These are the Sunday morning sermons from Reality Santa Barbara. Reality is a family of churches that desire to love Christ and fruitfully engage in His mission for His glory. Visit jesusisreality.com and/or realitysb.com.
The whole world celebrates holidays surrounding the incarnation (Christmas), death (Good Friday), and resurrection (Easter) of Jesus Christ, but very little attention is given to Jesus’ ascension, even in the Church. But the ascension is kind of a big deal.
Hebrew Scripture prophecies it. The New Testament’s most quoted Old Testament verse is about Jesus’ ascension. Peter’s Pentecost sermon cites the ascension as proof of Jesus as Israel’s exalted messianic king. When we say “Jesus is Lord”, or “Jesus is King” we mean, Jesus has ascended!
But why does the ascension matter to you, right here and right now as a 21st century follower of Jesus? Let’s talk about that.
The Great Commission has catalyzed tens of millions of Jesus followers to share their faith over the centuries. Christians have been compelled to share the good news of Jesus to family members, friends, and coworkers, to people in their communities and beyond, to other cities, states, nations, and continents.
Countless vulnerable, exploited and abused children have been rescued, millions of hungry have been fed, desperately poor communities have been given resources, water wells have been dug, and education has been provided all in the name of Jesus and His command to “go”.
Still, some Christians feel guilt around the idea of “going” (or not going, as it were). Others question some of the unintentional negative consequences of well-meaning Christians whose efforts caused complications or even harm to people in other parts of the world. What’s did Jesus mean when He told His disciples to “go”? What do these words mean to us in 21st century Santa Barbara, California? Let’s talk about the good news of the Great Commission.
Followers of Jesus have an easy time believing God loves the whole world,
but we sometimes struggle to believe that God really does love us.
In this prophecy from Isaiah, God expresses a love so supreme He invokes the strongest
relational metaphor—that of relationship between a mother and her nursing infant—
a love so supreme it transcends a mother’s love.
As we close in on the last couple of days before Jesus’ death,
there is little neutral ground in the hearts of humankind. In light of Jesus’ love, tender hearts can’t hold back their lavish worship, and hard hearts grow harder still.
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