By Peter Mead on Oct 12, 2021
based on 5 ratings
| 19,693 views
You need more than someone in the pulpit holding a Bible. Peter Mead warns us off of three "sub-gospel" habits.
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By James Scott on Apr 28, 2023
based on 3 ratings
| 14,391 views
"One of the greatest weaknesses we see from leadership in the church is not understanding the audience the leader is speaking to," says James Scott.
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By SermonCentral .com on Mar 1, 2021
based on 1 rating
| 12,520 views
Your church is in desperate need of a vision that is informed by God’s Word, inspired by God’s Spirit, and applied passionately and broken-heartedly to your local context.
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By Jeff Vanderstelt on Nov 21, 2022
based on 1 rating
| 12,364 views
If we are going to grow people up into Christlikeness in every way, we need to learn how to speak the truths of Jesus Christ into everything.
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By Lance Witt on Oct 17, 2023
based on 3 ratings
| 20,260 views
Pound for pound, nothing is as powerful as your tongue. As pastors, we count on God to use our tongues as His instrument. In last week’s article, we talked about using our words to bless and speak life into others. This week I want to add 2 additional strategies for the wise use of words.
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By Brandon Kelley on Jan 5, 2021
based on 2 ratings
| 11,672 views
A sermon speaks from the grand narrative of Scripture to the grand narrative of your life. These two stories have identifiable tension points: use them!
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By Duncan Hamilton on Mar 26, 2024
based on 2 ratings
| 13,721 views
For all of us it can be difficult to grasp a sense of something when it is actually happening; often comprehension comes only when it is over. Not, though, for Eric Liddell. He could always identify precisely when his life changed forever. It was April 6, 1923. The time was shortly after 9pm. On that day and during that hour, Liddell became a public speaker for God.
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By Duncan Hamilton on Apr 16, 2024
Two years ago I travelled China’s Shandong Provence; specifically to the city that Eric Liddell knew as Weihsien and which is now called Weifang. I walked around the site of the camp where he died of a brain tumour six months before the Second World War ended. The earth that held him during that war holds him still. No one can identify where Liddell was buried. So, instead of a grave, he has a monument – an enormous slab of rose granite shipped from the Isle of Mull in the Hebrides.
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