What Does God Require?
Preaching
Shaking Wolves Out Of Cherry Trees
And 149 Other Sermon Ideas
Purpose Statement: God does expect certain responses and behavior from us. What are these?
We know that God expects us to be a certain kind of person and to do certain things. Where is that list? How do we know? The Bible is filled with helpful ideas as well as outright commands. Some are easy to find: the Ten Commandments, the Beatitudes, and the Sermon on the Mount, while other ideas take a lifetime of Bible study and meditation. Some persons will simplify it all by saying, "Just accept Jesus." It needs some more elaboration. I will list two popular and profound statements concerning what God requires of us. These summarize the subject in a magnificent way.
a. Micah 6:6-8. Micah even begins by saying this is what God requires.
1. Do what is just. This means to build the kind of communities where people are all treated fairly and equally. This means social action. It means getting political. It means spending time learning all about social issues and where the injustices are in our society.
2. Show constant love. The word "love" is overworked and actual love is under used. Loving other people leads to service. It means making sacrifices and seeing opportunities to care for others.
3. Live in fellowship with God. Nothing else is possible without this mandate. Finding God is finding the knowledge, courage, compassion, and strength to be a Christian in the world for others.
b. Matthew 22:34-40. Jesus says he is summarizing the law into these two statements.
1. Love God. Love God with all you have. God is our life, our all. Our life cannot be centered, wholesome, productive, and complete without a relationship with our Creator and the source of all love.
2. Love others. Jesus said these two ideas are one. If we love God, we will love others, and in the process of loving others, we love God. However, it is a stern and difficult proposal, to love our neighbor as our self. We commit to that ideal and then spend the rest of our lives praying and studying the teachings and life of Jesus to see how to do it.
We know that God expects us to be a certain kind of person and to do certain things. Where is that list? How do we know? The Bible is filled with helpful ideas as well as outright commands. Some are easy to find: the Ten Commandments, the Beatitudes, and the Sermon on the Mount, while other ideas take a lifetime of Bible study and meditation. Some persons will simplify it all by saying, "Just accept Jesus." It needs some more elaboration. I will list two popular and profound statements concerning what God requires of us. These summarize the subject in a magnificent way.
a. Micah 6:6-8. Micah even begins by saying this is what God requires.
1. Do what is just. This means to build the kind of communities where people are all treated fairly and equally. This means social action. It means getting political. It means spending time learning all about social issues and where the injustices are in our society.
2. Show constant love. The word "love" is overworked and actual love is under used. Loving other people leads to service. It means making sacrifices and seeing opportunities to care for others.
3. Live in fellowship with God. Nothing else is possible without this mandate. Finding God is finding the knowledge, courage, compassion, and strength to be a Christian in the world for others.
b. Matthew 22:34-40. Jesus says he is summarizing the law into these two statements.
1. Love God. Love God with all you have. God is our life, our all. Our life cannot be centered, wholesome, productive, and complete without a relationship with our Creator and the source of all love.
2. Love others. Jesus said these two ideas are one. If we love God, we will love others, and in the process of loving others, we love God. However, it is a stern and difficult proposal, to love our neighbor as our self. We commit to that ideal and then spend the rest of our lives praying and studying the teachings and life of Jesus to see how to do it.

