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Sermon Illustrations for Trinity Sunday (2018)

Illustration
Psalm 29
This is a lesson to highlight the glory of God; such glory is associated with the mystery of the Trinity. Modern Reformed theologian Karl Barth well describes this glory:
In view of what has been said so far, this ‘in the highest’ means quite simply that he is the one who stands above us and also above our highest and deepest feelings, strivings, intuitions, above the products, even the most sublime, of the human spirit. (Dogmatics in Outline, p.37)
Great Puritan leader Jonathan Edwards extols God’s majesty this way:
But God is a being infinitely lovely, because he hath infinite excellency and beauty, is the same thing as to have infinite loveliness. He is a being of infinite greatness, majesty, and glory; and therefore he is infinitely honorable. (Works, Vol.1., p.669)
God’s reign over the waters in this Psalm (v.3) is reminiscent of how some ancient theologians used water as a way of describing God’s oneness and still his diversity. We can compare him to water in three forms -- the father as the source of a river, the son as the river itself, and the Spirit as the cup of water drawn from the river (see Athanasius, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, Vol.4, p.84).
Mark E.


Isaiah 6:1-8
Isaiah is called as a prophet of God and has a vision of the throne of God. Isaiah, like most of us, does not believe that he can follow through to the call of God. He is only a man, after all. Only a sinner, not really ready or capable of being God’s prophet. Yet, the seraphim, who have been singing and praising God, bring a coal from the altar and touch it to Isaiah’s lips. Isaiah is purified. When God calls, Isaiah responds with hope and courage, "Here am I; send me!"

Do you feel unworthy to answer the call of God on your life? Be in prayer my friend. Have no fear. Respond to God. God takes the broken and mends. God takes the lost and finds. God takes us, each as we are, and uses us. Be willing to respond, "Here am I; send me!"
Bonnie B.


Isaiah 6:1-8
Encountering God led Isaiah to confess his sin (v.5). John Calvin nicely explains how encounters with God make us know our sin:
Accordingly, until God reveals himself to us, we do not think that we are men, or rather we think that we are gods; but when we have seen God, we then begin to feel and know that we are. Hence springs true humility, which consists in this, that a man makes no claims for himself and depends wholly on God... (Calvin’s Commentaries, Vol.VII/1, p.208)
Martin Luther notes that Isaiah’s mouth was then cleansed with a burning coal (vv.6-7). In his view:
The glowing coal is the word kindled by the Holy Spirit in love... To touch the mouth is to strike the heart with the Gospel, which is sweet to the bitter heart. Then the heart is a fit vessel for honor, because it will... be His instrument for teaching others... (Luther’s Works, Vol.16, p.77)
This quote makes clear that the mission to which Isaiah and we are called must come about through God’s work and grace. On that matter Luther adds:
Of good works I have said and still say: No one can be good and do good unless God’s grace first makes him good... Just so the fruits do not make the true, but the tree bears the fruit. (What Luther Says, p.614)
Mark E.


Romans 8:12-17
While there is value to knowing the original Biblical languages when doing Bible study, let us not lose sight of the fact that if you read the gospels in an English translation you are still reading the scriptures. That’s because, when it comes to the New Testament, the original authors already wrote in a language different from the one Jesus spoke. What you are reading is a translation from the Greek, the world langauge of the Roman Empire in that time. The evangelists translated the original words of Jesus, probably first spoken in Aramaic, a regional language. At that time Greek was everyone’s second language. It was necessary to know it to engage in commerce.

However, every now and then an Aramaic word sneaks though, like in this passage. “Abba” is related to the word “ab,” “father,” but it really represents the sound a child would make not unlike daddy, or da da.
Frank R.


