April 18, 2025
Series: Good Friday, Rite of Nails and Cross, Triduum
Speaker: Pastor James Enderle
On Good Friday we remember the crucifixion and death of our Lord both with sorrow and solemn joy. Though the events of this day fill us with horror, the implications of those events give us every reason for praise. Jesus’ death had this breathtaking significance. Once and for all, it paid for the guild of all of us and for all of time. Standing in our place, our substitute was forsaken by his Father on the cross so that we could be reconciled to God and have an eternal home in heaven.
We look at Jesus on the cross, and there is sorrow. He is there because of us. He is there because he loves us that much, so much he gave us his last breath. Jesus took all our guilt into the tomb with him. It will stay there. He will not. That is why we can call this Friday good.
This year we will use a visual to help us contemplate the love of Jesus on the cross. All who wish to do so will be invited to come forward and place a nail in the cross on the main floor of church. The nail has a red ribbon attached to remind us that it was our sins that caused Jesus to shed his blood. This truth pains us. This truth causes us joy because Jesus’ life and death is the sacrifice that paid for the guilt of our sins and the sins of the whole world.
April 17, 2025
Series: Dead and Buried, Maundy Thursday, Triduum
Speaker: Pastor James Enderle
On Thursday of Holy Week, Jesus began to execute the terms of the New Covenant. This New Covenant replaced an old one and was fundamentally different from in it every way. While the Old Covenant was more like a contract, the New Covenant is more like a will. The old offers rewards in return for work; the new makes unconditional and lasting promises. The old will always leave us starving in our relationship with God; the new satisfies the deepest hunger of our soul.
This is precisely why Jesus connected this new covenant with a special meal. To an uninformed outsider, the Lord’s Supper looks like a poor snack—a bite of bread and sip of wine. But the followers of Christ understand that this holy food provides all the blessings of the new covenant.
April 13, 2025
Series: Confirmation, Dead and Buried, Palm Sunday
Speaker: Confirmation Class, Pastor James Enderle
Topic: Arrive, Buried, Confirmation, Cross, Daily, Dead, Exalted, Focused, forgiveness, Go, Here, hope, Humble, Identity, Jesus, Love, Other, Peace, Perfect, Prideful, Purpose, Redeem, Relationships, Seizure, Self-Centered, Servant, Serving, sin, Sin-Bearer, Sky, Struggle, Substitute, Surrender, Truth, Why
As we begin Holy Week, we see Jesus bury humanity’s endless attempts at seizing power. In our world, power dynamics are almost always in play. Those who don’t have power want it, often more than anything else. Those who have power are willing to do anything to keep it. In contrast, Jesus–who possesses all power as the Son of God–willingly surrendered His power and placed Himself in the hands of His enemies. Why? What He wanted more than anything else was not power, but you.
So, Jesus begins this Holy Week riding into Jerusalem on a donkey colt, knowing full well that He was riding to the cross. He would surrender Himself to the punishment that our sins deserved, so that through Spirit-wrought faith we might seize the glory and heaven that only He deserves.
April 13, 2025
Series: Dead and Buried, Palm Sunday
Speaker: Pastor James Enderle
As we begin Holy Week, we see Jesus bury humanity’s endless attempts at seizing power. In our world, power dynamics are almost always in play. Those who don’t have power want it, often more than anything else. Those who have power are willing to do anything to keep it. In contrast, Jesus–who possesses all power as the Son of God–willingly surrendered His power and placed Himself in the hands of His enemies. Why? What He wanted more than anything else was not power, but you.
So, Jesus begins this Holy Week riding into Jerusalem on a donkey colt, knowing full well that He was riding to the cross. He would surrender Himself to the punishment that our sins deserved, so that through Spirit-wrought faith we might seize the glory and heaven that only He deserves.
April 9, 2025
Series: Lenten Midweek, Lord, Have Mercy
Speaker: Pastor James Enderle
Topic: 10th Commandment, 7th Commandment, 8th Commandment, 9th Commandment, Action, Cathecism, Commands, Contentment, Convict, Covet, Desires, Failing, False, God, Heart, Honest, Identity, Integrity, Jesus, Live, Lord, Love, Luther, mercy, Neighbor, People, Pride, Secret, sin, Steal, Tangible, Testimony, Trust, Values
We use the word “integrity” to refer to something being in good condition. So, when we talk about the structural integrity of a building or of a ship’s hull, we mean those things are “sound” and “whole.” We use “integrity” in reference to people, too. Generally, if we speak of someone having integrity, we mean that there’s a wholeness to their character. Their morals are sound. If someone lives with integrity, it is not simply that they talk and behave decently. We would say the reason their behavior is proper is because their values and desires are proper.
