Sermons

  • Ephesians 6:5-9

    A Spirit-governed worker or boss will represent Christ in the workplace.

    “Ordinary” Christians have no less responsibility to live a worthy walk than those in full-time Christian work. Our prayer in every setting should be that others will come to Christ because of us. We’ve learned about how the overflow of the Gospel influences our individual walk with the Lord, our domestic relationships, and now our public life. Paul tells employees and employers how to take the Gospel to the work place through our work ethic.

  • Ephesians 6:1-4

    A worthy, Spirit-filled walk yields a warm and joyful relationship between parents and children.

    Paul describes the reality of relationships between children and parents when both are in Christ and Spirit-filled. Saved people who desire to obey the Spirit will just live this way. Obedience to these instructions requires growth in Christ-likeness on both sides.

    If the Christian home isn’t a warm and joyful place, then our culture is lost.

  • Ephesians 5:22-33

    A worthy, loving walk in light provides a warm and joyful reality in the Christian home.

    In this passage, we learn what marital and domestic relationships look like in Christ. When this passage is preached apart from its context, it can lead to bitterness, regrets, and disillusionment. We need to remember that all of us have been baptized into Christ and are brought into Light to live moral lifestyles (Eph. 4:1-6). Having already covered that ground, Paul assumes that his readers are being governed by the Spirit and living like Jesus in the home. As all members of a home live by the Spirit’s filling, there will be mutual submission to the direction of God. We are to respect, honor, reverence, and learn from one another. Outside of corporate worship, there’s no better place in the world than a Christian home.

  • Ephesians 5:18-21

    Living as light in any culture entails having an acute understanding of spiritual wisdom.

    The next few verses continue the application of our worthy, obedient, loving walk. Christians who are Light not only make wise choices but also embrace divine influence. This has a negative side and a positive – we are to avoid negative influences and instead be governed by the Spirit. The verbs of these commands are in the present active tense, which tell us they are to be continuous actions.

  • Ephesians 5:15-17

    Living as light in any culture entails having an acute understanding of spiritual wisdom.

    This section is the climax of Ephesians 4-6. We have just talked about black-and-white areas that a Christian, as Light, clearly avoids. Now we focus on Light’s desire to make wise choices in “gray” areas.

  • Ephesians 5:8-14

    The worthy walk of a Christian is filled with light contrasting the spiritual darkness of the world.

    God is light, and as we experience His work of dramatic transformation, we will find ourselves shining as lights in a world that loves darkness. The Bible knows nothing of a saved person who has a lifelong lifestyle of struggle with sin. God’s effective grace ensures you will grow more like Christ over time. These verses continue to describe what Light looks like.

  • Ephesians 5:3-7

    The worthy walk of a Christian is filled with light contrasting the spiritual darkness of the world.

    In these verses, Paul gives a pretty specific description of the lifestyle of darkness. The passage is not assuming that Christians are still living in the darkness described – rather, the Holy Spirit gives us a reminder of what we are not to go back to. It’s not worth going back! Our delight, as people transformed by His grace, is to live to serve Jesus.

  • Ephesians 5:1-2

    As a church, our highest ethic is love.

    In this passage, we find a unique command to be like God, a call to non-emotive love, and the ultimate example of both.

  • Ephesians 4:28-32

    The church's ethical "body language" - Part 2

    When we are owned by Jesus Christ, we no longer desire to communicate sinfully. The church ought to be known as the most ethical family in the community. Last week we learned how this plays out in two areas - speaking truth and addressing anger. Biblical anger can become unbiblical over time. Things in the body of Christ can disappoint you, but they need to be addressed. We are all fellow saints.

  • Ephesians 4:25-27

    The church’s ethical “body language” – Part 1

    This passage describes the spiritual “body language” of the church. The Holy Spirit through Paul’s pen gets laser-specific about what things the new nature does and should not do. These are instructions for how we behave within the local church. If they are not lived out, we grieve the Holy Spirit and hinder His ability to work among us.

  • Ephesians 4:23-24

    The Third Race Reality: The joyful reality in the life of the genuinely transformed Christian

    "Who am I? What am I here for? Where am I going? What should I do?" These are the questions that shape our personality and character. The unbelieving mind is always answering these questions with selfish, sinful, and worldly thinking. This old self is what we are able to lay aside once we are saved. Christ completely transforms us so we can mirror His character and tell others how he changed our lives.

  • Ephesians 4:20-22

    The Third Race Reality: The joyful reality in the life of the genuinely transformed Christian

    This week we begin looking at the four characteristics of our new lifestyle, in direct contrast to the characteristics of the unsaved we studied last week. When we have been saved, we think and live differently.

  • Ephesians 4:17-19

    The Third Race Reality: The Contrasted reality of a true Christian life versus the sensual or traditional-religious lifestyles

    In the next section of Ephesians 4, Paul continues his focus on individual Christian responsibility. He does this by contrasting the lifestyle of a Christian with two unsaved lifestyles - the Gentiles and the Jews. As dispossessed citizens of Heaven, we will no longer live in our old lifestyle. The worthy walk of Christians in our culture will be radically obvious and distinct.

  • Ephesians 4:7-16

    Personal maturity is the substance of unity in the local church.

    The 1999 U.S. women’s soccer team changed the face of women’s sports worldwide because they were well-trained and passionate about working toward their goal as a team. If we are functioning well as a church, we also will influence the world – for Christ.

    In these verses, Paul’s focus changes to individual responsibility within the body. Each member is specifically gifted by God, and each part works together toward a glorious goal. God designed the team and empowers it to have divine influence.

  • Ephesians 4:4-6

    Theme: Personal maturity is the substance of unity in the local church.

    Paul’s plea for unity in verse 3 is based on 7 doctrinal truths which form the Profound Source of our Worthy Walk. Doctrine is the foundation of righteous living, and spiritual oneness is the foundation of an effective church family. We must be in agreement on doctrine of Christ, then agree on the character and conduct our worthy walk. Understanding and pursuing spiritual maturity maintains our unity.

  • Ephesians 4:2-3

    Theme: Personal maturity is the substance of unity in the local church.

    As the glorious church of a glorious Savior, we have a glorious opportunity to live His character in our culture. When unbelievers observe our interaction, they should be amazed at the love we display (John 13:35). Maturing saints will be able to maintain the unity produced by the Spirit in a way that pleases the Lord.

  • Ephesians 4:1

    Theme: Christ has made the church spiritually one; joyfully, let it be one!

    This passage is important to understand because it forms the foundation for the rest of the book. The focus comes in verse three: “being diligent to preserve the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.” We will find that a truly unified church requires spiritual growth and maturity.

  • Judges 21

    Speaker: Pastor Kent Hobi

  • Judges 19

    Speaker: Pastor Kent Hobi

  • Ephesians 3:14-21, part 2

    Theme: The enjoyment of unseen spiritual realities prepares our hearts for unified daily living in God’s glorious church.

    This week, we finish up the doctrinal teaching portion of Ephesians. Paul’s main point can be summarized in 1 sentence: God desires to take every soul on the globe, from various cultures and backgrounds, and blend them into one family in His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ.

    This pinnacle passage takes the form of a prayer, preparing us for the practical instructions to come in chapters 4-6. Last week we discussed God’s Enablement and Indwelling. Remember that these four aspects flow into one another as a natural Spirit-given progression. If we’re governed by the Spirit, Christ will feel at home in our hearts. As Christ is at home in our hearts, we will know the infinite measure of love God has given to us in His Son Jesus Christ. As we know that love, we will know increasing maturity over time.