Episodes
Saturday Oct 18, 2025
LWWC - Joshua - Session 3
Saturday Oct 18, 2025
Saturday Oct 18, 2025
Summary of Sermon – Joshua Session 3
Text Focus:
Joshua chapters 3–5 — Israel’s crossing of the Jordan River, covenant renewal, and Joshua’s encounter with the Lord.
1. Crossing the Jordan: Following God’s Presence
Joshua leads Israel to the Jordan River as they prepare to enter the Promised Land. The ark of the covenant symbolizes God’s presence and direction. The people are instructed to keep a reverent distance and follow where they have not been before — a metaphor for trusting God’s leadership into new seasons.
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Emphasis: Check with God before acting, as David did.
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Without divine guidance, human wisdom leads to destruction.
2. Sanctification and Preparation
Joshua tells the people to sanctify themselves—prepare their hearts before encountering God.
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Spiritual application: many believers fail in preparation; we rush to worship or prayer without focus.
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Encourage deliberate quieting of the heart before God.
3. The Miracle and Memorial
When the priests step into the Jordan, the waters stop—a new generation witnesses God’s power, as their parents did at the Red Sea. Twelve stones are taken from the river to build a memorial at Gilgal, a lasting reminder of God’s faithfulness.
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Application: Tell your children what God has done; leave spiritual testimonies, not just material inheritances.
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Forgetting the cost leads to complacency—just as people forget the price paid for freedom or salvation.
4. Covenant Renewal at Gilgal
God commands the new generation to be circumcised, renewing the covenant their fathers neglected. Gilgal means “rolled away”—God rolls away the reproach of Egypt.
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Spiritual meaning: God circumcises our hearts, removing spiritual blindness.
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Revival is not for the lost (“unvived”) but for believers to be revived—to renew their first love.
5. Transition of Provision
After the Passover, the manna ceases, and Israel eats the fruit of Canaan.
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Message: God changes seasons—He may not move in the same way He once did.
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Mature believers learn to hear the still small voice, not depend on grand emotional experiences.
6. The Divine Encounter
Joshua meets the Commander of the Lord’s army—a divine or pre-incarnate appearance of Christ. He is told to remove his sandals, as Moses did at the burning bush, for he stands on holy ground.
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Application: The deepest encounters with God often happen alone, not in crowds.
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God desires one-on-one time with His people—to reveal Himself personally and intimately.
7. Final Exhortation
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Make room for personal encounters with God, beyond church gatherings.
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Strength, joy, and peace flow from direct relationship with Christ.
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No one—not even loved ones—can take the place of Jesus in bringing joy or fulfillment.
Closing Prayer
A call for God’s people to keep Him first, walk closely with His Spirit, and regularly make time for intimate communion with Him—away from distraction.
Monday Oct 13, 2025
Sunday Morning Service - Praise a means to Victory
Monday Oct 13, 2025
Monday Oct 13, 2025
Praise — A Means to Victory
Text: Hebrews 13:10–15 ; 2 Chronicles 20 ; Acts 16
Theme: Praise and thanksgiving are not reactions — they are weapons of victory and doors into God’s presence.
- Living in the Last Days
- The world hungers for comfort, not truth — but the church must stand firm in the Word.
- Amos 8:11 – “A famine… of hearing the Word of the Lord.”
- God doesn’t need us, but we desperately need Him.
- Application: Stay rooted in Scripture amid cultural drift.
- Thanksgiving in Prayer – Philippians 4:6
- “Let your requests be made known unto God — with thanksgiving.”
- Gratitude reminds God that we know He is the source.
- Posture check: Do we ask in fear or faith?
- Thanksgiving opens the door for God to move.
“We’re not stroking God’s ego — we’re acknowledging His hand in everything.”
III. Praise: Our Continual Sacrifice – Hebrews 13:15
- “Let us continually offer the sacrifice of praise.”
- Praise brings God into our moment; complaining pushes Him out.
- Daily praise > Sunday praise — Sunday should be overflow, not catch-up.
- Prophetic call: Start praising every day — and watch your life change.
- The Tabernacle of David Restored – Acts 15:16 & Psalm 22:3
- God promised to rebuild David’s tabernacle — the house of praise.
- David danced before the Lord, unashamed.
- Psalm 22:3: “God is enthroned in the praises of His people.”
“When we praise, God brings His throne into our situation.”
