It Doesn’t Have to be This Way

Pastor Sherry’s message for June 22, 2025,

Scriptures: 1 Kings 19:1-15a; Ps 42, Gal 3:23-29; Lk 8:26-39

I believe I shared this story with you some years back, but I have decided to bring it to your attention once again: 

“It was advertised that the devil was going to put his tools up for sale.  On the date of the sale the tools were placed for public inspection, each being marked with its sale price.  There werh a treacherous lot of implements.  Hatred, Envy, Jealousy, Doubt, Lying, Pride, and so on.  Laid apart from the rest of the pile was a harmless-looking tool, well-worn and priced very high.

“’The name of the tool?’ asked one of the purchasers.

“’Oh,’ said the adversary, “that’s Discouragement.’

“’Why have you priced it so high?’

“’Because it’s more useful to me than the others.  I can pry open and get inside a person’s heart with that one, when I cannot get near him with other tools.  Now once I get inside, I can make him do whatever I choose.  It’s a badly worn tool, because I use it on almost everyone since few people know it belongs to me.’

“The devil’s price for Discouragement was so high, he never sold it.  It’s still his major tool, and he still uses it on God’s people today.”

(Chuck Swindoll, The Tale of the Tardy Oxcart, Word Publishing, 1998, p.164.)

The point, of course, is that Satan uses discouragement to pull us away from trusting in God.  In this, as in so many of life’s crises, we cannot give him the victory.  We want to continue to trust in God despite any and all discouraging circumstances:  Failing physical health; Money or employment problems; Family problems; Struggles with acute anxiety or deep depression; Threats of hurricanes; Threats of wars.  Remember, the Bible says (Hebrews 11:1, NLT)—Faith shows the reality of what we hope for; it is the evidence of things we cannot see.  Our faith in Jesus helps us to cling to Him when things in our lives are not going well.

All of our Scripture passages today remind us to hold on to our faith in the face of discouragement.  They show us why it doesn’t have to be this way:

A.  Our Psalm (42), a teaching psalm (maschil), provides wise advice to all of us:  In verses 5 and 11, the author writes—Why am I discouraged? Why is my heart so sad?  I will put my hope in God!  I will praise Him again—my Savior and my God!  Scholars believe this psalm was penned when the Israelites found themselves taken captive by the Babylonians (586BC).  They were of course distraught that God allowed them to be captured and exiled to a pagan land.  The faithful remnant who still believed in the Lord realized the nation was being punished for its spiritual adultery—idolatry. The faithful and faith-filled reminded themselves, “It doesn’t have to be this way,” realizing that God could also rescue and redeem them (which He did 70 years later).

B.  Our Old Testament lesson from 1 Kings 19:1-15a, gives us the example of the great prophet Elijah, so discouraged that he asked God to let him die.  Think of this, through Elijah God had showed His superiority over the Canaanite god of nature, Baal, as well as the pagan fertility goddess, Ashtoreth.  God had used Elijah to call down heavenly fire on the altar he had made.  The 450 prophets of Baal and the 400 prophets of Ashtoreth had pled for their gods to do the same on their altar, but with no result.  Elijah had just scored a huge and miraculous victory over the false prophets of Baal.  But then word comes to him that Queen Jezebel, a Baal worshiper—an probably the most evil woman in Scripture–has sworn to kill him for showing up her pagan priests.  Realizing she is a nasty, powerful, and vindictive woman, Elijah temporarily “loses his Jesus” (though he predates Christ by many years) and runs for his life.

Without consulting the God he serves—Elijah, where is your faith?–he then spends sometime in the wilderness, so discouraged about his situation, so burned out—that he decides (without talking to the Lord) he has had it with being a prophet.  True, the life of a prophet is a difficult one.  Later on, Jesus will famously say of the religious leaders of Jerusalem (Matthew 23:37)—O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who kill the prophets and stone those sent to you….If you have ever been the truth speaker into a corrupt system, a badly run enterprise, or a vindictive clique, you know that truth-tellers (we call them “whistle-blowers”) suffer.  So Elijah is burnt out, depressed, and done in, afraid for his life, and at the give up point.

Here it’s important to realize that we often hear two messages after a significant move of God:  (1) The first is usually from the evil one.  Satan has used his tool of discouragement on Elijah.  Elijah surprisingly doesn’t even recognize it.  He just wants to give up, hand in his prophet ID badge, empty out his desk, and die.  (2) But our gracious Lord also always counters Satan’s spin with compassion and truth:  He sends him supernatural bread (manna) and fresh, restorative water; He also blesses him with deep,recuperative sleep.  The divine menu is simple but so nutritious, and the rest so restorative, that he is able to obey God and travel to Mt.Sinai 40 days’ distant.

God meets him there and curiously—since God knows everything—asks him (v.9)—What are you doing here, Elijah?  The Lord appears to want Elijah to figure it out for himself.  Elijah asserts he has been zealous in doing God’s work, but realizes he is afraid because the angry, evil Jezebel has put out a contract on him.  God then reveals Himself to him, not in the great things (ferocious wind, earthquake, and fire, signs of God’s judgment) but in a still, small whisper.  Following this, God asks the same question again, (v.13)—What are you doing here, Elijah?  Notice, the Lord really doesn’t respond to Elijah’s litany of troubles. Instead, He wants Elijah to refocus on his lifetime calling.  God reconfirms this calling, and sends Elijah back to do the work of a prophet:  [1] Anoint two kings, Hazael (over Syria), and Jehu (in Ahab’s place, over Israel); later, Jehu will be told to destroy Ahab’s dynasty (2 Kings 9:1-16), though Elijah will not be there to see it take place.  [2] And anoint his prophet successor, Elisha.  So, the Lord  appears to accept Elijah’s resignation, and reminds the prophet that He has reserved in Israel a remnant of 7,000 who love and worship Him.  Elijah was never really alone.  It was never really as hopeless as he had mistakenly believed.

C.  A truly hopeless case was the Gedarene demoniac in today’s Gospel (Luke 8:26-39).  Remember, the tribe of Gad never crossed the Jordan but liked the land they saw and settled in the Transjordan (east of the Jordan River).  This had the unexpected consequence of separating them, over time, from their Jewish brothers.  With this separation, they also drifted away from their faith to the point that they were now raising pigs—unclean!  Jesus encounters a man of Gad who was tormented by 6,000 demons.  He lived in misery and discouragement among the tombs. The demons within him recognized Jesus’ power and were horrified.  Jesus knew it didn’t have to be this way—He only spoke a word and cast the entire legion out of the man.  The guy was completely restored into who he had been meant to be.  But in what was probably a judgment on the pig industry—or even the descendants of Gad–Jesus allowed the demons to inhabit a nearby herd of hogs, who then rushed off to drown themselves  Meanwhile the previously hopeless man became a Jesus-follower and an evangelist.

D.  Why would Jesus go to this trouble?  Because, as Paul asserts (Galatians 3:23-29), this man’s faith in Christ made him a child of the Father.  All we who believe in Jesus are adopted children of God.  There is no national or racial barrier (Jew nor Greek) to our status; there is no economic barrier to our status (slave nor free); and there is no gender barrier (male nor female) to hinder us from becoming beloved children of God.

We cannot allow Satan the victory in our lives.  When we are discouraged, we need to remind ourselves that “It doesn’t have to be this way.”  We serve an awesome God who is only a prayer away. He holds the antidote to our poor health, financial struggles, family dissension, any struggle with anxiety or depression we are undergoing; also our fears of wars and storms. 

We have the whole counsel of Scripture to… 

1. remind us to put our trust in God, no matter what discourages us (Psalm 42);

2.  remember that even famous prophets like Elijah got discouraged, but God superintended his recovery (1 Kings 19);

3. recall how Jesus rescued and restored the demoniac, a massively discouraged person (Luke 8:26-39);

4. And focus on the fact that we are God’s beloved children, as per Paul in Galatians 3:23-29, due to our faith in His Son, Jesus Christ.

The next time you find yourself struggling, grab onto your faith with both fists, and tell yourself that discouragement is a tool of the devil and that you do not have to fall for it.  In truth, “It Doesn’t have to be this way!” Thanks be to God who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus  Christ.  Alleluia!  Alleluia!

©️2025 Rev. Dr.  Sherry Adams

Holy Trinity Sunday

Pastor Sherry’s message for June 15, 2025

Scriptures: Pro 8:1-4, 22-31; Ps 8; Ro 5:1-5; Jn 14:15-29

The following two stories illustrate the fact that the Trinity is just too big and too deep for us to get our mortal minds around:

In the first, a young American woman is traveling in France.  She goes into a bookstore and asks the small, elderly Frenchman who waits on her for a map of France.  He spends some moments in the back of the store and then he proudly presents her with an armload of maps, including one for Paris, a 2nd one of Marseilles, and a 3rd one of Lyons. 

The young woman is dismayed and says to the Frenchman, “But I just want a single map of the whole of France.” The older gentleman pulls himself up to his full height and proudly responds, “But Mademoiselle, France is too big to be captured in just one map.”

(Fairless & Chilton, The Lectionary Lab Commentary, Yr. C, 2015, p.195.)

The second concerns a family from India who visited with friends in California.  While there, the parents left their 11 year old daughter with their Christian friends, as they participated in a professional conference.  The family invited the girl to attend church with them on Sunday.  She went along and  quietly took in all she saw and heard.  

When they got back home, the host asked the girl for her impressions.  She then told him, “I don’t understand why the West Coast isn’t included too,” she replied. When they inquired what she meant, she added, “You know, in the name of the Father, the Son, and the whole East Coast.”

(Contributed by Ann Spivack, Reader’s Digest, as shared on www.sermon illustrations.com, 6/10/25.)

