in a world of blessings or curses. What kind of world do you want to live in? God who blesses all humanity has made a way for us to live in a world full of blessings because Jesus rescued us from the curse. If we want to live in a world full of blessings then we have to do our part and impart blessings to others including those who curse us. When we bless those who curse us, we neutralize cursing. When we curse those who curse us, we normalize cursing. Choose to bless. | |||
| I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For - U2 | 25 Jul 2021 | 00:37:18 | |
I have climbed highest mountains | |||
| Higher Love - Steve Winwood | 18 Jul 2021 | 00:30:01 | |
Think about it, there must be higher love | |||
| Everybody Wants To Rule The World - Tears For Fears | 11 Jul 2021 | 00:50:49 | |
Welcome to your life | |||
| Strangers In A Strange Land: The Faithfulness of Daniel | 20 Jun 2021 | 00:31:00 | |
The sixth century BC was a very difficult time for the Jewish people. Their holy city and their holy temple had been destroyed, and most of the survivors had been deported into forced exile in Babylon. The difficult challenge they faced was how to survive as exiles in Babylon and maintain their monotheistic faithfulness to Yahweh. How do you integrate into Babylonian society so that you can have a life but at the same time retain your Jewish identity? How do you live in a pagan world without becoming a pagan yourself? This is what the book of Daniel is about. | |||
| My Soul Waits for the Lord | 10 Nov 2024 | 00:36:44 | |
Psalm 130 invites us to wait for the Lord more than watchmen for the morning. Our souls wait for the Lord because there are no quick and easy paths on the road to spiritual formation. Waiting is inevitable. Waiting is baked into this ancient Christian faith we have received. Instead of a hurried dash through a department story, the Christian life is more like a slow walk down a wooded trail. The Christian life is a slow walk interrupted by moments of grandeur. Most of our days are spent waiting patiently on God. But we don't wait alone. God the Holy Spirit gives us faith, hope, and love to empower us in our waiting. | |||
| What Does This Mean? An Easter Look at the Cross: The Death That Conquers Death | 04 Apr 2021 | ||
The Crucifixion is not a defeat to be overturned by Resurrection; the Crucifixion is a victory revealed by Resurrection. The cross was made by Christ to become the portal by which he invaded death to liberate the dead ones. | |||
| What Does This Mean? A Lenten Look at the Cross: The Axis of Love That Re-founds the World | 21 Mar 2021 | ||
In Cain the world was organized around an axis of power enforced by violence. Violent power became the organizing principle for human civilization. This is the story of Cain of Abel, the story of Romulus and Remus, the story Sméagol and Déagol. These archetypal stories remind us of dark truths we would rather keep hidden. But Jesus came into the world to shine the light, tell the truth, and re-found the world. In Christ crucified the world is re-founded around an axis of love expressed in forgiveness. | |||
| What Does This Mean?: A Lenten Look at the Cross: The Eternal Moment of Forgiveness | 21 Feb 2021 | ||
On Good Friday the sin of the world coalesced into a hideous singularity that upon the cross it might be forgiven en masse. | |||
| Songs of Messiah: The Light Shines In the Darkness | 03 Jan 2021 | 00:39:41 | |
John's poetic prologue to his Gospel is one of the loftiest presentations of Christology in all the New Testament—it's also one of them of the most beautiful passages of Scripture. John's theopoetics reaches its crescendo when proclaims that until we see Jesus, we've never seen God. | |||
| Songs of Messiah: Simeon's Song | 27 Dec 2020 | ||
When Jesus was dedicated in the Temple, two old prophets -- Simeon and Anna -- spoke of the infant Jesus as Salvation and Redemption. Indeed, Jesus will save both Simeon and Anna, but neither of them knows how. | |||
| In The Beginning: Finding Jesus In Genesis: Isaac | 11 Oct 2020 | 00:39:06 | |
We look for Jesus in the story of Isaac, because as Christians that is how we read the Bible. Issac is the son of promise. Jesus is the fulfillment of all the promises of God. Isaac is the son of laughter. Jesus is the bringer of joy. Isaac is the son of sacrifice. Jesus is the lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. Isaac serves as a signpost pointing to the hope, joy, and new life we find in Jesus. | |||
| In The Beginning: Finding Jesus In Genesis: Abraham | 04 Oct 2020 | ||
In his many adventures Abraham constantly encountered Christ in some way. Abraham encountered Christ in the Voice that called him out Ur of the Chaldees and into the land of Canaan. In the foreshadowing of Melchizedek king of Salem who gave him bread and wine. In the trinity of strangers he entertained at his tent under the oaks of Mamre. In the smoking oven and burning torch that appeared when the covenant was cut. In the ram caught in the thicket on Mount Moriah on the day Isaac was offered up. Truly Jesus says, “Before Abraham was, I AM.” | |||
| In The Beginning: Finding Jesus In Genesis: Noah | 27 Sep 2020 | ||
Jesus is the Ark that carries the Cosmos away from corruption and into God’s new creation. Just as there was a door placed in the side of the Ark for access to salvation, so the side of Jesus was pierced that creation might enter the heart of Christ and be carried through the flood of destruction and arrive safely in a redeemed world where all things are made new. | |||