- His throne means healing, provision, deliverance, and power.
- Application: Gentiles have been grafted in — we are the new worshiping people of God.
- Jehoshaphat’s Victory – 2 Chronicles 20
- Surrounded by enemies, Judah sought the Lord.
- God’s word: “The battle is not yours, but God’s.”
- Worshippers went before warriors — and praise won the battle.
“They didn’t need swords — they needed God’s throne in their moment.”
- Praise confuses the enemy and positions believers for overflow.
- The Paradox of Praise
- Praise in pain defies logic but demonstrates faith.
- David worshiped after loss; Noah endured through faith.
- Real faith acts — it endures and praises through the storm.
- Application: When the world says “complain,” heaven says “praise.”
VII. Paul and Silas – Praise in the Prison (Acts 16:16–34)
- Beaten and chained, they prayed and sang hymns at midnight.
- Their praise reached heaven — and God shook the prison.
“When their praise caught God’s ear, He said, ‘Bring My throne down where the sewage is.’”
- Chains broke, doors opened, and salvation came.
- Lesson: Praise breaks bondage and draws others to Christ.
VIII. Call to Worship and Renewal
- Praise brings heaven into every situation.
- Angels move on behalf of those who fear and thank God.
- Stop fretting — start praising.
“Mix thanksgiving with your requests. Invite His throne into your situation — that’s how victory comes.”
Key Takeaway:
Praise is not a reaction to victory — it’s the means to it.
When you praise, God steps in with His throne, and everything changes
Monday Oct 13, 2025
LWWC - Joshua - Session 2
Monday Oct 13, 2025
Monday Oct 13, 2025
Joshua – Session 2: Faith, Obedience, and the Word
Text: Joshua 1–2 ; Romans 6
Theme: Living by faith and obedience through the Word of God
I. The Foundation – God’s Word at the Center
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Joshua 1:8-9 – Prosperity and success come from meditating on and obeying God’s Word.
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Key truth: The Word must have the final say in every decision.
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Personal principles:
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God’s Word overrules opinion.
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Don’t go to bed angry.
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Handle family issues within your own household.
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Application: Blessing follows submission to Scripture, not cleverness or culture.
II. Obedience, Stewardship, and Accountability
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Israel prepares to cross the Jordan; obedience brings unity and victory.
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Lesson: God owns everything — we are stewards.
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Disobedience forfeits blessing; stewardship invites favor.
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Moral call: Stand for truth and life — repentance restores, but sin must still be named as sin.
III. Rahab’s Faith – The Scarlet Thread of Salvation
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Joshua 2: Rahab hides the spies and hangs a scarlet cord — a symbol of Christ’s blood.
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Faith requires action; belief is proven by obedience.
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Everyone under the scarlet cord (inside the house) is saved — stay in the house (fellowship, worship, presence).
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Hebrews 10:25 – Do not forsake assembling together.
IV. Faith and Focus in a Distracted World
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Joshua and Caleb believed God despite giants.
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Faith stands on truth, not visible results.
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Warning against information overload — believers must fix their eyes on Christ, not chaos.
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Application: Maintain joy — “The joy of the Lord is your strength” (Nehemiah 8:10).
V. From Law to Grace – Faith That Works by Love
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Romans 6: Crossing Jordan pictures salvation — leaving Egypt (sin) for the Promised Land (new life).
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The Law is an X-ray — reveals sin but cannot heal.
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Christ is the Physician — He heals through grace.
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Faith and obedience are married; faith without works (obedience) is dead.
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Love produces obedience: “If you love Me, keep My commandments.” (John 14:15)
VI. Dead to Sin, Alive to Christ
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Romans 6:6-11 – Believers are crucified with Christ; position overrules condition.
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No longer slaves to sin, but servants of righteousness.
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Reckon (logizomai): The ledger is settled — Christ paid it all.
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Our identity is not in failure but in our position in Christ.
VII. The Shepherd Who Found Us
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Jesus is not a hireling — He stays in hard times.
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We didn’t find God; He found us.
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The Good Shepherd rescues His sheep and never forsakes them.
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Application: Trust His leading, rest in His faithfulness, and respond with daily surrender.
Key Takeaway:
“Our position in Christ overrides our condition in life.”
Faith acts, love obeys, and the Word sustains.
