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Sermon Illustrations for Easter 7 (2025)

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Acts 16:16-34
Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth writes in her devotion about South African minister Andrew Murray. She notes, “In 1895, a South African pastor, teacher and writer named Andrew Murray was preaching at large Christian conferences in England. In physical pain from an injury sustained a few years earlier (thrown from a cart while traveling and ministering), and having just received some discouraging criticism from a well-known person, the exhausted Murray opted to stay in bed one Sunday morning. But rather than wallowing in discouragement, he decided to write some notes for his own encouragement.

He penned the words, “In time of trouble say…” Then he wrote four principles. I am here by God’s appointment. I am here in his keeping. I am here under his training, and I am here for his time. Murray’s point is clear. Worshipping God is not dependent on circumstances. Worshipping God is because of who he is and his sovereignty over every aspect of our lives.

Worshipping God is not dependent upon our circumstances. Paul and Silas understood this truth. In this text, they were cast in prison for freeing a woman from control of an evil spirit. They are beaten and stuck in the innermost prison in stocks. What do they do? They could complain about the injustice of it all. They could wonder where God is and why he is letting this happen. They don’t do either of these. What do they do? At midnight, they are praying and singing hymns to God. They are leading a midnight worship service that really shook things up. The outcome of this is the jailer and his family come to the Lord. What do we do when things are tough? Will we worship in the storm?
Bill T.

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Acts 16:16-34
Recently, I had an opportunity to offer spiritual care to a man who was in jail. The place was well-maintained and I was able to meet him in a room that had some air and light, tables and chairs. Not such a bad location. Yet, for him, the cell wasn’t the same as our place for conversation. This man came to see me each month with a smile on his face, with joy in his heart and theological and faith questions to talk about. He also was a musician and yet, I can’t imagine that he, unlike Paul and Silas, was singing hymns in his cell.

He was released some months later, not through an earthquake or an act of God, but because he had completed his sentence. He sings and plays instruments in church now with the same joy on his face and the same joy in his heart. I wonder how Paul and Silas, in the innermost cells, kept their faith. They sang hymns and God’s answer to their faith was to open the doors and remove their chains. Perhaps the most important chains God removes is the chains of our heart that imprison us in doubt, fear, anger, and hate. Those chains we can all ask God to remove in song, in prayer, and in faith.
Bonnie B.

* * *

Acts 16:16-34
Paul and Silas were dragged before the authorities in Philippi for the heinous crime of interfering with business practices that relied on the exploitation of human beings. When Paul, because he was annoyed himself by the truth-telling of the female slave with a spirit of divination, cast out the demon that possessed her, her owners seized Paul and Silas and accused them of “disturbing the city, and…advocating customs that are not lawful for us.” (16:20-21) Without any semblance of legal process, the two were viciously beaten with rods and jailed.

Christians who advocate for those who are exploited, deprived of a living wage, trapped in conditions of near-slavery or blatant out-and-out slavery, may find themselves opposed by others who consider themselves Christians. They may be called naïve, unrealistic, impractical, and may even face arrest for attempting to intervene. They may be told that what they’re doing is just a drop in the bucket, as if that meant it was not worth doing. Certainly the apostle did not eliminate slavery or the sexual abuse of slaves in his lifetime, but he certainly changed one person’s life, hopefully for the better.
Frank R.

* * *

Revelation 22:12-14, 16-17, 20-21
Sometimes the book of Revelation confuses me. This week’s reading does that. I truly understand that God and Jesus are the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end. Then I get to the part about washing our robes and I get confused again. Is it doing laundry that makes me a part of the family of God? Yet, if we read verse 15, which is not a part of this reading, the meaning becomes clearer. Those who practice idolatry, are murderers, practice the pagan magic worship, are not welcome at the tree of life, are not cleansed of their sin. Now I believe that God can forgive all sins, but as I read this, I think of these mentioned in verse 15 as those who do not turn toward God, do not repent their sins. This begins to make a little more sense to me. It’s hard to be forgiven if you don’t want or seek forgiveness.

The water of life is offered to those who come. Jesus blesses those who follow him. Grace is offered to all those who are in relationship with Jesus. We are blessed not because we do our laundry, although that may be important, but because we come to God in repentance, in faith, seeking relationship, forgiveness, and grace. That I understand.
Bonnie B.

