Would you donate to us today?

×

Every week we want to bring to your attention expository, Gospel-centred sermons from pastors across Canada. We hope that you become familiar with some of the faithful ministers of the word in our nation. We also hope that you will be edified on your daily commute or whenever you listen to these messages. We lastly hope that you learn about the churches where these pastors minister, so that you can easily find Gospel-centered, expository churches in your region.

Gavin Peacock on Revelation 22:6-32 (Calgary)

At Christmas we celebrate Christ’s first advent. But sinful and suffering Christians must have their hopes set on his second advent, where all of history find its focal point in the person of Jesus. There will be a great divide, but for the church the end is just the beginning.

Here are the sermon’s main points of “I AM Coming Soon”:

1. Jesus is Coming: Worship God

2. Jesus is Coming: Be Sensitive to Sin

3. Jesus is Coming: Long For Him 

Here is sermon link

Paul Martin on Luke 19:1–10 (Toronto)

Paul Martin preached from Luke 19:1-10 on Sunday. The primary mission of Jesus was to save His people. We get to see an example of that in his interaction with Zacchaeus, a lost man who needed to be found. This lost man was found and you can be, too.

Here is the sermon.

Dan Thomson on Psalm 22 (Charlottetown)

An uninformed reader of Psalm 22 might suspect that David is knowingly describing a crucifixion. That’s logical from our 21st century perspective. However, that can’t be the case. This method of punishment was not widely used until the sixth century B.C. or later, long after any plausible date for the writing of Psalm 22.  This has to be a supernatural knowledge of the future — real prophecy, in other words. We see this in the Gospels and more specifically in John 19.

Watch the video here.

Rob Godard on Matthew 10:34-36 (Surrey)   

When Pope Julius I authorized December 25 to be celebrated as the birthday of Jesus in A.D. 353, who would have ever thought that it would become what it is today… 

When Professor Charles Follen lit candles on the first Christmas tree in America in 1832, who would have ever thought that the decorations would become as elaborate as they are today…

It is a long time since 1832, longer still from 353, longer still from that dark night brightened by a special star in which Jesus the king was born. Yet, as we approach December 25 again, it gives us yet another opportunity to pause, and in the midst of all the excitement and elaborate decorations and expensive commercialization which surround Christmas today, to consider again the event of Christmas and the person whose birth we celebrate and  the change that this event can make in our lives…Why did He come?

This Christmas season as we seek to focus on Christmas, it is our desire to answer the question, Why did Jesus come?

The audio and video can be found here.

*** Descriptions are provided by churches in which the sermons were preached.

LOAD MORE
Loading