Church of Christ Sermon Outlines and Lessons for 2009
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James 1:1
introduces a humble servant who became a pillar of the church. This
message considers James, the brother of Jesus, and the grace that
shaped his life, his leadership, and his letter. |
James calls
scattered believers to a surprising response: “Count it all joy”
when trials come (James 1:2–4). Joy flows from what God produces
through testing and from the wisdom He gives to those who ask in
faith (James 1:5–8). |
James 1:9–11
teaches that both poverty and wealth test the soul. The humble
believer may rejoice in exaltation, and the wealthy believer
must rejoice in humiliation, remembering the frailty of riches
and the permanence of God’s kingdom. |
James 1:16–18
proclaims God’s unchanging generosity. Every good and perfect
gift descends from the Father of lights, and by His will He
brings new life through the word of truth. This passage invites
grateful worship and confident obedience rooted in God’s steady
goodness. |
James 1:13–15
traces sin from temptation to death. God tests for growth; Satan
tempts for ruin. Temptation appeals to desire, gains consent,
and produces sin. Sin grows toward death unless confronted
through confession, cleansing, and Spirit-led obedience. |
James 1:19–21
summons believers to a life shaped by Scripture: swift to hear, slow
to speak, and slow to wrath. These verses reveal the pathway of
self-control that receives God’s implanted word and grows into the
righteousness God desires. |
James defines pure religion in concrete terms: disciplined speech,
compassionate action, and unstained holiness before God (James
1:26–27). |
James 2:14–20 reminds us that
true faith must be active. It is not enough to believe or
profess belief; faith must be demonstrated through obedience.
James reveals that faith without works is dead, emphasizing that
only a working, obedient faith brings life and salvation through
Christ. |
James 2:8–13 reveals that God’s
law of love and mercy governs how we treat others. The “royal
law” commands us to love our neighbor as ourselves, showing no
partiality. This passage reminds us that obedience,
impartiality, and mercy are all marks of genuine faith under
Christ’s law of liberty. |
James 2:1–7 teaches
that the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ leaves no place for
partiality. The church must judge with righteous judgment, honoring
character over appearance, and receiving every soul without
favoritism in the presence of the Lord of glory.
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Burial of Jesus
John 19:31–42 records the burial of Jesus during the Passover
preparation day. Each detail fulfills Scripture and verifies His
death, preparing the way for the first day of the week (John
19:31–42). |
Jesus On His Way To The Cross
(Matthew 27:31–32; Luke 23:26–32) As Jesus made His way to Golgotha,
the events surrounding Judas, the crowds, and the prophecy of
destruction remind us that God’s Word is certain. We must learn from
both the worldly sorrow of Judas and the godly sorrow of Peter. |
Luke 23:33–34 records Jesus’ crucifixion and His first word from the
cross, “Father, forgive them.” Today we consider the scene at
Golgotha and the prophecies fulfilled as the Lamb suffers for our
sins. |
At Calvary, Jesus’ first recorded word was a prayer: “Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do” (Luke 23:34). From
that mercy flows every scene that follows—promise for a sinner,
provision for a mother, and prophecy fulfilled as the Lamb bears our
sins.
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(Matthew 26:57–68)
Through a sleepless night Jesus endured unjust hearings before Annas
and Caiaphas. In the face of lies and violence He testified
truthfully to His identity. These trials reveal prophecy fulfilled,
human corruption unmasked, and the steadfast courage of the Son of
God. |
(Luke 23:6–12)
Luke records a revealing moment in the Lord’s trial: Jesus stands
before Herod. In these few verses the Savior teaches the purpose of
signs, the holiness of silence, the emptiness of spectacle, and the
courage of obedience. Let us see Jesus and learn. |
Without Faith
It’s Impossible to Please Him
Hebrews 11 Series
(Hebrews 11:4–6)
Faith is the foundation upon which every relationship with God is
built. Without it, there is no obedience, no worship, and no
salvation. Hebrews 11:4–6 presents two powerful examples—Abel and
Enoch—and a clear declaration that without faith, it is impossible
to please God. |
Abraham’s
Sacrificial Faith
Hebrews 11:17–19 reveals faith at its highest cost: Abraham offering
Isaac. In that test, Abraham trusted God to keep His promises, even
to the point of raising the dead. This is sacrificial faith that
obeys completely and rests in God’s power.