Romans 8:12-17
I saw it first on my social media feed. I later found that USA Today had written about it, too. It's a moment of pure joy committed to film. A young girl realizes she will be adopted. Her foster family will become her permanent one. Security footage from at American Heritage School in South Jordan, Utah, captures the moment when 11-year-old Tannah Butterfield learned from Jackie Alexander, her school's office manager, that courts had approved her adoption. Alexander had received a call a few moments earlier from Tannah's mother about the news.

"Her mom knew she would want to know right away because she had been so worried," Alexander wrote. "I don't think even I could understand myself what that moment would feel like."

What is shown on the camera is heartwarming. Tannah flings herself into Alexander's arms, kicking her legs in excitement as she's carried across the room.

Alexander said Tannah's parents had fought to adopt her "for as long as I can remember," and Tannah told CBS News she dreamed of the moment for years

"They are just caring, loving, they take really good care of me," she said. "My heart was so happy, it was like, 'Ahhh!' It was screaming."

There is such joy in an 11-year-old girl finding a permanent family. She belongs and that feeling overwhelmed her. I thought about that video and report again as I read this passage in Romans. Followers of Jesus do not have the spirit of fear. We have the spirit of adoption. Those who are led by the spirit of God are children of God. We’ve been adopted into his family. We are not just workers. We are children of the King! The phrase “Abba! Father!” speaks of an intimate expression a child would say to his or her father. It’s like saying “Daddy.” Do you remember the joy you felt when you recognized God’s love for you and that you were a part of his family?
Bill T.


Romans 8:12-17
Presbyterian minister Reverend Benjamin Weir, in his book Hostage Bound, Hostage Free, reveals what it was like to be held hostage. He was captured on the streets of Beirut by a group of Shiite Muslim extremists, in May, 1984. Weir was imprisoned for sixteen months. During those torturous months he was often chained and held in solitary confinement. Weir’s devout faith and trust in God sustained him during those perilous times. One routine in particular sustained Weir’s reliance on Jesus. Weir realized that if he dared to stand on the toilet, always in fear of being caught, he could look out the window. Doing so, he could see beyond the Bekaa Valley to the Lebanon Mountains. The snow-covered mountains and rays of early morning sunlight strengthened his faith. Weir confessed, “That sight, and the memory of it throughout the day, spoke to me of the grandeur of the Creator and his good intensions for the world and its people. This gave me hope and a sense of harmony.”

Application: Many things in life hold us hostage, whether it is an addiction to drugs, alcohol, tobacco, money, sex, television, workaholic or a hobby out-of-control. In our daily living we feel ourselves in bondage to pain, health problems, grief, difficult decisions, unruly neighbors, inconsiderate coworkers, and an uncompromising boss. For all these problems and others, each robbing life of its joy and satisfaction, we call upon the name of Jesus for help. We should seek liberation by living with the Holy Spirit. Then we can say with confidence, “Abba! Father!”
Ron L.


John 3:1-17
For sermons on the theme of being born again, John Wesley offers a striking observation on what it takes for someone to be entitled to the blessing’s of the Messiah’s kingdom:
An entire change of heart as well as of life is necessary for that purpose. This can only be accomplished in man by the almighty power of God. (Commentary On the Bible, p.457)
In the same spirit John Calvin also stressed that an entire change must transpire:
By the phrase born again is expressed not the correction of one part, but the renovation of the whole nature. Hence it follows, that there is nothing in us that is not sinful; for if reformation is necessary in the whole and in each part, corruption must have been spread throughout. (Calvin’s Commentaries, Vol.XVII/2, p.108)
Martin Luther sees the lesson as having implications for the Trinity doctrine, should this be a sermon direction:

Christ wants to prevent us from thinking of him as separate from the Father. Therefore, he again directs our mind from himself to the Father and says that the Father’s love for us is just as strong and profound as his own... (Luther’s Works, Vol.22, p.355)
For images to illustrate the Trinity, see the image drawn from Athanasius above in the exposition of  Psalm 29 or the following parts of a hymn attributed to early African theologian Marius Victorinus:
Source,
River,
Overflow,
O Blessed Trinity...

