First Baptist Church, Mount Pleasant, Michigan

  • Welcome
  • About Us
    • Service Times
    • Find Us
    • Calendar
    • Meet our Team
  • Blog
  • Resources
    • Sermons
    • Devotionals
  • Good News!
  • Ministries
    • Resources
    • Youth Ministry Forms
  • Contact Us
  • Give

Devotional: Ezekiel 27

Today’s passage: Ezekiel 27

Helpful thoughts:

  • The poetry in this chapter likens the city of Tyre (Surrounded by water) to a beautiful merchant ship.
  • No matter how beautiful the ship, no matter how wonderful the goods it contains, it is no match for the sea.  God would bringing judgment on Tyre and there was no beauty, wealth or international coalition that could stop it.
  • The final verses speak of the dread of all the surrounding peoples who had done business with Tyre.  As Tyre fell, so would the economies of all these other nations who relied so heavily on her.

Questions to consider:

  1. We often view the quality of our own lives by these economic circumstances, but what would 2 Corinthians 5:9 or Matthew 6:33 lead us to focus on?  If my definition of “blessing” is wrapped up in prosperity and ease, how will I begin to evaluate what is a good or evil action?
  2. If our hearts hold God in the right regard, why would the fall of an economic center like Tyre not result in the same “horror” as felt by the people in that region whose hopes were centered around their prosperity?
  3. In what ways has what God promised us in Christ through the Gospel so much better that what we may desire in present prosperity?  How do these truths help us to better handle earthly prosperity should it come?

February 24, 2022 Category: Devotions, Ezekiel

Devotional: Ezekiel 26

Today’s passage: Ezekiel 26

Helpful thoughts:

  • Today’s pronouncement of judgment is against the city of Tyre.  Chapter 26 is the first of three chapters which are devoted to the destruction of Tyre.
  • Tyre was a wealthy city of international trade surrounded by water just off the coast of modern day Lebanon.  It’s location made the people feel extra secure, safe from any attack.
    • It was conquered originally by Nebuchadnezzar.  Later, Alexander the Great made a causeway to connect the city to the mainland.
  • The chapter could be outlined this way:
    • Verses 1-6 – The reason for judgment
    • Verses 7-14 – The method of judgment
    • Verses 15-18 – The international response to judgment
    • Verses 19-21 – The permanence of the judgment

Questions to consider:

  1. In what ways are we reminded concerning where our safety and our strength comes from?  Who is our safety?  Who is our strength? (2 Corinthians 12:8-10)
  2. How does this help us to also redefine strength and safety in ways the world would not understand?  Was Tyre ever truly “safe” simply because of its location?  Was Nebuchadnezzar truly strong because of his own armies? (Daniel 4:29-33)
  3. How does Colossians 3:1-4 help us to answer these questions?  Where are believers hidden in safety for the day when the final victory is won?

February 23, 2022 Category: Devotions, Ezekiel

Sermon: John 20:19-31

February 22, 2022 Category: John, New Testament, Sermons

Devotional: Ezekiel 25

Today’s passage: Ezekiel 25

Helpful thoughts:

  • With the beginning of chapter 25, we begin a unit in the book of Ezekiel (25-32) which focuses on prophesies concerning surrounding nations. The nations are listed in geographical order clockwise from the northeast to the west.
  • Ammon (Northeast):  The Ammonites rejoiced in the profaning and fall of God’s people.  They would later fall to Babylon and nomads from the east would dwell in their land.
  • Moab (East): The Moabites did not regard Judah (Therefore, they also did not regard Judah’s God).  They would suffer the same consequence as the Ammonites.
  • Edom (South): The Edomites (Descendants of Esau) were great rivals with Israel and Judah.  They would fall to the people they hated most, by God’s decree.
  • Philistia (West): With a rivalry that appears to have equaled that of the Edomites, the Philistines are promised vengeance and wrath.

Questions to consider:

  1. What is the main motive for these judgments?  Whose reputation was/is to be protected?
  2. Who would these nations know and respect at the end of these judgments? (See the end of verses 7, 11, 14, and 17)
  3. These nations believed in many gods.  Their own national gods were to protect them from the gods of other nations.  Did God simply want these people to know he was stronger than their gods?  What does the phrase, “I am the LORD.” seem to indicate?  Even if you don’t believe in God, are you still under His authority and responsible to Him?  How can this truth impact our understanding of the need of evangelism?