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By Faith, Noah
(Hebrews 11:7)
Faith has always been the dividing line between salvation and
destruction. Hebrews 11:7 declares,
“By faith Noah, being divinely
warned of things not yet seen, moved with godly fear, prepared an
ark for the saving of his household, by which he condemned the world
and became heir of the righteousness which is according to faith.”
Today, we examine Noah’s obedient, reverent, and saving faith.
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The
Faith of the Patriarchs
(Hebrews
11:13–16)
Hebrews 11:13–16 shows the patriarchs living
as strangers and pilgrims, seeing God’s
promises afar off, embracing them, and
seeking a better—heavenly—country. God was
not ashamed to be called their God, for He
prepared a city for them. |
By Faith, Jacob
and Joseph
(Hebrews 11:21–22)
Our study from Hebrews 11 brings us today to two remarkable examples
of enduring faith—Jacob and his son Joseph. Both trusted in God’s
promises even as they faced death. Their faith was unwavering,
forward-looking, and rooted in the conviction that God always
fulfills His word. |
By Faith, Cain
and Abel
(Hebrews 11:4;
Genesis 4:1–16)
Hebrews 11:4 says, “By faith Abel offered to God a more excellent
sacrifice than Cain.” Genesis 4 records the account. From these
brothers we learn what acceptable worship is, how sin crouches at
the door, and how faith still speaks. |
Faith Defined
(Hebrews 11:1–3)
Hebrews chapter 11 defines and demonstrates true faith in God. In
verses 1 through 3, we find faith’s meaning, reward, and
understanding, showing what it means to trust God completely and to
live by His promises.
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By Faith, Isaac
(Hebrews
11:20)
Hebrews 11:20 records Isaac blessing Jacob and Esau “concerning
things to come.” This moment reveals how faith yields to God’s
revealed will and speaks blessing in line with His promises.
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By Faith Abraham
(Hebrews 11:8–10)
Hebrews 11:8–10 shows Abraham answering God’s call, dwelling in
promise by faith, and looking for the city with foundations, whose
builder and maker is God.
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Daniel and the Seventy Weeks Prophecy
(Daniel 9:20-27)
Daniel 9:20–27 records Gabriel’s answer to
Daniel’s prayer, revealing “seventy sevens”—God’s timetable from
Cyrus’s decree to Messiah’s atoning work and the determined end of
temple sacrifice. This lesson traces promise, fulfillment in Christ,
and the present kingdom He established, confirming God’s
faithfulness and sufficiency of His revealed word. |
Daniel's Prayer For Deliverance
(Daniel 9:1-19)
Daniel 9:1–19 records an aged prophet reading Jeremiah,
recognizing the seventy years’ fulfillment, and turning to God with
fasting, sackcloth, and ashes. His prayer—confession, covenant
appeal, and plea for God’s name—models Scripture-directed repentance
and bold intercession, seeking mercy, restored worship, and the
Lord’s favor upon His city and people today. |
The Ram and the He Goat
(Daniel Chapter 8)
Daniel 8 presents an awake vision set
in Belshazzar’s third year: a ram (Medo-Persia) is shattered by a
swift goat (Greece/Alexander), whose broken horn yields four. From
one rises a “little horn” (Antiochus IV), desecrating the sanctuary
until 2,300 evenings-mornings pass and cleansing comes—showing God’s
sovereign timetable and prophecy’s precision. |
Daniel's Vision of the Four Kingdoms
(chapter 7)
Daniel 7 shifts from court history to
apocalyptic vision. In Belshazzar’s first year, four beasts rise
from the storming sea—Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome. Above
them, the Ancient of Days judges and the Son of Man receives
everlasting dominion. This chapter steadies exiles: empires rage;
Christ’s kingdom endures and prevails. |
Daniel and the Lion's Den
(chapter 6)
Daniel 6 records steadfast faith