Today is both Father’s Day and Trinity Sunday.  Happy Father’s Day to all our fathers, and especially to God our Father!  We know that God the Father has both created all creatures on earth and has provided for them.  As our Proverbs lesson tells us (Proverbs 8:1-4, 22-31), He also created wisdom.  We can, like King Solomon, ask God to give us wisdom.  Initially, wisdom is personified as a woman, but as we see in verses 22-31, if you examine these proverbs carefully, it’s clear that Jesus, the architect of Creation, is God’s wisdom (“I am the way, the Truth [wisdom], and the life.”  John 14:6).  The Son has redeemed us and reconciled us to His Father.  In our Psalm today (Psalm 8), King David both celebrates the 

Father’s creation and the Son’s second coming in power, when He will put all things into subjection under His feet (Hebrews 2:5-8).   And the Holy Spirit, according to our Gospel passage today (John 14:15-29), is our Advocate, like our defense attorney.  He reminds us of all that Jesus taught, leads us into all truth [wisdom; Jesus], and guides us and sanctifies us (helps us or heals us to) become like Jesus. .

That’s roughly how the three persons of the Trinity separate out their work.  However, we want to bear in mind that St. Augustine of Hippo once wrote,  

“WHOEVER DENIES THE TRINITY IS IN DANGER OF LOSING HIS SALVATION :”  “ YET ON THE OTHER THE SIDE OF THE COIN.”  HE SAID, “WHOEVER TRIES TO UNDERSTAND THE TRINITY IS IN DANGER OF LOSING HIS MIND.”

(As quoted in www.sermoncentral.com, 6/10/2025.)\

Any analogy or metaphor we might use to try to explain the Trinity is probably too simplistic.

So, let’s instead focus today on our passage from Romans 5:1-5.  Paul wants us to be sure we understand all of the benefits we derive from having been saved by Jesus Christ.  He lays it out for us in just 5 pithy verses:

(1) First, (v.1) we have Peace with God the Father.  We all know of folks—and perhaps have experienced ourselves—being cut off emotionally from some family members.  We are related by blood, but for a myriad of reasons do not have any real or meaningful contact with each other.  Maybe they were abusive.  Perhaps their addictive behaviors or their cruelty were just too dangerous for us to be around.  Maybe they lied about us or believed the lies about us told to them by others.  Perhaps every time we are around them, they wound us again.  We or they have decided that spending time together is emotionally dangerous and damaging.  We or they have decided to act like the other person is dead to us to avoid additional pain.  It’s not what God would want from us, but it is a way to keep ourselves emotionally–and perhaps even physically–safe.

But we don’t want to, or have to, live that way with God the Father. Whether we knew it or not, we were cut off from Him, due to our sinfulness, until we accepted Jesus Christ as our Lord and Savior. In other words,  God loved us but was against us until then. However, now, as believers in Jesus, we are justified by our faith. Jesus effected for us a complete and total reconciliation with God the Father.  Remember, God cannot abide sin. Our sin cuts us off from God as though we are the toxic relatives.  But through Jesus’ atoning death on the Cross, He paid the penalty for our sins, past, present, and future.  Our redemption by Jesus saves us from hell, but even better enables us to have an intimate and loving relationship with the Father. This peace with God is a huge blessing!

(2) Next (verse 2), Paul says we now have access to God the Father through prayer.  This is also a tremendous blessing! This is so big that many non-believers mock it. They say things like, “For real!  You really think Almighty God would care about the fact you are worried about your grandchild or that you have an ear ache?”  But we know that He is “the God of the Big Picture” but also “the God of the Details.” He loves hearing from us and wants to share in our lives, even down to the minutia.  If something bothers us and we bring it to Him, He listens.  And if we ask for His help, He responds.

(3) Third (verse 2), we have hope.  I love the way retired Anglican Bishop N.T. Wright puts it: 

“As a result of being justified by faith, we are, in the old phrase, ‘in a state of grace,’ a status, a positon where we are surrounded by God’s love and generosity, invited to breathe it in as our native air.  As we do so, we realize that this is what we were made for; that it is the beginning of something so big, so massive, so unimaginably beautiful and powerful, that we almost burst as we think of it.  When we stand there in God’s own presence, not trembling but deeply grateful, and begin to inhale His goodness, His wisdom, His power and His joy, we sense that we’re being invited to go all the way, to become the true reflections of God, the true image-bearers, that we were made to be.  Paul puts it like this:  we celebrate the hope of the glory of God.”

(N.T. Wright, Paul for Everyone, Romans, Westminister John Know Press, 2004, p.83.)

Later in Romans (8:25), Paul will write, And we know that God causes everything to work together for the good of those who love God and are called according to His purpose for them.  Since we can trust that God works all things together for our good, we can always have hope, despite our circumstances.   After all, we worship “the God of all hope!”

(4) Fourth (verses 3-4), we have Triumph in times of trouble (i.e., we can celebrate in our suffering!). YIKES! This is a hard one to understand! The point Paul is making is that our God uses our suffering—which we will endure in this broken world—to prune us, to transform us, to mold and shape us into the best version of ourselves. The process helps us develop patience or endurance, as we hold on to our faith and hang in.  Patience/endurance, in turn, toughens our character.  And strong character fortifies our ability to hope, even against hope. 

Think about it, we live in a world that wants everything instantly: TV reception, microwaved dinners, and immediate answers to texts!  But God the Father, Jesus Christ His Son, and God the Holy Spirit call to us to swim against this cultural current. Patience is both a virtue and a fruit of the Holy Spirit. Our God wants us to develop patience, to strengthen our character, and to always have hope.

(5) And lastly (verse 5), our salvation proves how much God the Father loves us.  He sacrificed His only Son to save us.  We suffer when one of our children or other loved ones have to endure painful medical procedures—imagine how the Father suffered as He watched His only Son endure excruciating pain through His beatings and his crucifixion.  And now, while the Father and His Son dwell in Heaven, He has given us the Holy Spirit to fill our hearts with His love.

Thanks be to God for the creative love of our Heavenly Father, the redeeming love of His Son Jesus, and the sanctifying love of the Holy Spirit.  Amen!

©️2025 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams 

Come, Holy Spirit

Pastor Sherry’s message for June 8, 2025

Scriptures: Acts 2:1-21; Ps 104:24-35; Ro 8:14-17; Jn 14:9-14

Last week, I preached about the power of prayer.  I drew from our Acts 16 lesson in which Paul and Silas were praising God and praying at midnight from a Philippian jail. In response to their praise/singing and prayer, God sent His supernatural power (the Holy Spirit) to effect a jail break. This Holy Spirit empowered jail-break resulted in (1) an unknown number of fellow prisoners coming to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ; 

(2) the conversion and baptism of the jailer and his household; and (3) the release of Paul and Silas, after they had been cleaned up, doctored up from their beatings, and fed by the jailor.

Now I hope you agree that this was a pretty impressive lesson on the power of prayer. Our God hears our prayers and responds to them. Though He may not always answer in the way we want (He may say “NO” to what we are asking of Him. He also may not act as quickly as we might like. Sometimes He answers us immediately—I’ve witnessed people being healed in a prayer service immediately, and I myself have been healed a time or two. Sometimes His response comes after a few days—we prayed for rain last week, and voila! That answer was pretty speedy. It has rained almost daily, praise God!  And sometimes we have to be committed to praying for weeks, months, or even years. The point is to not get discouraged and lose faith. The point is to continue to pray, or as the Bible says, pray without ceasing.

Today we celebrate Pentecost, the birth of the Christian Church (of all denominations) and the impartation of the Holy Spirit to each of us who are “in Christ.”

A.  Our Acts 2:1-21 lesson tells us that the Church was birthed through prayer.  120 disciples of Jesus–men and women–were gathered in the Temple, doing what Jesus had told them to do:  He had instructed them, in Acts 1:4 to stay in Jerusalem and to… wait for the gift my Father promised…in a few days, you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit.  So they are obediently waiting and praying.

After 10 days of waiting and praying, the Holy Spirit shows up!

It’s a theophany! A God-sighting! They hear the sound of a big, strong wind, like a tornado; they see the sight of flames over 120 heads. And suddenly they are empowered!

They are empowered to praise Jesus in languages they had never learned and to speak to strangers about the Lord.

What can we conclude from this passage about what the he Holy Spirit can do in our lives?  (1) He empowers us to do things we cannot do in our own strength. Some years ago, I shared the true story of how an Air Force Academy cadet, a woman, lifted a car off of her father.  No young woman is that strong, without the assistance of the Holy Spirit. 

One of my favorite stories of a special empowerment is that of Benaiah from 2 Samuel 23:20-21— Benaiah son of Jehoida was a valiant fighter from Kabzeel, who performed great exploits. He struck down two of Moab’s best men [They may have been giants]. He also went down into a pit on a snowy day and killed a lion. And he struck down a huge Egyptian. Although the Egyptian had a spear in is hand, Benaiah went against him with a club. He snatched the spear from the Egyptian’s hand and killed him with his own spear. Benaiah, a mighty Hebrew warrior, chases a lion into a pit on a snowy day and kills it.  Why would any sane person choose to do such a thing?  The lion probably weighed 500 pounds and his paws, claws, and teeth were better suited to combat in a slippery environment than a man with no gun (just a spear or club). Nevertheless, Benaiah slays the lion. Subsequently, this feat becomes the most salient feature of his impressive resume: He was later hired by King David, to lead his body guard. Then he rose to become the commander of the King’s armies. The Lord gifted him with his fighting skills with his personal future and that of Israel in mind.

The Holy Spirit empowers us and also (2) inspires us—as with Peter—to preach a powerful sermon, or to say just the right thing (a rhema or healing word) to a person who needs to hear it.  Year ago, I was counseling a mother who had lost her adult son to suicide. She felt so guilty for having missed the signs of his deep despair and for not having done more to prevent his death. I said to her, “When might you be able to forgive yourself for not knowing what you did not know and for not doing what you did not know to do?”  The Holy Spirit gave me that inspiration for her. It was the key to unlock her incredible sense of failure and guilt.

He (3) equips us as well, as with speaking languages we never studied or tried to learn. (I wish He had done so for me when I studied Greek in seminary!) Thousands of worshippers gathered from all the known world heard their own language spoken with no discernable accent that day.

Many in the crowd knew the disciples were working-class folk from Galilee. They spoke Aramaic, a mix of Hebrew and Canaanite dialects; and they spoke Koine Greek—a kind of Hebrew influenced Greek. They may have known Latin, the language of the Romans. But how could they suddenly know so many different, foreign tongues?