The first six Commandments deal with our relationships with others: God and our fellow man. The final four Commandments get at the question of personal integrity. When someone steals, lies, or covets, it is a clear indication that their values and desires are highly improper. Such a person lacks honesty, empathy, and contentment. They say and do bad things because they are bad, not “sound and whole.” It is harsh, yet unfailingly true. Thus, when we break one of these Commandments, it is pointless to make excuses. Let us simply cry out, “Lord, have mercy, for failing to live with integrity!” And let us trust the Christ, who died so that we might be made “sound and whole.”
April 6, 2025
Series: Lent, Open Door Policies
Speaker: Pastor James Enderle
This week we see how our Father makes the treasures of his house available to any and all. He places them in the last place we’d expect—the trash. In God’s family, the things the world prizes and pursues are counted as worthless. Conversely, what the world rejects and discards is considered priceless and worth pursuing.
The best example of this is Jesus Christ himself. The Father sent his greatest treasure—God the Son—to earth. And many considered Jesus to be a trash that needed to be taken out. . . a troublemaker that needed to be killed. In truth, Christ is the precious cornerstone that God used to build his house, the one with the open door.
April 6, 2025
Series: Lent, Open Door Policies
Speaker: Pastor James Enderle
Topic: Christ, Crowd, Door, Faith, Finish Line, Follow, forgiveness, Fuel, Grace, Hiding, hope, Identity, Jesus, Love, mercy, Movement, Open, Passion, Peace, Policies, power, Race, Resurrection, Right, Run, Salvation, sin, Strive, Struggle, Stuff, Suffering, Thankful, Trash, Treasure, Value, Wrong, Zeal, Zealous
This week we see how our Father makes the treasures of his house available to any and all. He places them in the last place we’d expect—the trash. In God’s family, the things the world prizes and pursues are counted as worthless. Conversely, what the world rejects and discards is considered priceless and worth pursuing.
The best example of this is Jesus Christ himself. The Father sent his greatest treasure—God the Son—to earth. And many considered Jesus to be a trash that needed to be taken out. . . a troublemaker that needed to be killed. In truth, Christ is the precious cornerstone that God used to build his house, the one with the open door.
April 2, 2025
Series: Lenten Midweek, Lord, Have Mercy
Speaker: Pastor David Ruddat
Topic: Adultery, Authority, Commandments, Delight, Father, Fifth Commandment, Fourth Commandment, God, Hate, Holy Spirit, Honor, Jesus, Love, mercy, Murder, Neighbor, Others, People, Protect, Relationships, Respect, sin, Sixth Commandment, Son, Trash, Treasure, Treating, Triune, Unselfish
“Let us make mankind in our image” (Gensis 1:26). God’s intent was that being made in his image, mankind would not only live in close communion with him, but that we would reflect God’s love and care in our dealings with each other. The Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Commandments are all about different aspects of healthy human relationships: respect and obedience for those God places in a position of authority; valuing and defending the life and well-being of others; expressing relational bonds, particularly marriage, in appropriate ways. God wants us to treasure our fellow man. Yet, in virtually every type of relationship that can exist—parent and child, husband and wife, employer and employee, neighbor and neighbor—we invent new ways to hurt one other.
Breaking these Commandments shows how we feel about our fellow man. More, that disobedience speaks volumes about how we really feel about our God. Jesus said, “Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me. . . Whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not due for me” (Matthew 25:40,45). This week we see that Jesus is the only one who lives up to God’s expectations of how we should treat each other. So, in Lenten faith, we cry out to him, “Lord, have mercy for treating others like trash, not treasure!”
March 30, 2025
Series: Lent, Open Door Policies, Sundays in Lent
Speaker: Pastor James Enderle
We assume people get what they deserve. We assume that what goes around comes around. We assume God helps those who help themselves. Those assumptions are false. God does not operate on the principle of merit but of grace. No one is beyond the reach of God’s grace. God never turns it off. At the entrance of God’s open door is not a Father looking to condemn us, but a Father who has eagerly longed for our return. When we do, he takes us in his loving arms and assures us we are still his child. When the weight of our sin makes us fearful of God’s condemnation, he reveals his grace yet again.