Last modified: December 12, 2022
Brady• December 12, 2022•
Besides Mr. Rogers, the lawyer from Luke 10 is probably the most famous individual to ask “Who is my neighbor?” Jesus saw through the question, and flipped it on its head, asking instead, “Which person proved to be a neighbor?”
Isn’t this the only question that really matters? Our neighborly attitude shouldn’t be limited by culture or race, but by bandwidth. In other words, am I showing kindness and love and charity to as many people as possible, or only those I feel are worthy of it?
Loading Content...
The link has been copied to your clipboard; paste it anywhere you would like to share it.
CloseIt's good for us to ask questions of our faith, but the biggest one by far is the one that explains our very presence on this earth -- why are we here? The Bible gives us several answers for this (Gen. 1:26; Col. 1:16; Rev. 4:11), but those answers wouldn't suffice for a non-Christian. Instead, what this sermon does is try and provide a framework for answering that question. To do that, we need three things: a foundation, contentment, and a purpose. If we find those, we find the answer.
Last modified: December 12, 2022