B.  Our psalmist (Psalm 104:24-35) reminds us that the Holy Spirit is the creative arm of the Trinity. We worship one God in three Persons, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. God the Father is the Head, the leader—He has the ideas, the plans.  The Son takes His orders from the Father and, has appeared to us in flesh to demonstrate the Father’s great love for us, and to save us. God the Holy Spirit is the power source, the energy.

So this psalm celebrates God’s creative ingenuity.  He came up with so many different kinds of creatures; (I read Friday that there are 43 species of Toucan birds in Costa Rica.)  Through the Holy Spirit, God the Fathe…

 (4) gave us/them life (in Hebrew, the Holy Spirit is called the Ruach—literally. a current of air, figuratively, the breath). The psalmist writes in verse 30—When You send Your breath [the Ruach], they are created and You renew the face of the earth. The Holy Spirit also (5) sustains us as we live.

C.  In the Romans 8:14-17 passage, Paul wants us to realize it is through the Holy Spirit that we, who have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, are (6) adopted as God’s children.  We don’t have to be afraid of God.  Rather, we can approach Him as we would a grace-filled and loving father-figure.

D. And Jesus Himself, makes the astonishing claim in our Gospel lesson (John13:9-14) that the Holy Spirit will assist us to do (7) even greater works than Jesus did as He walked the earth.  The  Holy Spirit will heal people through our prayers. The Holy Spirit will assist us to cast out demons from people. The Holy Spirit will move through us to bring those who are lost to salvation.  How is it possible that we will do more than Jesus did?  Well, for one thing, there are more of us.  And, or another,  we have access to social media as a way to reach people.

We (8) abide with the Lord through the power of the Holy Spirit.  Years ago I read two books by Frank Peretti: This Present Darkness and Piercing the Darkness (I recommend them to you).  In both, he asserted that when groups of Christ-followers prayed, angels massed in the unseen world to do battle against the forces of evil on our behalf.  This notion was new to me then, but it made sense.  God enlists His angel armies to execute His will and respond to our prayers.  Remember the prophet Daniel was told by the Angel Gabriel that God had heard his prayers but that Gabriel had had to fight a powerful demon for 21 days in order to deliver the answer.  Paul was not exaggerating when he said (Ephesians 6:12, NLT)—For we are not fighting against flesh and blood enemies, but against the evil rulers and authorities of the unseen world, against mighty powers in this dark world, and against evil-spirits in the heavenly places.  No wonder our Lord wants us to pray without ceasing! 

Our prayers ignite the hosts of heaven and our prayer invites the assistance of the Holy Spirit.  Consider this story whose source I have forgotten:

 (Please know, in advance, that I mean no disrespect to either Baptists or Pentecostals).   A Baptist preacher and his wife decided they wanted a dog. Given the scrutiny/oversight from their congregation, they knew it needed to be a well-behaved Baptist dog.  So they went to an exclusive kennel and expressed their needs and reservations to the owner.  He assured them he had just the right dog for them. When the dog was produced, the kennel owner began giving it commands:  Fetch the Bible.  The dog bounced over to the bookshelves, looked them over, located the Bible, and obediently brought it to the man.  Then he said, Find the 23rd Psalm.  The dog, demonstrating amazing dexterity with his paws, leafed thru the Bible, found the correct passage, and pointed to it with his nose.

The preacher and his wife were so impressed that they immediately purchased the dog.  Later, they began to show off to members of their congregation what the dog could do, having him locate several Bible verses.  Folks were amazed, but one skeptic asked, Can he do any normal dog tricks?  “Let’s see,” said the preacher and commanded him to “heel!”  The dog immediately jumped up on a chair, laid his paw on a parishioner’s head and began to howl!  The preacher was shocked and turned to his wife and complained, “Honey, we’ve been swindled!  The kennel owner sold us a Pentecostal dog!”

This Pentecostal dog had the Holy Spirit gift of healing! If the Holy Spirit decides to work through you to heal someone, for heaven’s sake, don’t be alarmed!  Instead thank the Lord for the wonderful gift He has given you!  And use it to build up God’s Kingdom here on earth.

©️2025 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams 

The Power of Prayer

Pastor Sherry’s message for June 1, 2025

Scriptures: Acts 16:16-34; Ps 97; Rev 22:12-21; Jn 17:20-26

This morning, I want to focus on the power of prayer.  But first, let’s consider what God is saying to us through our Scripture passages appointed for today:

Jesus is praying for us in the Gospel of John 17:20-26.  As our High Priest, He is praying for us, interceeding—just before going to the Cross.

He asks the Father to (1) keep us as united to the Father as Jesus is;

(2) help us to dwell with both the Father and with Jesus in heaven; and

(3) so fill us with the Father’s love that we might love Him and others as the Father has loved His Son.

The Revelation 22:12-21 Reading reminds us that those of us who love and have surrendered our lives to Jesus are going to heaven,  while evil-doers will be barred from Paradise.

Psalm 97 describes what happens when God the Father shows up (this is called a theophany):  There are big signs like fire, lightening flashes, and earthquakes (which usually mean God is fixing to judge).  Verse 9 reminds us For You, O Lord, are supreme over all the earth; You are exalted far above all gods.  In other words, nothing and no one in this world is more powerful than our God.   He has the power, total power, to answer our prayers.  And verse 10 states  He [God] protects the lives of His godly people and rescues them from the power of the wicked.

He is our divine rescuer/our Redeemer.   He can and does pull us free from the tentacles of this seductive world. 

Our Acts lesson (16:16-24) provides us with a real life example, an object lesson, in how our God works through our prayers.

But first, consider this:

“A man was being pursued by a roaring, hungry lion.  Feeling the beast’s hot breath on his neck and knowing his time was short, he prayed as he ran.  He cried out in desperation, ‘O Lord, please make this lion a Christian.’  Within seconds, the frightened man became aware the lion had stopped the chase.  When he looked behind him, he found the lion kneeling, lips moving in obvious prayer. Greatly relieved at this turn of events—and desirous of joining the lion in meditation, he approached the king of the jungle.  When he was near enough, he heard the lion praying, ‘And bless, O Lord, this food for which I’m exceedingly grateful!’”

The man would have been better off praying for escape.  I guess the lesson is think about what you really want when you pray. Also consider the child who was asked by the preacher what his mother prayed for at his bedtime each night.  “The youngster replied, ‘Thank God he’s in bed!’”  I wonder how often God is amused by our prayers.

(Chuck Swindoll, The Tale of the Tardy Oxcart, Word Publishing, 1998, p.456.)  

Let’s examine our Acts lesson more thoroughly to discover everything we can about what God has to teach us about the power of prayer.  We find the Apostle Paul and his assistant, Silas, in Phillipi (a Roman colony in present day Greece) to establish a church.  As Paul and Silas are preaching and teaching, they find themselves followed by a slave girl who is able to see into the future.  She hollers a true message: (v.17)  These men are servants of the Most High God and they have come to tell you how to be saved.  She’s right, so what’s the problem?  Well first, she might have drawn unwanted attention to them. Second, she was disruptive and annoying, especially if she kept on screeching while Paul and Silas were trying to teach. And third, Paul discerned her knowledge came from demonic sources, and probably did not want amything from the evil one to taint his ministry. It is likely that the Holy Spirit had already revealed to him that she was being trafficked—used by her owners—to make money. 

So, Paul casts the demon out of her.  There’s a clear lesson here:  We don’t want to be trying to find out what our future holds from any medium or witch. In the 1980’s, before I went to seminary, I let my aunt talk me into making a visit to Casa Dega, a village of mediums near Orlando.  I wanted to know if I might remarry some day. The guy who worked with us called himself “Rev. Jerry,” but looking back, it is clear he was not a Christian. In addition, nothing he told me came true!  I had wasted my time and money.  We are to trust only God with our futures.

Now the Philippian medium’s owners became enraged because it meant a big loss of income for them.  As we see so often in today’s culture, they accuse Paul and Silas as a way of exacting revenge (Don’t get mad, get even!  In fact, ruin the person if you can. This belief is so unchristian!).

They make two false claims that were all too readily believed of Jewish outsiders:  (1) (Verse 20)  The whole city is in an uproar because of these Jews.  Really?  There was probably some excitement due to a demon being cast out, but such an event wouldn’t have galvanized an entire city.  (2) (Verse 21)  They are teaching customs that are illegal for us Romans to practice.  Also not really true. The Romans only later began to persecute Christians because they would not affirm that “Caesar is Lord.”  Since Christians would only avow that “Jesus is Lord,” they were seen as intolerant and then caught and punished.  But, since the Romans worshipped a large number of gods, at this point, most figured what’s the problem with one more?   Additionally, Paul and Silas would have known this as they were both Jews who were also Roman citizens.

The city officials side with the slave owners and have Paul and Silas severely beaten and jailed.  They are stripped and beaten with wooden rods. Their backs would have been lacerated, bleeding, and needing medical attention. Instead, they are thrown into the heart of a filthy, unsanitary prison.  To make matters worse, their feet and locked pin stocks, so they could not lay down or rest on their stomachs.

Now, put yourselves in Paul and Silas’ places, and think of how you might have responded to this treatment.  Here’s another clear lesson:

They praise God  they were singing hymns of praise.  Psalm 100:4 says  We Enter His gates with thanksgiving; go into His courts [ a step more intimate] with praise.  They knew the “secret sauce”  praise takes us in close to God’s heart.  It also opens our hearts and spirits to draw closer to God.  This is why I begin our pastoral prayer (most all my prayers) with praise and thanksgiving.  Praise puts us into the proper prayer mind-frame.  It helps us remember He’s exalted and all powerful, but we are not.

And because God loves us, He listens to us and He hears us.

Then they pray, and pray without ceasing.  John Bunyon once wrote, “You can do no more than pray after you have prayed, but you cannot do more than pray until you have prayed.”  (Swindoll, Ibid., p.452).

