My grace is sufficient for you

2 Corinthians 12:9-10

A sermon for the Seventh Sunday after Pentecost

You probably thought we are suddenly back in the season of Lent because we just sang “Come to Calvary’s holy mountain.” Note the somber words in the second verse: “wounded, impotent, and blind,” The whole tone of the hymn is Lenten, although it’s not in that part of the hymnbook.

Then we have this text from 2 Corinthians 12:9: “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore Paul concludes in verse 10: “Therefore I will rejoice in my weaknesses that the power of Christ may rest upon me.”

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Great is thy faithfulness

A sermon for the Sixth Sunday after Pentecost

Lamentations 3:23

In Lamentations 3:23 is the famous line: “Great is thy faithfulness.” We know it from the hymn by that name, written in 1923 by Thomas Obadiah Chisholm. He was born in a log cabin in Franklin, Kentucky and grew up to become a Methodist minister. The hymn is not in many hymnals because it is relatively new. But it has become a favorite of many because of the words and the tune.

Even though the hymn is a favorite, the actual text in Lamentations is even better. There is more breadth and depth in the third chapter of Lamentations and in the wider context. The whole question is: Where is God?

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The best deal there ever was

Cor 5:21

A sermon for the Fifth Sunday after Pentecost

2 Cor 5:21 is a key verse: “For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.”

We use this verse over and over again. It’s a key verse in the whole of 2 Corinthians. It was one of Luther’s favorites. It is the best business deal ever. God took our sin; we take his holiness. He took our death; he gives us life forever with him.


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The Christian Life: Glory

A Sermon for the Fourth Sunday after Pentecost

2 Corinthians 5:1-10

2 Cor 5:1-10 is considered one of the ten most difficult texts in the New Testament. What is it about?

Two preliminary comments: All the divisions in our Bibles into verses and chapters were added much later. Some of the divisions seem arbitrary. It’s useful to remember that these New Testament letters and writings were not divided in the way we have them today.

The second preliminary comment is that Paul is dealing with “opponents,” and we can’t exactly say who they are. We do know that in 2 Corinthians he is fighting for his apostolic life. What is important for us is that he is really asking the question: What does the Christian life look like?

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What about forever?

A sermon for the Third Sunday after Pentecost

At the beginning of the season of Pentecost, there is the account of Adam and Eve in Genesis 2 and 3 and the beginning of our troubles. With that comes the whole discussion about Eve. The feminists have been battling about this issue for forty years. They say that Eve is a victim. Even though they come up against 1 Timothy 2:14 (paraphrased): For Adam was formed first, then Eve; but Eve sinned first.

What do we make of this question as we look at how things began? First of all, the feminists point out that she would have sinned out of ignorance. How did she know? There was this command not to eat of the tree of life, but how would she know what it was all about? She really couldn’t be made accountable for much more than a simple mistake.

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