Northwest Gospel Church Sermons Camas/washougal

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 205:51:37
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Sinopsis

Latest sermons from Northwest Gospel Church in Camas, Washington. For more information visit us online at nwgospel.com

Episodios

  • Role Reversal

    03/04/2022 Duración: 44min

    Luke 22:66-71 | Ben Potloff | In this last portion of Luke 22, the author is using five verses to focus on one thing: the identity of Jesus. Morning comes and the Jewish leadership carts Jesus off to their= council chamber, perhaps to make official the deliberations from the previous night at the high priest’s house (v. 54). There, they ask, “are you the Christ?” What was Jesus supposed to answer? His interrogators were wanting him to answer that he was the Christ, implying his equality with God. Jesus is not coy but he responds indirectly, “But from now on the Son of Man shall be seated at the right hand of the power of God.” They receive a gift horse; there is a noose hanging there and Jesus puts his head through it. They check with another question (v. 70a) and get Jesus’ response (v. 70b). They take Jesus’ words as an affirmation, and they move quickly to punish him for what they consider to be blasphemy.

  • Abandoned

    27/03/2022 Duración: 42min

    Luke 22:54-65 | Max Janusch | In this passage, Luke turns the focus on Peter and shows us the sad failure of a disciple. Peter sits among the group huddled around the courtyard fire. One of the servant girls eyeballs Peter, and says “This man also was with him.” Peter’s retort was, “Woman, I do not know him.” There could hardly be a stronger way to deny Jesus, and it was pretty much all downhill from there. It looks completely hopeless save for one observation that Luke gives that no other Gospel account does: “And the Lord turned and looked at Peter.” This is a pathetic fall that landed amid shreds of hope as “he went out and wept bitterly” (v. 62). Luke also wants us to see one other important truth: the word of Jesus is solid. There is an irony in what happens next. Even as the religious leaders treat Him as a phony prophet, in their actions Jesus’ prophecy is being fulfilled. Whether it’s Peter’s denial or the beginning of the mockery of Jesus, he wants us to see how sure and solid Jesus’ word is.

  • From Death to Life

    20/03/2022 Duración: 36min

    Romans 6:3-11 | Ben Potloff | As Christians, we still find ourselves falling into old patterns and old sins. Why is this? What does the Bible say about our old lives? The Apostle Paul exhorts the believers in Rome to recognize that they have died to their old selves and to sin, and they now experience new life through salvation by faith in Jesus. This passage reminds Christians to recall their salvation and live in light of their new life.

  • Gethsemane: A Place of Crushing, Chaos, and Control

    13/03/2022 Duración: 52min

    Luke 22:39-53 | Luke Hendrix | Jesus’ prayer in the garden reveals much. Although Jesus is fully God, his prayer gives us a very real picture of his humanity. There is perhaps no way for us to understand the intense anguish experienced by Jesus in these moments. Yet God the Father understood, sending an angel to strengthen him. The trial did not cease but Jesus' attention is fixed on the will of the Father. This fixation leads Jesus through his agonizing moments in prayer and, fully in control of the circumstances, into the hands of the men who would put him to death.

  • The G.O.A.T.

    06/03/2022 Duración: 42min

    Luke 22:24-38 | Ben Potloff | This passage contains three major themes. First, Jesus defines greatness. Second, Jesus highlights the coming denial of Peter. Third, Jesus reminds the disciples of the coming struggles. This passage highlights something beautiful. It highlights Jesus’ compassion, his care, and his aching heart for his disciples knowing what is around the corner. As we look at the whole of this passage try not to see these as three independent chunks of narrative. Remove the verses’ numbers, remove the paragraph breaks and headings, and listen to the heart of Jesus. See what he is doing. Hear what he is saying.

  • Conspiracy Theory

    27/02/2022 Duración: 42min

    Luke 22:1-23 | Ben Potloff | Since Luke 9:51, we have followed along as Jesus has traveled through Israel with his face set “to go to Jerusalem.” Now, we come to the beginning of the end of Jesus’ earthly ministry. As the Passover is about to begin Jesus sends some of the disciples to prepare a space for them to eat together. It is during this meal that Jesus reminds the disciples that he will soon be betrayed. And more than just that, he reveals that he’ll be betrayed by one of the very men who is considered a disciple. It is with the shadow of Good Friday beginning to fall that Jesus inaugurates the Lord’s Supper, reminding his followers to participate in this symbolic meal together as they remember his sacrifice and look forward to the work that he will one day fully and finally complete.