| In The Beginning: Finding Jesus In Genesis: Adam | 20 Sep 2020 | ||
Where do we find Jesus in Genesis in relation to Adam? We find Jesus as a new Adam who gives humanity a new original ancestor. We find Jesus in the Seed of the Woman who crushes the head of the serpent. We find Jesus in the One who comes in search of lost Adam. | |||
| In The Beginning: Finding Jesus In Genesis: Creation | 13 Sep 2020 | ||
If we read the Old Testament as only predating Christ instead of deeply anticipating and foreseeing Christ, we have failed to read it in a Christian manner. But when we see Christ as the Creator, as the New Adam, as Noah’s Ark, as Abraham’s sought-after city, as Isaac’s ram on Mount Moriah, as the ladder between heaven and earth that Jacob saw, as foretold in the life of Joseph, then are we reading the Old Testament in the way Jesus taught his disciples to read it following his resurrection. | |||
| A Tale Told By An Idiot | 03 Nov 2024 | 00:35:08 | |
Let nothing disturb you Let nothing frighten you All things are passing away God never changes Patience obtains all things Whoever has God lacks nothing God alone suffices –Teresa of Ávila | |||
| Finding God In the Music: John Brown | 06 Sep 2020 | ||
John Brown went off to war to fight on a foreign shore | |||
| Finding God In the Music: Call Me Rose | 30 Aug 2020 | ||
My name was Richard Nixon only now I'm a girl | |||
| Finding God In the Music: Wooden Heart | 23 Aug 2020 | ||
We're all born to broken people on their most honest day of living | |||
| Finding God In the Music: Woodstock | 16 Aug 2020 | ||
Well, I came upon a child of God | |||
| Finding God In The Music: You Were There | 09 Aug 2020 | ||
Saw a man's home, a box made of cardboard | |||
| Finding God In The Music: The Logical Song - Supertramp | 02 Aug 2020 | ||
When I was young it seemed that life was so wonderful | |||
| No Ordinary Time: A New Hope | 26 Jul 2020 | ||
When things become unsettled, we typically look for some kind of change, something new, but what we need right now is not a new car, a new job, a new spouse, a new church, or a new country. What we need in the midst of all this craziness is a new hope. Faith, hope, and love all work together. Faith is a present reality oriented towards the past, what God has done. Hope is a present reality oriented towards the future, what God will do. Love is that present reality made known by the Holy Spirit. | |||
| No Ordinary Time: What To Do On the Worst Day of Your Life | 19 Jul 2020 | ||
When David returned to his home in Ziklag, he encountered disaster -- he had lost everything. His house had burned down, his possessions had all been stolen, his family had been kidnapped. What do you do on a day like that? How do you recover from such devastating loss? | |||
| No Ordinary Time: The God Who Speaks | 12 Jul 2020 | ||
The living God is the God who speaks. This God who knows you, loves you, and calls you by name, will speak to you. You can learn to discern the voice of God. And this is a wonderful thing, because one word from God can change your life. | |||
| No Ordinary Time: For the Weary and Worn | 05 Jul 2020 | ||
We live in a moment when almost everyone feels weary and worn. Too much has come at us too fast. We are facing no less than four crises at once: A public health crisis; an economic crisis; a political crisis; a racial justice crisis. In addition to these we still have to deal with whatever personal crises may come our way. We are weary and worn. And to the weary and worn Jesus says, “Come to me. You're weary and I want to give you rest. You're worn out from heavy burdens—let me lighten your load. The world is harsh, but I am gentle; the age is arrogant, but I am humble; the times are hard, but my yoke is easy. Come to me and I will give you rest.” | |||
| Being Bartimaeus | 27 Oct 2024 | 00:30:15 | |
In Mark's Gospel bar-Timaeus (son of Timaeus) is the only person Jesus healed who is given a name. The blind beggar bar-Timaeus is also the first person in Mark's Gospel to identify Jesus as the Son of David. So who is Timaeus and why does it matter? | |||
| No Ordinary Time: The Word From Heaven | 28 Jun 2020 | ||
When I begin to feel pessimistic about the way things are in the world, I remember that the world will be saved, because God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world. Because Jesus is the Savior of the world, the world will be saved. The Word of the Father sent from heaven will not return in vain—it will succeed! This is not an excuse for irresponsibility or apathy, but an invitation to trust Jesus and to cooperate with the Savior in saving the world. | |||
| No Ordinary Time: Scandalous Joy | 21 Jun 2020 | ||
To cultivate joy that is not dependent upon acquisition or events is deeply Christian. It also subverts the powers who want to control everything, including our joy. The powers want to dictate when and why we can rejoice, and then sell it to us. Rebel, and rejoice in the Lord! This is the scandalous joy given to us by Jesus. | |||
| No Ordinary Time: Return of the Exiles | 14 Jun 2020 | ||
One of the most important stories in the history of Israel is the story of their exile in Babylon. Israel's experience with exile informs so much of the Bible that its importance cannot not be overemphasized. The story of exile is what sets up the good news of Jesus. | |||