
Sermons
The Word of God faithfully preached to the Church is one of the most essential aspects of Christian discipleship. Through faithful expositional preaching all the saints grow together in the knowledge of God and in being equipped for ministry. This is one reason preaching is the central element of our Lord’s Day worship.
- 1 Corinthians
- 1 John
- 1 Peter
- 1 Thessalonians
- 1 Timothy
- 2 Corinthians
- 2 Timothy
- Acts
- Christmas
- Colossians
- Core Values
- Corporate Worship
- Easter
- Ecclesiastes
- Ephesians
- Ezekiel
- Genesis
- Guest Speakers
- Hebrews
- Hosea
- Isaiah
- James
- John
- Lament
- Luke
- Matthew
- Philippians
- Proverbs
- Psalms
- Romans
- Stand Alone
- Titus
Sermons
The Creation of Marriage
In Genesis 2.18-25, we find the creation of the first marriage. Marriage is the union of one man and one woman in a lifetime covenant. In the garden we find the goodness, beauty, and truthfulness of God’s design for marriage. And Marriage must be upheld in honor by all people, but especially, the church. There are three foundational truths that we consider to help us with that: 1) The Necessity of Marriage, 2) The Celebration of Marriage, and 3) The Union of Marriage.
The Garden of Eden
In Genesis 2.4-17, we find the extravagant generosity of God toward Adam in his original state prior to the fall. There are three really important ideas that we unpack in this text: 1) Eden’s garden-sanctuary, 2) Eden’s prophet, priest, and king, and 3) Eden’s promises and threats.
The Sabbath Rest of God
In Genesis 2.1-3, God rests from his work of creation and by doing so, he sets an example and pattern for all people to follow. Here we learn that we must sanctify the sabbath, devoting a special day in our weeks for worship and to rest. If we’re going to do that, there are four important themes we need to understand concerning God’s rest: 1) The completion of the cosmic temple, 2) the coronation of the cosmic king, 3) the consecration of the sabbath day, and 4) the consummation of the sabbath rest.
Created in God’s Image Pt. 2
We continue to meditate on Genesis 1.26-28. Last Sunday we considered what it meant to bear God’s image. Today we considered seven societal implications of being made in God’s image: 1) Man is creaturely, 2) Human-life is sacred, 3) Gender is a gift, 4) Family is foundational, 5) Sin is dehumanizing, 6) Sin is cosmic treason, and 7) the Church is essential.
Created in God’s Image Pt. 1
In Genesis 1.26-28, we learn the that creator whom we image is trinitarian. In other words, He is the one true and living God who exists in a plurality of persons. We also consider three foundational truths about being created in God’s image: 1) we were created to uniquely represent God, 2) we were created uniquely relate to God, and 3) we were created to uniquely receive God’s law.
The Creation of the World
This is our second sermon in Genesis. Here we cover all of chapter one and the main goal is not jsut to better understand the work of creation but to increase of our worship of the God of creation. There three big ideas highlighted in this sermon: 1) The theories of creation, 2) the days of creation, and 3) the God of creation.
In the Beginning, God
Genesis 1 gives us the definitive, inspired, inerrant, authoritative word from God on creation and the origin of the cosmos. In this sermon, we considered four introductory points to the book of Genesis, including 7 important interpretative lenses that we must use to be faithful interpreters of Genesis: 1) we interpret Genesis historically, 2) we interpret Genesis canonically, 3) we interpret Genesis theo-centrically, 4) we interpret Genesis redemptively, 5) we interpret Genesis typologically, 6) we interpret Genesis covenantally, and 7) we interpret Genesis worshipfully.
An Unfolding Pattern of Promise
As we take a break from our 1 Timothy series, Pastor Chris Komatsu (Lanai Baptist Church) preaches from Genesis 5. In Genesis 5, pastor Chris helps us to see that Moses wrote this genealogy with great intentionality. Within the lineage of Seth, we find four patterns of similarities and 3 irregularities. All of them in their own ways are intended to point us to Christ, the promised Savior of the world.