Twin Cities Grace Fellowship Sermons

The Determinate Counsel of God | Lesson 8

55 min · 10 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Determinate Counsel of God | Lesson 8

Descripción

What anchors your life when everything familiar can change in a moment? This message launches part two of the series, “That Which May Be Known,” shifting from how God reveals Himself to what He has eternally purposed—the “determinate counsel of God.” Beginning from Acts 2:23 and tracing through Romans, Ephesians, Proverbs, Isaiah, and Colossians, the sermon defines “counsel” biblically, contrasts God’s immutable, wise, and eternal counsel with the unstable, dark counsel of men, and shows how all of God’s planning before the foundation of the world centers in Christ. We see that God did not create or redeem on impulse; He acted according to a deliberate, eternal purpose formed within the Godhead itself.   This overview of divine counsel is not just theological “academia”; it is meant to ground believers in something that truly cannot be shaken. While our possessions, plans, and even our lives are uncertain, God’s counsel “shall stand” and He “works all things after the counsel of His own will.” The sermon presses probing questions: Do you know God’s counsel? Which counsel are you actually trusting—His or your own? Are you resting in the certainty of His purpose in Christ? As the series continues, the teaching will unpack the specific substance of that eternal counsel and what God has predestined as the believer’s everlasting end.

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Portada del episodio Now Made Manifest | Lesson 16

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Portada del episodio Faithful Is He That Calleth You | Lesson 13

Faithful Is He That Calleth You | Lesson 13

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Portada del episodio Children of The Day | Lesson 12

Children of The Day | Lesson 12

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Portada del episodio Centuries of Witness | Lesson 14

Centuries of Witness | Lesson 14

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Portada del episodio Watch and Be Sober | Lesson 11

Watch and Be Sober | Lesson 11

Are you living like a child of the day—or drifting along with a world that thinks it’s safe in the dark? In this sermon from 1 Thessalonians 5:1–11, we explore Paul’s teaching on “the day of the Lord” and how it connects to the broader biblical storyline in both Old and New Testaments. Pastor unpacks the meaning of “times and seasons,” the imagery of the day of the Lord coming “as a thief in the night,” and the world’s deceptive cry of “peace and safety” just before sudden, inescapable destruction. Along the way, he traces key Old Testament and Gospel passages (Joel, Amos, Matthew 24, Luke 21, 2 Peter 3) to show how this coming day brings both judgment and salvation, and how the Thessalonians could “know perfectly” about it yet still be troubled by false teaching. From there, the message turns to the believer’s identity and calling: we are not in darkness, but are “children of light” and “of the day.” That identity carries a clear exhortation—“let us not sleep, as do others; but let us watch and be sober.” Paul’s imagery of spiritual armor (the breastplate of faith and love, and the helmet of the hope of salvation) ties directly to the “work of faith, labor of love, and patience of hope” already seen in the letter. Because God has not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ, this coming day should not terrify us but shape how we walk now. The sermon closes by calling believers to live in a way that matches their calling—alert, sober, and comforted—so that we might truly “live together with Him” as we await His coming.

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