I had to tell the pastor that
after hearing his sermon, he's setting people up for a real problem.
After hearing a sermon titled «Life Lessons from a Pencil,» I got to thinking about the things a pencil can teach us about parenting.
I remember as a young child being afraid
after hearing sermons at church about the end of the world.
Not exact matches
To be sure some real true in heart believers had their first nudge toward salvation in Christ
after hearing a pew fire licking
sermon about where one who doesn't come to Christ will end up.
Why do we
hear sermon after sermon about Paul's instructions that «I do not permit a woman to teach or have authority over man» while never
hearing a peep about Paul's declaration that «Cretans are always liars, evil brutes, lazy gluttons»?
All of those years of
hearing sermon after sermon, youth camp
after Bible study, about doing BIG things for a BIG God with BIG visions and BIG plans left us with crazy - high expectations on ourselves coupled with a narrow understanding of following Jesus.
I have read articles and
heard sermons about this verse and how Jesus didn't want to be defiled by Mary before he ascended to heaven, and how Jesus rose from the dead, but he didn't ascend to heaven, but
after he talked to Mary, he did ascend to heaven,
after which time He could be touched by the apostles in the Upper Room, and then later, he ascended for good.
Soon
after I read this book I
heard a
sermon on «The Star of Bethlehem» (Matthew 2), in which the preacher quoted Roof.
The Yehudi comes to Lublin because he
hears that the Seer «consorts with good and evil,» and it is with good and evil that the Seer's first
sermon after his arrival deals.
It feels like it would be mentally impossible for me to sit through a church service and a
hear sermon right now, especially
after all the Spirit filled, energetically charged conversations and connections I've had with others in the name of Christ outside the church.
He took arts and crafts classes
after school with Charles Alston at the Utopia Children's House,
heard weekly
sermons from Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. at the Abyssinian Baptist Church, and attended the Harlem Art Workshop run by Augusta Savage.