2016-09-01T17:57:56-05:00

Matthew 6:1-18 Jesus spoke at length about 3 spiritual disciplines that He assumes His disciples are practicing.  These 3 disciplines Jesus preaches on are 3 that have for centuries been a part of Lent, as well as a fundamental part of the Christian life as a whole until the time of the Reformation. Can you name them? They are: almsgiving prayer fasting Prayer, most of us know.  But almsgiving is a neglected virtue, and fasting has all but vanished, except... Read more

2016-09-01T00:13:21-05:00

Who is the forgotten man of Christmas? Read more

2016-08-31T14:10:58-05:00

Matthew 5:38-48 I told you some time ago that love is the strongest thing known to man.  This only makes sense when you remember that we were wrought in love and formed from the substance of God’s love.  How could we not be made for love? However, I find that there are a lot of counterfeits out there to the agape kind of love to which God is calling us (and He’s calling us to Himself, who is love).  It... Read more

2016-08-31T23:58:50-05:00

And you thought the genealogies were boring. Read more

2016-08-30T13:29:49-05:00

Matthew 5:27-37 In the previous passage in the Sermon on the Mount we talked about how Jesus’ teaching is an intensification of the Law: to not get angry is much more difficult than to not murder.  Likewise, today, to not lust is much, much more difficult than to not commit adultery.  It’s not so much that Jesus is trying to make the Law harder: He’s simply explaining what the Law meant all along. Sometimes we have a tendency to think... Read more

2016-08-29T14:40:19-05:00

Matthew 5:17-26 The Sermon on the Mount, as I alluded to in my commentary on Matthew 5:1-16, is Jesus’ perfect exposition of the Law.  He who gave the Law and perfectly kept it is also its most perfect interpreter.  After establishing that God’s Law will not pass away, Jesus begins to apply it in a most perfect and, therefore, most exacting way. We would do well not to explain away or diminish the radical, revolutionary, and perfect nature of what... Read more

2016-08-28T16:41:30-05:00

Matthew 5:1-16               The Sermon on the Mount in general and the Beatitudes in particular are as dense as a black hole!  It’s a little intimidating trying to say something meaningful about the Beatitudes in such a small space, but here goes. The first thing that strikes me is the very name Beatitudes.  This name, of course, isn’t found in the original manuscripts but comes from the Latin word “beatus” for “blessing” or “blessed.”  As opposed to the rest... Read more

2016-08-26T17:08:00-05:00

Matthew 4:12-25 “And Jesus, walking by the Sea of Galilee, saw two brothers, Simon called Peter, and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the sea; for they were fishermen.  Then He said to them, ‘Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.’  They immediately left their nets and followed Him.” I want to try one of my favorite tricks when reading the Bible.  It’s a technique I pioneered when I was in 2nd and 3rd grade.  Ever... Read more

2016-08-21T23:35:11-05:00

Matthew 4:1-11  Baptism-Fasting-Feasting. This is the pattern of the life of Christ in Matthew 4, and it is the pattern of our lives as well.  You can even see this pattern in the Church Year that the church has created and preserved.  Advent and Christmas are kinds of baptisms or new beginnings: Advent is the initiation of the church year in which we prepare for Christ, and Christmas is the initiation of the life of Christ, whose life we join... Read more

2016-08-21T23:25:51-05:00

Matthew 3 “Repent!  For the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand!” There, that’s what you came to hear me say, wasn’t it.  It’s what I’m most famous for. Some called me Elijah.  But they were wrong.  Others called me The Prophet.  They, too, were wrong.  Some actually thought I was the Messiah, if you can believe that–me, John.  You may call me the John the Baptist as most do, or John, son of Zacharias, or just John. You may have... Read more


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