Wednesday Oct 08, 2025
Sunday Morning Service - Jesus is the only way
Wednesday Oct 08, 2025
Wednesday Oct 08, 2025
Sermon Summary — “Jesus Is the Only Way”
Text: John 6:41–71; John 11; Philippians 3
Theme: “Nowhere Else to Go — Jesus Alone Is Life”
Speaker: Pastor Matthew Robbins (LWWC)
1. Introduction: The Question of Direction
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Pastor opened with John 6:41–71, the account of Jesus declaring,
“I am the bread which came down from heaven.”
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The sermon’s central image was Peter’s confession:
“Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.”
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This statement marked a turning point — when many walked away, the true disciples realized there is nowhere else to go but Jesus.
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Title meaning: “Jesus is the only way” is not merely doctrine — it’s a life decision point every believer must reach.
2. Jesus, the Bread of Life
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Jesus contrasts spiritual nourishment with physical hunger:
“Your fathers ate manna in the wilderness and are dead. He who eats this bread will live forever.”
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The Jews misunderstood, thinking literally of flesh and blood; Jesus was speaking spiritually — about receiving Him fully.
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The pastor emphasized that many today make the same mistake — trying to understand God naturally instead of spiritually.
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The Spirit gives life; the flesh profits nothing. The Spirit and the Word always agree — the Holy Spirit never contradicts Scripture.
3. The Division of Disciples
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As Jesus spoke hard truths, many followers turned back.
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Jesus asked the Twelve, “Do you also want to go away?”
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Peter’s answer becomes the heart of the message:
“Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.”
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This is where faith matures — when we realize there’s no plan B.
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True disciples endure, even when teachings are hard or seasons difficult.
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“Life changes when you come to the place where there’s nowhere else to go but Jesus.”
4. The Example of Josiah — All or Nothing
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Pastor drew from King Josiah (2 Kings 22) as an example of wholehearted devotion:
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At 18, Josiah heard the Word of God and led a complete national cleansing, destroying idols both inside and outside Jerusalem.
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Most kings “cleaned up what people could see,” but Josiah went deeper — cleansing what others couldn’t see.
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Application:
“Are you just cleaning up what others can see, or letting the Holy Spirit clean you inside and out?”
5. The Resurrection of Lazarus (John 11)
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The story of Lazarus revealed Jesus’ power over death and His identity as the Resurrection and the Life.
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Martha showed faith — “If you had been here, my brother would not have died” — but still thought in natural terms.
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Jesus lifted her perspective:
“I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in Me, though he die, yet shall he live.”
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The resurrection is not a concept — it is a person.
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Because Jesus lives, believers will live also.
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“If He came out of the grave, I’m walking out too!”
6. Jesus Among False Comparisons
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The world still tries to place Jesus on the same level as other religious leaders — Buddha, Muhammad, Confucius.
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But that cannot stand logically or spiritually:
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If Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father except through Me,” then He is either Lord, liar, or lunatic — but not merely “a good teacher.”
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To be good, one must tell the truth; to be wise, one must be right.
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Therefore, if Jesus is both good and wise, His exclusive claims must be true.
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7. The Evidence of His Resurrection
Pastor listed historical and scriptural proofs of Jesus’ resurrection:
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He lived — more evidence of His life than any other person in history.
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He was crucified — both Jews and Romans confirm it.
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He died — verified by witnesses.
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He was buried — in a borrowed tomb.
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He rose again — testified by angels, disciples, and even Roman guards.
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The tomb was empty — no opposing claim refuted that fact.
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The disciples died for this truth — scattered across the world, they suffered and were martyred, none recanting the resurrection.
“Men will not die for what they know is a lie. But they died for what they saw.”
8. Application: Knowing Christ Above All
From Philippians 3, Paul’s words mirror Peter’s confession:
“What things were gain to me, I count as loss for Christ… that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection.”
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Religious credentials, education, and achievements mean nothing without Christ.
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Only one thing matters when we cross the finish line — being clothed in the righteousness of Christ.
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The Christian’s journey is about transformation — being both clothed with and filled by righteousness.
9. Pressing Toward the Mark
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Paul’s instruction:
“Forgetting what is behind and reaching forward to what is ahead, I press toward the prize.”
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Forgetting doesn’t only mean bad memories — sometimes it’s laying down our own plans or dreams to know Him more fully.
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Pastor challenged believers:
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“Are you just wanting Christ to help you when you’re in a jam, or do you want Him to own you — all of you?”
