Gathering Growing Going
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CloseWe live in an amazing world – sunsets of unimaginable colours, mountains with peaks dusted in snow, waves that roll and dump and foam in shades of blue and white, birdsong sweeter than Dame Nellie – and all point to the glory of God. But to know God, we need his words – and his words lead to life. In fact, his words bring not just life, but exposure – they reveal our sin, and our desperate need for forgiveness of those sins. Psalm 19 captures these truths for us, in a simple and profound way. And then we ask, ‘How does Jesus fulfil this poem?’ Jesus IS God’s word, the perfect revelation of God who confronts our sin, and saves us from our sins.
Scripture References: Psalms 19:1-14, Luke 24:44-48, John 1:1-18
From Series: Service - Sunday Morning, Psalm | More Messages from Bernard Gabbott | Download Audio
Foundation WordsBernard Gabbott - Sunday, 28 May 2023Psalms 19:1-14 |
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Rest rightly...Bernard Gabbott - Sunday, 27 December 2020Psalms 131:1-3, Matthew 19:13-15, Matthew 136:1-26 |
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The Bible is for ALL People (Baradine)Steve Etherington - Sunday, 24 March 2013Acts 2:1-11 |
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Read the Bible Encouragement - Part 1Steve Etherington - Saturday, 23 March 2013 |
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Read the Bible Encouragement - Part 2Steve Etherington - Saturday, 23 March 2013 |
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Stand Firm on God's WordDaniel Wood - Sunday, 11 September 2011 |
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Spread the WordTom Treseder - Sunday, 21 March 2010Matthew 28:1-20 |
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We love a turning point. Whether it is a story or a football game. Hope dawning at the darkest time. Where is the great turning point in Esther? It could be our memory verse, when Esther is persuaded by Mordecai to act to save her people. It could be when the king looks with favour upon Esther and holds out the golden scepter to her. It could be when Haman is forced to lead Mordecai through the city mounted on the king’s horse and proclaims that he is the man the king delights to honour. They are major events in the story of Esther. They are turning points of a sort. But the writer of Esther points us to another event. That looks so trivial.
Esther is such an exciting story! There are evil plots. There are interesting yet flawed characters. There is risk and sacrifice. There is heroism and villainy. Today, we are introduced to the villain of the plot, and what an evil scheming villain he is! He spins lies and concocts murderous plans to do away with the Jews, God’s covenant people. How will the people respond? Will he get away with his evil plan? Will God, who is not mentioned at all, intervene to protect His people, to live up to the promises He made to Abraham, the people at Mt Sinai, and to David?
There is so much that sounds familiar in these first two chapters of Esther: the world is dominated by loud and brash and imposing and degraded power, the people of God are small and struggling and faced with ambiguous decisions and actions and God seems so far away he is almost absent (at least to our minds and hearts). As we read this book, we will need God’s revelation to help us navigate its strangeness, its ambiguity, and its confrontational narrative. In this, we have the key to the book—the lack of God’s name in letters does not mean the lack of God’s presence.
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