Contributed by Mark Hensley on Oct 18, 2000
based on 94 ratings
| 4,138 views
LISTEN SLOWLY
Writer Charles Swindoll once found himself with too many commitments in too few days. He got nervous and tense about it. "I was snapping at my wife and our children, choking down my food at mealtimes, and feeling irritated at those unexpected interruptions through the day," he
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
Baptist
Contributed by Owen Bourgaize on May 17, 2001
based on 138 ratings
| 2,739 views
One of the most moving passages in English literature comes toward the end of Charles Dickens’ "Tale of Two Cities", a story of the French revolution. Each day there was a grim procession through the streets of Paris of prisoners on their way to the guillotine. In one of the processions was
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
Baptist
Contributed by Lynell Friesen on May 24, 2001
based on 41 ratings
| 2,758 views
Dr. Barnhouse used this illustration to portray this simple truth to his congregation and I would like to share it with you.
A young man, suffering from amnesia, lived a new life amid his old surroundings; he could remember nothing that had happened before he fell off a haywagon. As he fell,
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
Presbyterian/Reformed
Contributed by Andrew Chan on May 25, 2001
based on 120 ratings
| 7,626 views
True story happened Friday in Montreal
- A hospital patient who insisted on lighting a cigarette while hooked to an oxygen supply caused a small explosion, according to a hospital spokesperson.
The 73-year-old, who suffered minor burns in the blast, had been told not to light up but she ignored
...read more
Scripture:
Tags:
Denomination:
Evangelical Free
Contributed by Alan Perkins on Aug 19, 2001
based on 32 ratings
| 2,848 views
On April 21st, in the year 1519, the Spanish explorer Hernando Cortez sailed into the harbor of Vera Cruz, Mexico. He brought with him only about 600 men, and yet over the next two years his vastly outnumbered forces were able to defeat Montezuma and all the warriors of the Aztec empire, making
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
Baptist
Contributed by Terry Dashner on Dec 21, 2001
based on 56 ratings
| 9,467 views
How valuable is salt? 40 million tons are required each year to fill our needs. Homer called it divine. Plato called it a "substance dear to the gods." Shakespeare mentioned salt 17 times in his plays. Perhaps Leonard da Vinci wanted to send a subtle message about purity lost when he painted "The
...read more
Scripture:
Tags:
Denomination:
Evangelical/Non-Denominational
Contributed by Sermon Central on Jan 19, 2002
based on 5 ratings
| 1,414 views
Ill: Oliver Wendell Holmes, Senior, was a physian. As such he was very interested in the use of ether. (Ether was used to put people to sleep in the 19th century.) In order to know how his patients felt under its influence, he once had a dose administered to himself.
-As he was going under, in a
...read more
Contributed by Sermon Central on Mar 31, 2002
based on 19 ratings
| 4,207 views
THE MARK OF SUFFERING
In the real world of pain, how could one worship a God who was immune to it? I have entered many Buddhist temples in different Asian countries and stood respectfully before the statue of the Buddha, his legs crossed, arms folded, eyes closed, the ghost of a smile playing
...read more
Scripture:
Tags:
Contributed by Dana Chau on Mar 22, 2002
based on 11 ratings
| 1,334 views
Probably no foreigner exerted greater leadership over the people of Shaohsing, China, in the early twentieth century than Dr. Claude H. Barlow. This self-effacing medical missionary was the personification of a God-influenced life.
A strange disease for which he knew no remedy was killing the
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
*other
Contributed by Sermon Central on Aug 15, 2002
based on 20 ratings
| 4,310 views
WHAT'S ON THE OTHER SIDE
A sick man turned to his doctor, as he was preparing to leave the
examination room and said, "Doctor, I am afraid to die. Tell me what lies on the other side."
Very quietly the doctor said, "I don’t know."
"You don’t know? You, a Christian man, does not know what is on
...read more
Tags:
Contributed by Mark Hensley on Aug 16, 2002
NEW ORLEANS (Aug. 8) - Ten people on a behind-the-scenes tour at an aquarium plunged into a shark tank after a platform collapsed. No one was seriously injured, officials said.
Two people were taken to a hospital for minor cuts and bruises, said Melissa Lee, a spokeswoman for the Aquarium of the
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
Baptist
Contributed by James Botts on Aug 29, 2002
based on 7 ratings
| 5,916 views
AN OLD SIN, A NEW WORD
Have you noticed that people are more and more angry then ever before? Consider the following…
One anger management firm stated that “one out of every five Americans has an anger management problem.”
According to FBI statistics, there were 23,305 homicides in 1994 and the
...read more
Scripture:
Tags:
Denomination:
Baptist
Contributed by Sermon Central on Aug 29, 2002
based on 17 ratings
| 4,769 views
DRAGGED THROUGH LIFE
We live in a very tense, uptight, and fast-paced world filled with hurry.
A Tahoma, Washington newspaper carried the story of Tattoo the basset hound a while back. Tattoo didn’t intend to go for an evening run, but when his owner shut the dog’s leash in the car door and took
...read more
Tags:
Contributed by Paul Fritz on Sep 14, 2002
based on 11 ratings
| 2,238 views
LET PEOPLE HEAR IT
Fritz Kreisler (1875-1962), the world-famous violinist, earned a fortune with his concerts and compositions, but he generously gave most of it away. So, when he discovered an exquisite violin on one of his trips, he wasn’t able to buy it.
Later, having raised enough money to
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
Evangelical/Non-Denominational
Contributed by Sermon Central on Sep 22, 2002
based on 8 ratings
| 3,652 views
Few men of this century have understood better the inevitability of suffering than Dietrich Bonhoeffer. He seems never to have wavered in his Christian antagonism to the Nazi regime, although it meant for him imprisonment, the threat of torture, danger to his own family and finally death. He was
...read more
Tags:
Contributed by Sermon Central on Oct 6, 2002
based on 13 ratings
| 3,783 views
HARD TIMES FOR HELL
Hell, it would seem, has fallen on rather lean times. It used to be that the vast majority of Christians, regardless of denominational affiliation, believed that Hell was a real place where the wicked and the impenitent go when they died. The very thought of the pains and
...read more
Tags:
Contributed by D. Greg Ebie on Oct 30, 2002
based on 11 ratings
| 2,325 views
SENT FROM HEAVEN
One of the most moving passages in English literature comes towards the end of Charles Dickens’s Tale of Two Cities, a story of the French revolution.
Each day, a grim procession of prisoners made its way on the streets of Paris to the guillotine. One prisoner, Sidney Carton, a
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
Assembly Of God
Contributed by Paul Fritz on Oct 31, 2002
based on 2 ratings
| 2,304 views
The Bible defines worldliness by centering morality where we intuitively know it should be. Worldliness is the lust of the flesh (a passion for sensual satisfaction), the lust of the eyes (an inordinate desire for the finer things of life), and the pride of life (self-satisfaction in who we are,
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
Evangelical/Non-Denominational
Contributed by Paul Kallan on Dec 24, 2002
Among the poems of Rabindranath Tagore titled Gitanjali, there is one [No.50] that tells the story of a beggar. As he went begging from door to door, his king appeared in his golden chariot before him. He thought that the king would give him great riches and his evil days were over. So he stood
...read more
Tags:
Denomination:
Catholic