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The task may change in life, but the call never changes — the call is to know Him.
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10. Closing Call and Prayer
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Life’s tasks come and go — but the call to know Christ remains constant.
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God may place us in different seasons or struggles to draw us closer.
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Some believers stay in the wilderness longer because they resist His process.
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Final prayer:
“Lord, bring us to that place where, like Peter, we realize — we have nowhere else to go but You.”
Key Takeaways
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Jesus is not a way — He is the only way.
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Faith must move from the natural to the spiritual.
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True disciples endure — even when others walk away.
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The resurrection is the foundation of our hope.
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Our greatest calling is not ministry, but intimacy: to know Him.
Wednesday Oct 08, 2025
Thursday Bible Study - Zechariah - Session 3
Wednesday Oct 08, 2025
Wednesday Oct 08, 2025
Sermon Summary — Zechariah: Session 3
Text: Zechariah 3–4
Theme: “Not by Might, Nor by Power, but by My Spirit”
Speaker: Pastor Matthew Robbins (LWWC)
1. Opening and Ministry Update
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Pastor opened with thanksgiving: in just six days, 32 new nations began listening to the church’s broadcast — evidence that God’s Word is reaching the world.
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Prayer emphasized the importance of being “found in the Word, following the Word, and structuring our lives around the Word.”
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Transitioned into Zechariah 3, explaining the historical background:
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The people of Israel had returned from Babylonian exile.
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The prophets Haggai, Zechariah, and Nehemiah encouraged them to rebuild the temple and walls of Jerusalem.
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2. The Ark and God’s Faithfulness
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Pastor recalled the history of the Ark of the Covenant, which never changed — from Moses to David to Solomon — symbolizing God’s unchanging nature.
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He shared conviction from the Holy Spirit: the original Ark still exists and will one day reappear when Israel rebuilds the temple.
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Israel has reportedly reconstructed priestly garments and temple furnishings, preparing for restoration.
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Key lesson: God never changes; His covenant stands forever.
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When the Ark reappears, it will be a global sign of God’s faithfulness and sovereignty.
3. Joshua the High Priest and Filthy Garments (Zechariah 3)
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Vision: Joshua the high priest stands before the angel of the Lord while Satan accuses him.
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Joshua is clothed in filthy garments, symbolizing human sin and unworthiness — even a priest cannot stand clean before God on his own.
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God rebukes Satan and commands that Joshua’s filthy garments be removed and replaced with rich robes and a clean turban marked “Holiness to the Lord.”
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Meaning:
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God removes iniquity and clothes His people with righteousness.
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Salvation is not self-earned — “We can’t clean ourselves; the Lord must do it.”
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Application: Many people say, “I’ll fix myself before I come to God.” Pastor rebuked this thinking:
“You don’t clean up to come to Jesus — you come to Jesus to be cleaned up.”
4. The Branch — Jesus Revealed
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The angel declares:
“I am bringing forth My servant, the Branch.”
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This is a prophecy of the Messiah, Jesus Christ, who removes iniquity “in one day.”
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That “one day” refers both to:
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Israel’s restoration (1948 — national prophecy fulfilled in a day).
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Christ’s crucifixion, where sin was forgiven once for all.
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Through Christ, believers are clothed in righteousness — the Old Testament points directly to Jesus.
5. The Vision of the Lampstand and Olive Trees (Zechariah 4)
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Zechariah sees a golden lampstand (menorah) with seven lamps and two olive trees beside it.
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The angel explains:
“This is the word of the Lord to Zerubbabel: Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit.”
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Zerubbabel, a descendant of David, was leading the rebuilding of the temple.
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Meaning:
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Human effort cannot accomplish God’s work — it is only through the Holy Spirit.
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“Some trust in chariots and horses, but we trust in the name of the Lord.”
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6. Watchman Nee and the Broken Vessel
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Pastor shared insights from Watchman Nee’s “The Release of the Spirit.”
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The alabaster box story illustrates that the value is not the vessel, but what’s inside.
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The Holy Spirit must be released through a broken life.
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Our cleverness or intellect can block the Spirit’s flow — we must depend fully on God’s Word and Spirit.
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True ministry touches the spirit, not merely the emotions or intellect.
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Key quote:
“If I only tell stories but don’t use the Word of God, I’m touching your soul, not your spirit.”
