エピソード

  • Psalm 38 - Do Not forsake Me Lord
    2025/12/22
    PM Worship Service, 21 December 2025 Beloved, there are moments in the Christian life when sin becomes unbearably heavy. The joy of communion with God seems distant, the heart aches with guilt, and the conscience will not be silenced. That is the scene before us in Psalm 38. This is one of the seven penitential psalms — a prayer of a believer who feels the crushing weight of sin and the sting of God’s fatherly discipline. David, the man after God’s own heart, groans under the arrows of divine chastening. His body aches, his spirit trembles, his friends withdraw, and his enemies surround him. Yet, through it all, his eyes remain lifted to the Lord: “Do not forsake me, O Lord! O my God, be not far from me! Make haste to help me, O Lord, my salvation!” (vv. 21–22). This psalm is a gift to us. It teaches us how to pray when guilt pierces the soul, when suffering humbles the heart, and when loneliness deepens our sorrow. It reminds us that though sin wounds deeply, there is mercy, restoration, and hope for those who look to the Lord. And it ultimately points us to Christ, who bore the full weight of our sin, so that in our darkest hour we may still say, “You, O Lord, are my salvation.” As we open this psalm, let us listen carefully — not only to David’s cry, but to the Spirit speaking through him — calling us to honest confession, humble submission, and confident trust in the steadfast love of our God.
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    37 分
  • 04 Paul Accepted by the Apostles Galatians 2’1-10
    2025/12/09
    AM Worship Service, 07 December 2025, Lebanon Presbyterian Church (PCA), Abbeville County, South Carolina USA
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    34 分
  • 03 Paul's Gospel is from God - Galatians 1'11-24
    2025/11/23
    AM 23 November 2025 Paul defends the divine origin of the gospel in Galatians 1:11–24, showing that it is revealed by Christ and transforms sinners by sovereign grace.
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    34 分
  • 02 Galatians 1'6-10 No Other Gospel
    2025/11/16
    As we begin this passage, you may notice something unusual. Paul, in almost every other letter, begins with thanksgiving. Even when writing to the troubled church in Corinth, Paul could still thank God for His grace at work among them. But not here. Not in Galatians. There is no thanksgiving, no pause for polite greetings, no gentle buildup. Instead, Paul comes in with the shock of holy astonishment: “I am astonished that you are so quickly deserting him who called you in the grace of Christ…” Something had gone terribly wrong in these churches. They had started well, embracing the gospel of grace that Paul preached — salvation through faith in Christ alone. But now, they were turning to what Paul calls “a different gospel,” a distortion that added requirements to the finished work of Jesus. In this case, it was the teaching of Judaizers — insisting that Gentile believers needed to obey the ceremonial law, including circumcision, to be fully accepted by God. And, brothers and sisters, this is not just an ancient problem. The temptation to believe in Christ plus something else is alive and well today. Christ plus performance. Christ plus tradition. Christ plus a certain spiritual experience. The problem is, when you add anything to Christ, you don’t enhance the gospel — you lose it altogether. This passage is God’s urgent word to His church: there is no other gospel. Not then, not now, not ever. And so this morning, we will walk carefully through these verses to understand their meaning, to see how Christ fulfills them, and to hear how the Spirit calls us to cling to the one true gospel with unwavering faith. AM Service 16 November 2025, Lebanon Presbyterian Church (PCA), Abbeville, South Carolina, USA
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    32 分
  • Psalm 35 The LORD our Defender
    2025/11/10
    In this expository sermon on Psalm 35, “Great Is the LORD,” Pastor John Butler unfolds David’s heartfelt cry for vindication when falsely accused, betrayed, and mocked. The psalm reveals God as the righteous Judge and divine Warrior who defends His people and delights in their welfare. Through David’s suffering, we see the greater David—Christ Jesus—who was betrayed, falsely accused, and vindicated in glory. This sermon comforts believers who suffer injustice, teaching them to entrust their cause to the Lord who sees, saves, and will one day silence every false tongue. PM Service, 09 November 2025
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    40 分