Looking around at the depravity and sickness of the world can leave us miserable and feeling like lone voices crying out against an impossible storm - but Micah, who felt the same way, knew that He could trust in the Lord and have hope. Micah knew that God was a God of restoration and turning around the impossible. We too, through Jesus, can lay claim to an even more immovable hope - that our sins have already been dealt with and no wrath comes for us.
Thoughts, sermons, and articles from a sinner saved by grace alone and washed in The Blood of King Jesus
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
This sermon was written during a study week on 'death, dying, and bereavement' when we had to write a funeral sermon for one of ...
-
What is Anglicanism? To many you may as well ask “what is nice” or “what is bad” - it is a completely subjective question to which you c...
-
On Maundy Thursday I attended the diocesan "Chrism Eucharist." This of course is a very modern fad (though made out to be a ...
No comments:
Post a Comment