August 25, 2024
Speaker: Pastor James Enderle
Topic: Accepting, Bread, Difficulty, Eating, Eternal Life, Faith, Food, forgiveness, Hard, hope, Jesus, Life, Listening, Offensive, Peace, Spiritually, Swallowing, Teachings
As Jesus concluded his Bread of Life discourse, many said, “This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it?” and walked away. Read carefully. They did not say the teaching was hard to understand. The meaning was clear enough. Jesus was teaching that the only chance to enjoy eternity in heaven is through a close connection to him. He is the only bread that gives eternal life. That isn’t hard to understand, but it is hard to accept. Eating this bread means reordering our lives so that Jesus is by far our highest priority. It means loving the Blesser infinitely more than his earthly blessings. It means realizing that Jesus is the only thing we really need. If we had nothing but him, we would not lack anything that ultimately matters.
Jesus watches the multitudes walking away from him. He turns to the Twelve—he turns to us this week—and he whispers, “You do not want to leave me too, do you?” May the Spirit give us the wisdom to answer, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.”
July 7, 2024
Speaker: Pastor James Enderle
Topic: Amazed, compassion, Everyone, Feel, forgiveness, Glee, Gospel, Gratitude, Love, Ministry, Offended, Offense, Offensive, Ordinary, Pride, Rejection, Repent, Repentance, Resentment
If ministry involves serving others with love and compassion, you would think that people would respond only with glee and gratitude for the help they received. Sometimes, but not always. If you offer to help a family member who is having trouble paying his bills, he might be offended, wondering if you are implying that he is not a good provider. Likewise, if you try and share the gospel with someone, he might resent the message that he is a sinner in need of salvation. You are trying to minister to this man’s greatest need. Your intentions are loving. Yet he responds with rejection and resentment.
When our ministry efforts are met not with glee and gratitude but rejection and resentment, we are in good company. The prophets, apostles, and even Jesus himself all had those who responded negatively to their ministries. When that happens to us, it doesn’t mean our ministry is no longer meaningful. For if others do not appreciate our efforts to serve them, God still appreciates our efforts to serve him.
March 8, 2023
Series: "Acceptable Sins", Lenten Midweek
Welcome to worship today at Morrison Zion Lutheran Church. We exist to glorify God. We… read more