  • Doomsday Preppers Pt. 2

    20/02/2022 Duración: 41min

    Luke 21:5-38 | Ben Potloff | It can be incredibly easy to find ourselves living in fear. We live in fear of natural disasters. We live in fear of economic collapse and financial hardship. We live in fear of the influence of political figures and the power of governments. We can live in fear because we know our struggles and failings, and we fear that our shortcomings will affect us and our loved ones. This passage can, if read shallowly and hastily, lead to fear. In Luke 21:5-38, Jesus speaks of imminent destruction, the persecution of believers, the overthrow of governments, pain and suffering, natural disasters, and even captivity. But he does not present these realities without also presenting a greater hope for those in Christ. So, before we engage with this passage, let’s go to God in prayer. Let’s confess our anxieties and fears. Let’s allow the “God of all comfort” (2 Corinthians 1:3) to speak to us through the words of Jesus.

  • No Respecter of Appearance

    13/02/2022 Duración: 38min

    The religious leaders’ questioning of Jesus has come to an end (see Luke 20:40), but Jesus keeps the ball rolling with a question of his own. He asks, “how can they say that the Christ is David’s son?” It’s here that we think back to Luke’s opening words, where he tells us why he has written this Gospel account, “to write an orderly account for you... that you may have certainty concerning the things you have been taught.” It’s almost as if, while writing, Luke wants to prove the kingship of Christ, because he then turns and gives us a picture of the upside- down nature of the kingdom of God. Within earshot of his subject, Jesus condemns the scribes, who are hungry for the accolades that come with their position. Instead of affirming what their society would say about this group, he tells the crowd that they will receive greater condemnation. In the next breath (remember, the chapter distinctions were added much later after Luke’s writing), the author tells us the story of the widow’s offering, proving again

  • Your Best Life Later

    06/02/2022 Duración: 38min

    Here we are yet again... the religious leaders are back at it, attempting to trap Jesus by asking an impossible question that seemingly has no satisfactory answer. This time it’s the Sadducees who bring the question, and it’s a question about marriage and the resurrection. The Sadducees came primarily from wealthy priestly families, and history tells us that they mostly looked to the first five books of the Old Testament as their Scripture, likely rejecting or ignoring the rest of the Old Testament. Because of this, they didn’t believe in the resurrection of the dead. So it’s with this in mind that we look at Luke 20:27-40. The religious leaders have come to trap Jesus. If one were to follow Moses’ instruction in Deuteronomy 25 and marry his brother’s widow (and if this were to happen seven times to the unfortunate bride), whose wife would she be at the resurrection? Yet again, Jesus’ answer shuts them up... this time for good. “Teacher,” the scribes reply in verse 39, “you have spoken well.” And they no long

  • You Are Not Your Own

    30/01/2022 Duración: 36min

    Jesus is a brilliant storyteller. The chief priests and scribes, the religious leaders of Israel in this day, are continually trying to trap Jesus, peppering him with impossible questions with the aim of crucifying him whether he agrees or disagrees. Recently, there was a question about the authority with which he teaches. Jesus’ brilliant storytelling gives the perfect answer to this question: the parable of the wicked tenants. Afraid of the people, they fire another fastball; yet another “damned if you do, damned if you don’t” question. This time, the question centers on paying taxes to an authoritarian, oppressive government that unjustly ruled over God’s people. And yet again, Jesus the storyteller has the perfect response to their interrogation.

  • The Look

    23/01/2022 Duración: 42min

    Beginning with chapter 20 we see a basic pattern in Jesus’ ministry emerging; the Jewish leadership is coming after him. In the previous chapter Jesus had cleansed the temple and in this chapter we see wave upon wave of opposition seeking to discredit and trap him. Verses 9-19 constitute a parable that is meant to depict his opposition (the chief priests, scribes, and elders of the Jews). There is nothing veiled about this parable. Some things don’t need any interpretation. Jesus’ opponents are at the end of a long line of Israelite leaders that have rejected Yahweh’s servants. Jesus exposes his enemies and rather directly says “I know what you are going to do.”