* * *

Revelation 22:12-14,16-17,20-21
This is a text for getting the faithful to look ahead to the future. Famed German theologian Jurgen Moltmann thinks that such a future-orientation is the essence of Christianity. As he put it:

“Christianity”: has its essence and its goal not in itself and not in its own existence, but lives from something and exists for something that reaches far beyond itself… If we would fathom its essence then we must enquire into that future on which it sets its hopes and expectations. (Theology of Hope, p.325)

There is neurobiological data indicating that there are benefits for living life open to the future. When undertaking new tasks, the brain forges new neural (brain-cell connections). And when that happens the front part of the brain (the prefrontal cortex) is bathed in the brain chemical dopamine, which gives feelings of pleasure and happiness (Sherwin Nuland, The Art of Aging: A Doctor’s Prescription for Well-Being). We do well to follow the advice of the inventor of the electric starter and the electric cash register Charles Kettering. As he put it: “My interest is in the future because I am going to spend the rest of my life there.”
Mark E.

* * *

John 17:20-26
In the midst of all the talk about our polarization in American society and how even Christians are demonizing each other over our different views on the last presidential election, it is good to be reminded that the church is our common mother (Luther’s Works, Vol.51, p.166). And if we have a common mother, we must be brothers and sisters. There are all sorts of salubrious side-effects which result from living out Jesus’ prayer for unity. Ancient Greek writer Aesop said it well: “In union there is strength.” To be completely immersed in a project bigger than ourselves (to experience something as “us”, rather than just “me’) leads to the secretion of the pleasurable brain chemical dopamine and so results in happiness (Daniel Amen, Change Your Brain, Change Your Life).

If you prefer to focus on Jesus’ call to evangelism in the prayer (v.23), Martin Luther offers a nice word of encouragement. As he put it:

The noblest and greatest work and most important service we can perform for God on earth is bringing other people, and especially those who are entrusted to us, to the knowledge of God by the holy gospel. (What Luther Says, p.958)
Mark E.

* * *

John 17:20-26
John MacArthur once wrote, “Believers all belong to the same Lord, and are thus one with each other. Therefore, anything that denies our oneness with each other denies our oneness with him.” Unity in purpose and action among the members of the Body of Christ is important. Sometimes, though, we don’t quite reach that. I found this story that illustrates this.

The story is told of two men riding a tandem bicycle up a steep hill. After much effort, they finally made it to the top of the hill. The front rider said, “That was a tough ride.” To which the second rider replied, “Sure was, and if I hadn’t kept the brake on, we might have slipped backwards.”

That’s a funny story, but it can sting a little. Jesus prayed in the garden, “I ask not only on behalf of these but also on behalf of those who believe in me through their word, that they may all be one. As you, Father, are in me and I am in you, may they also be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me” (vs. 20-21). The reason for our unity is that it affects our ability to share Jesus with the lost world. When Christians are united with one another, it strengthens their ability to effectively share the faith with the world around them. Will we be one and with one voice proclaim the truth of Jesus?
Bill T.

* * *

John 17:20-26
As clergy we are probably used to praying for others, especially in their presence before surgery, or in times of trial, or in the wake of someone’s passing. Have you ever experienced a moment when you were prayed for? I remember occasions when I have dutifully prayed with someone before a medical procedure, for instance, at the end of which the person I had prayed for immediately began to pray for me. In this passage the disciples, at the end of the longest discourse in scripture, hear themselves prayed for and in the process hear prayers for those who were not there yet, but who shared in the prayers in the future. Our unity is cemented with every disciple who was, who is, and who will be. It’s a reminder that prayer is not something that happens in a moment, but has its roots in past prayers and will blossom and leaf in future prayers. I encourage yourself as you read this scripture to hear Jesus praying not only for those present, but for you in the present as well, and for us to pray with and for the communion of saints in all times and in all places. Prayer is not a lonely activity occurring in a moment, but the activity of the Spirit all times and places, before creation, and after the fulfillment of history.
Frank R.
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A Time for Everything
Larry Winebrenner
Ecclesiastes 3:1-13

Henry didn't like Jack.

Oh, he loved him like a brother. He would die for his friend. But oh, the arrogance. He always thought he was right. And he would always use authority, authority of some kind, to support his claims.

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Mark Wm. Radecke
This season, the boundaries of darkness are pushed back. A light shines in the darkness and the darkness is powerless to extinguish it.

Darkness has always been a potent metaphor for those things in life that oppress and enthrall us, frighten and intimidate us, cause us worry and anxiety and leech the joy from our lives.