Someone else once said, “Prayer is not room service.”  In fact, they went on to assert, “There’s something exquisitely luxurious about room service in a hotel.  All you have to do is pick up the phone and somebody is ready and waiting to bring you breakfast, lunch, dinner, a chocolate milkshake, whatever your heart desires and your stomach will tolerate.  Or by another liquid motion of the wrist, you can telephone for someone who will get a soiled shirt quickly transformed into a clean one or a rumpled suit into a pressed one.  That’s the concept that some of us have of prayer.  We had created God in the image of a divine bellhop.  Prayer, for us, is the ultimate in room service, wrought by direct dialing.  Furthermore, no tipping, and everything is charged to that Great credit card in the sky.”  (Ibid., p.453)

Prayer is, in fact, surrender.  Did you notice that Paul and Silas weren’t grumbling. But I’ll bet they were praying for a break through—or a breakout!   Meanwhile, everyone else incarcerated there was listening and perhaps coming to Christ.

Next, notice what God does:  He provides a massive earthquake (a theophany).  Verse 26 states  …the prison was shaken to its foundations.  All the cell doors flew open. An earthquake could have torn them from their walls, but to unlock them was purely supernatural.  All the chains fell off; this was also due to a supernatural intervention.  Furthermore, the prisoners don’t leave (Think about the jailbirds in New Orleans who recently escaped from behind a cell toilet.  They jumped out and fled like roaches do when you turn on the lights.)  These other prisoners had witnessed a miracle.  They appeared to have turned their lives over to Jesus.  Through Paul and Silas, God had brought about a revival in that jail.

Those miracles then bring the jailor (and his family) to a saving knowledge of Christ.  The warden provides medical attention for Paul and Silas.  They then baptize the jailor and his household.  And, finally, he feeds them.  Everyone ends up rejoicing over God’s powerful answer to prayer.

Church, prayer is powerful!  Prayer effects things we cannot. Illnesses are healed.  Addictions are broken.  Relationships are mended.

We need to pray daily, especially if you don’t already.

Not just bedtime or mealtime prayers.  John Wesley and Martin Luther each prayed 3-4 hours per day, and look at what God accomplished through them.  Jesus sometimes prayed all night!  We need to spend significant time with our Lord.

We also need to pray for others.  You can begin with the people on our weekly prayer list.  Pray for your family, coworkers, and any friends who don’t follow Jesus.  There is a team of us who pray each Sunday afternoon for strangers who drive by the front door of our church.  Many of them now honk their horns and wave at us, expressing appreciation for the spiritual help.

Prayer is how we access the power of God.  It’s impact is astonishing.  

©️2025 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams

The Good Shepherd

Pastor Sherry’s message for May 11, 2025

Scriptures: Acts 9:37-43; Ps 23; Rev 7:9-17; John 10:22-30

Back in 2007, I thought the Lord was calling me to plant a new church. I was living in Tallahassee then and did not believe I was in any way gifted to do this. But, intending to be obedient to the Lord, I decided to check out some successful church plants there to see how they did it.

One Sunday, I attended a large Pentecostal Church called “Genesis”—I liked the name—in their 4th year.  At the time, they were meeting in a high school auditorium, and claimed they had 800 adults (+ numerous kids) attending.

The Pastor that Sunday preached about the trials and tribulations their congregation had experienced during their 4 years of existence:

1.) They had 1200 show up for their Easter Service, but were plunged into darkness when a squirrel ate through a power line.

2.) The school board had reneged on and amended their contractual agreement several times, requiring them to spend more than they had budgeted or expected.

3.) The stage lights didn’t work well and had to be jerry-rigged each week.

4.) The heat and AC controls were locked up in another office so they could not adjust them as needed.

5) The weekly set up and take down had wearied their volunteers and robbed them of energy and focus.

In sum, he said, “Being in this high school has been a nightmare!”

At this point, I was sure he was going to launch into a plea to raise more money so they could buy or build their own sanctuary.  But, surprisingly, the pastor reminded them that the Lord had led them there in the first place!  He had prayed and fasted, and believed the Lord had told him to rent the school auditorium. His wife had prayed and got the same response. His staff had prayed about it and came to the same decision.  Perhaps even more convincing was the fact that the principal of the high school had actually approached them to ask if they wanted to rent his space!

They believed they had received a clear direction from the Lord, jumped on the deal, and assumed it would be, “Easy, all would go well, because the Lord had set this up for us!” 

Now I was there to discover, from someone who was experienced, what is required to start up a new church. I was thinking this was all pretty discouraging until I heard the rest of his sermon.  He admitted they had learned that (a.) Sometimes the right place will feel like the wrong place; (b.) Sometimes the right time will feel like the wrong time;

and (c.) Sometimes, when things don’t go well, we will doubt that we heard God correctly.  Yes, they had had their share of troubles in that school auditorium, but they had also brought 600 people to Christ in their 4 years there. I agree with that Pastor that at times like that, the Lord wants us to remember to remain obedient—to persevere—no matter the set-backs and aggravations. Sometimes, what Jesus is looking for from us is that we trust in Him to use even our hard experiences to train us up in the way He wants us to go.  If we can continue to lean into our Good Shepherd, He will not lead us astray.

In our Gospel lesson today, (John 10:22-30), Jesus has a brief but testy interchange with the Scribes and the Pharisees, in which He makes some important statements:

He is in Jerusalem for Hanukkah (Winter-time, perhaps 4 months prior to His death). Jesus is teaching in the Gentile area of the Temple, Solomon’s Colonnade. He is focused on training up His disciples—the 12 and many others—in the few short months He has remaining. Apparently by this time, He has left off trying to convince the religious authorities of His divine identity. The Scribes and Pharisees are trying to get Him to directly state that He is the Messiah, so they can bring Him up on charges of blasphemy (claiming He is God when He is not).  He responds to them (vv.25-27) I have already told you, and you don’t believe Me.  The proof is the work I do in My Father’s name.  [In other words, My actions speak louder than any words].  But you don’t believe Me [In other words, you don’t get it]… because you are not My sheep.  My sheep listen to My voice.  I know them, and they follow Me.

This is brief but very important lesson, so let’s unpack it now:

First, we are His sheep if we believe in Him. FAITH is what it takes to become a Christ-follower. We have read Scripture and we have taken in what Jesus did and said; or we have seen the huge difference He has made in our own life, or in the life of someone else. (For example, I heard yesterday that a man with stage 4 prostate cancer had been healed in his church last Sunday.)  And so we have come to believe in Him.

Second, when we believe in Him, we can begin to talk to Him and hear from Him. Do you talk to Him?  How do you know when God is speaking to you?  How do know you have heard from Him?

There are actually a number of ways God is speaking to us:

1.) Scripture (God’s Word written) A passage may leap off the page when you ask for God’s direction. I was ready to abandon the ordination process when I checked it out with the Lord and was directed by Him to Psalm 110:4 The sovereign Lord has decided and will not change His mind. That did it for me. I stopped trying to back out.

Or you may read a passage that seems to be written exactly for you in your current situation.  Back in 1984, my husband had left me for another woman.  My heart was broken and I was grieving when someone from my church advised me to read Isaiah 54. I did and was amazed!  Verse 4 reads, Do not be afraid; you will not suffer shame. Do not fear disgrace; you will not be humiliated. I was teaching high school at the time and all my students knew about my situation. I felt emotionally naked, vulnerable, and ashamed. In verses 5-6, the Lord says, “For your Maker is your husband—the Lord Almighty is His name—the Holy One of Israel is your Redeemer; He is called the God of all the earth.  The Lord will call you back as if you were a wife deserted and distressed in spirit—a wife who married young, only to be rejected.”  That passage had my initials on it. I knew it was meant for me. I took God at His word that He was my husband, and He has faithfully loved me, provided for me, and protected me ever since!

2.) Through others (especially 2-3 unsolicited comments.)  In the case of the Genesis Church, they had agreement among several folks who were praying separately but came to the same conclusion.

3.) Circumstances (closed vs. open doors). Watch for how things work out. God will guide you through the way in which He sets up events. Consider how you met your spouse or how you came to land a good job. Often the circumstances are pretty curious and unlikely, unless superintended by our God.

4.) A nudge in your spirit.  You will feel led to do or say something that’s unusual for you. Years ago, I was walking early in the morning when I had such a nudge:  Pick up a stick! It was insistent and repeated, so I located a large stick I would consider a cudgel. Seconds later, two huge dogs came snarling out of the woods, intending to attack me. But I had my big stick, shook it at them, and they retreated.

5.) Billboards, bumper stickers, and song lyrics.  My son will be thinking about a concern while in his car, then see a bumper sticker on a car just ahead that perfectly addresses his issue.

6.) Dreams/visions.  Jesus still speaks to us in dreams and visions. I encountered an Iranian man, a new Christian, who had fled to Turkey. Through an interpreter I asked how he had come to know Jesus Christ. His name was Navid and he said Jesus appeared to him and spoke to him in a dream. Jesus said something very consistent with what he had said during the day. As a result, the young man accepted Him. 

7.) Angelic visitation.  The writer to the Hebrews says wethen may not know we have entertained angels. I met an older man in New Orleans while at lunch one day. I had never seen him before and did not see him ever again.  He told me I needed to leave New Orleans, as a category 4 hurricane was coming which would flood the city. This happened 4 months before Hurricane Katrina hit. The church I was pastoring took on 10 feet of water during the storm, but the Lord had moved me back home to Tallahassee 2 months earlier.

8.) A strong Knowing.  Some call this a “a word of Knowledge.”  You know something that you can’t explain how you know it.  It seems to just drop into your head and you just know. This happens to me often when I am counseling people. It’s a gift and a blessing, it is always right, and I thank God for it.

9.) An audible word.  These are rare. I have had one. I was awakened by a deep male voice at about 3-4:00 a.m. back in 1988. I awoke to the echo of the word “reconciliation,” not a word I used much at that time. I then wondered who I was to be reconciled with, but later determined that in my counseling work, I was reconciling clients to God, to others, and to their best version of themselves. In seminary, I spent time studying 2 Corinthians 5:17-21, in which St. Paul says we are all called to a ministry of reconciliation.

We have to practice recognizing God’s voice to get better at it. 

The story is told of a young, rather inexperienced pastor who was trying to teach some little kids about Jesus as the Good Shepherd: 

“He told the children about sheep, that they weren’t smart and needed lots of guidance, and that a shepherd’s job was to stay close to the sheep, protect them from wild animals and keep them from wandering off and doing dumb things that would get them hurt or killed.

He pointed to the little children in the room and said that they were the sheep and needed lots of guidance.

