Sinopsis
Solid Rock Church sermons
Episodios
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Men of the Kingdom
01/05/2016In the sermon this past Sunday, we looked at the God-given design and calling on the men of God’s Kingdom. As the Apostle Paul lays out the structure of discipleship within the Church for Titus, we see that all men are called to the character of Christ described in the qualifications of the Elders. The role of Elder is not an elite role in the church for the special few. But instead, the role of the Elder is something that all Christian men should aspire to. Paul clearly calls Titus, along with the other qualified men in the Church, to engage in discipling the younger men in the Church as potential and future Elders, calling them towards leadership.
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Raising Up The Next Generation
24/04/2016In the sermon this past Sunday, we continued to look at our inward Mission as a Church: to invest and engage in making disciples of the next generation. Whether you have children in your home or not, every believer is mandated to engage the next generation and lead them towards spiritual maturity. There is a significant difference between conforming our children into our image verses participating in the work of the Holy Spirit to conform our children into the image of Jesus. In Titus 2, Paul reminds us that only the grace of God can cause us to be more like Jesus. God’s grace conforms our inward identity by satisfying our deepest need and filling our hearts with a gratitude that convinces us to let go of the things of this world and pursue Jesus-likeness.
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Love One Another
17/04/2016In the sermon this past Sunday, we looked at the second part of our internal mission as a church: to love one another. In 1 John 3, we were challenged by the truth that the way we love one another greatly impacts the Mission we are on and is a primary identity marker for the Church. Jesus told us that we will be known by the world as his disciples by how well we love one another. In contrast to the pop culture perspective on love, the Bible defines and measures love by willing sacrifice. Love is the willful choice to lay your life down for someone else. This means laying down our agendas, our preferences, our pet peeves, our to-do lists and even our own comfort. Before we can truly love one another, we must have hearts that are open to the needs of others and be ready for action. Are you willing to love the people in your life who require more from you? What action step(s) can you take this week to engage in loving others?
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Serving the Body
10/04/2016In the sermon this past Sunday, we continued the A Church on Mission sermon series, looking at God’s design for believers to serve the local church. God has filled every believer with His Spirit, distributing supernatural gifts that enable us to do ministry beyond our natural abilities. According to 1 Corinthians 12, everyone who knows and loves Jesus is filled with the Holy Spirit and has a spiritual gift with which to do ministry for the good of the church. A healthy church consists of believers with diverse roles serving in unique harmony, reflecting a singular mission. What spiritual gift have you been given? What are you passionate about? Where is the greatest need in your church?
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Amazing Grace
27/03/2016In the Easter sermon this past Sunday, we looked at how the resurrection of Jesus truly displays the amazing grace of God. In John 10, Jesus declares to His followers that He is the Good Shepherd because, unlike the other religious leaders and systems of their day, Jesus was truly going to stand between His people and death. In the same way that a shepherd places himself between danger and his flock, Jesus says that He will protect His sheep from the wolves by laying His life down and taking it back up again. What an amazing thought… Jesus willingly and intentionally laid His life down and picked it back up in order to save undeserving people. This is the essence of grace, giving something good to recipients who didn’t ask for it, don’t deserve it and could never pay it back. We see in the death and resurrection of Jesus, the most vivid depiction of God’s amazing grace.
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Your Will Be Done
20/03/2016As we continued our sermon series A Church on Mission this past Sunday, we looked at the role of prayer in our church ministries and daily lives. In Matthew 6, Jesus teaches us that prayer isn’t about manipulating God to do what we want, but rather prayer is a time to submit our wants and desires to God in worship. As we pursue a daily prayer life, we are pursuing contentment in what God provides for us. Through prayer, we receive forgiveness and remind ourselves to be ambassadors for God’s forgiveness to the people around us. Prayer is also a powerful tool in pursuing holiness and becoming more like Jesus.
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Building The Church
13/03/2016When we hear “build” and “church,” we typically think of church buildings. This past Sunday, we looked at what it means to truly build the church. In 1 Corinthians 3, we were reminded that the Church is made up of people, not buildings. The mission of Jesus is to build a prevailing church on Earth through His disciples. His disciples do the faithful work of the farmer, but only Jesus can cause hearts to change and the Church to grow. The only reason we are considering building bigger buildings at Solid Rock is so that we can become a beacon of hope to this community and become a more significant launching pad for missionaries globally, sending our people out into the darkness of this world with the light of hope we have in Jesus. As a church in this community, Jesus has commissioned us to plant seeds in the lives of the people around us by investing and inviting them into a relationship with Him. Who are some of the people whom God has used in your life to lead you to salvation and spi
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Sowing & Reaping
06/03/2016As we continued the sermon series A Church on Mission this past Sunday, we looked at the topic of financial giving. In 2 Corinthians 9, Paul reminds the church that there is a deep connection between sowing financially and reaping financially. We learned that God calls Christians to give regularly to the work He is doing through the local church from the joy in their hearts. God promises to take care of the needs of all who trust in Him. God also promises that when you sow generously, you will reap generously so that you can give beyond your tithe as an offering to the work He is doing globally. Giving is not a matter of doing; it is a matter of being who you were created to be. You were created by a generous God to bear His image in the world. Giving generously reflects God’s character and magnifies God’s glory. Do you consider yourself someone who gives sparingly or generously? What obstacles keep you from making a commitment in your heart to give more generously to the work God is doing through
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The Church
28/02/2016In the sermon this past Sunday, we looked at the identity and nature of the local church. In the Bible, the Church is never a place or a building; the Church is always a people who follow Jesus together and live on mission in their community. In Acts 2, we observed that the Church is the gathering of those have heard and believed the Gospel. As we saw in the Jerusalem Church of Acts 2, the nature of the Church is devotion to Jesus and each other. Jesus accomplishes His mission on Earth through a fully devoted church that exhibits a lifestyle of community and sacrificial living.