7. The Capstone and the Mountain
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God tells Zerubbabel:
“Who are you, O great mountain? Before Zerubbabel you shall become a plain.”
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Symbolic of God leveling obstacles through grace and power.
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“He shall bring forth the capstone with shouts of ‘Grace, grace!’”
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The capstone (or chief cornerstone) represents Christ, the head and completion of all things.
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Pastor drew connections to Egypt’s pyramids and ancient symbolism, explaining how the “capstone” points to unity under Christ — “the head of the body.”
8. The Two Olive Trees — Moses and Elijah
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The two olive trees represent the two anointed ones who “stand beside the Lord.”
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Pastor identified them as Moses and Elijah — symbols of the Law and the Prophets.
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These two appear repeatedly:
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On the Mount of Transfiguration (Matthew 17).
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As the two witnesses in Revelation 11, prophesying during the tribulation.
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Moses’ body was divinely preserved; Elijah was taken up without dying — both return to testify of Christ’s glory.
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Their ministries align perfectly with Revelation’s description:
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Elijah shuts up the heavens (no rain).
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Moses turns water to blood and releases plagues.
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9. The Word Deposited in Us
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Pastor closed with a powerful exhortation:
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Reading and hearing Scripture is like making spiritual deposits.
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The Holy Spirit later draws from what you’ve stored.
“The Holy Spirit goes to your bank account — make sure there’s something in it.”
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God’s Word feeds the spirit, not just the mind.
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“You don’t have to retain everything — just keep putting it in. The Holy Spirit will bring it out when it’s needed.”
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10. Final Exhortation
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God’s Word must govern us — not the other way around.
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Pastor concluded with this charge:
“Don’t come to the Bible trying to make it fit you.
Come to it and fit yourself to it.” -
Closing prayer asked that the Word of God come alive, ignite prayer, and make believers a light in their generation.
Key Themes
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God’s unchanging faithfulness (the Ark).
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Cleansing through Christ alone.
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Ministry through the Spirit, not human might.
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The prophetic unity of the Law and the Prophets fulfilled in Jesus.
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Living by the Word — daily deposits of truth.
Wednesday Oct 08, 2025
LWWC - Joshua - Session 1
Wednesday Oct 08, 2025
Wednesday Oct 08, 2025
Sermon Summary — Joshua: Session 1
Text: Joshua 1:1–9
Theme: “Be Strong and Courageous — Stand on God’s Word”
Speaker: Pastor Matthew Robbins (LWWC)
1. Opening & Testimony
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Ministry outreach continues to grow — 92 nations now tune into the podcast, with Brazil as the leading listener.
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Reminder from Amos: there is “a famine in the land — not of bread or water, but of hearing the Word of the Lord.”
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Pastor celebrates that God always gives a platform to those who faithfully teach His Word.
2. The Call of Joshua
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After Moses’ death, Joshua is appointed to lead Israel into the Promised Land — the end of wandering and the start of inheritance.
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God alone buried Moses, preserving his body for future purpose (referenced from Jude and the Mount of Transfiguration).
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Joshua is charged to “Arise… go over this Jordan,” marking a new beginning of courage, obedience, and leadership.
3. The Meaning of the Name
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Joshua (Yahashua / Yahushua) — means “Yahweh is salvation.”
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Same root name as Jesus (Iēsous) in Greek — both mean “the Lord saves.”
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Just as Joshua led Israel into the land of promise, Jesus leads believers into eternal life.
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The sermon explained transliteration (sound-based) versus translation (meaning-based), showing how “Joshua” and “Jesus” are connected through language and purpose.
4. God’s Promise to Israel
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God promised Israel vast territory — from the wilderness to the Euphrates River.
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Today, Israel holds only a fraction of that land.
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Their partial obedience and sin caused loss, yet God’s promises remain and will be fulfilled in His timing.
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Every nation is accountable to God — “The nations that forget God shall be turned into hell.”
5. God’s Charge to Joshua (and to Us)
Three times God says:
“Be strong and of good courage.”
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The Hebrew meaning carries the sense of divine impartation — God depositing strength within Joshua.
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The same word (“Be of good cheer” — tharreo) in the New Testament shows Jesus imparting courage to His followers.
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Believers today receive the same spiritual strength through faith and obedience.
6. The Word as the Foundation of Success
“This Book of the Law shall not depart from your mouth… then you will make your way prosperous, and have good success.”
