Posts Tagged ‘SSCC’

Break Free: Prison Break (David Yarborough)

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Break Free – What Are You Afraid Of

Pri$on Break – Has the current economic climate held you captive with fear and worry? Are you worried about the future? Jesus speaks directly to these issues by offering hope and a challenge. We have a choice to do it our way, or His way’ to build our kingdom, or seek His kingdom. So what will it be?

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About the Series
Break Free – What Are You Afraid Of?
Fear is one of our strongest and powerful emotions. What does it tell us? What does it do to us? And more importantly how can we break free from its grip on our lives? This series will look at our greatest fears, and give us God’s prescription for fighting fear in our lives.

Get a Life

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

Do you know what you need to get before you get a date?  Over the next few weeks, I want to talk about dating, marriage and romance.  As we start off, I want to address those that are still in the dating game.  So what is it that you need to “get” before you get a date?  The first thing you need to get is a life.

I wonder if any of you have ever had a dating relationship end with a bunch of heartache, tears, and disappointment.  Perhaps you tried to figure out how life was going to go on without the other person.  And then realized something…  You put so much energy and focus into your dating relationship, and so much of your self worth was wrapped up in the other individual. All of sudden you woke and realized how much of your life had been on hold because of that relationship.  Your career, your interests, your friendships and your relationship with God had all taken a backseat to Mr. (or Ms.) Right – and now you have discovered that the person was Mr. (or Ms.) Wrong.

One of the biggest dangers that any single person needs to be aware of as a potential dater is the temptation to make another person the center of our life.  The First commandment of dating is this:  Thou shalt get a life! Your own life.

The most important element you will ever bring into a real relationship is a real life with a sense of purpose, identity, and healthy self-esteem.  You do not want to bring a needy, desperate, clingy life into a dating relationship.  You are not ready to date if that is where you are.

In the book of Genesis, God created man and then put him in the garden to work it and take care of it.  Man had God first in his life.  Then man was given a life purpose.  He wasn’t just sitting around waiting for love to come along.  Eventually the Lord said,  “It is not good for man to be alone.  I will make a helper suitable for him” (Genesis 2:18).

God is the one who said it is not good for the man to be alone.  God had a plan to bring a relationship into man’s life.  He was preparing a bride for him.  God didn’t give man a helper because he was an emotional basket case and didn’t know what to do with himself on Friday nights.  God was making a suitable helper for man, a complement to what was already good.  A “helper” or partner from God is not meant to fix what is broken or fill what is empty in our lives.

A true potential partner is meant to be a companion to complement and strengthen that which is already good.  God made relationships to be two parts that work harmoniously together.  Please read this next phrase carefully: A relationship with the opposite sex is not meant to be a band-aid for a bleeding heart.  Human relationships were never meant to give us the life we have finally been looking for.  We are supposed to bring our own life into our relationship, and ultimately into our marriage.

God said, “It is not good for man to be alone.”  So many have instead turned it into the thought: “I can’t stand to be alone.”  And they buy the lie that they are insignificant if they are not in a dating relationship.  They always have to have a man (or a woman) in order to feel good about themselves.  People with real lives don’t always need to be in a relationship with someone else to feel good about themselves.  I want to warn you from setting all of your hopes for fulfillment in a dating relationship. Finding the right partner is awesome, but you do not want to put so much pressure on a relationship that you are liable to suck the life out of the other person.  So, do you need to get a life?  And that’s the Word.

When It Hurts: Is God Worth it? (David Yarborough)

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

When It Hurts: A Look at the Book of Job

Is God Worth It? – This is one of the major questions of Job. Will we only love and serve God when things are good? Or will we love, serve, and trust Him even in our suffering? Is He Worth it? Job had no idea that this was the battle he was fighting. There was a war over his worship, and there is one for yours as well.

Download a printable note-taking sheet.

About the Series
When it Hurts – Suffering, Pain, and Adversity. How is a wise person to respond when life hurts? Perhaps there is no greater place to go for an answer than the book of Job. Job’s life became a battle ground as Satan petitioned God to bring down this righteous man. Would he buckle? Would He curse God? Would He trust God? What about you? How will you respond when life hurts?

It's Personal: A Better Question (David Yarborough)

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

It’s Personal:

A Better Question – When it comes to the Christian faith, there is one question that trumps them all.  We many have questions and we may have doubts, but the ultimate question is “Who is Jesus?”  If you really start to answer that question, you will find out that it really is personal.

Download a printable note-taking sheet.

About the Series
It’s Personal – People who are not Christians all have a reason that they have never received Christ. They often have obstacles and questions that keep them from trusting Christ. The truth is though that adults rarely become Christians because all of their obstacles are removed. They just get smaller as something else gets bigger. When Jesus becomes personal, our obstacles may not completely disappear, but they are no longer a hindrance to us really trusting in Christ. Join us during this series as we seek to get personal with our faith.

It's Personal: Coming to Terms (David Yarborough)

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

It’s Personal:

Coming to Terms – We often want God to come to us on our terms.  If He really is God though, shouldn’t we have to come to Him on his terms.  God revealed Himself to Abraham at a time when many people thought many different things about God.  God came on His terms, however, to reveal who He really was.  Are you ready to come to God – on his terms?

Download a printable note-taking sheet.

About the Series
It’s Personal – People who are not Christians all have a reason that they have never received Christ. They often have obstacles and questions that keep them from trusting Christ. The truth is though that adults rarely become Christians because all of their obstacles are removed. They just get smaller as something else gets bigger. When Jesus becomes personal, our obstacles may not completely disappear, but they are no longer a hindrance to us really trusting in Christ. Join us during this series as we seek to get personal with our faith.