We know darkness in our physical lives when illness is close at hand, when we lack the basic necessities of life -- food, shelter and clothing.
Paul E. Robinson
Early in January in northern Canada the sun peeks above the horizon for the first time after six weeks of hiding. An important dawn for Canada. Imagine how the lives of people in the northern latitudes would be different if they got used to the darkness and never even expected that a dawn would ever lighten their horizon again.
John N. Brittain
We lived in Florida for a while in the 1980s and it was then that we learned about Tarpon Springs. Not a large city, it has the highest percentage of Greek Americans of any place in the US. This dates back to the 1880s, when Greek immigrants moving into the area were hired as sponge divers, a trade they had plied back in the old country. Today Tarpon Springs' main claim to fame is the Greek Orthodox Church's Epiphany celebration, which is held every January 6, with the blessing of the waters and the boats.
Charles L. Aaron, Jr.
Early January always feels like a fresh start. The Christmas whirlwind has settled down. We still have a fighting chance to keep our resolutions for the new year. Cartoons always depict the New Year as a baby, full of possibilities and innocence. We hope that with a new year we can leave the baggage behind us, stretching toward a brighter future.

Stephen M. Crotts
Many things are written with all of the excitement of some fresh truth recently received. Other things are written from anger. And there is much these days in any pastorate to make one mad. Still other messages are delivered from depression. I'm convinced that the majority of preachers I know are over the edge into burnout. And what of this particular study? Where am I coming from? Today, I'm writing from a broken heart, a heart shattered by a fallen comrade.
William B. Kincaid, III
Did you notice that bad things did not stop happening through the holidays? And is any warning necessary that bad things will happen in every season of this year? Surely there is better news than that, but we ought to be honest about the bad news. Not even the holidays generate enough good will to stop people from blowing up airplanes and destroying people's reputations and abusing children and selling drugs to teenagers and gunning down their neighbors.
Robert A. Beringer
"So, what's new?" he asked. It happens all the time. You meet someone on the street you have not seen for awhile. "What's new?" "Oh, nothing much, really.

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When to accommodate and when not to accommodate? That's the question we face today. Most likely, the minds and hearts of our congregations will be focused on the new year. They will have just celebrated the advent not only of a new year but in this case a new millennium. With all the hype about the year 2000, our attention will doubtless be engrossed in the calendar. On the other hand, today is also an important liturgical celebration of the naming of Jesus. It provides us opportunity to acknowledge the importance of that name which has become sacred in our tradition.
Mark J. Molldrem
Schuyler Rhodes
These are the longest hours of darkness. Although the winter solstice is passed, the darkness lingers for many more weeks. The season becomes a symbol for the longing of the human spirit to "see the light." It becomes difficult to catch sight of the light, however, when so many shadows lurk at every turn of a corner we make. We claim to be an enlightened people; yet settle for clap-trap on television and spend countless hours absorbing it like a sponge under a dripping faucet. We call athletes heroes for nothing more than being good at what they do.
Cathy Venkatesh
In many countries, January 6 is a public holiday with parades, parties, and festivities celebrating the visit of the wise men. For some Christian churches, the main celebration of Christ's incarnation occurs on this day. But in the United States, Monday, January 6, 2014, is nothing special in the public sphere. For most of us, this day marks the beginning of our first full week back at work or school after the Christmas and New Year's holidays.

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Teachers: Most youngsters (and many adults) have a misconception of the wise men. The Bible does not state that the wise men visited Jesus at the manger. Even so, our tradition of gift giving at Christmas may relate to the wise men's gifts. The church celebrates the arrival of the wise men's visit to Jesus 12 days after Christmas. This event is called "Epiphany."

Take a moment to explain to your students the significance of Epiphany, the wise men, and Jesus. The lesson from Matthew states three gifts that the wise men gave Jesus: gold, frankincense and
Today we are going to be like the wise men from the East who looked for baby Jesus. They were told the wonderful story about a promised Messiah who would save the world. He was the "king of the Jews" and would be king of all people. They traveled a great distance. They wanted to see the baby. They had to see the baby! So they left and ended up in Jerusalem. There they asked about the promised king.

The man who was king became very jealous. Even though they were looking for a spiritual king -- a king of our hearts, minds,
Teachers or Parents: Have an Epiphany pageant to close off the Christmas season and the twelve days of Christmas with the children of your church. Have people stationed in various parts of the home or church building where you might go to ask the question, "Are you the Messiah?" They will, of course, say, "No." The first group might add, "Look for the star." Involve as many children as possible. Let them ask the question. Let them get into the role of wise men from the East. Help them relive the story and see that Jesus is more than king of the Jews or king of

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