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Success, used only once in the Bible, is defined by obedience and meditation on God’s Word.
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True prosperity is not wealth or position — it is faithfulness to Scripture.
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“Do not turn to the right or left” — God’s Word must be the final authority in every area of life.
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The pastor warned against redefining morality through governments, culture, or opinion: “If the Holy Spirit lives in us, change is inevitable.”
7. Personal Testimony: Strength Through Affliction
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Pastor shared his open-heart surgery experience (on Yom Kippur, “Day of Deliverance”) as a turning point where God deepened his walk.
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Quoted Psalm 119, emphasizing how affliction can become God’s classroom:
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“Before I was afflicted I went astray, but now I keep Your Word.”
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God’s faithfulness in affliction brings revelation and renewal.
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The Word is sweeter than honey and more precious than gold — a believer’s constant companion in suffering and success.
8. The Word Made Flesh
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Read John 1:1–14 — “In the beginning was the Word… and the Word became flesh.”
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Jesus is the Word — you cannot love Him and reject Scripture.
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“If they won’t believe Moses and the prophets, they won’t believe even if one rises from the dead.”
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To reject the Word is to reject Christ Himself.
9. The Battle of Faith
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When you were in sin, you weren’t battling Satan — you were living with him.
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The real battle begins when you switch sides and live for Christ.
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The Christian life is warfare — but God’s strength sustains His people.
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Illustration: a railroad worker’s lantern went out though he kept swinging it — a warning that we must not let our light go out.
10. Final Call
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It’s time to:
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Pray more
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Study the Word more
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Witness more
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“We’re running out of time. Be strong and courageous. The Lord is with you wherever you go.”
Tuesday Sep 30, 2025
Sunday Morning Service - Behind the Veil
Tuesday Sep 30, 2025
Tuesday Sep 30, 2025
Sermon Summary – Behind the Veil
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Part six of a prayer journey series.
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Focus: moving through each stage of prayer (modeled by tabernacle furniture) to reach the manifest presence of God behind the veil.
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Tied to the season of the Days of Awe and the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur).
The Prayer Journey
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Thanksgiving (Entering the Gate)
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Acknowledge dependence on God.
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Gratitude for daily blessings builds humility and faith.
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Praise (The Courts)
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Praise God for His works in Scripture and in personal life.
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Strengthens confidence before making requests.
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Brazen Altar (Repentance)
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Clearing sin and disobedience—both actions committed and duties left undone.
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Laver (Speaking the Word)
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Affirming our position in Christ despite our condition.
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Candlestick (Holy Spirit Illumination)
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Welcoming the Spirit to renew the mind and guide prayer.
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Table of Showbread (Truth-telling with God)
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“Cup of coffee with God”: being fully honest—joys, anger, questions.
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Example: hard prayer for a loved one to be broken so they might return to God (like the prodigal son).
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Altar of Incense (Petition)
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Prayers rise as incense before God (Psalm 141, Revelation 8).
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Spirit-led petitions avoid selfish, flesh-driven requests.
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Behind the Veil (The Ark / Manifest Presence)
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Goal of prayer: intimacy with God, listening more than speaking.
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Jesus tore the veil, granting direct access—not just distant recognition but true fellowship.
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Lessons & Applications
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Manifest vs. Omnipresence: God is everywhere, but He desires to manifest Himself personally to His children.
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Prayer as Relationship: not “Walmart style” requests, but time invested with God.
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Hard Prayers: sometimes God calls us to pray for breaking, not blessing, to bring loved ones to repentance.
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Stillness & Meditation: modern culture overloads us with information; believers must learn to wait in silence before God.
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Faith & Persistence: Prayer must be effectual (energized by the Spirit), fervent (refusing to be denied), and prevailing (producing results).
Biblical Anchors
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James 5: The effectual, fervent prayer of a righteous person avails much.
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Ecclesiastes 5: Draw near to hear rather than offer the “sacrifice of fools.”
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John 14: Jesus promises to manifest Himself to those who obey His Word.
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Examples of persistence in prayer: Jacob wrestling, Bartimaeus crying out, the woman with the issue of blood, Zacchaeus climbing the tree.
Encouragement & Call
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Prayer is the greatest access point of power, healing, provision, and presence available on earth.
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Believers are urged to:
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Commit more time to prayer.
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Enter with thanksgiving and praise.
