The Glory That Is Due
In this powerful message, Ian McFarland preached about the overwhelming complexity of life and the beautifully simple truth that gives meaning to it all: humanity was created for the glory of God. Walking through passages like Romans 1, 1 Corinthians 2, Isaiah 43, Psalm 16, Revelation 4, and 1 Corinthians 10:31, Ian explored how people search endlessly for purpose, identity, fulfillment, and happiness, yet remain restless apart from the God who made them.
Ian unpacked the reality that while life, relationships, emotions, and even theology can feel impossibly complicated, God has made the most important truths accessible. From Romans 1:19-21, he taught that God has revealed Himself clearly through creation, and that humanity’s deepest problem is not ignorance of God, but refusing to glorify Him. He also examined how the Gospel is both wonderfully simple and infinitely deep — simple enough for a child to receive, yet profound beyond full human comprehension (Matthew 19:14, Hebrews 5:12-14, Romans 11:33, Ephesians 3:19).
The sermon emphasized that true joy, peace, and abundance are only found when life is centered on God rather than self. Ian challenged listeners with the truth that modern culture promises fulfillment through self-expression, achievement, comfort, and autonomy, yet continues producing unprecedented emptiness, anxiety, and hopelessness. Through scriptures like Psalm 16:11, Isaiah 62:5, Zephaniah 3:17, and Psalm 27:4, he reminded the church that God delights in His people and invites them into fullness of joy in His presence.
Ian also gave practical encouragement for daily living: glorify God in the ordinary moments of life — waking up, working, eating, resting, learning, creating, worshiping, and loving others. Drawing from Psalm 118:24, Psalm 59:16, Psalm 145:15-16, Psalm 4:8, Exodus 35:30-35, and 1 Corinthians 10:31, he urged believers to reorient every aspect of life around worship and gratitude to the Creator.
Ultimately, this sermon was a call to stop living for lesser things and rediscover the purpose for which humanity was made: “To Him be glory forever and ever.” (Ephesians 3:20-21)