Then the minister put his hands out to the side, palms up in a dramatic gesture, and with raised eyebrows said to the children, “If you are the sheep then who is the shepherd?” He was pretty obviously indicating himself.

A silence of a few seconds followed.  Then a youngster said, “Jesus, Jesus is the shepherd.”

The young minister, obviously caught by surprise, said to the boy, “Well, then, who am I?”

The little boy frowned thoughtfully and then said with a shrug, “I guess you must be a sheep dog.”

(Borrowed from www.bestcleanfunnyjokes.com, 5/6/25.)

Now bear with me a few more minutes as I attempt to be your sheep dog, leading you consider a few more truths about Jesus, our Good Shepherd:

In Psalm 23, an aged King David essentially summarizes for us what he has experienced the Good Shepherd do for him (and what He will do for us). This time, he sees himself not as a shepherd, himself, but as one of God’s sheep. Like a shepherd would do for his flock of sheep, David says God has…

1.) Protected him from harm.  

“Several years ago, in eastern Turkey in the Van province near Iran, there were shepherds who were caring for a flock of 1,500 sheep. They took a break and neglected the sheep while eating breakfast. During those few minutes the sheep wandered away towards a cliff that dropped off into a ravine 15 meters below. The first sheep fell to his death. The next 399 also followed and fell to their deaths. The remaining 1,100 sheep also followed and fell, but because the ravine was already littered with sheep their fall was cushioned and they survived.”

(Pastor Tim Melton, www,SermonSearch.com, May 6, 2025).

2.) Provided food, water, and rest for him;

3.) He had restored him when he had been discouraged or distressed;

4.) Led him in the right or wise direction;

5.) He had given him physical and emotional comfort;

6.) And blessed him spiritually. 

Just like last week, our Revelation passage (7:9-17) provides a picture of what worship is like in heaven. Believers from all times, places, races, and nations will be present to join with the angels in praising our God. The number will include Old Testament saints, all born again Christians, and Jews who will come through the Great Tribulation to believe in Jesus.

St. John then testifies that (v.17) The Lamb on the throne will be their shepherd.  He will lead them to springs of life giving water and God will wipe every tear from their eyes. Jesus has been our Good Shepherd in the past, He is our Good Shepherd now, and He will continue to shepherd us in heaven

The important question now is do you know the Good  Shepherd? Are you on intimate terms with Him?

A famous actor on the level of James Earl Jones or Charlton Heston was asked to recite the 23rd Psalm.  He did so and the folks who heard his recitation were mightily impressed.  Then the famous actor asked the old preacher/”sheep-dog” seated nearby to do the same.  His version was not as smooth or polished as the actor’s, but, “when he finished there was not a dry eye in the room. When someone asked the actor what made the difference, he replied. ‘I know the psalm, but he knows the Shepherd.”

(Pastor Steve Jones (www.SermonSearch.com, May 6, 2025)

This is a great day to become close friends with the Good Shepherd!

©️2025 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams

Worthy is the Lamb

Pastor Sherry’s message for May 4, 2025

Scriptures: Acts 9:1-20; Ps 30; Rev. 5:1-14; Jn 21:1-12

Some years back, I read a book—can’t remember the title—but it was an autobiographical account of an Army doctor in WWI, who died and was taken up into heaven. You may renenber, from our Covid experience, that there was a huge, worldwide influenza epidemic from 1918-1920.  Mostly young people were susceptible, especially those gathered together in army camps, bases, or foxholes. This doctor, whose name I’ve sadly forgotten, was working in an Army hospital at a base in Texas. He was struck down by the disease and appeared to have died. Someone even covered his head with a blanket, the sign to everyone that another soldier had perished. It took several hours before anyone came to remove his body.

But in the meantime, he found himself flying back over his home (planeless) in Virginia, where he saw his mother hanging out clothes to dry, and his father walking over to talk with her. He noted that his parents were safe and well. Then he found himself whisked up into heaven. He reported beautiful, vivid colors, lots of flowers and wonderful smells. Everyone he saw there was happy and healthy. He felt enveloped in love. He even encountered Jesus! He was filled with joy and wanted to stay; but, in short order, Jesus told him his work on earth was not done, so he was going to be sent back. The doctor came back to life just as they were preparing to remove his body for burial. He went on to get well, only to fall into a profound depression that lasted 3 years!  He wrote that he missed heaven so much that he found life as we know it to be profoundly disappointing by comparison. Eventually, he rallied, found meaning and purpose in being a doctor, and went on with his life.

I previously preached here about Jesus’ fish-fry on the beach, and Paul’s dramatic conversion, but today I want to focus our attention on our reading from Revelation.

Revelation chapters 4 and 5 offer us the best report of what Heaven is like in all of Scripture. In Chapter #4, the 90-92 years old Apostle John finds himself “taken up” into the Heavenly throne room. He has a vision of Jesus and receives the Lord’s words for the 7 churches in Asia Minor, but is then directed by Jesus to come up into heaven.

He sees things there that are almost too difficult to for him to put into words. He sees God the Father, seated on His throne, at the very center of a huge gathering. God dwells in dazzling light so overwhelming that John cannot clearly see His face. He tries to describe that light by using the image of light reflected by sunlight on jewels.  Scholars believe the jewel tones he saw were red, white, bright green, and perhaps purple.  Additionally he observes that God is surrounded on His throne by an emerald-hued rainbow. The rainbow is likely reminiscent of the days of Noah.  It seems to indicate the eternality of God’s promises—that is, that God does not break His promises to us, even if we disappoint Him.

Around God’s throne are 24 smaller thrones.  There is considerable conjecture about who the 24 elders are who are seated on the lessor thrones.  Most experts today think they represent “the true Church” or the “Redeemed:” including the 12 patriarchs or leaders of the Old Testament tribes of Israel; and the 12 Apostles from the New Testament.  They are dressed in white, the color of purity and righteousness, and what seems to be the uniform of heaven. They all wear a gold crown on their head, indicating they are a royal priesthood.  

John hears thunder and sees lightening shoot out from God’s throne. In Old Testament times, these signaled God’s presence and often His judgment. John perceives that the One seated on the throne is about to release His judgment on the inhabitants of the earth. Additionally, He notes (1) 7 torches around the throne, symbolic of the full presence of the Holy Spirit.

(2) Then he describes a “glass sea” under the throne, separating God the Father from everyone else there. God is totally holy. He is also, as I often say, large and in charge, so this bit of separation makes sense. 

(3) John is also amazed by God’s Honor Guard–the 4 living creatures (seraphim). They have eyes all over themselves, which looks and sounds very strange but indicates that they are omniscient or all- seeing. They fly about on 6 wings. Their bodies are those of strange, composite beings that may symbolize the apex of created life forms:

(a.) The mightiest wild animal, a lion (known to be ferocious);

(b.) The mightiest domestic animal, an ox (known for its strength);

(c.) The mightiest of all animals, humankind (known for our intelligence)

(d.) And the mightiest bird, the eagle (known for its swiftness).

Obviously these composite beings are capable of protecting God’s space and His person. Who could successfully take them on?

In Chapter #5, we find God the Father holding a scroll in His right hand, the hand of power.  John notes that it has writing on both sides. Typically in those days, people wrote on the front side of papyrus only, as the fibers on front were oriented horizontally while those on the back ran vertically. To have written on both sides indicates that the scroll is filled to overflowing with the decisions and the direction of God.  A number of Biblical scholars believe it contains both the salvation of humankind and the judgment of the wicked. A noted expert on the interpretation of Revelation, Robert Mounce, writes, “The whole story of human history rests in the hand of God.  What simpler or more sublime way of picturing God’s ultimate sovereignty over all history could be found than this picture of the scroll resting in the hand of God?  However strong evil becomes, however fierce be the satanic evils that assail God’s people on earth, history still rests in God’s hand.”

(Robert H. Mounce, The Book of Revelaton (Revised Ed.), Eerdmans, 1998, pp.82-83.)

Additionally, this scroll is sealed with 7 seals against tampering (again 7, in the Hebrew numbering system, is the number indicating completion). So, we can assume that what’s written therein is perfectly safe against tampering and that what’s written therein is very important!

John hears an angel ask (v.2) Who is worthy to break the seals on this scroll and open it?  Perhaps eager to learn God’s plans, John bursts into tears because (v.4)…no one was found worthy to open the scroll and read it. Then one of the 24 elders directs John to stop weeping. because Someone worthy has been found:  the Lion of the Tribe of Judah, the heir to David’s throne, Jesus.

But the Jesus who comes forth is not a warrior king in all His resurrection splendor, nor a majestic lion. Rather, He is portrayed as a little lamb who had been sacrificed—alive now (resurrected) but probably evidencing a slit throat. Obviously it takes Someone totally conformed to God’s will—like Jesus—to break the seals. God Himself doesn’t do it, but He has the Mediator, Jesus, bring human history to its foreordained consummation (Mounce, Ibid, p.143).

At this point, we should pause and say, “Worthy is the Lamb!” The use of the Lamb image is both striking and unusual. When people groups want symbols of power for their country, they tend to choose apex predators: Russia has the bear; Britain, a lion; France, a tiger; and the USA, the bald eagle. But God chooses a slain lamb, a typical temple sacrifice for sin. Christ is victorious precisely because He has surrendered Himself to be sacrificed, like a Passover Lamb.  He has triumphed over sin, death, and evil by His death on the Cross.

This particular lamb, Jesus, is powerful because He is depicted with seven horns, an Old Testament symbol for complete and perfect power.

Similarly, He has 7 eyes, representing His all-seeing omniscience.

So the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world steps forward to open the scroll, and all of heaven bursts into song. The 24 elders fall down before Him, surrendering to worship, singing Jesus a new song. They play harps to accompany worship music (I don’t think we will be the ones playing harps, despite what the culture contends).  The elders also offer up golden bowls of incense, which John is told are the prayer of the saints.  Then a myriad of angels join in a powerful chorus.  Finally, John writes (v.13) Blessing and honor and glory and power belong to the one sitting on the throne and to the Lamb forever and ever. (Talk about a Halleluia Chorus!)