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The Songs We Sing
21/02/2016As we continued the sermon series, A Church on Mission, we looked at the topic of worship from a biblical perspective. This week we focused on the expression of worship, corporately, through the songs that we sing. In Psalm 150, we observed that when we gather together in corporate worship, we are stepping into a God-ordained time where we boast in the Lord. In order for our singing to be considered true biblical worship, our lyrics must boast about what God has done and/or who God is. In the last six verses of the Psalms, God gives 13 commands for His people to engage in corporate worship through singing. The Psalms end with the final command for everything that has breath to participate in corporate worship.
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Created to Worship
14/02/2016As we continued the Church on Mission sermon series this past Sunday, we shifted our focus to the topic of worship. We concluded that the Bible teaches that we were created to worship God in every aspect of our life, but because of sin, our hearts are prone to worship the idols of creation, rather than the Creator. Idol-worship occurs when we pursue the passions of our flesh and carry out of the desires of our body and mind. When we turn to Jesus in true repentance of our idol-worship, He removes our sins, transfers our identity, reconciles our relationship to God and makes us fully alive to worship Him. We are created to worship God alone by finding our happiness in Him as the sole object of our heart’s deepest desires.
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A Church On Mission
07/02/2016This past Sunday, we launched a new sermon series entitled A Church on Mission, in which we looked at the clear and singular mission that Jesus gave His church in Matthew 28:16-20. In His final address before His ascension back to Heaven, Jesus instructed His disciples to make more disciples and multiply God’s Kingdom on Earth. The Church today is the fruit of that mission. We carry the torch of the same mission: to walk with Jesus, living for His mission in our everyday lives. We are a church on mission! What does it mean to be on mission? What priority should the Mission of Jesus have in your everyday life? What should it look like to live your life on mission for Jesus?
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A Better Kingdom
31/01/2016In the final sermon in the Revelation series this past Sunday, we celebrated the final appearance of God’s Eternal Kingdom. All who have trusted in Jesus will become the holy city of God, adorned in beauty and splendor as a bride who is ready for her groom. As the kingdom of man gives way to the Kingdom of God, Jesus will put death to death and restore eternal and abundant life, making all things new according to the riches of His grace. As the glory of God fills His Eternal Kingdom, the saints will enter into a better Eden and enjoy the eternal presence of God forever.
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The Book of Life and the Death of Death
24/01/2016As we continued the Revelation series this past Sunday, we looked at Revelation 20:11-15. In this final scene of judgment, we see the created world exposed to the revealed majestic presence of the Holy God seated on His throne. At this moment in human history, all the people who have ever dwelled on earth will be divided according to what they have done with Jesus. Those who have trusted in Jesus will be judged by whether or not their names are written the Lamb’s Book of Life. Those who have trusted in themselves, rather than Jesus, will be judged according to their deeds. After the dead have been judged, the final enemy of Jesus, death itself, will be put to death. This is the beginning of the Eternal Kingdom of God, giving way to the New Eden.
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The Final Battle
17/01/2016As we continued the Revelation sermon series this past Sunday, we looked in Revelation 20:1-10 where God displayed His sovereign power and authority over Satan by seizing, binding, throwing, shutting and sealing Satan in order to restrain him from deceiving the nations for a period of time known as the Millennium Reign of Christ. Despite different views on the literal or symbolic use of “1000 years,” we rest assured that those who place their faith and trust in Jesus will be resurrected into eternal life. At the Final Battle in human history, we see that the saints of God will be finally vindicated and the enemies of God will be finally defeated.
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The Wedding Feast and the Great Divide
10/01/2016In the sermon this past Sunday we made it to the exciting part of the story where the victorious king returns to make war against his enemies and rescue his bride. In Revelation 19 we saw that, at the return of Jesus, the saints will unite with one thunderous voice to worship Him as their King and stand before Him in righteousness and purity. While the saints enjoy the fulfillment of all that has been promised, His enemies will also reap what has been sown. At His return, Jesus will establish an eternal divide between the Kingdom of God and the kingdom of Satan forever.
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The Fall of Babylon
03/01/2016We returned to the Revelation series this past Sunday, looking at the final strategy of Satan to dethrone Jesus and make himself God. We learned that Satan uses the intoxicating pleasures of wealth and immorality to seduce people away from God and that the intoxication of sin always gives way to deeper and darker sin. Promising pleasure, Satan always leads his loyal followers in desperation, shame, suffering and death. Despite His greatest efforts, Satan will be destroyed according to God’s plan. As God’s children, we must strive to not give in to the temptations of Satan and hold tight to the promises of God.
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The False Prophet
13/12/2015In the sermon this past Sunday, we looked at the continuation of the plan of Satan to wage war against God and His followers through raising up two earthly leaders: the Antichrist and the False Prophet. This week we looked at how the False Prophet will use the influence of the Antichrist and economic sanctions to control the people on Earth. Through his influence, the False Prophet will require the people on Earth to receive the mark of the beast, mimicking the Seal of the Holy Spirit with which God marks His followers in Ephesians 1:13-14 and Revelation 7:1-3.
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The Antichrist
06/12/2015In the sermon this past Sunday, we continued the Revelation series by looking at the character and strategies of the antichrist in Chapter 13. We noticed that Satan’s strategy is to masquerade as God in order that we might follow and worship him. Through pretending to be God, Satan’s followers are lured into finding their identity, joy and security in the things of earth. On the other hand, the Saints of God are those who find their identity, joy and security in the things of heaven. Through hearing and believing the Gospel, the Saints of God are empowered to face trials and persecution with faith that is rooted in God’s sovereignty.