ERCC Sermons

Our New Humanity

57 min · 10. touko 2026
jakson Our New Humanity kansikuva

Kuvaus

Discussion Questions: 1) Was there anything from the sermon or the passage that stuck out to you? 2 Paul commands the Gentiles to "remember" their former condition before Christ as a first and fundamental act. What is a specific area of your life where remembering where you came from has shaped how you treat others? 3) It's easy to believe intellectually that we were saved by grace while still functionally living as if we've earned our place with God. What does that subtle entitlement look like in daily life, and how do you recognize it in yourself? 4) Paul distinguishes between breaking down a wall and making peace, arguing that walls fall all the time without real peace following. Where do you see people around you pursuing unity without any actual basis for it, and what does the church have to offer that the world doesn't? 5) The sermon named specific walls the church tends to build: generational, ethnic, political, cultural. Which of those feels most real or most challenging in your own experience of Christian community? 6) If the gospel is genuinely good news, a celebration that the war is over, how would that change the posture you bring when sharing your faith with someone who has been hurt by the church or has walked away from it?

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141 jaksot

jakson Walk Worthy kansikuva

Walk Worthy

Discussion Questions: 1) Was there anything from the sermon or the passage that stuck out to you? 2) Paul could have opened the practical section of Ephesians with apostolic authority, but instead he introduced himself as a prisoner for the Lord. What circumstance in your life right now feels like a chain, and what would it change to see that chain as belonging to the Lord rather than to whatever is holding you? 3) The sermon described gentleness (prautes) as the posture of a warhorse under the rider's command: all of its strength present, none of it spent in panic or self-direction. In a situation where you feel most tempted to power up or prove yourself, what would it look like to bring your full strength while keeping it submitted to the Lord's direction? 4) Paul says the church's task is not to create unity but to guard what the Spirit has already made. In your relationships at home, at work, or in this church, where are you more often trying to build unity from scratch rather than protecting what God has already given? 5) The sermon contrasted the wolf pack (find your tribe, expel the weak, protect your own) with the church's call to bear one another's burdens. Who is the hardest person in your life to bear with right now, and what would it look like to bring them patience rather than a verdict? 6) The sermon ended with the image of Jesus as a lamb who gave Himself to His enemies rather than powering up. Where is the Lord calling you specifically to respond to opposition with that kind of gentleness this week, and what is making that hard?

31. touko 202643 min
jakson Rooted in Love kansikuva

Rooted in Love

Discussion Questions: 1) Was there anything from the sermon or the passage that stuck out to you? 2) Paul speaks of an inner person and an outer person at war in every believer. Where do you notice the flesh speaking the loudest in your own life right now, and what is the inner person trying to say back? 3) The sermon described a heart with a hierarchy, where things like family, career, or comfort often slip into the seat that belongs to Christ. Which of those "good things" do you sense has been climbing into the seat of authority in your heart? 4) Paul kneels before he asks for anything, and he asks first for power before he asks for love. What would change in your prayer life if you began with asking for the Spirit's strength rather than for the outcomes you want? 5) The love that surpasses knowledge is not less knowledge, it is knowing Christ in a way that produces real grace toward people. Who in your life right now is hard to love, and what would it look like to ask God for grace toward them rather than reasons to cut them off? 6) Paul writes from prison and still describes himself as rooted and grounded. What circumstance in your life are you waiting to change before you feel free to live out of the love of Christ?

24. touko 202656 min
jakson The Mystery Revealed kansikuva

The Mystery Revealed

Discussion Questions: 1) Was there anything from the sermon or the passage that stuck out to you? 2) God's plan was always to bless all nations through Abraham, but the Israelites kept narrowing that promise to themselves. In your own life, where do you notice yourself drawing a smaller circle than God draws? 3) Jonah knew God would forgive Nineveh and that was exactly why he refused to go. When have you found yourself hoping God's grace wouldn't reach someone, and what did that reveal about your own heart? 4) The idea that we are stewards, not sources, of grace means the pressure to fix people is not actually ours to carry. How does that change the way you think about engaging with someone who is struggling? 5) Paul found a way to experience blessing in prison because his joy was not tied to his circumstances. What circumstances in your own life are you waiting to change before you feel free to live out your calling?

17. touko 20261 h 2 min
jakson Our New Humanity kansikuva

Our New Humanity

Discussion Questions: 1) Was there anything from the sermon or the passage that stuck out to you? 2 Paul commands the Gentiles to "remember" their former condition before Christ as a first and fundamental act. What is a specific area of your life where remembering where you came from has shaped how you treat others? 3) It's easy to believe intellectually that we were saved by grace while still functionally living as if we've earned our place with God. What does that subtle entitlement look like in daily life, and how do you recognize it in yourself? 4) Paul distinguishes between breaking down a wall and making peace, arguing that walls fall all the time without real peace following. Where do you see people around you pursuing unity without any actual basis for it, and what does the church have to offer that the world doesn't? 5) The sermon named specific walls the church tends to build: generational, ethnic, political, cultural. Which of those feels most real or most challenging in your own experience of Christian community? 6) If the gospel is genuinely good news, a celebration that the war is over, how would that change the posture you bring when sharing your faith with someone who has been hurt by the church or has walked away from it?

10. touko 202657 min
jakson Dead, Alive, Seated kansikuva

Dead, Alive, Seated

Discussion Questions: 1) Was there anything from the sermon or the passage that stuck out to you? 2) Paul describes humanity as "dead" in trespasses rather than simply lost or struggling. What changes when you take the word "dead" seriously, and how does it affect the way you understand what God did for you? 3) The enemy's strategy isn't to make people obviously miserable but to keep them satisfied with good things like money, relationships, and community, so they never look past them. Where have you found yourself most tempted to treat a good thing as an ultimate thing? 4) Ephesians 2:6 says believers are already seated with Christ in the heavenly places, not that they will be someday. What would change in your daily life if you actually lived from that settled identity rather than toward it? 5) Paul says we are God's workmanship, created for good works that He prepared beforehand. What does it look like practically to walk into works God has already prepared, rather than inventing your own agenda for serving? 6) Paul wrote Ephesians from a prison cell, with his freedom stripped away, and the letter is full of praise. What does his contentment reveal about where he had placed his identity, and where does your contentment tend to be located?

3. touko 202655 min