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Dare To Be Different In 2026.
Contributed by Andrew Moffatt on Jan 22, 2026 (message contributor)
Summary: What does it take to change and live for Jesus, what does it take to move from belief in the Messiah to a follower of the Messiah, of Jesus Christ? This is an update on a previous seron, A bit more relevant for 2026.
As we are starting into 2026, today I want to ask a simple question, well a couple. What does it take to change and live for Jesus, what does it take to move from belief in the Messiah to a follower of the Messiah, of Jesus Christ? It takes transformation and it starts in your head. Do you dare to be different?
Dare to be different the sermon. Romans 12:1-3
2026
Last week we heard about the Hebrew people parked up beside the Jordan River, just across from the city of Jerico, in the Spring time when the river was in flood, camped if I remember rightly for only three days? Then the priests carrying the Ark of the Covenant and put their feet in the river and it backed up all the way to a place called Adam. They then crossed over on dry land as the backed up in what I believe was an invisible dam structure engineered by God. Well, that was a bit different and required one thing to occur, the priests stepping into the river.
Different now there’s an interesting word. This is my segway into today’s message.
What do we think about people who are different? I don’t mean a little different but a lot different. See if you can pick who these might be.
Now he’s a bit different eats bugs, wears strange clothes and lives in the scrub, or…
Did you hear about the bloke who saved a ship load of people by allowing himself to be thrown overboard, nutter?
Well that’s different.
There was such a crowd around the pharmacy and such a need to get to it that they tore the roof off to get the meds that their friend needed. Certainly different.
His kid had caused him so much shame when he left, ripped off the estate, blew the cash in night clubs and on hard living until he had nothing left. When he went back home his Dad not only welcomed him with open arms but celebrated like the boy had done nothing wrong.
These things that happen, these people who react in ways that are unexpected sometimes shock us, they sometimes make us wonder why people respond the way they do, why they think the way they do.
You might see that the references I've made are a little bit of paraphrasing of Biblical stories, John the Baptist, he was a bit odd by modern standards, wore camel skin garments, ate wild locusts and honey. Jonah, well if I was in the same situation I think I would have gone overboard kicking and screaming, not volunteered. The friends who lowered their paralyzed mate into the house after breaking through the roof so that Jesus could heal him, who paid for the house repairs?
The Father in the story of the Prodigal Son, who shamed himself in the eyes of the community to forgive and welcome back his pain in the neck kid; this Dad certainly put himself out on a limb. It may have been a lot easier just to tell the boy to sling his hook to stay away. It happens. However that was a depiction of God and the way he responds to his wayward children all of us.
Different; are you doing things differently, are you different to the rest of society, or are you compliant, not wanting to make waves? Where does being different for the sake of God’s kingdom start?
If you are here today and are a Christian, and when I use the word Christian; I don’t mean that you were brought up in a Christian society, so you get the general idea about what Christianity is. Christian because a grandparent was pushy enough with your parents so that you got done as a baby, yip got done, christened or dedicated so that if anything horrible happened you would get to heaven in a state of grace. Or that you generally believe that Jesus was a good man, so in that case I’m definitely Christian. There’s probably a whole lot of examples of what a Christian is, there’s even some, soldiers, church members who believe that that signing a bit of paper and becoming a member or a soldier is the golden ticket to heaven just as those who centuries ago believed that paying for a church indulgence would get them straight to heaven. I’m not sure it works that way.
1) Christians are called to be different, to seek God’s will for their lives to repent of the ways they have missed the mark for a start and what that means is to take charge of their lives and with the Spirit of God living in them, with them - change. But there are some who encounter God and after the initial Holy Spirit encounter that takes them a few hundred metres up the road to glory they somehow faze out and end up back on the road that is filled with potholes and burdens, the same old road that they were travelling is a battle, life is a struggle, if not Hell on earth. If you want a really good depiction of this; check out the parable of the sower and the parable of the weeds in Matthew’s gospel chapter 13. For all of us there’s a choice to be made, an internal choice to be transformed to be different to what we have been. Last week we heard about the people leaving camp and stepping in the river and on into the Promised Land, as Christians we leave the old behind and enter into a new life, Jesus said we must be born again. (John 3:3).
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