Community Church - Sermons

Is God’s Word at Work in You? - Frank Neudorf

27 min · 31. Mai 2026
Episode Is God’s Word at Work in You? - Frank Neudorf Cover

Beschreibung

Paul thanks God without ceasing because the Thessalonians received what they heard as the word of God, not the word of men, and that word is now working effectively in those who believe. The text presents Paul as a humble vessel. He does not lift himself up, but lifts up their reception of Scripture. Scripture itself stands as God-breathed and Spirit-moved, as Paul and Peter agree. The claim of inspiration is not bare. Eyewitness testimony, a unified redemption story across 66 books and many authors, an ocean of manuscripts, archaeological confirmations, and fulfilled prophecy all serve as evidence that God has always backed his word with works. God never asked blind faith. He gave signs in Egypt, fire on Carmel, the witness of John, works of Christ, and the Scriptures that point to Jesus. The gospel comes heard, welcomed as truth, and received in trust. Romans 10 ties hearing to believing and calling on the Lord. Historic faith shows a shape: notate that learns the content, a senses that agrees with it, and fiducia that entrusts the heart. True belief brings action. The word that is believed does not sit idle. It goes to work in speech, in purity, in sobriety, in love for God rather than the world. Paul brings Scripture to bear on the tongue that edifies, on sexual holiness that refuses what should not even be named, on drunkenness that is forbidden, and on a dress and a life that point to God’s peace rather than to the body. The question stands: does life line up with what the mouth claims to believe, or is faith dead on arrival. The Thessalonians became imitators of the churches in Judea by suffering from their own countrymen. Persecution does not mean God’s people are in the wrong. It often means the cup of rebellion is filling up for those who forbid the word. Judgment waits, yet God’s patience calls for repentance. Paul longs to return, but Satan hinders again and again. God turns that hindrance on its head, birthing letters that have circled the globe for two thousand years. What the enemy meant for harm becomes food for the church. Paul closes with his motive. His hope, joy, and crown are people standing in the presence of the Lord Jesus at his coming. That is the reward he runs for, and that is the aim of all gospel work.

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Episode Is God’s Word at Work in You? - Frank Neudorf Cover

Is God’s Word at Work in You? - Frank Neudorf

Paul thanks God without ceasing because the Thessalonians received what they heard as the word of God, not the word of men, and that word is now working effectively in those who believe. The text presents Paul as a humble vessel. He does not lift himself up, but lifts up their reception of Scripture. Scripture itself stands as God-breathed and Spirit-moved, as Paul and Peter agree. The claim of inspiration is not bare. Eyewitness testimony, a unified redemption story across 66 books and many authors, an ocean of manuscripts, archaeological confirmations, and fulfilled prophecy all serve as evidence that God has always backed his word with works. God never asked blind faith. He gave signs in Egypt, fire on Carmel, the witness of John, works of Christ, and the Scriptures that point to Jesus. The gospel comes heard, welcomed as truth, and received in trust. Romans 10 ties hearing to believing and calling on the Lord. Historic faith shows a shape: notate that learns the content, a senses that agrees with it, and fiducia that entrusts the heart. True belief brings action. The word that is believed does not sit idle. It goes to work in speech, in purity, in sobriety, in love for God rather than the world. Paul brings Scripture to bear on the tongue that edifies, on sexual holiness that refuses what should not even be named, on drunkenness that is forbidden, and on a dress and a life that point to God’s peace rather than to the body. The question stands: does life line up with what the mouth claims to believe, or is faith dead on arrival. The Thessalonians became imitators of the churches in Judea by suffering from their own countrymen. Persecution does not mean God’s people are in the wrong. It often means the cup of rebellion is filling up for those who forbid the word. Judgment waits, yet God’s patience calls for repentance. Paul longs to return, but Satan hinders again and again. God turns that hindrance on its head, birthing letters that have circled the globe for two thousand years. What the enemy meant for harm becomes food for the church. Paul closes with his motive. His hope, joy, and crown are people standing in the presence of the Lord Jesus at his coming. That is the reward he runs for, and that is the aim of all gospel work.

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Episode Marks of a Faithful and Christ-Centered Ministry - Pastor Dave Klassen Cover

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Luke’s closing scene lifts the eyes to the Ascension. Jesus raises his hands, blesses, and is carried into heaven, and worship breaks open into joy. Acts then lets Pentecost rush the room. The Spirit fills, rests on each, and gives utterance. Christ departs in order to draw near, so his people now live by his indwelling Spirit, not by his visible presence. That sets the frame for what Paul shows in 1 Thessalonians 2. Real ministry happens because God has come to dwell, and that same Spirit gives boldness, purity, love, and holiness. Paul’s entry into Thessalonica is not empty. Philippi had brought shaming, beatings, and a dungeon, yet God put steel into his voice and he preached amid strong opposition. The gospel, then, is not a soft thing. It stands up in a storm and sings at midnight. Paul says the message did not arise from error, uncleanness, or trickery. God had examined him and entrusted him with the gospel. That word entrusted sounds like a seal. Approved after testing. If God has the key to the vault, he only hands it to clean hands. Paul’s methods match his message. No flattering words. No cloak for greed. No reaching for applause. He works for God’s smile, not man’s. That keeps the heart straight when compliments come and when they do not. Then the tone shifts. A nursing mother enters the room. Gentleness carries the gospel. Paul shares not only the gospel of God but also his own life. Love does hard things, quiet things, even things no one wants to do. He labors night and day so no one bears his load, then pours out the word all day. A father then takes the floor. Paul exhorts, comforts, and charges so that each would walk worthy of God, who calls into his kingdom and glory. Truth, love, and holiness run like three strands in one cord. Truth makes the content clean, love makes the contact tender, holiness makes the conduit credible. Holiness asks what a person is when the door is shut. Righteousness watches conduct with people. Blamelessness guards public reputation. The aim is not fame but formation, not numbers but lives that bring praise and honor and glory to God.

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The apostle John emerges as a fisherman turned lifelong witness whose intimacy with Jesus shaped the church's theology and mission. His early attachment to John the Baptist brought him to Jesus, and three years at Jesus' side filled a lifetime of ministry that stretched nearly to a century. John preserved eyewitness detail of miracles, trials, and resurrection appearances, and he condensed his reflections into the Gospel of John, three short letters, and the book of Revelation. Those writings present a tender Father, a Savior who is fully God and fully human, and a Spirit who continues the incarnate presence among believers. John frames Jesus as the eternal Word through whom all things were made, insisting that the same Jesus who walked Galilee stood at the center of creation. He selects seven miracles as "signs" that point beyond wonder to identity, using concrete events to prove Jesus' divine authority and to invite personal trust. John also clarifies the Spirit's role as another helper, the ongoing presence that binds the church to Jesus after his departure. As an eyewitness, John recounts scenes others omit: access to the temple court, the intimacy at the cross where Jesus entrusted his mother to another disciple, the empty tomb where seeing became believing, and the lakeside breakfast that restored and redirected Peter. Those moments form the heart of the Gospel's pastoral aim. John writes simply and memorably, making profound truths accessible while pressing readers toward a faith that changes life. Exile on Patmos shaped John's apocalyptic vision, and his long ministry around Asia Minor anchored churches through teaching rather than missionary travel. Across biography, theology, and pastoral counsel, the sustained call runs clear: historical knowledge about Jesus must become trusting surrender that yields eternal life. The writings insist that belief is not merely assent to facts but a confident reliance on the person and work of Jesus Christ.

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