ز عندما تموت ما يهم في النهاية هو ان كنت قد عشت للمسيح ام لا MP3: http://illbehonest.com/arabic/Yesw-Alemseyh-Tim-Conway God wants you to live a life where you are madly in love with Jesus Christ. Where Christ excites you, you fear Him, you love Him, you find Him beautiful. You love Him more then your family and more then money. You love Him above everything. And because of that love that spills over, with joy you seek to serve Him. Isn't that the kind of life that God wants from you? - Tim Conway
The most important day of your life and marriage is the last day. What does it take to finish well? The short answer: you both are going to need Jesus.
This clip is a preview of the upcoming March 25 sermon "Reverse-Engineering Your Life and Marriage," part 11, the last sermon in the Real Marriage series. In this round-table-style sermon, Pastor Mark and Grace talk with a few couples who've been married for decades about what they've learned about living a life and marriage that glorify God.
Do you have a tendency to think "God has forgotten me?" John 3:27 says - "A person cannot receive even one thing unless it is given him from heaven." - All that we have has been perfectly crated by our Father in heaven, may we not doubt the Lord, but trust Him by faith.
"The moment when you take your first step through the gates of hell, the only thing you will hear is all of creation standing to its feet and applauding and praising God because God has rid the earth of you. That's how not good you are." - Paul Washer
This clip is taken from the sermon, "Jesus and Repentance" preached by Pastor Mark Driscoll at the Mars Hill Church Ballard campus in Seattle, Washington on November 21, 2010. It is the 56th sermon in our sermon series on the Gospel of Luke.
This clip is taken from the sermon, "Jesus and Repentance" preached by Pastor Mark Driscoll at the Mars Hill Church Ballard campus in Seattle, Washington on November 21, 2010. It is the 56th sermon in our sermon series on the Gospel of Luke.
Though He Slay me, yet will I Trust in Him - Matthew Henry
"Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him: He also [shall be] my salvation: for an hypocrite shall not come before him. Behold now, I have ordered [my] cause; I know that I shall be justified." (Job 13:15a-16,18)
Matthew Henry was a 17th and early 18th Century minister of the Gospel in Chester, England, and died in 1714. Quoting Charles Spurgeon: "First among the mighty for general usefulness we are bound to mention the man whose name is a household word, Matthew Henry. He is most pious and pithy, sound and sensible, suggestive and sober, terse and trustworthy...."
Matthew Henry - (1662-1714), Calvinist biblical exegete Matthew Henry was born near Wales on October 18, 1662 and was primarily home-educated by his father, Rev. Philip Henry, and also at the Thomas Doolittle academy from 1680-1682. Henry first started studying law in 1686, but instead of pursuing a career in law he began to preach in his neighborhood.
After the declaration of liberty of conscience by James II in 1687, he was privately ordained in London, and on June 2, 1687, he began his regular ministry as non-conformist pastor of a Presbyterian congregation at Chester. He remained in this position for 25 years. After declining several times offers from London congregations, he finally accepted a call to Hackney, London, and began his ministry there May 18, 1712, shortly before his death.
Henry's reputation rests upon his renowned commentary, An Exposition of the Old and New Testaments (1708-10, known also as Matthew Henry's Commentary on the Whole Bible). He lived to complete it only as far as to the end of the Acts, but after his death other like-minded authors prepared the remainder from Henry's manuscripts. This work was long celebrated as the best English commentary for devotional purposes and the expanded edition was initially published in 1896. Instead of critical exposition, Henry focuses on practical suggestion, and his commentaries contains rich stores of truths. There is also a smaller devotional commentary on the Bible from Henry known as Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary.
Wrath comes because of: 1) Great Wickedness (Genesis 6:5). It results in: 2) Great Sorrow (Genesis 6:6). It brings: 3) Great Collateral Damage (Genesis 6:7) yet it also promises: 4) Great Redemption (Genesis 6:8)
What do you do when you've been sexually assaulted? What do you do when someone you love has been assaulted? What if you've assaulted someone?
This clip is a preview of the upcoming sermon "Disgrace and Grace," a deeply moving, pastoral look at the issue of sexual assault in light of the gospel, which will be shown at all Mars Hill churches this Sunday, February 26 and released online shortly thereafter. It's preached by Pastor Mark Driscoll out of a chapter written by his wife, Grace, about sexual assault that was committed against her years ago.
For more on the issue of sexual assault and the gospel, please see these two important books by Mars Hill pastors and leaders: "Rid of My Disgrace" by Pastor Justin and Lindsey Holcomb, http://amzn.to/fWmyl3 and "Redemption" by Pastor Mike Wilkerson http://amzn.to/huKDbT