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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.

Peter Mahaffey on Ephesians 2:10 (Toronto)

Peter Mahaffey preached on Ephesians 2:10. God has saved us and brought us from death to life, and made us into a new creation so that we would be a people who seek to live a life of good works.

Here is the link.

Paul Toews on “Living to Please” from 2 Corinthians 5:6–10 (Calgary)

One day we will die and we will see the Lord. The way we live now has direct bearing on our enjoyment of that day.

Here is the link.

Rob Godard on “The Danger Of Compromise: An Empty Victory” from Judges 10-11 (Surrey)

Judges is getting more and more sad in the apparent depravity of Israel becoming like the world around it. This is perhaps a great reminder for us, in our culture, of the danger of the church becoming like the world. To fight this we, as God’s people, must become Gospel oriented, and saturated with the Word. The only way to know the true God of the Bible is through His self-revelation, illuminated by the Spirit of God. The only way to know what He wants is through His Word.

This important message and the entire series on the “Danger of Compromise” can be found here.

George Sinclair on John 12:1-19 (Ottawa)

If I become a Christian will Jesus make me do weird things? Will I become more and more weird as Jesus becomes more completely Lord and Saviour of my life? Isn’t there a story in the Bible about someone pouring really fragrant ointment on Jesus’ feet and then wiping her hair on His feet and in the ointment? Don’t you think that’s a bit weird? Let’s look at the story and find out how the person and work of Jesus shapes us. Let’s read John 12:1-19 together. (By the way, if you are interested on how the stories in the four Gospels fit together, see here).
Here’s the link to George’s sermon

Dan Thomson on 2 Samuel 1:17-27 (Charlottetown)

So why did David lament? This wasn’t a corporate time of mourning by Israel as a people. This was David, the target of Saul’s spear, whom he loathed and plotted against and drove into enemy territory!  This is David lamenting the death of his greatest enemy. However, David can relate on one level to Saul. He understands what it means to be God’s anointed. David recognizes that Saul was God’s anointed, even with all his inadequacies. This was a God given compassion.

David knows that Saul’s legacy will be failure and defeat due to God’s judgement over him. Dying at the end of the total collapse of his reign as King, being remembered only for the failures, not the successes. He died with no nobility. No valor. No honour. This is a reputation that David wants avoided at all costs for the sake of God’s glory.

Also, Jonathan’s love for David had everything to do with David’s Kingship. In the same way we should put God ahead of our earthly relationships – including our own marriages – David and Jonathan are enamoured by God and His rule and reign in their lives, which superseded even the desires for intimacy.

As Christians, our trajectory is God given eternity, not self satisfying humanity. David’s perspective was always the big picture, and he wanted Israel to remember that.

Here is the message.

Bradley Morrice on Luke 16 : 19 – 31 (Montreal)

Aujourd’hui, nous abordons un sujet très délicat, soit le jugement dernier. Avec une parabole, Jésus veut nous raconterunehistoire tout en nous enseignantune leçon. Nous allons regarder ensemble trois points quientourecejugement : premièrement l’avertissementavant le jugement, ensuite l’attitude après le jugement, et finalement la raison pour le jugement.

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Today we are dealing with a very delicate subject, the last judgment. With a parable, Jesus wants to tell us a story while teaching us a lesson. We will look together at three points that surround this judgment: first, the warning before the judgment, then the attitude after the judgment, and finally the reason for the judgment.

Here is the sermon.

 

 

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

 

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