Sermons on Exodus
Sermons
25When you cry out to God in pain, does He hear? Exodus 2 reveals a God who knows our suffering intimately because Jesus carried it all at the cross.
Discover why Reformed churches are called Reformed and what it means to worship God on His terms, not ours. This sermon explores the second commandment and how faithful worship shapes generations.
In a culture gripped by busyness, God's gift of Sabbath rest invites us to stop striving and find true refreshment in Him and His people.
When life backs us into a corner with no escape, God invites us to be still and watch Him fight our battles with unlimited power and love.
Coveting reveals hearts hungry for what only God can satisfy. True contentment comes not from getting more, but from finding everything in Christ.
God introduces Himself at the burning bush as holy, compassionate, and utterly dependable. The I Am of Exodus 3 is the same God who crossed holy ground for us in Jesus Christ.
Ever feel like you need just one more thing to be happy? The tenth commandment diagnoses our restless hearts and points us to the only cure: contentment in Christ, who satisfies every longing.
Our words reveal our hearts. The ninth commandment exposes how deeply falsehood runs in us and points us to Jesus, the faithful and true witness who bore the curse of our lies.
The eighth commandment reaches far beyond obvious theft, exposing how we treat money, work, and business dealings. When Christ captures our hearts, we discover a treasure that transforms greed into radical generosity.
Lust is the root and adultery is the fruit. The seventh commandment reaches far deeper than physical unfaithfulness, right into the hidden corners of the heart.
Human life carries immense dignity because every person bears God's image. The sixth commandment calls us not just to avoid murder, but to honour all people and find mercy at the cross.
Honouring parents and all authority is deeply tied to honouring God Himself. Christ perfectly kept this command for us, covering our failures with His righteousness.
The rhythm of rest and work goes back to creation itself. God blessed the seventh day not for His sake, but for ours, inviting humanity into communion with Him.
God's name represents His reputation and relationship with His people. Honouring that name means living with integrity, not just avoiding swear words.
God demands exclusive worship because He alone deserves our heart's deepest loyalty. Every good thing we elevate above Him becomes an idol that enslaves rather than satisfies.
God demands undivided loyalty not as a tyrant but as a rescuer. Before commanding 'no other gods,' He reminds His people: I loved you first and brought you out of slavery.
We only truly grasp God's grace when we understand His law. This series on the Ten Commandments reveals who God is, confronts our brokenness, and points to Jesus, who fulfils the promise woven into every command.
When Aaron's staff swallowed the Egyptian magicians' snakes, God declared His absolute authority over every counterfeit power. Satan's schemes are real but ultimately fake, and death itself has been swallowed up in Christ's victory.
God's law reveals His heart and offers a blueprint for flourishing. Discover how obedience shapes lives that draw others to Him.
When Israel was trapped between Pharaoh's army and the sea, God fought for them. The greatest rescue points forward to Jesus winning the ultimate battle against sin and death.
The ten plagues reveal a holy God who judges rebellion yet offers grace to the hardened heart willing to turn back.
When life goes from bad to worse, God calls His people to grab hold of His promises and trust His sovereign plan, even when circumstances seem to spin out of control.
Moses makes excuses when God calls him to lead Israel out of Egypt. KJ explores three common objections we make when God directs us, and why trusting His power matters more than our ability.
Four hundred years of silence ends when God reveals Himself as holy fire, moved by compassion, and utterly dependable. His name is not a noun but a verb: I AM.
Moses had it all: wealth, education, status in Pharaoh's palace. Then came the wilderness. Discover how God uses waiting, solitude, and discomfort to prepare us for His purposes, and meet the God who hears, remembers, and rescues.