under pressure. Conspirators weaponize law to trap Daniel, yet his
disciplined prayer life endures. Thrown to lions, he is preserved by
God, vindicating righteousness and exposing corrupt power. This
guide explores historical context, structure, theological themes,
and practical lessons for courageous obedience amid hostile
cultures. |
Belshazzar Saw the Writing on the Wall
(Daniel Chapter 5)
Daniel 5 recounts Belshazzar’s
blasphemous feast, sacred vessels profaned, and a mysterious hand
writing divine judgment on the palace wall. Daniel interprets the
words—MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN—foretelling the fall of Babylon
that very night. This study explores the history, symbolism, and
sobering lessons about pride, accountability, and God’s sovereign
rule. |
Nebuchadnezzar's Testimony
(Daniel 4)
Daniel 4 records King
Nebuchadnezzar’s testimony. After prideful boasts and a warning
dream, the Babylonian ruler is humbled by God, loses his sanity,
lives like a beast, and then has his reason restored. He lifts his
eyes to heaven, blesses the Most High, and learns that God rules all
kingdoms. |
Nebuchadnezzar's Fiery Furnace
(Daniel 3)
Daniel 3 recounts the fiery furnace:
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego refuse Nebuchadnezzar’s golden
image, choosing loyal worship over survival. Cast into flames heated
sevenfold, they walk unharmed with a fourth figure. God delivers;
the king praises the Most High. This study explores courage, civil
disobedience, and steadfast faith under pressure. |
Nebuchadnezzar's Dream
(Daniel 2)
Daniel 2 lifts the curtain on God’s
rule over empires. Nebuchadnezzar dreams; Babylon’s sages fail;
Daniel prays and God reveals. A statue outlines four kingdoms, then
a stone cut without hands shatters them. The message endures: heaven
sets up kings and establishes an everlasting kingdom that will never
be destroyed. |
Introduction to Daniel
(Daniel 1)
Meet Daniel—prophet, exile, and model
of steadfast faith. Taken from Jerusalem to Babylon as a youth, he
learned the empire’s ways without surrendering allegiance to God.
Serving pagan kings, Daniel practiced prayerful courage, excelled
with wisdom, and proclaimed heaven’s rule. This introduction orients
readers to his world, themes, and relevance. |
In The Beginning
(Genesis 1:1–2)
Genesis 1:1–2 declares, “In the beginning God created the heavens
and the earth… and the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of
the waters.” These opening words ground all Scripture and anchor our
faith in the sovereign God who made and sustains everything.
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The Creation
Account of Genesis
(Genesis 1:1-5)
Genesis 1:1 sets the foundation for all Scripture and for our faith.
God “in the beginning” created the heavens and the earth, and
Genesis 1–2 records His orderly work with clarity and purpose
(Genesis 1:1–5).
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Creation Days 1
Through 6
Genesis 1:1–31
Genesis 1:1–31 reveals God’s ordered work across six days, preparing
an inhabited world and crowning it with mankind made in His image.
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Creation Day Six
Genesis
1:24–31
Genesis 1:24–31 records the sixth day when God filled the land with
living creatures and then crowned creation by making mankind in His
image, blessing humanity with purpose, dominion, and provision.
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Genesis 2:1–6 shows the seventh day completed, the week blessed, and
the earth prepared so that man may live and serve God. The text
centers our attention on humanity within God’s finished creation.
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And God Formed
Man
(Genesis
2:7–17)
Genesis 2:7–17 reveals God’s intentional design: He formed man from
dust, breathed life into him, placed him in Eden, gave meaningful
work, and set holy boundaries through the two trees.