So what can we take away from our glimpse into God’s throne room in Heaven?  I believe the following insights are worth remembering:  

1.) True power in this world does not rest with human dictators or human governments, but rather with our God.

2.)  God controls the course of human history.

3.) Even the most exalted beings in heaven humbly acknowledge God’s superiority in every way—so should we.

4.)  As God, Jesus knows how human history will end…our history is truly His-Story.

5.) How true then is Paul’s assertion from Romans 8:31 If God is for us, who can be against us?

6.) When we each get to heaven we will join millions of believers and angels in worship of our God and our Lord Jesus.

Thanks be to God Who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ!  Alleluia!  Alleluia!

©️2025 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams 

But, What’s Next?

Pastor Sherry’s message for April 27, 2025

Scriptures: Acts 5:27-39; Ps 150; Rev 1:4-8; Jn 20:10-31

The true story is told of a mom of two small children helping them dye Easter Eggs several days before Easter Sunday (Yes, I realize Easter Sunday was last week). Her children were 3YO Dan and 2YO Debbie. As they worked at this craft activity, she taught them the meaning of Easter. She also taught them the Easter acclamation: She said, “Alleluia, The Lord is Risen!”  And the children learned to repeat, “The Lord is risen indeed, alleluia!  It turns out their father is a Presbyterian minister.

Dan, the 3YO, wanted to impress his Dad with what he had learned.  So, on Easter morning, he burst into his dad’s bedroom, shouting, “Daddy, Daddy, Daddy, God’s back!”  Isn’t that adorable?!  Don’t you love the way small children interpret life events?

Yes, Jesus came back from the grave, But, What’s Next? Where does this leave us?  What are we supposed to do now?

As always, our readings today point us in exactly the right direction:

A. Let’s start with our Gospel from John 20:19-31.  We remember from our Gospel lesson last week that some women disciples of Jesus had gone to His tomb to pay their final respects to the Lord—only to find His tomb open, and His body gone.  Before they could get too upset, however, 2 angels appeared to tell them Jesus had been resurrected, and that they were to go report that miraculous news to “the-12-minus-Judas,” which they did.  The guys were of course skeptical, because none of them expected to see Jesus as anything other than dead. 

In today’s passage, it is the evening of Resurrection Day and Jesus appears to the “11-minus-Thomas.”  He suddenly materializes through a locked door.  He has to say (v.19)  Peace be with you! because they were no doubt shocked and afraid. He shows them his wounded hands and feet to assure them He is real and not a ghost. But notice what he does next:  He says again (v.21)—Peace be with you!  Then, He says, As the Father has sent Me, I am sending you.  He calms their fears and their excitement.  Then He announces that He is sending them. Of all the things He could have chosen to say to them, He gives them their But, what’s next?  Here’s what’s next for them and for us: They (and we) are to tell others who do not know Jesus, the Good News.  We are to teach them about who He is and what all He did.  We are to pray for them for faith and healing.

B. Our Acts lesson (5:27-39) tells us that this is exactly what the Disciples began to do.  Rather than continue to huddle in the Upper Room, they went to the Temple and began to preach and teach about Jesus. In chapter 4, Peter and John were arrested for this and for healing a beggar.

Peter boldly declares to the Sanhedrin (4:10)—It is by the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, Whom you crucified but Whom God raised from the dead, that this man stands before you healed. Peter did not mince any words did he?  The Jewish religious authorities tell them they are not to preach anymore about Jesus.  But again Peter bravely responds (4:19-20)—Judge for yourselves whether it is right in God’s sight to obey you rather than God.  For we cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard.  The authorities let them go.

By the time of today’s passage, the word has spread that the Apostles are doing what Jesus did, preaching, teaching and healing.  Crowds flock to them. The jealous religious leaders once again have them arrested and jailed. An angel sets the Apostles free, and they resume teaching and healing again the next day. The jealous leaders, who are mad enough to kill them, arrest them again.  Bold Peter again proclaims they have to keep bringing people to Jesus because they are obeying God!  Even if it means being arrested or persecuted, they won’t stop.

At this point, the highly respected Rabbi Gamaliel (Paul’s teacher) wisely speaks up.  He counsels the Sanhedrin to leave the Apostles alone.

If they are zealots acting on their own, their movement will die a natural death; but if they are indeed doing God’s will, the Sanhedrin will not be able to stop them.  Worse yet, they will find themselves fighting against God. His wisdom prevails.

Now, we did not live with Jesus for three years, hear His words, or witness to His healings and deliverances.  But because of what we know from the Bible, and from what Jesus modeled and taught, we realize Jesus is worthy.  As the beginning verses of Revelation (1:4-8) reveal to us, He is our sovereign and everlasting God.  He is worthy of our attention.  He is worthy of our obedience.

D. And our Psalm (150) dramatically proclaims He is worthy of our praise and worship.  Only the Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, are worthy of our worship.  Our culture now worships money, power, influence, sex, even fashion and one’s social media presence.  We need to be mindful of who or what we worship. The story is told of how the brother of the famous American preacher named Henry Ward Beecher (1813-1887), came to his church one Sunday to substitute for him. 

A large audience had already assembled to hear Beecher, and when the substitute pastor stepped into the pulpit, several disappointed listeners began to move toward the exits. That’s when the minister stood and said loudly, “All who have come here today to worship Henry Ward Beecher may now withdraw from the church. All who have come to worship God keep your seats!” 

(Lou Nicholes, November 28, 2017, as presented by  http://www.SermonCentral.com ,4/20/2025).

Hopefully, we come to church to worship none other than our Lord, Jesus Christ.

So, What’s Next?  We cannot just occupy the pews of our church building. The What’s next is to tell those who aren’t connected to Jesus about Who He is, why they need Him in their lives, and how to go about getting connected to Him.  It’s the first thing He told the Eleven—so it must have been very important to Him. One of the purposes for coming to church on Sunday is to become strengthened and equipped to bring others to Jesus. Another purpose for coming to church is to worship Him.

We need to obediently respond to Christ’s command that we tell those we encounter about Jesus. This will require we have God’s peace in our hearts and spirits. We need not stand on street corners or go door to door passing out tracts. Instead, we look for opportunities that the Lord gives us to connect with people, as well as the words to say.

This reminds me of something I heard from Graham Cooke, an Anglican priest, at a healing conference he held some years back at a Vineyard Church in Gainesville, Florida. He said he was in America, somewhere in New England, when he walked into a Starbucks. As he entered, he heard the Lord tell him, See that man seated over there.  I want you to go tell him I will heal his daughter if he prays for her daily. Graham obediently went up to the man to convey this message. The guy asked him not to bother him as he had had very bad news and wasn’t up to talking to anyone. Graham said he had a message from God for him. The guy replied that he was an atheist and didn’t believe in God. Graham replied to him, “Well God believes in you.”  He then told him the Lord knew that he had just learned that his daughter, his only child, had dropped out of college and was prostituting herself to earn money for drugs. The Lord also knew he was broken-hearted. God promised to heal her if the man would pray for her daily for 6 months. The man told Graham that he didn’t know how to pray.  So Graham Cooke wrote a prayer out on a Starbuck’s napkin and directed him to say that to Jesus daily. He also gave him his card so the man could report back whatever happened. Four months later, the guy contacted Graham Cooke to tell him his daughter had left her life of drugs and prostitution, that they were reconciled, and that he was both thrilled and grateful. In fact, both of them had become Christ-followers as a result of this. This is such a great example of (1) a divine appointment, an opportunity set up for Rev. Cooke by the Lord, and (2) also of how the Lord gave him the words to say. As a result, both this man and his prodigal daughter became believers in Jesus Christ.

Finally, we remember that our motivation to tell others about Jesus comes from our devotion to Him and our worship of Him.

Alleluia, He is risen!  The Lord is Risen indeed, Alleluia!

©️2025 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams 

Resurrection Sunday, 2025

Pastor Sherry’s message for April 20, 2025

Scriptures: Isa 65:17-25; Ps 118:1-2,14-24; 1 Cor 15:19-26; Lk 24:1-12

How many of you enjoy a good mystery?  Briefly, here are two.  See if you can figure them out:

1. “Everyday a gentleman went to work.  Every day, he would ride the elevator all the way to the bottom floor of the high rise apartment building in which he lived.  But when he came home from work, he would ride the elevator back up to only the 6th floor.  Then, he would take the stairs to his apartment many stories higher in the building.  This he did every day, unless it was raining.  If it was raining, he would ride the elevator all the way to the floor of his apartment.  Why?”

2.  Here’s the second one:  “Ann is lying on the floor dead.  There’s broken glass and water all around her.  Stuart is asleep on the couch seemingly oblivious to the death that has occurred.  How did Ann die?”

To keep you from puzzling these two mysteries out while I continue to preach, I’ll tell you their solutions: “In the first one, the gentleman would only go to the 6th floor on his return home from work because that was the highest button that he could reach on the elevator control panel.  He was a short man.  On days that it rained, he had his umbrella with him, and he could use that to punch the button that indicated his floor.” “In the second situation, it might help you to know that Ann is a fish, and Stuart is a cat.  And the glass and water all around Ann on the floor is from her fishbowl that Stuart successfully knocked over.”  The true mystery here is what then kept Stuart from eating Ann? 

(Borrowed from a sermon by Chris Talton, April 15, 2001, www.sermoncentral.com, 3/24/2005)

If we put ourselves in the position of the women who went to Jesus’ tomb on the morning of His Resurrection Day, we would realize they too were presented with several mysteries:

1. The gigantic stone that had sealed the entrance to the tomb had been rolled back.  Who could have done such a thing?  Remember, these ladies had been with Jesus at the Cross.  They had seen Him suffer and die.  They had watched Joseph and Nicodemus remove Jesus’ body from the Cross and transport it for burial in the new tomb nearby.  They also knew the men had hastily anointed Jesus body with embalming ointments and cloths, and had come to neaten things up and complete the job.  Surely they realized no single person could have rolled that huge, heavy stone away.

They probably also knew a contingent of Roman soldiers had been assigned there to guard the tomb.  So what had happened to them?  Had the Romans stolen Jesus’ body?  Had the Jewish religious authorities taken it?  They had to be both puzzled and alarmed.

