Sermons

Summary: God’s Word is wonderful to appreciate, vital to absorb, and powerful to apply—it shapes our steps, anchors our souls, and reveals God’s heart.

Part 1 — Appreciate Your Bible

Most of us first met the Bible through a song long before we could spell “theology.”

> “The B-I-B-L-E, yes that’s the book for me;

I stand alone on the Word of God—the B-I-B-L-E.

That little chorus carried a big truth: when all other voices clash, there’s one voice that still speaks clear and true.

We sang it with childish boldness, but somewhere along the line we forgot how daring that declaration really was—I stand alone on the Word of God.

It isn’t just a children’s song. It’s a believer’s creed.

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A Familiar Book—Yet Still Unfamiliar

The Bible has been the best-selling book in the world for centuries, and yet it may be the least read in the house. It sits on nightstands beside cell phones and remote controls. It’s quoted in movies, stitched on throw pillows, and scrolled on social media.

But the question remains—has it gotten off the shelf and into the soul?

If you were raised in a home of faith, you may remember the sound of thin pages turning, the smell of an old leather cover, or a parent’s voice reading a psalm at bedtime. Maybe you didn’t come from that kind of home, but somewhere along the journey someone handed you a Bible—a teacher, a friend, a stranger on a street corner—and you knew instinctively: this isn’t an ordinary book.

Even people who don’t believe it’s divine instinctively treat it with reverence.

Something about it feels otherworldly. That’s because it is.

Psalm 119:129 says,

> “Thy testimonies are wonderful; therefore doth my soul keep them.”

The word wonderful means beyond comparison, extraordinary. The psalmist is saying, “God, what You’ve said is in a category all by itself.”

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A Book Unlike Any Other

There are beautiful books, influential books, and ancient books—but there is only one book that reads you while you read it.

When you open a cookbook, it tells you how to bake bread.

When you open a science text, it tells you how the world works.

When you open the Bible, it tells you how to live—and more than that, it gives you the power to do it.

That’s because it’s God-breathed.

Paul writes in 2 Timothy 3:16,

> “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God.”

That word “inspiration” means God-breathed. The same breath that formed Adam and filled his lungs is the breath that fills these pages.

When you read Scripture, you are inhaling the breath of God.

Peter confirms it:

> “Holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy Spirit” (2 Peter 1:21).

The Bible was written through people, not apart from them. God didn’t erase their vocabulary or personality. He used their pens, but the message came from His heart.

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The Crisis of Confidence

Every believer eventually faces a moment when faith in the Bible is tested.

It might come from a skeptical professor, a headline, or a conversation with someone who says, “You don’t really believe all that, do you?”

Maybe it’s subtler—the quiet voice of doubt whispering, Can a book this old really speak to a world this modern?

In those moments, you decide what kind of foundation you’ll build your life on.

Will it rest on shifting opinions—or on the steady Word that has outlasted them all?

I remember talking with a young man who told me, “I can’t trust anything that’s been copied and translated so many times.” I asked him, “Do you believe in the law of gravity?” He laughed. “Of course.” I said, “Then you already trust an invisible principle described by people you’ve never met and confirmed every time you drop your phone.”

Truth doesn’t weaken with age—it deepens with testing. The Bible has faced more scrutiny than any document in history, and still stands unbroken.

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Every Word Matters

When Jesus faced temptation in the wilderness, He answered Satan not with reasoned debate but with written truth. Three times He said, “It is written.”

Then He added,

> “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God” (Matthew 4:4).

He didn’t say some of the words or most of the words—He said every word.

Later, in Matthew 5:18, Jesus took it further:

> “Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled.”

A jot was the smallest letter in Hebrew; a tittle was a tiny stroke distinguishing one letter from another. Jesus was saying, “Not even the smallest mark is accidental.”

Every word, every detail, carries purpose.

When God says light, He means light. When He says grace, He means grace. When He says finished, He means forever.

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Tried but Not Defeated

Across history, people have tried to silence this Book.

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