Existence,
Life,
Knowledge,
O Blessed Trinity...

Seed,
Tree,
Fruit,
O Blessed Trinity...

Free us,
Save us,
Justify us,
O Blessed Trinity
(The Fathers of the Church, Vol.69, pp.324ff.)
Mark E.


John 3:1-17
There are so many passages in the Bible that should not be taken literally or you will miss the point. The earth was not created in seven 24 hour days. Bread and wine are not literal, but symbolize Jesus body and blood. Baptism is not just water, but water and the Spirit. We should not kill our enemy -- we should love them. The Bible is full of examples that can’t be taken literally. Nicodemus was taking Jesus words about being born again literally. Some denominations take many statements literally, like the creation story or like looking. Nicodemus was normal in that sense.

Sometimes there are some unbelievable statements that must be taken literally. Even the disciples had trouble with Jesus statement that he would rise from the dead -- literally! We need the Holy Spirit to guide us as we read. Even in our church there are individual differences. Just one example you may not want to use is the strong statements in both Old and New Testaments against homosexuality! It has divided our church!

The most important sentence that must be taken literally in this text is verses 16 and 17. This is God’s promise for us.

Our lesson is rare in that it tells of one Pharisee who believed in Jesus. He saw literal miracles performed by Jesus. Some today believe that healing miracles can still happen as Jesus promised and believe because they saw it happen, but others doubt it. We should not need a miracle in order to believe God’s word for us but we also need to be born again. We usually think of this as our baptism in water and that is important. Maybe Jesus was thinking of John’s baptism which the Pharisees rejected because it hurt their pride. Maybe Nicodemus rejected it when he first heard it also. It sounds like Nicodemus had come to believe in Jesus because he stayed to witness and didn’t just run off.

You wouldn’t be in church if you didn’t believe it. But in every church I have served there was always at least one who shared his doubts with me. It was my job to change his or her doubts and sometimes I could only do it through prayer.

A dear friend of my wife and I was in in depression when she lost her faith because of some problems in her life. When I gave her a booklet with some scripture in it, she read it over and over again until she began to believe. “That and prayer were the answer!
Bob O.


John 3:1-17
Be born again! What does it truly mean? How does it come to be? These are questions Nicodemus asked? There are things we do not understand, us humans. We do not know how being born of God works. There are those who believe that one single moment of choosing to follow Jesus and the resulting power of the Holy Spirit they feel is the moment when they are born again. They remember the occasion, the date and the time. For others of us that born-again moment is harder to identify. Is it when we were baptized or confirmed. Is it when we felt God stirring in our hearts the first time. Is it a specific moment or a time of spiritual growing and developing?

My friends, it does not matter how you encounter the life you have been given by God in a faith-filled and faithful way. What matters is that you seek to align your life with God, with God’s love and grace and hope. What matters is you accept that you are a beloved child of God and that in thanksgiving for that giftedness you live a life of righteous love of God and neighbor. This is the born-again moment that Jesus speak to Nicodemus about.
Bonnie B.
UPCOMING WEEKS
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Plus thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...

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John Jamison
Object: A large paper bag with candy or stickers inside, depending on what you are comfortable giving your children.

Note: When the child reaches into the bag, quickly squeeze or shake the bag and make a noise to surprise them. The goal is just to surprise them, not scare them. Have fun with this!

* * *
John Jamison
Object: A small candle and a bright flashlight. If you have a really bright flashlight, just shine it in the children’s direction, and not directly into their eyes.

* * *

Hello, everyone! (Let them respond.) Are you ready for our story today? (Let them respond.) Excellent! Today’s story is about Jesus. But I need to warn you that the story may sound a little confusing when I tell it to you.