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And God Formed Eve
(Genesis
2:18–25)
In Genesis 2:18–25, we find one of the most beautiful and
foundational accounts in all of Scripture—the creation of woman and
the institution of marriage. Here we learn of God’s wisdom, love,
and purpose in forming Eve from Adam’s rib, creating the perfect
companion and completing His design for humanity.
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Sin Enters the
World
(Genesis
3:1–8)
Genesis 3:1–8 shows how temptation approached, doubt arose, desire
was enticed, and sin entered a world that had been wholly good. This
account reveals our enemy’s tactics and our need for God’s grace in
Christ.
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God Confronts
Adam’s Sin
(Genesis
3:8–15)
Genesis 3:8–15 records the Lord’s confrontation of Adam after sin
entered the garden, revealing personal accountability, the reality
of guilt and shame, and the first promise of redemption through the
woman’s Seed.
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Genesis 4:1–12 records the first brothers, the first offerings, the
first warning, and the first murder. From their choices we learn how
God views worship, authority, repentance, and justice, and how faith
still speaks (Hebrews 11:4).
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Genealogies of
Genesis
(Genesis 5:1–32)
Genesis 5:1–32 records the line from Adam to Noah. In these names
and years God teaches the dignity of His image, the certainty of
death, the beauty of walking with Him, and the hope He provides.
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Before the Flood: The Days of
Noah
(Genesis 6:1–8)
Genesis 6 shows why judgment came. As humanity multiplied,
corruption spread. God strove with mankind through Noah, a preacher
of righteousness, yet evil filled every thought. This passage
explains the flood and warns our generation.
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Noah Builds the Ark
(Genesis 6:8–22)
In a corrupt and violent world, Noah
found grace because he walked faithfully with God. This sermon from
Genesis 6:8–22 examines Noah’s obedience in building the ark, God’s
covenant of salvation through water, and the lasting lesson that
faith and obedience remain the pathway to divine grace and
deliverance. |
Genesis 8:1–22 records the turning point of the Flood: God
remembered Noah, calmed the waters, settled the ark, renewed the
earth, received worship, and gave a lasting promise of stability to
every generation.
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After the Flood:
God’s Four Changes
(Genesis
9:1–7)
After the flood, God blessed Noah and set four
world-shaping directives: animal dread of man, permission to eat
flesh without blood, the sanctity of life in God’s image, and
accountability for murder. These verses explain our world and call
us to faithful obedience.
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Genesis 11:1–9
records the building of the tower at Babel and God’s response. This
account reveals humanity’s pride, God’s purpose for the nations, and
the divine origin of languages.
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How Can We Know
Which church is the church of Christ?
When people lose
something important — a beloved dog, a stolen car, a treasured
possession — they do not want a substitute. They want the original,
the exact one. In the same way, when Jesus promised to build His
church, He was not talking about many different versions. He had one
in mind, and the only way to find it today is to compare what we see
in the religious world to the description given in the New
Testament. |
What Church is It?
