Body

Sermons

  • Unrelenting Faith

     

    Neil Rhodes

    The last spoken words of Jesus on the cross were, "Into thy hands I commit my spirit." Jesus never stopped obeying the Father even on the cross—he lived in perfect submission to his last breath. In total faith he gave his life into the hands of God. Through the cross Jesus brought man back into full fellowship with the Father, so we can return to the place of faith and confidence in God. We can go anywhere in the world for God, knowing he will keep us, provide for us, and supply all we will ever need to accomplish his will in the earth.

  • It Is Finished!

     

    Neil Rhodes

    "It is finished!" Jesus cried triumphantly from the cross. He was proclaiming to his father that everything that was required to complete the new covenant was accomplished. Jesus, through his unblemished life and total obedience to the father, completed all the requirements given to him, and so declared his part finished. The father would demonstrate that he accepted Christ's sacrifice for all sin by raising him from the dead. God fully accepted his son's sacrifice and established the covenant for all eternity.

  • Dispelling Lies and Discovering the God of Love

     

    Gary Wilkerson

    Eve got it exactly right when she said she was deceived and then she sinned. So many for so long have focused on the sin, or the fruit, rather than the root, which is a deception that comes from Satan. We have been misled to believe that God has separated himself from us, is angry and distant. God loves you and desires fellowship with you. He sent his Son to die so that he could spend eternity with you. God is nicer than you think.

  • The Eternal Word

     

    Neil Rhodes

    In great pain and agony hanging on the cross, Jesus cried out his fifth statement, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" Many have interpreted this statement as Jesus receiving the sin of mankind on himself, and therefore God could not look upon his son. However, did God really forsake his son, or was Jesus pointing us to Psalm 22 as being the fulfillment of this psalm? At this time the psalms did not have numbers, so Jesus was quoting the first verse of this particular psalm in order to point out that his death was not a haphazard decision but a fulfillment of the Word of God. The Bible establishes Christ as the supreme sacrifice for sin; he was found without sin, and therefore, the right to become the sacrifice for the sin of the world. Jesus took on the penalty of death for the sins of the world.

  • The Thirst of God

     

    Neil Rhodes

    Jesus, after being brutally beaten and finally nailed to the cross, cries out, "I thirst!" In his state of dehydration the Roman soldier responded by giving him a sponge of vinegar and gall. If all the statements Jesus made on the cross are covenantal, then Jesus must also be pointing us to something deeper. In his Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said, "Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled." On the cross Jesus was pointing us to his ardent desire to establish true righteousness once again, and then declare those who believed in him as righteous.

  • Born of the Spirit

     

    Neil Rhodes

    Looking down at his mother, Jesus says, "Woman, behold thy son! Behold thy mother!" Naturally, we know that John took Mary in to his household and took care of her the rest of her life. However, if we are looking at all the statements as covenantal then is there something deeper Jesus wanted to communicate to us. We have to look back at the first promise God made regarding the Messiah. God told Eve that Satan's defeat would come from her seed, referring to Jesus. Mary was the end of a long line of woman that God used to bring forth this seed. Therefore, Mary, at the end of the line of promise, brought forth the Messiah, and from the Messiah would come new birth for all who believed in Jesus. This statement is symbolic of what God does for those who believe: we are born in the spirit.

  • Uninterrupted Fellowship with God

     

    Neil Rhodes

    Once the original sin had been forgiven, there was nothing to stand in the way of man being reconciled back to God. Only the sacrifice of Jesus could accomplish this. As he hung between two thieves on the cross, one reviles him and the other asks that Jesus remember him in paradise. Jesus, then turns to the thief and makes his second statement, "Verily, I say unto thee, Today, thou shalt be with me in paradise." Once the law of God was satisfied by the righteous Christ, the mercy of God could then be given, and we are seated with Christ in heavenly places.

  • The Inner Groanings Of Jesus

    Carter Conlon

    Can you believe that Jesus can do something in your life outside of the realm of impossibilities? Don’t stand in the doorway of unbelief with the promises of God buried in the grave. There is a groaning in the heart of God for you to simply come into agreement with His plan for your life.

  • Believing You're Clean Will Totally Change Your Behavior

     

    Gary Wilkerson

    Many of us probably have a room in our house where we keep all our junk—an office, the garage, etc. Since we already see that room as dirty, we let it continue being dirty and even add more junk to it. A lot of us, if we are are honest, think we are dirty. It's easier to believe we are unclean, than it is to believe we are righteous. We aren't partially righteous in Jesus and then we complete it through our own righteousness. We are fully righteous through our faith in Christ's finished work on the cross. When you truly see how clean you are in Christ, you won't so easily add sin to your life. Don't call unclean what Jesus calls clean.