One day, a man named John was writing to people to tell them about Jesus, and this is what he wrote. He said:

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Isaiah 60:1-6
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An upper middle-aged man is politely led out of the factory where he works by both the union and management representatives into mandatory early retirement. The company wants to hire two employees at a lower rate of pay rather than pay this skilled worker for the thirty years of seniority that he earned through days of sweat and toil.
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Just when you thought the holidays were over, when the last of the holiday snacks, Chex Mix and cookies and the fruit in the basket that arrived in the mail, were finally eaten, New Year’s celebrated and the football games turned off for the moment, and things are almost back to normal — along comes a late Christmas card, with its traditional picture of shepherds and kings and angels and cows and sheep and the light shining out of the manger, a tried and true quotation from scripture or a reference to a Christmas carol, and a swiftly penned greeting from an old friend, to make it all real agai

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John E. Sumwalt
Arise, shine, for your light has come,
and the glory of the Lord has risen upon you.
For darkness shall cover the earth
and thick darkness the peoples,
but the Lord will arise upon you,
and his glory will appear over you.
(vv. 1-2)
Frank Ramirez
See, I am going to bring them from the land of the north and gather them from the farthest parts of the earth…a great company, they shall return here (Jeremiah 7:8).

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:

When Jesus came, many people failed to recognise him. As we worship him today let us try to recognise him in each other.

Invitation to Confession:

Jesus, Lord, have mercy.

Jesus, Christ, have mercy.

Jesus, Lord, have mercy.

Reading:

John 1:10-18

SermonStudio

Stephen P. McCutchan
He has not dealt thus with any other nation; they do not know his ordinances. Praise the Lord!
-- Psalm 147:20

Constance Berg
Karny runs. She runs marathons. She runs races. She runs for fun. Karny loves to run because it reminds her that she is alive. Alive to feel the ocean breeze near her house. Alive to feel the gentle pain in her legs after a good ten-mile run. She is grateful for her life because she was so close to losing it.
Richard A. Jensen
The focus in Matthew 1 was on names. Name after name after name culminating in THE Name: Jesus! In Matthew 2 there is a focus on places. The first place mentioned is Bethlehem. Matthew begins his birth story by simply telling us that Jesus was born in Bethlehem. In the course of the story the Magi come from the east looking for the city in which the "child of the star" was to be found. Herod didn't know. The chief priests and scribes looked it up. Bethlehem!
John T. Ball
Today is an important day in the life of the world and the life of the church. In the northern hemisphere this is the first day of the New Year. Last night many of us celebrated the eve of this New Year -- noisily or somberly. Noisy types went out to dinner and danced until our feet grew weary. We counted down the last seconds of the old year, and wildly greeted one another with shouts, drinks, hugs, kisses, and fireworks. Then we sang the traditional lines of Robert Burn's poem, "Auld Lang Syne," and went home.
Mary S. Lautensleger
Walking in the dark is difficult, even in the familiarity of your own home. Furniture has a way of rearranging itself in the dark so that you can whack your shins a little easier. Small, sharp toys crawl out from their hiding places to park themselves in your path. Your dog or cat is stretched out on the carpet, sleeping blissfully until your foot makes contact with a tail or a paw.
Richard E. Gribble, CSC
One Christmas morning, Dennis, Nancy, and their young son, Eric, were traveling south from San Francisco to their home in Los Angeles. They had spent Christmas Eve with relatives in the Bay Area, but both parents had to work the next day, thus, it was necessary to travel on Christmas. About noon, Dennis and Nancy decided they were hungry so they stopped at a local diner for lunch. Naturally, because it was Christmas, the restaurant was nearly empty and Eric, their young son, was the only child in the restaurant.

Steven E. Albertin
"Sticks and stones may hurt my bones, but words can never harm me."

There has never been a bigger lie that has ever been so widely perpetuated. A friendly playground game erupts into a fight and insults fill the air. One of the combatants defiantly shouts, "Sticks and stones may hurt my bones, but words can never harm me." Even though such words attempt to minimize the harm inflicted by such insults, in fact they reveal just the opposite. These words have wounded him deeply.

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