  • The Last Word

    16/01/2022 Duración: 38min

    A ‘catch 22’ is a dilemma where someone can’t escape because of conflicting or contradictory rules and outcomes. This is exactly what one finds in Jesus’ interactions with the Jewish leaders in this section of Luke's Gospel. The last two verses of chapter 19 provide a bit of context for the story that unfolds at the beginning of chapter 20. Jesus has made it to Jerusalem and has begun teaching in the temple. Then, the opposition enters the picture. The Jewish leaders are seeking to destroy Jesus, even though there is no evidence that he is guilty (19:47-48). So, as we’ve seen so many times before in Luke’s Gospel, they set out to trap Jesus. Questioning Jesus on the source of his authority, Jesus turns the tables on them and offers an answer provided that they honestly answer his question first. However, when realizing that to answer Jesus honestly would mean they either admit to rejecting God’s messenger or open themselves up to critique from the public, they choose silence. This passage puts the ignorance a

  • The Things That Make for Peace

    09/01/2022 Duración: 45min

    We’re back in the Book of Luke. We started this Gospel back in 2018, and have spent 58 Sundays in its pages. We’ve witnessed Jesus’ birth, his teaching, his miracles, and, most recently, his journey toward Jerusalem. This week concludes that journey that began back in chapter 9. While this week’s text may seem like a random smattering of events at the end of a road trip, almost every detail of this story harkens back to an Old Testament prophecy about the coming Messiah. In these pages we see contrasting responses to the Savior of the world: we hear a crowd praising the Son of God, saying “Blessed is the King who comes in the name of the Lord! Peace in heaven and glory in the highest!” But we also hear a growing grumbling from Israel’s religious leaders who are now plotting to kill the coming King.

  • The Lord Is Near

    02/01/2022 Duración: 53min

    The Lord is near... This simple reality changes absolutely everything for absolutely everyone. This morning, we come to Philippians 4:5-23. Here, the Apostle Paul is writing to the church at Philippi, reminding them of the nearness of our God and of the imminent return of Jesus. We cannot hope to face the affliction and hardships of this life without recognizing the amazing reality that our Lord is near.

  • Talk Is Cheap

    26/12/2021 Duración: 37min

    This week, we come to the close of our journey through the Book of Ruth. In this final chapter, we see Boaz redeem Ruth and Naomi, and we read that a baby is to be born. In light of all the hardship experienced by Ruth and Naomi and despite the wicked backdrop of the period of the judges, God is working to redeem his people. Here, we see that redemption is found in a Redeemer who is willing to pay the price.

  • The Gift of Presence

    24/12/2021 Duración: 34min

    As we look ahead to Christmas morning, we examine the story of Jesus' birth, as told by Matthew. Jesus' birth was more than just the birth of a king, it was more than the fulfillment of the prophets, it was even more than God coming to earth in human form. Jesus' birth was the ultimate fulfillment of God's promise to come and dwell with his people. In this passage, we see that while we can't come to God, he has come to us.

  • The Redeemer

    19/12/2021 Duración: 45min

    This week, we continue our journey through the Book of Ruth. We've been introduced to the major characters of this short narrative, and we are starting to see the theme of redemption playing out in the lives of Naomi and Ruth. Here, we see that the rest we long for is only found in a relationship with our Redeemer.

  • The Outsider

    12/12/2021 Duración: 41min

    As we continue in our Advent sermon series, we are introduced to a crucial character in the Book of Ruth. Boaz is a "worthy man" who is related to Naomi (v. 1). This worthiness is put on display as Boaz provides for and protects Ruth in a time when Israel is dangerous. Throughout this passage, God's providence is center stage and we are called to see what the Lord does for those seeking refuge in him.

  • On the Move

    05/12/2021 Duración: 51min

    This week, we begin our Advent sermon series: In the Days When the Judges Ruled the Land. It is with Judges barely in the rearview mirror that we are introduced to Naomi. Having lost her husband and sons, she begins the journey back to her home country with his widowed daughters-in-law. Here, we see that even in the bitterest of circumstances, God is working.

  • A Story That Begins in Bethlehem

    28/11/2021 Duración: 45min

    The saying goes, “two wrongs do not make a right.” We see this reality playing out every day. After forgetting to do the dishes, lying about it won’t make them suddenly clean. When one sibling steals from another, stealing a toy of theirs won’t ‘right’ anything. This week’s passage not only horrifically confirms this idea, it also shines a brutal light on all of Israel in one of the darkest nights for the people of God. The end of Judges displays wrong after wrong after wrong as the people of Israel move further and further from the holy ways of the LORD that they were taught. And without warning, the book of Judges ends. “In those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did what was right in his own eyes.”

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