Cautiously, they stepped inside the tomb to see if His body was there. Instead of finding Jesus’ corpse, they suddenly encountered two “men” in brilliant white clothes–angels.  It’s almost comical that the angels ask them, Why do you look for the living among the dead?  [He is alive!]  He is not here; He has risen.  Literally, the ancient Greek states, He has been raised.  The verb tense implies that God the Father has raised Jesus.

Angels had proclaimed His birth; now angels proclaim His resurrection (The angels and the women are all witnesses to this miracle).  These angels remind them of Jesus’ teachings about His death and resurrection on the 3rd day.  This is a prompt for them to remember. but it’s also a rebuke—”How could you forget something so very important?!!”

Then they do remember, and go to tell the disciples (the next  resurrection witnesses).  The Eleven do not believe them, even though they should have known these women were reliable truth-tellers.  Peter takes off for the tomb, to see for himself (he is now a witness).  Peter probably now knows better than anyone not to doubt the Lord’s words.  But he still wonders (perhaps “marvels”) about what Jesus’ absence in the tomb means. 

This passage (Luke 24:1-12) closes with questions in everyone’s mind about what has happened (big mysteries). 

The accounts of Jesus’ Resurrection are also reported in the other three Gospels, Matthew 28:1-8; Mark 16:1-8; and John 20:1-8.

A. You might want to read them each and compare to get a fuller sense of how the first witnesses to Jesus’ resurrection responded to the mysteries with which they were presented.

B. Paul, as we know, came to believe in Jesus sometime after the events of Resurrection Sunday.  By then, the mysteries had been explained.

So Paul is intent, in our 1st Corinthians 15:19-26 lesson, that we understand that Jesus’ resurrection is the defining moment of Christianity.

First, back in verses 5-8, he reminds us of who all saw Jesus following His resurrection:  Peter (omitting the women); the 12 minus Judas; more than 500 disciples (maybe he included the women among the 500); Jesus’ brother, James; and Paul himself.

Next, in verses 13-19, Paul asserts that our entire faith depends upon the truth of the resurrection:  Verse 14—If Christ has not been raised, our preaching is useless and so is your faith. In other words, Christ’s resurrection from the dead is incontrovertibly true and forms the basis of our belief in Him.  We worship a God who has the power to bring His Son back from the dead.  I want a strong, powerful God like that, don’t you?  We worship a God who loves us so much that He sacrificed His one and only Son to redeem us.  We worship Jesus, the One and Only, the God Who—because of His self-sacrificing love for us and His obedience to His Father–was willing to cover the cost of our sins.  The sinless Son of God gave up His life so we might have new life, and have it abundantly.  We can connect directly with the Father because Jesus opened the way for us (As He hung on the cross, the massive Temple curtain was torn in two, from top to bottom.)  We can anticipate being resurrected because Jesus opened the way for us.  And, when He comes again in glory to judge the living and the dead, He will destroy death…Praise God! 

C.  We don’t know who wrote Psalm 118:1-2, 14-24, but it is an ode to joy!  The psalmist invites us to focus on heavenly realities–not the frustrations and disappointments of this life.  Because of the mighty things Jesus will do [has done]—including demonstrating His power over death—we can gratefully rejoice in the Lord and praise Him for our deliverance, provision, and protection.

We are to be thankful to Him because (V.1)—The Lord is good; His love endures forever.  (V.14)—The Lord is my strength and my song; He has become my salvation.  (V.18)—Prophesying Jesus’s resurrection, the psalmist wrote, I will not die but live, and will proclaim what the Lord has done…He has not given Me over to death. Jesus was laid dead in a tomb–But He did not remain there as we would have.  He rose again, overcoming death for our sakes!  We are also grateful for the fact that (v.22)—The stone the builders rejected [Jesus] has become the capstone.  The capstone was either (1) a large rectangular stone used as a lintel over a doorway; or (2) a large square or rectangular stone used to anchor or align the corner of a wall; or (3) it might also be the keystone or middlemost stone in an arch.  The capstone (building corner or doorway lintel) or keystone (arch) kept the building from collapsing by supporting what existed beside and above it. The psalmist prophetically meant this as a metaphor for Jesus, who holds all things together for us— no wonder we call Him our Rock and our Redeemer.

Our passage today ends with this line (V.24)—This is the day the Lord has made, let us rejoice and be glad in it.

D. Isaiah 65:17-25 reminds us both that Jesus overcame sin and death, and that we too will therefore experience a joy-filled life after death.

After Jesus defeats the forces of evil at Armageddon, God (v.17) will create new heavens and a new earth.  If you read through the book of Revelation, you can tell that our world will be a disastrous mess by the time Jesus appears a 2nd time.  We will probably need a new earth, at a minimum.

Verse 19 tells us that the newly created Jerusalem will be delightful!

God will be overjoyed with His people there; and they too will be very happy, with no one weeping or crying.  Premature death will be an event of the past (no cancers, illnesses, strokes, heart-attacks, eye problems, hearing loss, or sciatic pain).  People will be able to enjoy the fruits of their labors (no warfare or taxes).  All of God’s people will be blessed!  God will answer our prayers before we even finish praying them.  And all animals will become plant-eaters—no more carnivores devouring prey—and will be at peace with each other.

Thanks be to God the mysteries presented the women at the open tomb have been solved.  We are not left to wonder.  Paul wants us to fully appreciate what Jesus has done for us through dying and rising again.  Our psalmist calls upon us to be grateful and to rejoice!  And Isaiah describes a wonderful world ahead for us when the resurrected Jesus comes back to earth.  Let’s celebrate by singing along to Keith and Kaitlin Getty’s version of https://youtu.be/m_063OI38RQ?si=Dre8ll-AV-GHUlPB In Christ Alone.

©️2025 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams 

The Crucifixion

Pastor Sherry’s message for Good Friday 

Scriptures: Isa 52:13-53:12; Ps 22; Heb 10:16-25; John 18:1-19:42

Have you considered recently that we date our lives from the birth of Jesus?  Whether folks believe in Jesus or not, we all—believers and nonbelievers alike– date our checks, emails, letters, our own birthdates, any contracts we sign, from Jesus’ birth.  The Latin expression is Anno Domini, or AD, and means the year of our Lord.  Time before Christ’s birth is designated as BC, Before Christ.  We thus might think of today as April 18, 2025 AD, or April 18th in the year of our Lord 2025. This certainly commemorates Jesus’ 1st Advent, but truly we might more properly number our years from the date of His Crucifixion, 33 years later.

Why would I say this?  Because Good Friday marks the day we were all saved.  On this day, we commemorate the fact that our precious Savior atoned for all of our sins, past, present, and future.  His passion, His suffering, His shed blood washed us clean.  He traded our guilt for His righteousness; our punishment for His purity.  He won for us the right to go to Heaven when we die, and He made us adopted sons and daughters of God the Father, grafted into the line of God’s Chosen People.  Good Friday is a very special day.

(Leith Anderson, www.PreachingToday.com, 4/15/2025.)

Our Scripture passages assigned for today all try to communicate some aspect of Jesus’ Crucifixion:

A. The Isaiah lesson was written 700 years before the events came to be, and describes them so accurately.  If you want a sense of what the crucifixion was like for Jesus, Isaiah 52:13-53:12, the 4th and final Suffering Servant Song, is the place to start. Biblical scholars call this Messianic prophesy the Gospel in the Old Testament.

Isaiah tells us Jesus will be raised high, lifted up (on the Cross) but also highly exalted (when it is all over).  No one would think so as they observed Him carrying His Cross.  He will in fact startle or surprise the whole world—even render them speechless—because it will be through the paradoxical loss of all things that He gains all things.

Jesus’ suffering included the fact that though King of the Universe, He will be/was (v.3)—despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows and familiar with suffering… beaten beyond recognition; pieced, crushed, oppressed, afflicted; executed in the worst possible way–like a common criminal–hung between true felons.  He will die childless—“cut off,” which was to the Hebrews evidence of a tragic, futile existence.  People will think He got what He deserved, but He didn’t…verses 4-5—Surely He took up our infirmities and carried our sorrows….the punishment that brought us peace was upon Him, and by His wounds we are healed.  

A preacher named Leith Anderson describes it this way, “On the cross Jesus was stained with our human sin. He had never personally experienced sin before in his life, and now he was overwhelmed with sin in his death. God dumped on him the concentrated sum total of every murder, every lust, every envy, every rape, every theft, every profanity, every act of racism, every injustice against the poor, every sin of every person from every generation.” 

(Leith Anderson, www.PreachingToday.com, 4/15/2025.)

Despite all this pain and suffering, however, Isaiah also predicts Jesus will ultimately be vindicated.  Isaiah tells us that the Father will richly reward Him—verse 11—After the suffering of His soul, He will see the light of life [resurrection], and be satisfied…Therefore I will give Him a portion among the great, and He will divide the spoils with the strong.  God the Father intended to reward Him as though He were a king sharing in the spoils of a great victory, because (1) He went willingly to death, and because (2) He graciously interceded for our sins.

B. The Passion narrative of John (18:1-19:42) describes exactly what took place during Jesus’ arrest, disreputable trials, torture, crucifixion, and burial.  We can all discern how closely it fulfills Isaiah’s prophesy.  What wasn’t made evident ahead of time, however, is how clearly Jesus controlled events.  They sent 500 men to arrest Him!  (Temple guards and Roman soldiers.)  He bravely stepped up and asked who they sought and they replied, “Jesus the Nazarene.”  Verse 6 tells us that when He answered, I AM He —They all drew back and fell to the ground.  Perhaps it was due to the fact that He said “I AM,” the Hebrew name for God.  Or maybe they were suddenly afraid of the unarmed Christ!  He asked again who they came for, they said again, “Jesus the Nazarene,” and He replied (impatiently?) (v.8)—I told you that I AM He…and since I AM the One you want, let these others go.  He safeguarded His disciples.

He prevented widespread bloodshed.

Later, He corrected the High Priest’s guard for hitting Him, thereby demonstrating how dishonorable were His 3 trials:

1.) In Hebrew jurisprudence in those days, no trial could begin at night as this one was;

2.) No trial could begin and end within one day, as this one did.

3.) No one could strike a prisoner who had not yet been found guilty.

