Sermons on Genesis (Page 3)

Sermons on Genesis (Page 3)

Work – Genesis 2:1-15, 3:17-19

So much of life is work, and so it’s important that we understand what the bible teaches about it. In Genesis 2, Adam is called to work. Work is a “creation ordinance” – built into living life in God’s world. Here in Genesis we see that work is good, valuable, necessary, and frustrating. Sermon Text

Fill the Earth – Genesis 1:27-28; Matthew 28:18-20

With this sermon we begin looking at the “creation ordinances” – the commands given to humanity at their creation. Made as image-bearers of God, they are told to then fill the earth with image-bearers of God. Before the fall, this was accomplished solely through procreation (being fruitful and multiplying). After the fall, this required the redemptive work of Christ to restore the image of God in fallen humanity. Sermon Text

The Image of God – Genesis 1:24-31; 2:7

“The irony of being human, is that people in the same time and place can have such contradictory views of themselves.” But the word of God doesn’t leave us wondering, lost, confused, about who we are. It tells us, we are made by God in his image. In this sermon we look at what 1) the Identity of the image of God, 2) the Mission of image-bearers of God, and 3) the Renewal of the image of God. Sermon Text

How Our World Points Us to God – Genesis 1:1, Romans 1:18-23

John Calvin wrote: “God daily discloses himself in the whole workmanship of the universe. As a consequence, humanity cannot open their eyes without being compelled to see God”. God reveals himself through the world around us. This sermon considers how the following questions of existence point us to God’s reality and our need to seek, know, and worship him: 1) Why is there something instead of nothing? 2) Why is there order instead of chaos? 3) Why do we live in an inescapable moral…

God the Creator – Genesis 1:1-31

Genesis 1 through 3 is like an overture of the Bible.  It’s like an overture of an opera or a musical.  It comes at the beginning, and is distinct and unique in itself, but it introduces the musical themes that you will hear throughout the rest of the composition.  Genesis 1 is similar to that, in that it is unique and distinct in itself.  There is no other part of the Bible that is quite like it.  And of course,…

Outward Church – Genesis 1:26-28, Matthew 28:16-20

The introduction to our series on Jonah doesn’t start in Jonah, but looks at Jesus’ “Great Commission”, which shows us the radical call of discipleship, the outward direction of the Church, and the promise of Jesus’ personal presence with us.