The Lake Forest Sermoncast
What happens when the commands of the world collide with the commands of the God of life? This week, we continue our summer sermon series, Faces of our Faith, by diving into the opening chapter of Exodus. While Pharaoh—the most powerful man in the ancient world—is left nameless in the text, history immortalizes two brave Hebrew midwives: Shiphrah and Puah. Ordered by the empire to participate in systemic violence, these ordinary women chose a different path. Pastor Chad connects their ancient act of creative, nonviolent civil disobedience to our own backyard here in Tennessee—from the training grounds of the Highlander Folk School to the disciplined Knoxville lunch counter sit-ins of 1960. Through their story, we are challenged to examine our own everyday lives: Will our hands, our voices, and our silence be used to participate in harm, or to resist it? Pop in your headphones (and maybe queue up the Prince of Egypt soundtrack) to discover how a deep reverence for God can completely reorganize our loyalties today. Scripture Focus: Exodus 1:8-21 The Hebrew Concept of Yirat Elohim: Why "fearing God" actually means shifting your ultimate allegiance away from worldly empires. The Myth of Spontaneous Change: How Rosa Parks and local Knoxville civil rights activists relied on deep, intentional, and practiced spiritual discipline rather than mere reactivity. The Modern Challenge: Recognizing the subtle ways we are invited to participate in division and scapegoating in our neighborhoods, schools, and online spaces.
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