4.) No one could be sentenced without 2 or more eye-witnesses.

And when Pilate demanded, (v.10)—Don’t you realize that I have the power to release You or crucify You?  Jesus replied (v.11)—You would have no power over Me at all unless it were given to you from above.

He even determined the moment of His death (v.30)—He said, “It is finished,” bowed His head, and gave up His spirit. 

Jesus allowed everything to take place as it did out of obedience to His Heavenly Father, and to fulfill more than 28 prophesies.

C. Psalm 22 reveals to us Christ’s thoughts on the cross:  From noon until 3:00pm, He felt forsaken by His Father. The Father was with Him when He was arrested.  The Father was with Him during His outrageous trials. The Father was with Him when He was beaten.  The Father was with Him when He was nailed to the Cross.  But His Father—because a holy God cannot tolerate the presence of sin–turned His back on Him when He became sin for us. The most awful moment of Jesus’ crucifixion came when he cried out, “Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?”  Those words are in Jesus’ native tongue of Aramaic and mean, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”

He also admits to feeling like a worm.  The word for the term for worm that He uses is, in the Hebrew, a Coccus worm.  When smashed, the Coccus worm emitted a substance used to make red dye.  This is symbolic of Jesus’ blood poured out for us. 

Additionally, He feels the scorn and hatred of His enemies.  From the Cross He feels surrounded and besieged:  The soldiers are like many bulls…the strong bulls of Bashon (a region known for cattle production) .  

His tormentors from the foot of the Cross—scribes, Pharisees, the hostile mob—resemble (v.13)— roaring lions tearing their prey; and verse 16— dogs have surrounded Me; a band of evil men has encircled me, they have pierced my hands and my feet.  

Nevertheless, despite pain, suffering, and the loneliness of feeling abandoned, Jesus trusts in the love of His Father.

D.  The writer to the Hebrews (10:16-25) wants us to remember 2 additional facts:  (1) As Christ breathed His last breath, the curtain in the Temple—a large curtain of finely woven linen—was torn from top to bottom.  No human hand accomplished this.  God in Heaven tore it to indicate that Jesus’ death has granted us access to Him.  We may freely enter into the Holy of Holies (God’s presence) through the shed blood of Jesus Christ.

(2) Jesus’ death also ended the sacrificial system that had begun with Abel.  The shed blood of bulls, sheep, goats, etc., was required for centuries to atone for human sin.  God set it up so that something had to die to make up for or redeem us from our sin.  But with Jesus’ Once-and-for-all-perfect-sacrifice-of-Himself, these were no longer needed.  In this sense, Jesus’ Cross became an altar.

On this Good Friday, let us sincerely and truly thank our Lord Jesus for all He endured to save us.  Thanks be to God who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ!  Alleluia!  Alleluia!  

©️2025 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams

Palms to Passion

Pastor Sherry’s message for April 13, 2025

Scriptures: Lk 19:28-40; Ps 118:1-2, 19-29; Isa 50:4-9; Ps 31:9-16; Phil 2:5-11; Lk 22:14-23:56

Our custom here at Wellborn Methodist Church has been to focus on Jesus’ Passion—His experiences and thoughts leading up to and including His Crucifixion.   Typically, then, we have handed out palm crosses, like you have today, but without focusing on Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday. This year, I wanted us to focus on the difference between Palm Sunday and Good Friday.  This is why we began our service on the front porch today, symbolically outside Jerusalem, if you will. And we followed the path of Jesus, riding on a donkey, as He made His way from the city gate into the Temple.

Now the Sadducees of 2000 years ago believed the Messiah would enter the city 4 days before Passover. Passover would have begun at sundown on Friday and ended at sundown on Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath.Thus, they made sure the gates to the Temple remained open the first day of their week, so Messiah could walk right on in and assume His throne.

Under normal circumstances, then, there would have been a great deal of hoopla and excitement among the Passover crowds, with people asking, “Is this the year?  Will Messiah show up? “  Knowing He would be arrested early Thursday morning and hanging on His Cross by Friday, Jesus chose to enter Jerusalem on what we call Palm Sunday.  What courage!

He fulfilled the prophesy of the minor prophet, Zechariah, from chapter 9, verse 9 (NLT) Rejoice, O people of Zion!  Shout in triumph, O people of Jerusalem!  Look your king is coming to you.  He is righteous and victorious, yet He is humble, riding on a donkey—riding on a donkey’s colt.  Victorious kings, Like David, would have entered the city to large, cheering crowds.  The people would have waved palms and placed their garments on the road for the King to tread upon.  At the end of 4th season of “The Chosen,” in episode 8 (you may call it up on YouTube), the writers re-enact one such victorious return, singing of King David, “Hosannah, Our King is Victorious!”

King David would have ridden in on his war-horse, but King Jesus rides in on a humbler animal, a donkey.  Luke wants us to be sure to know that this animal was borrowed from someone who knew of and loved Jesus, and it had never been ridden before.  Many in Jerusalem assumed Jesus was the Messiah and thronged around Him, praising Him and singing many of the lines read today from Psalm 118:25-29. Hosannah (Yesha anna in Hebrew) means save us now.  The crowds are asking Jesus to save them.

Do you think they knew that He was God in the flesh? They are cheering Him on. They are rejoicing in His presence. They are filled with hope that He is their Messiah.

The Passion readings appointed for today lead us from this celebratory procession to Jesus’ arrest, trials, death, and burial: 

A. Paul reminds us in Philippians 2:5-11 that Jesus humiliated or humbled Himself to come to earth to save us.  The Palm Sunday crowds expected Him to save them and that is exactly what He intended to do.  Paul wants us to be as humble and as obedient to the Father as Jesus was. Jesus obeyed His Father in everything, even up to and including His manner of death. Though totally righteous and holy, He died as though He were a rightfully tortured and despised criminal.

Paul also desires that we appreciate the depths of Jesus’ sacrifice on our behalf:  He gave up His heavenly prerogatives as King of the Universe–the One who spoke creation into existence–to be born in a stable, to a poor, young, homeless couple, in a ragtag and oppressed, tiny nation. Instead of demanding respect and a wide following as a great and exalted leader, He humbly behaved as a servant to all. No wonder the Father has honored Him above all things, declaring that His name commands total obedience, from every being, in every sphere of the universe!  Incidentally, this includes non-believers who will be shocked to arrive at the Great White Throne Judgment, only to discover they made the wrong choice to dismiss Him during their lifetimel

B.  Isaiah prophesies in 50:4-9 how Jesus, the Suffering Servant of God, will be treated during His Passion experience.  Verse 4 tells us He was tutored by Holy Scripture and also by His heavenly Father.  Verse 5 insists that He was always obedient to the Father’s will.  Verse 6 peaking for Jesus in the first person—I offered My back to those who beat Me, My cheeks to those who pulled out My beard.  I did not hide My face from mocking and spitting. This verse tells us He would endure beatings:  He was beaten by the Jewish Temple guards during the night;

Then He was beaten again by the Roman soldiers early in the morning. He would be spit upon, in His face (such a sign of contempt and hatred), and on His bloody body (YIKES!  to so desecrate God Himself)!  He will have His beard pulled out.

But notice too, in verses 7-9a—He will trust in God, His Father, the entire time.  He remained constant and faith-filled, despite all the evil that was done to Him!  I think He thus modeled to us how we might withstand persecution, if such befalls us for being Christians.  We are to hold on to our faith in God and to the love of Jesus for us, with both hands.

C.  Psalm 31:9-16 was written by King David.  The portion we read today is a prayer in which he seeks the Lord’s deliverance from a very powerful foe.  It is also very aptly describes what Jesus probably suffered on the way to His crucifixion at Golgatha, and even as He hung suspended from the Cross:  

   (1) V.9— Be merciful to Me, O LORD, for I am in distress… 

(2) V.10—My life is consumed by anguish and my years by groaning; My strength fails….

(3) Vv.11-12—Because of My enemies, I am the utter contempt of My neighbors; I am a dread to my friends—those who see Me on the street flee from Me.  I am forgotten by them as though I were dead; I have become like broken pottery.  

He is experiencing despair and grief.  But He does not succumb to it.  In verse 14, he reminds Himself, But I trust in You, O LORD.  I say, “You are my God.”  And He reaffirms for Himself, (v.15) My times are in Your hands.  We can trust in God to sustain us through the most difficult times because He is only a prayer away (meaning He is present to us).  He loves us, and He sent His only, beloved Son to die to save us.

D.  Our Passion narrative comes from Luke this year (22:14-23:56).  It needs little explanation as it speaks very powerfully for itself.  We see and understand that, though they had welcomed Him as a hero on Sunday, by Thursday they had replaced their Hosannah’s with outraged cries to Crucify Him!  What happened?  Well, quite simply, He disappointed their expectations.  They wanted a military leader to subdue the Romans; a warrior on a war-horse rather than a humble donkey.  They expected Him to overthrow their oppressors instead of teaching and praying daily in the Temple.  He didn’t live up to their idea of a Savior.  Their disappointment turned into anger and murderous rage, fueled and stoked by the jealous religious leadership who felt threatened by Him. So they killed Him.  But they didn’t eradicate either His memory or His influence.

We are currently living through a period in our country in which the influence of Jesus appears to have waned.  Fewer and fewer people seem to know Who Jesus is and why believing in Him and worshipping Him is important. Many churches have declining memberships. Folks appear to have given up regular Sunday attendance.  In fact, a statistic I heard recently said that most committed Christians only attend church once every three weeks.  Many activities compete for our attention—sporting events, leisure time pursuits, work, even sleeping in.  I was probably in my late 30’s when I realized that God spoke to me during Sunday worship.  His voice came to me through the music, the sermon, the readings, or sometimes from something a fellow worshipper said.  As much as I wanted to sleep in, I realized if I missed church, I would miss what the Lord had to say to me that week.  And as I came to regard my congregation as my “spiritual family,” I also realized I would miss what was often only a once a week contact. 

We need to remember all that Christ has done for us.  As I preached last week, we need a Savior because we cannot save ourselves.  The Good News is that we are washed clean of our sins by the sinless blood of the true Passover Lamb, our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.  Come, Let us adore Him!

©️2025 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams