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A Day of Good News
INTRODUCTION
Today we begin our missions emphasis month.
In October the Sunday morning messages will challenge to:
Give to missions.
Go to our world, starting with our own communities, as missionaries.
Pray for the missionaries we send to the world.
On the third (20th) and fourth (27th) Sundays of the month we will host missionaries in our services who will take about 5-7 minutes each to tell us about their calling and their place of service.
On Sunday the 20th I will clearly explain how this church supports missionaries through Faith Promise Giving.
On Sunday the 27th we will receive your faith promises for giving to missions for a 12 month period.
One particular highlight I am looking forward to is the October 23, Wednesday night, shoe giveaway.
We need lots of volunteers, so clear you calendar for that evening.
We already have 200 pairs of shoes and socks to go with them.
If you want to purchase more kid’s shoes or socks to add to the inventory, that would be great.
But I really need you to be here on that wonderful Wednesday night when we bless our community by putting new shoes of the feet of kids who need them.
God has blessed us in these past weeks with a revival spirit—people saved, filled with the Holy Spirit, baptized, and many encouraged, refreshed, and renewed.
I see no reason for that to end!
In fact, this month should move us forward in our desire to bring the lost to Jesus here and around the world.
O, Lord, let the well of revival gush forth with a river of life among us today and this month!
In preparation for today’s message I need to ask you to use your imagination.
I want you to imagine what it was like to live thousands of years ago in a walled city.
Outside that city you see a large army determined to destroy your city.
Inside the city, there is no hope and no food—people are frightened and desperate.
As you scrounge for a scrap of food or a drop of dirty water to drink you realize that the enemy will soon overrun your city and you will either be a slave or you will be dead.
That is the way it was for thousands of people living in a city in Israel in the distant past.
Samaria, the capitol city of the Northern Kingdom of Israel, was under attack by the Syrian army (also called Arameans).
Samaria, the capitol city of the Northern Kingdom of Israel, was under attack by the Syrian army (also called Arameans).The city had no hope.There was no way to escape.They were outnumbered by one of the most powerful armies in the world.They couldn’t flee the city and they couldn’t win a fight with their enemy—fear seems to be their only option.Conditions inside the city of Samaria were horrible—famine, disease, and death were the order of the day.The following passage from reveals the desperate situation the people faced:
The city had no hope.
There was no way to escape.
They were outnumbered by one of the most powerful armies in the world.
They couldn’t flee the city and they couldn’t win a fight with their enemy—fear seems to be their only option.
Conditions inside the city of Samaria were horrible—famine, disease, and death were the order of the day.
The following passage from reveals the desperate situation the people faced:
I can’t hardly comprehend such horrible conditions—they would eat anything to stay alive.
Donkey’s were valuable working animals, now a donkey brain dinner cost almost as much as the entire animal live and ready to work.
About a cup of bird droppings cost five shekels of silver—a common man’s salary for six months.
And most disturbing of all, an episode I don’t even want to mention, women agreeing to boil and eat their baby boys.
Could you agree with me that conditions inside that city were horrible?
Outside the city lived four men stricken with leprosy.
Society forced lepers to live separate from them to avoid spreading the disease.
They were outcasts.
These lepers were starving and half-dead from hunger.
They were trapped between a Syrian army bent on destruction and a starving city soon to be destroyed.
tells their story:
tells their story:
What an amazing story.
If the lepers remained where they were, they would die.
If they went into the city they would die.
If they begged mercy from the Syrians they would probably die, but they might find mercy.
They decided to march on the enemy’s camp.
God caused the footsteps of four men to sound like a large advancing army and the Syrians fled so fast they left everything behind.
A day of hunger, disaster and defeat became a day of rejoicing and victory.
While the lepers feasted and set aside provisions for the future, the people of the city still anguished in hunger.
The lepers remind me of people who have trusted Jesus for salvation and are enjoying the blessings of God.
The people in the city remind me of lost people who do not know God and are suffering under the curse of sin.
Today, I want us to look at the four lepers and their actions in order to appli
The lepers decided to return to the city and share the good news of their discovery to a hungry city.
This story tells me that we must shared the good news of Jesus Christ with those who do not know Him.
BODY
If you are a Christian you should think of the privilege you enjoy.
In at the beginning of the second sentence the lepers say, “This is a day of good news.”
Indeed, today is a day of Good News!
If you have trusted Jesus for salvation, I want you to think of the privileges and blessings you enjoy today—
Your sin has been forgiven.
The Holy Spirit dwells in your life.
Your name is written in the roll-book of heaven.
Your heart is right with God.
God’s hand of blessing is upon you.
Eternity in heaven awaits.
You are saved and God tossed your sins in the sea of forgetfulness where He will never dredge them up.
I don’t know why so many Christians look so sour and defeated.
We are saved!
We are delivered!
We are redeemed!
We are set free.
We are Holy Ghost filled and heaven bound.
We are living under the blessing of a loving, caring, compassionate, powerful, gracious, and merciful God.
We have reason to rejoice!
Lift up your hands child of God, lift up your head, child of God, lift up your voice, praise Him this morning—you are saved, delivered, set free, redeemed, Holy Ghost filled, heaven-bound, and you have reason to rejoice!
Look what the Lord has done for you—He has healed you, He has saved you, He has filled you, and He has set you free.
Thank God for His many blessings!
When the lepers found the camp abandoned and saw the food and riches left behind they declared it was a day of Good News.
Their hunger was satisfied — they found plenty of food.
Their thirst quenched—more than enough to refresh them.
Their future secure—they looted the camp and found more than enough to support them the rest of their lives.
So it is with Christians today—we’ve tasted the bread of heaven, drank from the cup of Christ, and we have laid up treasures in heaven.
Today, those who love and serve Jesus can certainly agree with them—it is a day of Good News!
We should think of the privilege we enjoy but we should not keep it to ourselves.
Notice in v. 9 at the beginning of the verse they say to each other, “What we are doing is not right.”
They were enjoying a time of great blessing.
They had plenty of food for the first time in a long time and they were feasting.
They found riches beyond imagination and were storing the riches for their future.
Suddenly they remembered a city filled with people eating donkey-brain burgers and bird droppings and they said—what we are doing is not right.
They were selfishly enjoying the blessings of God while thousands upon thousands of people didn’t know about the good news.
The wrongness of their actions is reinforced in v. 9 in the third sentence the lepers say, “If we wait until daylight, punishment will overtake us.”
The lepers came to themselves and realized that it was a sin to keep the good news to themselves.
This reminds me of many Christians and of many churches today.
Christians and churches rejoice in the blessings of God and feast on His vast provision of grace and salvation while all around people are starving and dying in sin.
In Jesus commanded us to:When we fail to tell the lost and spiritually starving people of the world about Jesus, we sin.A minister, while traveling in a desert in the Middle East tried to tell the Muslim tour guide about Jesus.The Muslim said, “Why do you want to tell me this?”The minister replied, “Because I love you, God loves you, and I want you to know about Jesus,”The Arab replied, “I understand—you don’t want to commit the sin of the desert.”The
sin of the desert is knowing where there is water and not telling anyone.I wonder how many Christians and churches commit the sin of the desert—we know where there is a fountain of living water, but we don’t tell anyone.If we as individuals or we collectively as a church don’t diligently work to fulfill the great commission and tell others the good news we are not doing right and punishment will overtake us.If we will pursue the great commission God will continue to bless us.
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