“God, through Paul, is wanting us to see that there are two types of people in this world: those who have sin living and reigning within them and those who have the Holy Spirit living and reigning within them…The dominant chord of NT instruction is to live in victory over sin by the power of the Spirit, with the expectation that every believer will experience substantial, significant, and observable victory over sin, even while we continue to struggle and knowing that perfection is not attained in this life…”
Romans 7:1-12
“The law offers both a carrot and a stick, two options: obey it completely and you will receive life and blessing; fail to adhere and you will receive the curse due to all those who rebel against the living God…It is so vital, church, that we not consider ourselves under the law, even for our sanctification…The Law revealed God’s righteous standard, but it provided none of the desire and power necessary to carry it out. To be under the law, then, is to be under a curse…Those who are united with Christ have died to the dominion of the law, and are now enabled to do what Israel was called to do: bear fruit for God. The promised Spirit has become a reality for those united with Christ in his death and resurrection, so that God is causing them to bear the fruit of obedience from the new heart of flesh.”
Romans 6:15-23
“Genuinely putting our hope and trust in Jesus for salvation will result in a transformed life. So Paul argues that if one claims to be under grace, and yet lives as a slave to sin, the claim is nullified by their conduct. Those who live under grace show that they are under grace because they have a new master and are liberated from under their own master, sin.”
Romans 6:1-14
“One of the reasons that so many Christians seem to be losing the struggle with sin is due to their faulty view of sin, and what actually takes place at conversion. You see how we think about what happens to us when we are born again impacts how we live today. Our passage this morning is wonderful because we should see in it how God, through Paul, is commanding us to embrace a critical and foundational truth: the power of sin’s dominion has been broken for those who have been born again…(T)he grace that believers receive is so powerful that it breaks the dominion of sin. This grace delivers not merely from punishment, but from sins power and rule…it doesn’t simply involve forgiveness of sins, but it also involves a transfer of Lordship, so that believers are no longer under that tyranny of sin.”
The Power and Coming of Our Lord (2 Peter 1:12-21)
“Peter, with his last opportunity to teach, wants you to know God is at work in you by His great power. Therefore make every effort to grow in Christlikeness. It is Peter’s hope and expectation that they would have faith in God that would propel them forward into action…This is not a myth, but it is a reality…We have been taken out of the rat race. Our life is for - and our fulfillment is in - Jesus.”
Romans 5:12-21
Mark 6:45-52
“I’m a Baptist, so I’m not a dancer. I have seen it. I can appreciate it, that it has this lovely cadence to it. But I don’t have the feet for it I suppose. I would like to say something around the realm that the Gospel in our lives is something like a dance though - where we learn something new about God, and we have to respond. And as we learn more about God we are required to submit more about we know about ourselves. And it’s this step after step after step in our lives that changes us, that completes us, as we walk this road. So this is an interesting passage that reveals more about our Lord…”
Romans 5:6-11
“There were these famous stories Paul’s audience would have been familiar with. The Greco-Roman world loved them a good ‘bromance’. Stories of friends so close and committed that one was willing to die for the other. This is not at all what God has done for us. Christ laid his life down for us, according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God, while we were still weak in nature, ungodly in character, still choosing to sin against him, his enemies rather than friends…Our conviction this morning is that we have not appropriately rejoiced in what God has done for us.”
Romans 5:1-5
Mark 6:31-44
Pastor Leighton continues taking us through the Gospel of Mark, by looking at the well known story of the feeding of the 5000. He shows us that this is so much more than a well-known Sunday school story, but a story of how Jesus was like a shepherd was providing food for his sheep (v.34). Leighton shows us how Jesus is the fulfillment of: a)’The Lord is My Shepherd’ from Psalm 23, b)the ‘Rejoicing Shepherd’ from Luke 15 who searches for the lost sheep, c) the ‘Good Shepherd’ from John 10 who lays down his life for his sheep, d) the ‘Chief Shepherd’ from 1 Peter 5 who honors his servants, and e) the ‘Great Shepherd’ of the sheep from Hebrews 13 and Revelation 7:17.