February 22, 2022 Category: Devotions, Ezekiel

Devotional: Jude 24-25

Today’s passage: Jude 24-25

Helpful thoughts:

  • After sharing what false teachers are doing and what their consequence will be, Jude concludes his epistle with what God is doing and what he will receive.
  • Those who are true followers of Christ will not suffer the same judgment as the false teachers Jude has warned us about.  God will present us “blameless before the presence of His glory!”
  • The glory, majesty, dominion and authority that God has had, does have, and will always have should serve as a warning to those who rebel against Him, and as a victory cheer to those who believe and have submitted to His lordship.

Questions to consider:

  1. How does the promise of verse 24 compare with the promises of passages like Philippians 1:6, Romans 8:28-30, and Ephesians 5:25-27?  What is God able to do…and what has He promised to do?
  2. How will the fulfilment of this promise result in our great joy?  Why should it give us joy even now as we wait for that day?
  3. How does the reality of who God is impact the way we see and think about our day, our desires, our relationships, our possessions, etc.?  To whom do we truly belong and for what purpose do we exist?

February 21, 2022 Category: Devotions, Jude

Devotional: Jude 17-23

Today’s passage: Jude 17-23

Helpful thoughts:

  • It shouldn’t surprise us when false teachers and false Christians stir up division in the church.  The Apostles told us this would happen.
    • This warning gives us reason to be diligent, alert and active in our faith (Verses 20-22).
  • When Jude uses the phrase, “The last time” he is referring to the time of the Church.  We often think of the last time as the Tribulation and Millennial Kingdom (From our vantage point).  But Jude is simply referring to the time after the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ…the Church Age.
  • The exhortations in this passage help clarify something for us…being part of a church is not merely a recreational activity.  There is a war being waged (Ephesians 6:10-12).

Questions to consider:

  1. What source of division in the church is mentioned in this passage?  How might division be caused by those mentioned in the book of Jude?  What are some general solutions to church division?
  2. What are the actions given which characterize a person who is being “built up in the most holy faith?”  What kinds of things do Christians do in the midst of the spiritual warfare we are in (Verses 20-23)?
  3. Why is it right (And so very poignant) to call evangelism, “Snatching them out of the fire?”  Though we can not force anyone or argue anyone into repentance, what reality should embolden us to share the Gospel with the lost?

February 20, 2022 Category: Devotions, Jude

Devotional: Jude 14-16

Today’s passage: Jude 14-16

Helpful thoughts:

  • Enoch is the man who walked with God and then one day, “was not, for God took him.” in Genesis 5:18-24.
    • There is a book called 1 Enoch that is considered “extrabiblical.”  This means that the book is NOT scripture, not God’s authoritative word.  This specific quote that Jude gives does contain truth, but that doesn’t mean the whole book should be included in Scripture.
  • The theme word of this quote, “Ungodly!”
    • God’s response to all the ungodliness will be conviction and judgment.
  • Verse 16 emphasizes the way these false teachers use their words.  Nothing (Outside of themselves) seems good enough for them until they want something from you.  Then they flatter you to manipulate you for their own advantage.

Questions to consider:

  1. What kind of “conviction” is Jude writing about in verse 15?  Is this a conviction that leads to repentance or simply a guilty verdict declared?  Since judgment comes with it, which would it have to be?
  2. What judgment was rendered for those who receive conviction that leads to repentance? (Romans 3:23-26)
  3. How would repentance and love change what is being depicted in verse 16?  Go through the descriptions in the verse and think of what a Christian would “put on” in place of these actions (Ephesians 4:22-24).

