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Mark 1:1-8

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Commentary

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Changing times -- Isaiah 40:1-11, 2 Peter 3:8-15a, Mark 1:1-8 -- Wayne Brouwer -- Second Sunday of Advent - B
Advent reminds us of the flow of time. We are all bound by time.

Illustration

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Route 62 and Route 65... -- Mark 1:1-8 -- 2002
Route 62 and Route 65 run together as an improved highway to a few miles northwest of Harrison [Arka
John the Baptist's call for... -- Mark 1:1-8 -- 2002
John the Baptist's call "for everyone to straighten out his life," calls to mind Isaiah's beautiful
John's message called for repentance... -- Mark 1:1-8 -- 1996
John's message called for repentance of sins.
Margaret Thatcher, England's first woman... -- Mark 1:1-8 -- 1996
Margaret Thatcher, England's first woman prime minister, in her autobiography, The Path to Power, wr
Ooh, how gross! several people... -- Mark 1:1-8 -- 1996
"Ooh, how gross!" several people exclaimed as he put the applesauce over his chocolate cake.
The person who subscribes to... -- Mark 1:1-8 -- 1990
The person who subscribes to two sports magazines, watches or listens to regular baseball broadcasts
The A&E Channel once... -- Mark 1:1-8 -- Second Sunday of Advent - B
The A&E Channel once had a Biography segment on General George Marshall.
John the Baptist is like... -- Mark 1:1-8 -- Second Sunday of Advent - B
John the Baptist is like that eccentric uncle who visits every year around Christmas.
John the Baptist's diet certainly... -- Mark 1:1-8 -- Second Sunday of Advent - B
John the Baptist's diet certainly was one that we moderns would find strange.
While on vacation at a... -- Mark 1:1-8 -- Second Sunday of Advent - B
While on vacation at a well-known Atlantic Ocean beach, a couple went to one of the local attraction
John the Baptist was the... -- Mark 1:1-8 -- Second Sunday of Advent - B
John the Baptist was the most unlikely character to herald the coming of Christ.
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New & Featured This Week

The Immediate Word

Katy Stenta
Mary Austin
Dean Feldmeyer
Tom Willadsen
Nazish Naseem
George Reed
Christopher Keating
For October 26, 2025:

Emphasis Preaching Journal

David Kalas
I am a scoreboard watcher. I follow a lot more games than I actually watch, but since technology makes it easy to check scores on a moment’s whim, I watch a lot of scoreboards of teams and games that I am at least mildly interested in. And as I check those scores, I find myself having immediate reactions: “Great!” “Oh, that's too bad.” “Excellent!” “Nuts.” And in the midst of that sports-fan roller coaster, I must continually remind myself that not all scores are final.
Bill Thomas
Mark Ellingsen
Frank Ramirez
Joel 2:22-32
Martin Luther sings the praises of God’s love revealed in this lesson. He wrote:

The love of God which lives in man loves sinners, evil persons, fools and weaklings in order to make them righteous, good, wise, and strong. Rather than seeking its own good, the love of God flows forth and bestows good. (Luther’s Works, Vol. 31, p.57)

John Wesley nicely summarizes the Spirit’s role in fighting the lure of our old sinful habits:

CSSPlus

John Jamison
Object: This message is a role-play story. You will need two children to play the roles of the Pharisee and the tax collector. I usually ask two children if they will help me as they are all coming forward for the message, but you may select them however you choose.

* * *

StoryShare

John E. Sumwalt
Trouble and anguish have overtaken me, but your commandments are my delight.
Your statutes are always righteous; give me understanding that I may live.
(vv. 143-144)

When I was an associate pastor in Janesville, Wisconsin one of my responsibilities was to give a lecture on spirituality once a month at a drug treatment facility. The students who attended were persons who had been convicted of drunk driving and were required to attend the class as a condition of their sentence. Attendance was always good.

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:

We all dislike people who blow their own trumpets, although sometimes we may be in awe of them. Jesus too deplored such behaviour and was never in awe of those who practised it. In our worship today let us open ourselves to Jesus, allowing him to see what is in our hearts.



Invitation to Confession:

Jesus, sometimes we allow other people's behaviour to intimidate us.
Lord, have mercy.
Jesus, sometimes we refuse to reach our own fullest potential because we are afraid.

SermonStudio

Schuyler Rhodes
Every morning when sleep leaves and waking comes there is cause for praising God. Caught up, as we are, in the currents and eddies of our lives, this is easy to forget. This wonderful psalm is a reminder. God's bounty and abundance spill into our lives like waters over a causeway. God's delight in creation explodes in a million different colors. In every moment there is reason to give God praise.
Robert R. Kopp
When I was a little boy growing up in Nanticoke, Pennsylvania's First Presbyterian Church, one of those Christian chalk artists with black light, neon colors, and black felt canvas who made pictures of Jesus look like those Elvis portraits for sale on the side of the road at the beach showed up as entertainment for a Sunday evening potluck dinner.
John E. Berger
Today's sermon begins with this little one-person drama.
Mark Ellingson
Have you ever felt that you were absolutely at the end of your rope, left without hope? Sometime during the years of 539 B.C. to 331 B.C. that is the way the people of Judah felt. It seems that their land had been ravaged by a plague of locusts which had had catastrophic consequences.

Once a harvest has been destroyed, you cannot repair it. If a building has burned to the ground, you cannot repair it. In those instances you need to start from scratch with a fresh start.

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