This lesson examines the identity of the church of Christ
as revealed in Scripture. We will see that it was promised by God,
prophesied by the prophets, established by Christ, opposed by Satan,
open to all, free from man-made doctrines, and committed to honoring
God’s will in all things. |
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Sermon/Lesson Title

(Right Click to Download) |
Audio

Video
 Text
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Category |
Deterrents To Evangelism |
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Evangelism |
What? Me? Evangelize? |
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Evangelism |
The Necessity of Evangelism |
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Evangelism |
The Urgency of Evangelism |
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Evangelism |
The Resurrection of Christ |
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Jesus |
Esther Lesson 2 |
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Esther |
Esther Lesson
1 |
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Esther |
By Grace are ye Saved Through Faith |
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Grace |
Amazing Grace (An analysis of God's Grace) |
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Grace |
Ecclesiastes chapter 11 |
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Ecclesiastes |
Ecclesiastes Chapter 10, Part 2 |
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Ecclesiastes |
Analysis of Obedience |
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Obedience |
Analysis of a Command |
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Obedience |
Ecclesiastes Chapter 9 conclusion and chapter 10 Lesson 1 |
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Ecclesiastes |
Ecclesiastes Chapter 9 Lesson 2 |
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Ecclesiastes |
Ecclesiastes Chapter 9 Lesson 1 |
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Ecclesiastes |
God's Plan For Man's Salvation |
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Salvation |
Abiding in Christ |
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Christian Living |
A Christian's Influence |
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Christian Living |
The Word of God |
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Apologetics |
Convicting the World |
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Christian Living |
The Cost of Caring |
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Christian Living |
Lay Up For Yourself Treasures in Heaven |
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Christian Living |
Ecclesiastes Chapter 4 Part 2 |
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Ecclesiastes |
Why Christians Don't Teach Others the Gospel |
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Evangelism
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I Am The Vine (John 15) |
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Christian Living
Jesus |
When We Pray (Matthew 6:5-8) |
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Prayer |
Ecclesiastes Chapter 4 Part 1 |
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Ecclesiastes |
Calling Attention to Ourselves |
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Christian Living |
Motivations For Prayer |
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Prayer
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The Savior's Way |
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Salvation
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Love Your Enemies |
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Christian Living |
Love The Church |
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Church |
And Then There Was Life |
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Apologetics |
Ecclesiastes 3 |
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Ecclesiastes |
The Law of Vengeance |
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Christian Living |
John 14 Part 2 |
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John |
Ecclesiastes Chapter 2, Lesson 2 |
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Ecclesiastes |
Acts 17 and the Word of God |
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Evangelism &
Church |
John 14
Part 1 |
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John |
Taking Oaths |
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Christian Living |
Ecclesiastes 2 Lesson 1 |
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Ecclesiastes |
The Righteousness That Exceeds |
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Christian Living |
John 13 Part 2 |
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John |
Listen to the Voice of the Lord |
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Christian Living |
Ecclesiastes Lesson 3 The Meaning of Life |
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Ecclesiastes |
John Chapter 13 |
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John |
In Six Days |
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Apologetics |
Ecclesiastes 2 All Is Vanity |
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Ecclesiastes |
Faith and Works |
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Faith
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Luke 22 |
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Luke |
Introduction to Ecclesiastes |
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Ecclesiastes |
A Praying Church |
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Prayer
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Making the World a Better Place |
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Christian Living |
Remember Jesus in Your Youth |
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Christian Living |
Salvation by Faith Only? |
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Salvation |
Matthew 26 Lord's Supper |
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Matthew |
The Year of the Jubilee |
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Leviticus |
Saved By What? |
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Salvation |
The Power of Influence |
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Christian Living
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Feast of Israel |
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Leviticus |
The Harvest |
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Evangelism
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Matthew 26 |
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Matthew |
The Beatitudes Part
3 |
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Beatitudes |
Attitudes Towards Christ |
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Jesus
Christ |
The Beatitudes Part
2 |
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Beatitudes |
The Feast of the Trumpets |
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Leviticus |
The Beatitudes Part 1 |
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Beatitudes |
Matthew 24 Part 3 |
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Matthew |
Lord Remember Me |
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Christian Living |
Kings and Rulers |
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Christian Living |
The Feast of the First Fruits |
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Leviticus |
The Attributes of God |
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Proverbs |
Wine in Proverbs |
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Proverbs |
Matthew 24 Part 2 |
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Matthew |
Is the church of Christ a Denomination? |
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Church |
The Feast of Unleavened Bread |
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Leviticus |
We Are Without Excuse |
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Apologetics |
Visitation Lesson 1
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Evangelism |
Visitation Lesson
2 |
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Evangelism |
Visitation Lesson 3 |
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Evangelism |
Visitation Manual and Workbook
(word doc) |
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Evangelism |
The Passover |
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Leviticus |
Priorities For The New Year |
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Christian Living |
Matthew 24
Part 1 |
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Matthew |
The Sabbath |
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Leviticus |
Matthew 21 |
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Matthew |
Matthew 22 |
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Matthew |
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