It's Personal: A New Approach (David Yarborough)

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

It’s Personal:

A New Approach – What is your obstacle to true faith in Christ?  Listen as we talk about how often rational, smart, thinking adults overcome some of their obstacles to faith in light of a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.  Everything changes when “It’s Personal.”

Download a printable note-taking sheet.

About the Series
It’s Personal – People who are not Christians all have a reason that they have never received Christ.  They often have obstacles and questions that keep them from trusting Christ.  The truth is though that adults rarely become Christians because all of their obstacles are removed.  They just get smaller as something else gets bigger.  When Jesus becomes personal, our obstacles may not completely disappear, but they are no longer a hindrance to us really trusting in Christ.  Join us during this series as we seek to get personal with our faith.

Change is Coming: Opposition or Opportunity (David Yarborough) January 18, 2009

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

Opposition or Opportunity:
God uses circumstances to bring about change in our lives. Will we see the troubles and trials of life as an opposition to our happiness, or an opportunity for our holiness?

Download a printable note-taking sheet.

About the Series
As we head into 2009, there is a lot of change in the air. The economy has changed our view of the present and the future. Our nation is preparing for a huge change with a new president. With all of this change, the question is “Will we change as well?” Change is coming is about true change from the inside out.

Constructing Christmas: Christmas Eve (David Yarborough) December 24, 2008

Wednesday, December 24th, 2008

Christmas Eve Service, December 24, 2008
About the Series

While the New Testament begins with the birth and the arrival of Jesus Christ, there is a lot of history behind it in the Old Testament. How does the Old Testament story relate to and prepare us for Christmas and all that would follow. If you think it takes you a long time to get ready for Christmas, you might just might be amazed at all of the Christmas preparations God made throughout the Old Testament. Listen along as this series begins with a tree in a garden, and watch God begin to construct His Christmas plan from the beginning.

Constructing Christmas: A Child of Promise (David Yarborough) December 21, 2008

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

A Child of Promise: Do you remember being filled with anticipation to see what you were going to get for Christmas? It was sometimes hard to wait and see. In a similar way, the old testament in scripture is full of anticipation for the first Christmas when Christ will come. 750 years before his coming, Isaiah declared the coming of Christ with a certain “just wait and see” flair. Here what the prophet had to say about Christ 750 years before he was born.

Download a printable note-taking sheet.

About the Series
While the New Testament begins with the birth and the arrival of Jesus Christ, there is a lot of history behind it in the Old Testament. How does the Old Testament story relate to and prepare us for Christmas and all that would follow. If you think it takes you a long time to get ready for Christmas, you might just might be amazed at all of the Christmas preparations God made throughout the Old Testament. Listen along as this series begins with a tree in a garden, and watch God begin to construct His Christmas plan from the beginning.

Simeon

Saturday, December 13th, 2008

There sure is a lot to see at Christmas time. There are lights, trees, TV specials, and all sorts of decorations. When I was a kid, however, there was one main thing that I wanted to see – lots of presents underneath the tree.

On the very first Christmas, there was a man named Simeon who longed to see something as well. The book of Luke says, “He was waiting for the consolation of Israel and the Holy Spirit was upon Him. It had been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not die before he had seen the Lord’s Christ” (Luke 2:25-26).

Simeon was waiting for the consolation of Israel. This was a phrase used to speak of God’s promise to bring relief and deliverance to his people Israel. God had promised to send one that would end their oppression and bring them hope and comfort. Simeon saw his people in need of God’s help. Many were rebellious and separated from God. Simeon was looking for God’s help, God’s hope, and God’s forgiveness. He was a man of spiritual passion with a hunger for God.

Simeon wanted to see God – and he did in the face of the baby Jesus. Simeon was a priest in the temple when Jesus’ parents brought him to be dedicated to the Lord forty days after his birth. We are used to referring to Jesus as God’s Son, but there was no precedent during Simeon’s time for God to come in flesh as a baby. And yet he had eyes to see what God was doing even in the form of an infant. The passage makes clear that he was a man who was in tune with what God was doing. Simeon was moved by the Spirit to enter the temple as Mary and Joseph came in with their child. As Simeon took Jesus into his arms, he held the baby in his arms and praised God saying “your salvation has finally come.” Simeon had waited for many years, and now he was staring the salvation of God in the eyes. And the Savior of the world was in his arms, wearing a diaper.

Can you imagine how he felt? He had waited a long time for this moment. The Lord had actually promised Simeon that he would not die until he had seen the Lord’s Christ. And now He has come. Can you picture him taking the child, pulling him close, kissing his tender face, looking upon him in delight and thinking, “God is faithful. God has kept his promise. He has come.”

According to Simeon, Jesus was an absolute “must see.” Holding the Christ child in his arms, he proclaimed to God: “Sovereign Lord, as you have promised, your servant may now depart in peace, for my eyes have seen your salvation which you have prepared in the sight of all people, a light for revelation to the Gentiles and for glory to your people Israel” (Luke 2:29-32).

Simeon could now depart in peace because he had met the Lord’s salvation face to face in the person of Jesus. This baby did not come to live. This baby came to die, and to give his life for the sins of the world. Jesus did not come so we could have warm fuzzy feelings at Christmas. He came on a rescue mission. He came because we couldn’t get to heaven without him.

Have your eyes seen the Lord’s salvation? Have you met Jesus Christ? Have you received his forgiveness? You cannot depart in peace without him. And that’s the Word.