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Seek not just God’s hand but His face.
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Be patient like Job, consistent like Elijah, and persistent like the saints of old.
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Final invitation:
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Unbelievers—come to Christ today.
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Prodigals—return to the Father.
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Christians—renew prayer life and spend time behind the veil.
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Tuesday Sep 30, 2025
Thursday Bible Study - Zechariah - Session 2
Tuesday Sep 30, 2025
Tuesday Sep 30, 2025
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Continuation of Zechariah study (chapter 2).
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Connection to previous teaching on the Feast of Tabernacles—God’s appointed times foreshadow His redemptive plan.
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Emphasis: Jesus is the only perfect role model; all others fall short.
Key Vision: The Measuring Line
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Zechariah sees a man measuring Jerusalem.
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Message: Jerusalem will expand beyond walls, inhabited with abundance.
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God Himself promises to be a wall of fire around Jerusalem and glory within it.
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Points forward to the New Jerusalem (Revelation) where God is the light and dwelling place.
Prophetic Themes
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God’s Set Times & Plan
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The feasts are God’s appointments, not just Israel’s.
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Fulfilled in Jesus’ first coming; final fulfillment awaits His return.
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God’s plan is global: from a lamb for one (Isaac) → family (Passover) → nation (Levitical priesthood) → whole world (Christ).
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Judgment on Nations
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Nations opposing Israel touch “the apple of God’s eye” and will face judgment.
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Zechariah links closely with Revelation and Daniel: warnings of Babylon (world system) and call to “come out” from it.
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America and modern nations risk falling into Babylon’s errors of pride, wealth, and forgetfulness of God.
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Messiah’s Coming & Millennial Kingdom
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Jesus will dwell among His people; many nations will join the Lord.
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Three main judgments:
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Judgment Seat of Christ – believers’ works judged, not salvation.
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Sheep & Goats Judgment – survivors of tribulation separated (Matthew 25).
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Great White Throne – final judgment of unbelievers.
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Natural people will survive into the Millennium; children born then must choose Christ. Some will still rebel, even with direct access to Jesus.
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Millennial Realities
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Long life restored; judgment executed swiftly by Christ ruling with a rod of iron.
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Feast of Tabernacles continues during the Millennium—nations refusing to honor it will suffer drought.
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Satan will be bound for 1,000 years, then released briefly to deceive again, before final destruction.
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Warnings & Applications
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Human rebellion: Even in perfect conditions with Christ present, some will still reject Him—showing the depth of human pride and sin.
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True justice: God’s judgment is righteous, unlike human corruption; He sees hearts and thoughts.
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Modern relevance: America, like Israel, risks judgment by forgetting God, trusting in wealth, and opposing His purposes.
Encouragements
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Believers’ sins are covered and forgotten in Christ—salvation brings complete forgiveness.
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History and prophecy confirm God’s sovereignty: His Word and His promises always come to pass.
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Psalm 2 reminds us: though nations rage, God laughs at their plans. Christ will reign as King of Kings.
Closing
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Prophecy read from 2020: America missed her day of visitation; the world is descending toward its appointment with the Creator.
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Urgent call: Prepare for God’s appointments, trust Christ fully, and remain faithful.
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Ended with the Lord’s Prayer.
Tuesday Sep 30, 2025
LWWC - 7 Feasts - Session 4
Tuesday Sep 30, 2025
Tuesday Sep 30, 2025
- The teaching completes the study of the seven feasts of the Lord, focusing on the Feast of Tabernacles (Sukkot).
- Emphasis: these are God’s feasts, not merely Israel’s—they reveal His plan for the whole world.
- Christ fulfilled the spring feasts through His life, death, and resurrection; the fall feasts point to His return and final harvest.
Feast of Trumpets, Day of Atonement, and Tabernacles
- Feast of Trumpets: The “alarm” call to repentance, beginning the 10 “Days of Awe.”
- Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur): High priest entered the Holy of Holies once a year to make atonement for Israel—foreshadowing Christ’s ultimate sacrifice.
- Imagery: veil, bells and pomegranates on priest’s robe, blood covering the mercy seat → fulfilled in Jesus’ death and resurrection.
- Feast of Tabernacles:
- Commemoration of deliverance from Egypt, dwelling in booths, God’s provision in the wilderness.
- Prophetic picture of final harvest and God “tabernacling” with His people in the future kingdom.
