series: Jonah
title: It ends with a question
teacher: Jacob Bender
date: November 20, 2016
scriptures: Jonah 4, Isaiah 58:12, Nahum 2:10, Nahum 3:1-5, Genesis 4,
series: Jonah
title: It ends with a question
teacher: Jacob Bender
date: November 20, 2016
scriptures: Jonah 4, Isaiah 58:12, Nahum 2:10, Nahum 3:1-5, Genesis 4,
teacher: Jacob Bender
date: November 13, 2016
series: Jonah
title: After an Election
scriptures: Psalm 11, Romans 13, Jonah 3, Jonah 4:1-3, Psalm 56:8, Isaiah 57:15 (mentioned), 1 Corinthians 9:22, Jon 13:35, 2 Peter 1:3-8
series: Jonah
title: Before an Election
teacher: Jacob Bender
date: November 6, 2017
scriptures: Jonah 3:1-5, Matthew 12:38-41, Philippians 2:7, Revelation 5, Daniel 6, Psalm 118:9, Jeremiah 17:5, 2 Corinthians 5, 2 Kings 15 & 18 (mentioned), 1 John 4:18, Hebrews 12:2, Psalm 11:4
During Election seasons, it can be very easy for us to begin to think that our world will rise and fall based on who wins the election... But as Christians we need to remember that we are ambassadors in this world, of a different Kingdom, and no matter who wins the elections on Tuesday, the God that we serve will STILL be on the throne on Wednesday. Every Single Time!
We dedicated several babies and parents to Jesus this Sunday morning!
series: Jonah
title: The sign of Jonah
date: October 30, 2016
teacher: Jacob Bender
scriptures: Jonah 1:15- Jonah 2 (whole thing, Jonah 3:1-2, Proverbs 13:12, Matthew 12:38-41, Mark 4:35, Jonah 1:11-12
series: Jonah
title: Yom Kippur
teacher: Jacob Bender
date: October 16, 2016
scriptures: Jonah (entire book), Leviticus 16, Leviticus 16:22, Hebrews 10:8-14
This last week, those who practice Jewish culture celebrated Yom Kippur. This year it was Tuesday, October 11th at sundown, and ended Wednesday October 12th at the same time. And there is a Jewish tradition… that in their afternoon services on Yom Kippur every year, they read, in its entirety, the book on Jonah. And its a tradition that dates back thousands of years… where families would all gather around together on Yom Kippur, and they would read it together.
Because to most people, the book of Jonah is the story of a guy who got eaten by a whale. Who was in his belly for three days, and then he got spit out. Thats the gist of what most of us know about the book.
So, today we are going to start our series on the book of Jonah, exploring some of those questions…
Why is it considered to be one of the books known as “the prophets” when Jonah doesn't give a single prophecy the entire time… Why do the Jews, on their holiest day of the year, take the time to sit down and read the book in its entirety?