February 19, 2022 Category: Devotions, Jude

Devotional: Jude 8-13

Today’s passage: Jude 8-13

Helpful thoughts:

  • The false teachers are being compared to those who were judged from verses 5-7.
  • Just because somebody had a dream doesn’t mean they heard from God or saw anything legitimate (Like Heaven, for instance).
    • The Word of God is our inerrant, infallible and sufficient source of God’s revelation to man.
  • False teachers speak flippantly and errantly about angels and demons.  Even Michael the archangel doesn’t do such things.
  • False teachers are motivated by selfish gain.  Three examples are given for illustration:
    • Cain – Genesis 4:5-8
    • Balaam – Numbers 22:5-7
    • Korah – Numbers 16:1-3, 31-35

Questions to consider:

  1. What is the overall description of perspective given on these false believers and false teachers?  How would you summarize these verses?
  2. What are some big, popular and even financially lucrative books, movies, speakers, etc. that you have seen over the last few years that fit into these descriptions?  What can Christians do to protect themselves from the latest unbiblical crazes?
  3. What does verse 12 teach us about false teachers?  How will they be noticed?  Will they be rooted in truth or carried along by every “new doctrine”?  Will they be giving or will they feast?  Will they submit to authority and community or will they keep their distance from meaningful fruitful relationships?  How can these questions also encourage us to be growing and moving in the right direction in our walk with Christ and His church?

February 18, 2022 Category: Devotions, Jude

Devotional: Jude 5-7

Today’s passage: Jude 5-7

Helpful thoughts:

  • Jude gives a few examples from history to show that false teachers will also be judged righteously by God.
  • Those three example are:
    • The unbelieving Israelites during the exodus.
    • The rebellious angels.
    • The indulgent people of Sodom and Gomorrah and the surrounding cities.

Questions to consider:

  1. Who was responsible for the rescuing of Israel from Egypt and the judgment on those who rejected God and would not believe or obey?  How does this affect how we see and understand Jesus and the Old Testament?
  2. In what way do the three adjectives above (Unbelieving, rebellious, indulgent) go together?  How would the false teachers being discussed in the book possess and portray all three attributes?
  3. Why is it important for Christians to know that false teachers will be judged?  How should this affect our posture and thinking concerning them (Ephesians 5:6-11)?  How does it also humble us and remind us of our own rescue (Romans 3:23)?

February 17, 2022 Category: Devotions, Jude

Devotional: Jude 3-4

Today’s passage: Jude 3-4

Helpful thoughts:

  • Jude desired to write about the Gospel itself, but realized another need of the church.  This letter is written to encourage the church to contend for the faith against false teaching.
    • This faith was “once for all” delivered to the saints, meaning it will never change.
  • There always have been and there always will be false teachers.
    • They are “designated” for condemnation.
    • They are inside the visible church.
      • “Visible” meaning, they go to church, people count them as part of their church (Having “crept in unnoticed”), but God knows they are not His children.
  • The method of these false teachers and false believers is to “pervert” the grace of God.
    • They teach what sounds like truth, but twist it.  These false teachers sound right about so many things, but somewhere along the way, they twist and pervert the message to lead people astray.
  • We often think of “sensuality” along with lust and sexuality, but the word can include other sins as well.  It is a lack of constraint.

Questions to consider:

  1. If the faith has been once and for all delivered, should any new documents or teachings or visions or any other new source of information be able to change the Gospel message?  Could the way of salvation ever change (John 14:6)?
  2. What does false teaching result in (Verse 4)?  What does it turn into?
  3. Is it possible to watch preachers on tv, on the internet, or to hear them on the radio, and be listening to false teachers?  Is it possible that there could be people in our church (Or any church) who are there to deceive and oppose God and would never admit it?  What would be the right way to know?  How would we rightly discover that?

February 16, 2022 Category: Devotions, Jude

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 79
  • 80
  • 81
  • 82
  • 83
  • …
  • 230
  • Next Page »

Recent on the Blog

  • Sermon: Luke 2:1-21
  • Sermon: Luke 1:26-56
  • Sermon: Matthew 16:13-20
  • Sermon: Matthew 16:1-12

Devotionals by Book

  • Devotions

Sermons by Book

  • Sermons

Inside

  • Welcome
  • About Us
    • Service Times
    • Find Us
    • Calendar
    • Meet our Team
  • Blog
  • Resources
    • Sermons
    • Devotionals
  • Good News!
  • Ministries
    • Resources
    • Youth Ministry Forms
  • Contact Us
  • Give

Search

Copyright © 2025 · First Baptist Church, Mount Pleasant, Michigan · 1802 E. High Street Mount Pleasant, MI 48858 (Directions) · (989) 775-5578 · Contact Us