Prophetic and End-Time Insights
- Tabernacles points to:
- Final Harvest: ingathering of nations (Revelation 14, Ezekiel 37).
- Protection and Provision: God shelters Israel in tribulation.
- Messiah’s Reign: Christ dwelling with His people, fulfilling Ezekiel’s promise.
- The Antichrist will desecrate the rebuilt temple mid-tribulation; Israel’s eyes will be opened, leading to great tribulation.
- God will intervene, bringing judgment (wrath poured out in righteousness).
- Nations will be judged based on their stance toward Israel; blessing or cursing depends on alignment with God’s covenant.
Jerusalem in Prophecy
- Central focus: Jerusalem is the stumbling block for nations.
- Zechariah 14: God will defend Jerusalem, split the Mount of Olives, and establish His reign.
- Nations that resist worship during the Millennial Kingdom will face plagues and drought.
- The Feast of Tabernacles continues into the Millennium as a required festival for all nations.
Application & Encouragement
- Believers must live ready for Christ’s return—watching, not waiting for signs like the rebuilding of the temple before repenting.
- Call to repentance, intercession, and readiness:
- Repent like Israel’s days of awe.
- Witness faithfully to the lost.
- Trust God’s plan, even for loved ones not yet saved.
- Reminder: God loves the lost more than we do—Christ intercedes even now.
Closing Notes
- Festivals reveal God’s redemptive plan: past (fulfilled in Christ), present (salvation available now), and future (His return and reign).
- Encouragement: keep faith, pray for the lost, and be filled with hope as the end of the age approaches.
Tuesday Sep 23, 2025
Sunday Morning Service - Entering In
Tuesday Sep 23, 2025
Tuesday Sep 23, 2025
Summary of the Sermon: “Entering In – The Prayer Journey”
Central Theme
The message calls believers to develop a deeper, more relational prayer life—“hanging out with God.” Prayer is not merely listing personal requests but a sacred journey of communion, thanksgiving, praise, repentance, and transformation, modeled after the Old Testament tabernacle.
Key Biblical Foundations
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1 Samuel 12:23 – Ceasing to pray for others is sin; intercession is a duty.
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Job 42:10 – Job’s restoration came when he prayed for his friends, even those who hurt him.
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Matthew 5:44 – Jesus commands prayer for enemies and those who persecute us.
These verses emphasize selfless intercession as central to powerful prayer.
Steps in the Prayer Journey
The speaker uses the tabernacle layout as a guide, showing how each stage draws believers closer to God’s manifested presence:
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Thanksgiving (Gate – Psalm 100)
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Enter God’s presence with gratitude for all gifts, from basic needs to spiritual blessings.
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Praise (Outer Court)
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Praise God for His mighty works in Scripture and personal life, inviting His manifest presence.
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Repentance (Brazen Altar/Laver – 2 Peter 3:9)
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Confess sins and clear hindrances to approach God boldly.
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Sanctification (Laver – 1 Timothy 4:4-5)
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Speak Scripture over oneself, acknowledging Christ’s righteousness and cleansing.
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Communion & Word (Table of Showbread – John 6:48-58)
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“Have a cup of coffee with God,” feeding on His Word and gaining His perspective.
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Spirit-Led Prayer (Holy Place – Romans 8:26)
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Allow the Holy Spirit to intercede with groanings beyond words, aligning with God’s will.
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Manifest Presence (Holy of Holies)
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Behind the torn veil is God’s deepest mercy, love, and wisdom—true worship and intimate fellowship.
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Practical Insights & Challenges
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Prayer is Relationship, Not Ritual: Move beyond quick petitions; spend unhurried time with God.
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Selflessness: Focus prayers on others; sowing intercession brings blessing back (“boomerang effect”).
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Honest Conversation: Be real with God—share frustrations, failures, and doubts.
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Daily Practice: Even a few intentional minutes each day can transform one’s spiritual life.
Call to Action
Believers are urged to:
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Commit to daily “hanging out with God,” using the tabernacle pattern as a flexible guide.
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Intercede for others, including enemies.
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Seek God’s manifested presence, not merely His gifts.
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Embrace Scripture as spiritual nourishment and the ultimate source of wisdom.
This sermon invites a shift from transactional prayer to a transformative, intimate friendship with God, leading to spiritual growth, deeper peace, and a vibrant faith.
